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Hi , is it adobe reader free for commercial use?
Can you i have a answer?
Thanks.
Yes you can install on you own computer at the company. It's ok if the computer belongs to work, it's ok if you use it for work.
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Please anyone can help me to answer on this question?
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What commercial use? The answer to all licensing questions is by definition in the EULA, but we may have a non-legal idea for you.
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Means it allowed for company use? is it no need license?
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Can you use the software as a tool within your business? Yes of course. Anyone can use it.
Can you resell the software? No.
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I want to help answer your question (within what is allowed under the law because I am not a lawyer) but you must explain what you mean by the completely vague "commercial use" phrase.
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Means it allowed for company use? is it no need license?
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Well, all commercial use is by a company. What use do you want to make?
I'll tell you some things you can and can't do. Maybe it will be a starting point. Remember, this license is a LEGAL CONTRACT and only a lawyer can give official advice; this is just my personal idea from other replies.
You CAN install Acrobat Reader on YOUR OWN computer and use it to read and print PDF files.
You CANNOT put Acrobat Reader on your web site.
You CANNOT sell Acrobat Reader.
If you look after the computers in a company (IT support) you CANNOT install Acrobat Reader for the OTHER PEOPLE in the company, unless you get an extra (free but important) license.
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So you means , i cannot use it on my company pc ? I only can install to my personal device.
Is it correct?
Thanks for your answer.
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Yes you can install on you own computer at the company. It's ok if the computer belongs to work, it's ok if you use it for work.
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Hi, guys.
You say
https://forums.adobe.com/people/Test+Screen+Name wrote
Yes you can install on you own computer at the company. It's ok if the computer belongs to work, it's ok if you use it for work.
but, where in the license agreement can I find this statement? I read it but it was not clear.
Can you point me an official source where I can legally proof this?
Best regards.
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On Windows, by default the Adobe Acrobat Update Service starts with Windows and also updates the Adobe Acrobat Reader to newer versions automatically. (Correct me if wrong)
Will the newer versions of Adobe Acrobat Reader (Free version) remain free for commercial use (one can use it for work)? or
Should I disable Adobe Acrobat Update Service to run automatically then check the license of newer version and then install the newer version manually?
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I'll try to simplify this.
At one point in time, there should be atleast one "source" which states whether commercial use is allowed or not (or any other facility) from the service provider. "Source" could mean anything from main webpage, FAQs, pricing/comparison page, EULA page, official forum/community, agreement before installation, agreement during installation, email/phone support etc. One source stating whether a facility is available or not should be enough!!!!!!.
An example: Aeroadmin main webpage explicitly states that business use of the software is allowed but there is no mention of business/commercial use on their EULA webpage. This is a perfect example to show that license agreement is not the only source for finding availability of a facility like commercial use.
If there is more than one source making the same claim of a facility being available like commercial use then that is ok. But if there is one source stating that commercial use is allowed and another source stating that commercial use is not allowed at one point in time then that creates confusion among the users.
Hence, in future if Adobe plans to make newer/latest versions of Adobe Acrobat Reader for non-commercial use and states this on a source such as license agreement, FAQ etc then this page (which is a source claiming commercial use is allowed) should be edited as being invalid for newer/latest versions. In this case, it would also be helpful to continue providing older versions which are free for commercial use.
Hope, this is insightful.
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The license agreement is the ONLY legal source. No comment, permission or explanation can change this. Lawyers like to argue over interpretation of course.
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Your above answer is labeled as the correct answer. Thank you very much for that. As this is the official community/forum of Adobe your above correct answer is obviously an official answer. A similar question on this community [ https://community.adobe.com/t5/acrobat-discussions/a-free-version-of-acrobat-reader-dc-for-commercia... ] has also been redirected to this page for the answer.
In case, you don't want your above correct answer to be an official answer then kindly edit/delete it. Thank you again.