


You may also transfer the software to a device owned by someone else if (i) you are the first licensed user of the software and (ii) the new user agrees to the terms of this agreement.Įvery time you transfer the software to a new device, you must remove the software from the prior device. If you transfer the software to another device, that other device becomes the “licensed device.”

If you acquired the software from a retailer as stand-alone software, you may transfer the software to another device that belongs to you, but not more than one time everyĩ0 days (except due to hardware failure, in which case you may transfer sooner). Stand-alone software acquired from a retailer. License to a new computer or device, the software will no longer run on the prior computer or device.ī. You may assign the software license to another computer or device in accordance with the above installation and use rights. In the new introductory section it says (my emphasis)Ĭan I assign or transfer the software to another computer, device or user? Actually the MS License Terms, MSLT, for Office are contradictory (big surprise for MS) The problem is figuring out how to do it!. If you got Pro Plus as a volume license, then you MAY be able to transfer it to a new owner. If you got it from a discount offer at work, the HUP (Home Use Program), you CANNOT transfer the license to someone else, even a charity. If you bought it "cheap" on the internet, it is almost certainly an illegal license. If it "came with" the computer for "free", it is almost certainly an illegal license. How did you get Pro Plus in the first place? This is very important. Pro Plus is a very limited distribution bundle, as Igor suggested, directed more at business than casual users.
