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Participating Frequently
November 20, 2025
Question

Acrobat 2020 perpetual licence, seemingly is not perpetual

  • November 20, 2025
  • 1 reply
  • 179 views

As you can see, I bought Acrobat 2020 in 2021 and paid a pretty handsome sum for it, as I needed it as a student of law.

As time goes on, I have replaced hardware and always uninstalled it and sanitised my drive before reinstalling the OS. Now, here lies a problem. The remaining laptop I had died, right in the middle of an exam! On that laptop, there were three accounts, all on the same machine. The problem is that every time you add Adobe to the account, it thinks it is a new machine. This is incorrect and is a serious flaw in the software development.

The manufacturer, ASUS (whom I will never recommend again), deleted the data I couldn't access due to a motherboard failure and the installation of a non-removable NVMe drive, which I didn't know until I came to remove it. So, three sets of software, one machine, all deleted.

Now, let's look at the correspondence I get from Adobe when I get an activation failure notice. The Adobe agent tells me to 'deactivate' other installations. If an installation is uninstalled, it is deactivated by default. However, the Adobe website lists your activated devices – well, it would, if it actually worked. As you can see, the Adobe website clearly does not list any active devices, and the initial support I contacted stated there was none listed that he could see, either!

Ok, let's look at the software. Is there a 'deactivation' function provided? Not according to the screenshot provided. So, this is escalated to Support back-end five days later. As you can see, Adobe Support delivers a clear statement: "We regret to inform you that support is no longer available for the product you are enquiring about." Yet their own website states they DO provide support for Acrobat 2020 until the end of November 2025. 

So, not only are they misleading purchasers, but they are also breaching their contractual obligation to resolve technical issues with the software product that the end-user had paid a lot of money for. 

Adobe, to put it simply, if you state you provide support for a product of your brand, you are legally obliged to honour that support, not merely state 'it is no longer available'; that is a blatant lie.

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1 reply

kglad
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 20, 2025

adobe doesn't have a way to snoop on your installs or uninstalls.  you have to explicitly inform adobe's servers that you've activated or deactivated its software.  (by clicking help > activate or help > deactivate)

 

you can install on an endless number of computers.  adobe does nothing to block you and has no way to block you.

 

however, if you want to use beyond the 30 trail on any one computer, you must activate during installation and by clicking help > activate.

 

at this point, if you're seeing an excess activation count message and it's impossible to deactivate on a computer that has an activation, it's impossible to regain that activation.  there's no work-around.

Participating Frequently
November 20, 2025

If you observe in the screenshots (as provided), there is no functionality to activate or deactivate. To activate, you need to sign in, as per the pop-up that appears, and then the activation server performs a licence code handshake: genuine > go; counterfeit > no go. So they do have a way to 'snoop', as you eloquently put it for the Adobe Acrobat 2020 version. 

Participating Frequently
November 20, 2025

regarless of which, if it is a perpetual licence, then access to that software should be without restriction – especially if the activation server is no longer going to be available. Then, Adobe should provide a bypass patch so that they do not require a connection to validate software they no longer maintain or support. A bit of a bind for those who have just bought the software as a perpetual licence, only to find out that... using it twice means there is no way to deactivate it – the software is rendered useless.