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    Home Cybersecurity
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    Microsoft (Tries to) Shoot Pirates Out of the Channel Waters

    Written by

    Lisa Vaas
    Published February 9, 2006
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      So, you got a bargain. You got Windows software for a song. What difference does a little piracy make? Microsoft has plenty of money, right?

      Maybe so, but every piece of pirated software makes a lot of difference to the little guys—to channel players like Joe Stopski.

      “[The] perception in the past was its strictly a Microsoft-centric problem,” Stopski said. “But what happens with companies such as ours, its not just the Microsoft part [of the sale] that you lose. You go in and are working with other competitive partners out there, and all it takes is one using pirated software. Its not just one piece of software you lose—you end up losing the total deal, the $150,000 deal.”

      Stopski is the vice president of business development at Fusion Microsystems, an OEM. Hes been sitting on Microsofts Partner Advisory Council to address some of the piracy pain that eventually culminated in the WGA (Windows Genuine Advantage) program, a non-piracy program that now requires customers to download an ActiveX control that checks the authenticity of their Windows software before allowing them to upgrade.

      Microsoft made the WGA, which was once voluntary, mandatory last year.

      Since then, the company has made it clear it wasnt joking. Most recently, Microsoft in December filed charges against 10 parties who allegedly violated its MAPS (Microsoft Action Pack Subscriptions).

      MAPS is a means for partners to obtain heavily discounted Microsoft software, but the software must only be used for internal testing and development and may not be deployed on product systems or resold.

      Even with the WGA in place and charges being filed against alleged MAPS misuse, however, the going is rough for channel players.

      Microsoft Director of License Compliance Cori Hartje refers to estimates from the Business Software Alliance that 35 percent of all software bought today is counterfeit.

      In plain paycheck-speak, that means that anybody in the industry who comes to work five days a week is only getting paid for three.

      “We want to make sure we protect and help OEM system builders and partners, because its hard to compete,” Hartje said.

      “Theres a small margin in systems. If somebody down the street is selling a counterfeit Windows system and youre selling legitimate software, its very hard to compete.”

      Analysts back Microsoft up on this one.

      “Piracy is a huge problem, and its certainly much more prevalent in some parts of the world than it is in others,” said Julie Giera, an analyst for Forrester Research.

      “As companies expand globally, especially into Asia-Pacific, any of the OEMs and resellers are finding it very difficult to compete, because this issue of piracy, or lack of IP protection or lax IP protection, is really significant.”

      Not only does piracy undercut OEM and reseller revenue, Giera pointed out; it also affects the entire supply chain, since most OEMs and resellers provide a set of value-added services, from support to consulting to tools, not to mention relationships with other resellers and partners.

      According to a study done by IDC, counterfeit software made up 53 percent of software installed in Asia-Pacific in 2003; in Eastern Europe, the piracy rate was 71 percent; and in Latin American countries the rate averaged 63 percent. Indeed, throughout the world, piracy rates are high.

      Thats not to say its not going on in the United States—IDC estimated a 23 percent piracy rate for installed software for the same time frame.

      But whereas in the past anybody could make copies of Microsoft with a CD duplicator for just pennies for the disk, enhanced keycodes and the WGA program have made it much harder to activate counterfeit products.

      Thats a good thing. Still, there are issues to iron out.

      Editors Note: This story was updated to correct the source of estimate on piracy rates as coming from the Business Software Alliance and to correct a statement about the origins of piracy.

      /zimages/3/28571.gifRead the full story on The Channel Insider: Microsoft (Tries to) Shoot Pirates Out of the Channel Waters

      /zimages/3/28571.gifCheck out eWEEK.coms for Microsoft and Windows news, views and analysis.

      Lisa Vaas
      Lisa Vaas
      Lisa Vaas is News Editor/Operations for eWEEK.com and also serves as editor of the Database topic center. She has focused on customer relationship management technology, IT salaries and careers, effects of the H1-B visa on the technology workforce, wireless technology, security, and, most recently, databases and the technologies that touch upon them. Her articles have appeared in eWEEK's print edition, on eWEEK.com, and in the startup IT magazine PC Connection.

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