Study finds global piracy rates hold fast at 35%, Russian and Chinese scallawags belay a bit

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The fourth annual Global Piracy Study, conducted by tech market research company IDC on behalf of the Business Software Alliance, was released this morning. The researchers estimate that again this year, 35% of all software on PCs worldwide is pirated. This is despite claimed advances in legitimate sales in traditional problem areas like China, where the government's decision to license operating systems and other software is uses on state-owned PCs has resulted in a 10% drop in three years (a drop from 92% to 82%, but still). Other developing markets, though, seem to be taking up the slack. Nearly one third of countries surveyed has piracy rates topping 75%, and while developing markets account for fully 30% of global PC sales, they only account for 10% of software revenue.
Perhaps the most surprising finding was that, despite the world's lowest piracy rate--21%--the estimated value of pirated software in the US is the highest on the list. IDC estimates that the US accounts for US$7.3bn in piracy losses. That raises a red flag in my mind: are we really buying (or not) that much more software than other countries, or are we getting ripped off paying for software that sells for less elsewhere?
Even taken with the XXL grain of salt BSA funding requires, these are big numbers.Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Tech groups support new cybersecurity bill

(InfoWorld) - A tech trade group and a leading cybersecurity vendor applauded new legislation introduced in the U.S. Congress that would broaden penalties for cybercrime, including first-time penalties for botnet attacks.
The Cyber Security Enhancement Act, introduced Monday, would create for the first time criminal penalties for botnet attacks often used to aid identity theft, denial-of-service attacks, and the spread of spam and spyware. Botnets are groups of compromised computers that hackers can control remotely.
The bill, introduced by Representatives Adam Schiff, a California Democrat, and Steve Chabot, an Ohio Republican, would also allow prosecutors to pursue racketeering charges against cybercriminal groups, would expand sentencing guidelines for cybercrime by allowing the forfeiture of property used to commit the crime, and would add $30 million a year to the budgets of federal agencies fighting cybercrime.
The Business Software Alliance (BSA), a trade group, and Symantec, a security vendor, both offered support for the legislation. BSA and other tech trade groups have pushed Congress to pass tougher cybersecurity legislation, and BSA said its member company CEOs will push for passage of the bill when they meet in Washington, D.C., in June.
"For too long. cyber criminals have taken advantage of legal blind spots and an under-resourced law enforcement community to brazenly threaten online confidence and security," BSA President and CEO Robert Holleyman said in a statement. "This legislation will give law enforcement updated and improved tools to combat what has become a growing, organized criminal enterprise."
Symantec, in a statement, cheered the cosponsors effort to target botnets. The sophistication of cybercrimes, particularly botnets, "far outstrips the laws on the books," said John Thompson, the company's chairman and CEO. The bill shows Congress is "truly serious" about combating cybercrime, he added.
The bill would also broaden the definition of electronic data theft related to interstate or foreign communication, and expand the cyber extortion statute.
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