Uhmmmmm... yeahhhhh... technically it's stealing. Perhaps you should look up the definition. ...The definition typically states something along the lines of "taking without the owner's permission." From the discussion and your own words it seems you are no longer at or affiliated with the University other than being an alumnus. Generally when you leave a University, you give up your right to use University resources; even most University IDs state on them that the ID is property of the University and must be returned to the University.
So the question is... since "there is nothing to be stolen.", if you contact the Administrator of the University's Altium License server and ask "Do I have permission to continue to use this license server?" Would that Administrator reply in the affirmative? If not, clearly you are stealing!
A main quality that separates TRUE engineers from the rest of the world is their integrity. Does anyone know why it is important to have integrity as a REAL Scientist or Engineer?
Do you think golf would be a cool sport if players had no integrity?
Further, while it is pretty offensive to lie to everyone else, one should never lie to themselves!! Are you sure you are not stealing??
Sure I live in a glass house, but at least I PAID for my Altium License.
Oh, get off your moral high horse and don't presume to question my integrity; your "TRUE" and "REAL" aphorisms are quite banal and makes me wonder if your idea of "cool" involves wearing a certain pinky ring.
First of all, you don't even have a clue as to what exactly I'm entitled to. Alumni are entitled to the same privileges and campus resources as regular students for 1 year after graduation, to include userID, e-mail, VPN access, services, etc. In other words, if I had access to it as an undergrad, then I legitimately have access to it now. Second, I neither signed nor agreed to policy stating that I must surrender all license privileges upon graduating. If my alma mater receives some sort of discount from Altium for their bulk purchase, then that contract is between the university and Altium, not between me and the university. Furthermore, there is no "FOR ACADEMIC USE ONLY" limitation attached to my installation. Third, I have de facto paid for access to this license server in the form of tuition and lab fees; the fact that you were ass raped for an independent license doesn't negate the fact that I've paid the required dues to my alma mater, which in turn paid the Altium piper pimp. So I stand firm in my original disposition. Do I feel like I'm playing the system a bit more than your average engineering student? Without a doubt. But quite frankly, you can bet your top dollar that I'm going to milk the crap out of these hind tits for all they're worth.
And no, my student ID is
my property (or co-owned by my bank had I opted to activate it as a debit card),
governed by (read NOT owned by or property of) university rules and regulations, and nowhere in their bylaws does it state that the ID is property of the university, which should be obvious after mentioning that these IDs can be linked directly to a private bank account.