@acarson @wiljames @treehousedarren I have asked this several times of several people, and have not received an answer, I’d be most grateful for it. You state that companies will sometimes grandfather older customers with software when switching to a subscription model. Can you give me any example of software which runs entirely on the user’s machine, which switched to a subscription model, and for which the older customers were not grandfathered in with the ability to continue to run the version of the software they had bought with all its features? As I said, I have never seen this, not once. It’s not sometimes, it is simply always, without any exception I know of. Let me be clear, companies will often refuse to update their software if customers don’t switch to a subscription. They will often refuse to support their software if you don’t subscribe. They will often say that software will not be maintained to work with new systems, or their own services, if you don’t subscribe. All that is fine. That’s not what I’m talking about. I have yet to see a single example of a company which removes working features from working software when that software was sold originally as a lifetime license. It’s not only possible that I’m wrong, it’s likely, and I would be very grateful for correction because this is something completely new in my experience apart from the death of the owner or bankruptcy. I think it’s new to me because nobody else has done it, and nobody else has done it because it’s a flagrant breech of the legal contract formed when the customer purchased a license. I would appreciate correction if I’m wrong, either about that last point or about any company actually having done this before.