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Autodesk

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Revision as of 17:23, 20 February 2026 by Naboroo (talk | contribs) (Controversies: => Removed the table layout to replace it with a more readable one, accessible from the table of matters + renamed and changed the source for Ian Davis controversy, the article that was broken, and I replaced it with Ian Davis' own video + Louiis Rossmann's video on the topic which provides other customer's POVs)

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Autodesk
Basic information
Founded 1982
Legal Structure Public
Industry Software
Also known as
Official website https://autodesk.com

Autodesk, Inc. is an American software company headquartered in San Francisco, California, that provides software products and services for the architecture, engineering, construction, manufacturing, media, education, and entertainment industries. The company was founded in 1982 by John Walker, who was a co-author of the first versions of AutoCAD.[1]

Autodesk primarily develops and maintains computer-aided design (CAD) software used globally across many engineering and design industries. Autodesk's extensive portfolio of proprietary software enables its programs to interoperate, facilitating cloud-based building information management (BIM) collaboration among owners, architects, engineers, and contractors.[2]

Modern versions of Autodesk Products, such as Inventor or AutoCAD, have been known to operate via always-online DRM[3] and have served to provide significant inconvenience for consumers if their internet goes out or their license verification servers are offline for maintenance.

Consumer impact summary

User Freedom

Autodesk ceased to sell perpetual licenses for HSMWorks (2016) and will eliminate access altogether (2025–2028), rendering locally stored information unusable[citation needed].

Future Fusion versions will lack support for Windows 10, with unclear implications for existing installations[citation needed].

Business Model

Autodesk transitioned their go-to-market model from perpetual licenses to subscriptions and multi-year contracts billed annually[4]. As noted in their annual proxy statement:

Our go-to-market (GTM) model has evolved significantly and purposefully over the years, from the transition to subscription and multi-year contracts billed annually, through self-service enablement, the adoption of direct billing, and more. In fiscal 2025, we completed the launch of our direct billing model (“the new transaction model”) and are now beginning the optimization phase, positioning Autodesk to better meet the evolving needs of its customers and channel partners. This comes from faster and less complex processes and more digital self-service and automation that enable tighter channel partnerships and less duplication of effort. The new transaction model will further unlock long-term value by strengthening our sales and marketing efficiency.[4]

Removal of legacy entitlements (e.g., HSMWorks from Fusion 360), in addition to the refusal to honor permanent licenses (e.g., Product Design Suite 2013)[citation needed].

In the End User License Agreement (EULA) for Autodesk products, section 9.7 allows Autodesk to audit a users premises to verify compliance[citation needed]. If the user or company is found to have overextended licenses, Autodesk requires the user to purchase additional licenses to cover the overextended licenses in question. However, the software does not limit the number of machines that can sign in and activate it simultaneously[citation needed]. Autodesk compliance agents threatened to increase fines if legal counsel is hired against Autodesk. [5]

Market Control

Autodesk holds a majority of the market share on CAD software, especially in the BIM category[citation needed]. This allows Autodesk to significantly raise its prices each year.

Vernor v. Autodesk, Inc.

In 2007, Timothy Vernor tried to sell his physical copy of Autodesk. Autodesk sued Vernor for copyright infringement in Timothy Vernor v. Autodesk, Inc as Vernor's purchase was for a license. The case made its way to the US Court of Appeals 9th Circuit, where it was decided in Autodesk's favor, limiting the first-sale doctrine[6].

Controversies

Telemetry bugs and harmful fines

In 2017, consumers reported that Autodesk's telemetry on paid versions of software detected pirated versions of their software on PCs, and they explicitly received[7] on paid versions of software detecting pirated versions of their software on PCs, and they explicitly sent large fines as a punishment.[8] This software has also been reported to malfunction, and Autodesk is allegedly pressuring consumers into purchasing expensive versions of their licenses.[9]

Ian Davis ended lifetime subscriptions

In 2023, YouTuber Ian Davis owned a permanent, standalone license for Autodesk Product Design Suite Ultimate 2013, which failed to renew. Autodesk refused to issue a new license without an additional subscription purchase.[10][11][12]

Windows 10 support discontinuation

In 2024, Autodesk announced that Autodesk Fusion would no longer be supported for Windows 10 users after the start of January 2026. Stated in their support article, "Autodesk will no longer consider Windows 10 for Validation, bug fixing, and product support of future releases." The phrasing has rightfully baffled consumers, and with a lack of elaboration from support teams, it is unclear whether existing installations will continue to function, especially since the line "existing installations cannot be repaired or reinstalled" is confusing and leaves questions unanswered.[13]

