another OGA question

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saypoint

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I bought a copy of Office 2007 Pro from an online seller who advertised it as

a genuine, new copy. It came in a sealed box with the hologram CDs and

installed with no problems using the product key in the box. After

downloading updates, I started getting the "not genuine" message after

reboots. The seller insists that this is a legitimate licensed product which

was purchased from a Circuit City store that was going out of business, and

that the messages I'm getting are due to some problem with the installation,

not with the authenticity of the software.



I can force him to refund my money by having my credit card company or

paypal stop the payment, but I've seen some posts in various places

describing cases where genuine software got this OGA fake warning. I want to

give him the benefit of the doubt. How do I determine what the truth is?
 
might be your antivirus

blocking the required

scan of the program.



have you tried this?



http://tinyurl.com/y9gx8f4



incidentally, temporarily

disable your anti virus

before doing the above.



--



db·´¯`·...¸>

DatabaseBen, Retired Professional

- Systems Analyst

- Database Developer

- Accountancy

- Veteran of the Armed Forces

- Microsoft Partner

- @hotmail.com

~~~~~~~~~~"share the nirvana" - dbZen



>

>




"saypoint" wrote in message news:484E45E1-B367-4C4B-8A58-62597ABBB2EE@microsoft.com...

> I bought a copy of Office 2007 Pro from an online seller who advertised it as

> a genuine, new copy. It came in a sealed box with the hologram CDs and

> installed with no problems using the product key in the box. After

> downloading updates, I started getting the "not genuine" message after

> reboots. The seller insists that this is a legitimate licensed product which

> was purchased from a Circuit City store that was going out of business, and

> that the messages I'm getting are due to some problem with the installation,

> not with the authenticity of the software.

>

> I can force him to refund my money by having my credit card company or

> paypal stop the payment, but I've seen some posts in various places

> describing cases where genuine software got this OGA fake warning. I want to

> give him the benefit of the doubt. How do I determine what the truth is?
 
http://tinyurl.com/oga123



I think the above is more

appropriate for validating

office.



--



db·´¯`·...¸>

DatabaseBen, Retired Professional

- Systems Analyst

- Database Developer

- Accountancy

- Veteran of the Armed Forces

- Microsoft Partner

- @hotmail.com

~~~~~~~~~~"share the nirvana" - dbZen



>

>




"db" wrote in message news:F661C237-5524-4B7F-B30E-04E848A83B5A@microsoft.com...

> might be your antivirus

> blocking the required

> scan of the program.

>

> have you tried this?

>

> http://tinyurl.com/y9gx8f4

>

> incidentally, temporarily

> disable your anti virus

> before doing the above.

>

> --

>

> db·´¯`·...¸>

> DatabaseBen, Retired Professional

> - Systems Analyst

> - Database Developer

> - Accountancy

> - Veteran of the Armed Forces

> - Microsoft Partner

> - @hotmail.com

> ~~~~~~~~~~"share the nirvana" - dbZen

>

>>

>>


>

> "saypoint" wrote in message news:484E45E1-B367-4C4B-8A58-62597ABBB2EE@microsoft.com...

>> I bought a copy of Office 2007 Pro from an online seller who advertised it as

>> a genuine, new copy. It came in a sealed box with the hologram CDs and

>> installed with no problems using the product key in the box. After

>> downloading updates, I started getting the "not genuine" message after

>> reboots. The seller insists that this is a legitimate licensed product which

>> was purchased from a Circuit City store that was going out of business, and

>> that the messages I'm getting are due to some problem with the installation,

>> not with the authenticity of the software.

>>

>> I can force him to refund my money by having my credit card company or

>> paypal stop the payment, but I've seen some posts in various places

>> describing cases where genuine software got this OGA fake warning. I want to

>> give him the benefit of the doubt. How do I determine what the truth is?


>
 
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