Russia attacks Microsoft licensing costs

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The Russian government has hit out at Microsoft, claiming the software giant's overly strict and costly licensing regime is to blame for the high rates of consumer piracy in the country.

Russia is in the Business Software Alliance's top 10 list of worst offending countries for counterfeit software, and deputy Russian IT minister, Dmitry Milovantsev, admitted in a briefing in Moscow last week that unlicensed software is a "very serious problem" for the country.

He said the low average income of people in Russia is one of the factors in the relatively widespread use of cheaper unlicensed copies of software, but he also laid some of the blame on the behaviour of the large software vendors for their restrictive and expensive licensing policies.

In particular he singled out Microsoft for its policy of not allowing partners to sell computers without copies of Windows pre-installed in Russia.

He said: "If you want to install Linux you have to erase Microsoft and that increases the cost of each computer by $50. [With] one that already has Windows installed on it, and you want to use open source, you have to install the operating system."

Milovantsev said law enforcement efforts should be focused not on the individuals caught using fake software but the criminals manufacturing it.

He said: "We are constantly fighting against unlicensed use of software but we need to fight not with the consumers, but those who develop the software."

With Russia stepping up its bid to compete in the international IT outsourcing market and attract business to the country, Milovantsev maintained it has a "very strict and solid" position when it comes to industrial intellectual property rights.

The problem of unlicensed software in Russia has been highlighted in recent weeks by the case of a teacher accused of using unlicensed copies of Microsoft Windows and Office software on 12 classroom PCs.

The case attracted the attention of current Russian president, Vladimir Putin, and former leader Mikhail Gorbachev, who called for the charges to be dropped. And this week the Russian courts indeed dismissed the prosecution calls for the teacher to be fined and rejected the case as "trivial".

Talkback

M$ should not be allowed to decide what OS you put on a computer.
That choice should be up to the consumer. Why should you pay extra for something you aren't going to use?

ator1940 19 February, 2007 14:20
Reply

Microsoft is more concerned with its POPULARITY than the QUALITY of its operating systems. There are so many bus in each of windows, whether it is XP or Vista, that it can't stand tall in front of open source coding operating systems, as Linux and Unix, and this is the reason it is asking for more rates, i.e. &50, to sell its computers without windows. If Microsoft has to gain popularity, it should make schools, cafes, education related institutes to take use of pirated windows. In <a href="http://find.com/countries/russia"> Russia </a>, people know how to crack windows and they are doing it at large. If Russia has to grow its outsourcing market, it has to make some amendments in its law. Piracy is not the solution for cheaper OS to Russia, but to get better results Russia need to avert to Linux and they know it.

pss_seh 29 January, 2009 01:27
Reply

This really is a most excellent point. EU take note!

Moley 29 January, 2009 14:28
Reply

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