HSMWorks end of life

In 2012, Autodesk acquired HSMWorks, a computer-aided manufacturing (CAM) product for programming Computer Numerical Control (CNC) machines, with the intention of integrating the technology into its own software and cloud services.[14] HSMWorks could continue to be purchased with a perpetual license until 2016, when Autodesk announced that all Autodesk products, including HSMWorks, would transition to a subscription model, ending support and maintenance plans for perpetual licenses.[15] In 2019, Autodesk transitioned HSMWorks subscribers to Fusion 360 subscribers, granting them entitlement to download and use HSMWorks.[16] In February 2025, Autodesk sent an email to Fusion 360 subscribers that HSMWorks entitlement would no longer be included on new subscriptions after March 25, 2025. and entitlement would end March 25, 2028, for all subscribers. "At that point, you will no longer be able to download, access, or use HSMWorks."[17]

Because HSMWorks was subscription-only, or entitlement was only available through a Fusion 360 subscription, from 2016 onward, any person or organization that used up-to-date versions of HSMWorks since then will cease to have access to all data associated with HSMWorks, despite the data being locally stored and HSMWorks being installed (although unusable). HSMWorks data is not compatible with Fusion 360 nor Inventor CAM (products that share some technology with HSMWorks), thus, no solution exists to bridge users' data to actively supported software.

Products

  • AutoCAD - Autodesk's flagship CAD software, used for free-form 2D and 3D design
  • Revit - 3D design software that is primarily used by architects, engineers, and structural designers to design, draft, and model buildings and other structures
  • Autodesk Inventor - 3D digital modeling
  • Autodesk Fusion - 3D digital modeling
  • Civil 3D - 3D design focused on civil infrastructure
  • 3ds Max - 3D Animation
  • Maya - 3D Animation
  • Mudbox - 3D digital painting and sculpting

References

  1. Williams, Alex (6 Mar 2024). "John Walker, Tech Executive Who Popularized AutoCAD, Dies at 74". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 8 Jul 2025. Retrieved 2 Aug 2025.
  2. "Autodesk BIM Collaborate Pro: Create, collaborate, and stay up to date". Autodesk. Archived from the original on 30 Jan 2025. Retrieved 2 Aug 2025.
  3. "Install network licensing software". Autodesk. Archived from the original on 30 Jan 2025. Retrieved 2 Aug 2025.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "Autodesk Fiscal Year 2025 Notice of Annual Meeting and Proxy Statement". Autodesk Investor Relations. 2025-05-06. Archived from the original on 5 Jul 2025. Retrieved 2026-02-05.
  5. Vondran, Steve (2023-04-12). "Autodesk Internal Getting Very Aggressive in 2023 Beware of Over-Assigning Licenses". Archived from the original on 2025-07-30. Retrieved 2025-10-23.
  6. "Timothy Vernor v. Autodesk Inc". Justia. Archived from the original on 23 Sep 2021. Retrieved 2026-02-05.
  7. "AUTODESK ANALYTICS PROGRAMS". Autodesk. Retrieved 2 Aug 2025.
  8. "Autodesk detected pirated programs after purchasing licenses". Reddit. Archived from the original on 4 Aug 2025. Retrieved 2 Aug 2025.
  9. "Autodesk detected pirated programs after purchasing licenses (Reply)". Reddit. Retrieved 2 Aug 2025.
  10. Ian, Davis (2023-06-29). "So much for Permanent Standalone licensing..." YouTube (video). Ian Davis' personal YouTube channel. Retrieved 2026-02-20.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  11. Louis, Rossmann (2023-06-30). "Autodesk screws customers by turning lifetime licenses into subscriptions". YouTube (video). Retrieved 2026-02-20.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  12. Ian, Davis (2023-07-03). "Thoughts on AutoCad License invalidation". YouTube (video). Ian Davis' personal YouTube channel. Retrieved 2026-02-20.
  13. "Fusion Announcing End of Support for Windows 10". Autodesk. 4 Dec 2024. Archived from the original on 30 Jan 2025. Retrieved 2 Aug 2025.
  14. "Autodesk Acquires HSMWorks Technology". Autodesk. 1 Oct 2012. Archived from the original on 15 Feb 2026. Retrieved 2 Aug 2025.
  15. Johnson Swan, Keli (14 Jun 2021). "Recent Developments in Autodesk Licensing and Audits, Part I". scottandscottllp.com. Archived from the original on 18 Nov 2025. Retrieved 2 Aug 2025.
  16. "HSMWorks 2020 now included with Fusion 360 subscriptions". Autodesk. 23 Apr 2019. Archived from the original on 16 Nov 2025. Retrieved 2 Aug 2025.
  17. @lenny_1962 (3 Feb 2025). "HSMWorks End Of Life March 25th, 2028". Autodesk. Archived from the original on 8 Jul 2025. Retrieved 2 Aug 2025.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)