Pirated copies now show an offer for 50% off an Office license.
Since switching to a yearly subscription format in 2013, Microsoft’s suite of Office programs, including Word, PowerPoint, Excel, and more, has collectively become one of the most pirated pieces of PC software in the world. Many users have opted instead to continue using licenses for older, single-payment iterations of Office, while others have instead chosen to pirate unlicensed copies of the modern iteration. Instead of attempting to dissuade pirates from using the unlicensed software, Microsoft is now trying a different method: enticing them with discounts.
Microsoft tempts software pirates with 50 percent discount on Office https://t.co/exORTsS8Xq pic.twitter.com/9E4PaNNrJA
— The Verge (@verge) December 9, 2021
While unlicensed copies have long had a banner encouraging users to register, something new has appeared. According to a Ghacks report, pirated copies of Office 365 have begun showing an offer for a 50% off discount, representing an ambitious move to convert pirates to paid customers. The page that the offer links to contains a warning from Microsoft noting that pirated software may expose users’ PCs to viruses, and that buying a license is a safer choice. With the discount, a single-person one-year Office 365 license would cost $34.99.
Microsoft Office, as one of the most widely used office and productivity suites globally, is also among the most pirated. #Microsoft #MicrosoftOffice #MicrosoftOfficePiracyhttps://t.co/hRJDKRDFOF
— FinancialXpress (@FinancialXpress) December 9, 2021
Microsoft currently has roughly 50 million registered Office 365 users, though they could potentially bring in millions more if this gambit pays off.
Better.com CEO Apologizes for Mass-Firing
Frank Vogel Says Lakers Have ‘Too Much Casualness’
-
Global experts in artificial intelligence believe the coming decade will dramatically reshape how humans interact with machines. Some predict...
-
Credit: Shutterstock The team behind Claude is speaking out. Anthropic has revealed what it describes as a large-scale and...
-
Credit: Shutterstock You capture a breathtaking sunset or a perfect candid of friends, but when you look at the...
-
Credit: Shutterstock In the digital landscape of 2026, we have officially entered the era of “Post-Visual Truth.” With the...
-
Credit: Shutterstock If your iPhone keeps flashing that dreaded “Storage Almost Full” warning, you’re not alone. Between photos, apps,...
-
Credit: Shutterstock If you’ve ever glanced at your phone during a long workday and wondered whether your dog is...
-
Credit: Shutterstock If you’re a Gmail user, you might want to pause your inbox scrolling for a moment. A...
-
Credit: Shutterstock Today marks an exciting moment for the developer community as xAI officially introduces the Grok Voice Agent...
-
Credit: Shutterstock Big news in the dating world! Justin McLeod, the founder and CEO of Hinge, is stepping down...
-
Credit: Shutterstock Dubai’s dining scene has never been afraid of bold ideas—but the city’s newest culinary experiment might just...
-
Credit: Shutterstock Disney Brings Olaf to Life with AI-Powered Snowman Robot Disney has accomplished the unthinkable by transforming one...
-
Credit: Shutterstock Thirty years ago, before most people had ever heard the term “cybersecurity,” a Japanese anime depicted a...
