top | item 5032538

(no title)

gigantor | 13 years ago

Adobe's official PR stance on this is somewhat confusing; are they releasing license keys to allow for an easier 'try before you buy', with the understanding on the honour system that you'll purchase a license (almost a humble bundle with a fixed fee)? Or is it a completely free license with the hopes to wet your appetite for CS6 and up?

UPDATE: You still need a paid license to use it legally. This is a service Adobe is providing to make life easier for existing licensed users of CS2 to enable continued usage. "While this might be interpreted as Adobe giving away software for free, we did it to help our customers" ( http://blogs.adobe.com/conversations/2013/01/update-on-cs2-a...)

discuss

order

nileshk|13 years ago

My understanding is that they wanted to shut down the product activation servers for CS2, so they released an update for it that removed the product activation check (and made the updates available on a publicly accessible web page), so that existing CS2 users could keep using it without things breaking.

blumentopf|13 years ago

It's not an update. The software is the same as released in 2005. Only the license keys are special keys that make the software bypass the Internet activation.

So why did they make the software downloadable at all and not just the special license keys? The Macromedia Studio MX 2004 suite they acquired uses the same activation servers. In that case they only made special license keys available and not the software.

This smells like a thinly veiled strategy to penetrate the market without saying so (for whatever reason).