second hand market

About this tag
The second hand market for software licenses is a complex legal area, as highlighted by the ongoing ValueLicensing v Microsoft case. This dispute centers on whether perpetual desktop products like Microsoft Office and Windows can be resold under the exhaustion doctrine established in the 2012 UsedSoft ruling. The case has pivoted from antitrust and licensing claims to a copyright argument, with ValueLicensing seeking £270 million in damages. The outcome could reshape the pre-owned software market across Europe and the UK, affecting how consumers and businesses trade used licenses. This tag covers discussions on legal precedents, licensing models, and the economic impact of software resale.
  1. ValueLicensing v Microsoft: UsedSoft Exhaustion and the Copyright Pivot

    Microsoft’s late-stage pivot in the long-running ValueLicensing dispute — recasting what began as an antitrust and licensing fight into a copyright question — has elevated a technical legal argument into a case that could reshape the pre-owned software market across Europe and the UK. The...