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Pirated software is on the
increase and now accounts for over one third of the
software installed on the world's computers and it's cost
the software industry a staggering, $28bn (£12bn) last
year in lost revenues. That's the startling claim of the
UK based, Business Software Alliance. Their annual survey
of global software piracy shows that some 36% of software
applications were illegally installed and being used
during 2003.
The study, conducted for
the first time on behalf of the BSA by global technology
research firm, International Data Corporation,
incorporated major software market segments, including
operating systems and consumer software and local market
software. They discovered that while software costing
$81bn (£38bn) was installed onto computers around the
world, only $51bn (£23bn) was actually purchased and
installed legally.
The USA and Canada who
collectively are the most honest when it comes to
purchasing software show a software piracy rate of 23%
whilst the worst offenders are within the Eastern European
countries, where piracy levels are an incredible 71%. It's
difficult to draw any comparisons from previous years data
as this is the first year the study has been out-sourced
to an independent company and takes in a wider spectrum of
software than the previous studies conducted in-house by
the BSA. As well as counting the number of illegally
produced software programs installed on systems, the study
also includes software for where an insufficient number of
site licenses have been purchased.
“Software piracy
continues to be a major challenge for economies
worldwide,” said Robert Holleyman, president and CEO of
BSA. “From Algeria to New Zealand, Canada to China,
piracy deprives local governments of tax revenue, costs
jobs throughout the technology supply chain and cripples
the local, in-country software industry.”
Mr Holleyman went on to
say, that the IDC study reflects a logical evolution in
BSA’s decade-long effort to measure piracy in the global
economy. Its scope was expanded to account more accurately
for trends such as the growth of local software markets
worldwide and the acceleration of Internet piracy.
For its analysis, IDC drew
upon its worldwide data for software and hardware
shipments, conducted more than 5,600 interviews in 15
countries, and used its in-country analysts around the
globe to evaluate local market conditions. IDC identified
the piracy rate and dollar losses by utilizing proprietary
IDC models for PC, software and license shipments by all
industry vendors in 86 countries.
The study found that the
size of a regional software market is the critical link
between piracy rates and actual dollars lost. For
instance, 91 percent of software installed in the Ukraine
in 2003 was pirated, as compared to 30 percent in the U.K.
But dollar losses in the U.K. ($1.6 bn) were about 17
times higher than those in the Ukraine ($92.1m). This
difference is attributed to a much larger total PC
software market in the U.K. than in the Ukraine.
“A number of factors
contribute to the regional differences in piracy,
including local-market size, the availability of pirated
software, the strength of copyright laws, and cultural
differences regarding intellectual property rights,”
said John Gantz, Chief Research Officer at IDC.
“Unfortunately, we found that high market growth regions
also tend to be high piracy regions, such as China, India
and Russia. If the piracy rate in emerging markets –
where people are rapidly integrating computers into their
lives and businesses – does not drop, the worldwide
piracy rate will continue to increase.”
“The fight for strong
intellectual property protection and respect for
copyrighted works spans the globe, and there is much work
to be done,” Mr Holleyman said. “BSA will continue to
work with governments to enact policies to protect
software intellectual property as well as implement
programs to raise business and consumer awareness about
the importance of copyright protection for creative works.
Lowering the piracy rate will stimulate local economic
activity, generate government revenue, create job growth
and cultivate future innovation.”
Countries with Highest
Piracy Rate:
- Vietnam 92%
- China 92%
- Ukraine 91%
- Indonesia 88%
- Zimbabwe 87%
- Russia 87%
- Algeria 84%
- Nigeria 84%
- Pakistan 83%
- Paraguay 83%
Countries with Lowest
Piracy Rate
- United States 22%
- New Zealand 23%
- Denmark 26%
- Sweden 27%
- Austria 27%
- United Kingdom 29%
- Japan 29%
- Belgium 29%
- Germany 30%
- Switzerland 31%
Related links:
http://www.bsa.org/
http://www.idc.com/
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About
The Author
Robert
Palmer is CEO of deskNET Communications (http://www.desknet.co.uk)
- providing webmasters and e-commerce with
a more successful alternative to opt-in
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bob@desknet.co.uk |
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