The lawyer I spoke to was Dutch. There is some unclarity about EULA's sold to consumers, I think the general idea of the consumer protection is that the consumer should have seen the EULA before they paid for the product.
That said, it says on the box that the software is only for Apple hardware, and I think even only as an upgrade for an existing OSX install.
If you're a company, then EULAs are definitely binding, no matter where you are.
That said, it says on the box that the software is only for Apple hardware, and I think even only as an upgrade for an existing OSX install.
If you're a company, then EULAs are definitely binding, no matter where you are.