Comments on: Study: Software piracy costs $34 billion
Losses worldwide are up $1.6 billion from 2004, IDC finds. About one out of every three software copies is pirated.
Losses worldwide are up $1.6 billion from 2004, IDC finds. About one out of every three software copies is pirated.
January 8, 2010 10:02 AM PST
January 8, 2010 9:08 AM PST
January 8, 2010 7:35 AM PST
Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.
More feeds available in our RSS feed index.
Related quotes
What type of statement is that? "...cost 34 billion" This is a very misleading statement because it implies that every pirated software would be bought which there is NO evidence for.
I am not supporting pirating software in any way and I believe in punishing people who do pirate and use pirated software.
But statements like this are not the way to get ride of it.
IDC, do your homework first. Then tell us the real loss from pirated software instead of stipulating and releasing numbers that are missleading and does not answer any question in regards to this great prioblem.
-ok
The most common falacy in these reports: Any pirated copy of software represents a loss of sales exactly equal to the package's MSRP.
If teenager Joey installs a second copy of his Unreal Tournament game on his brother's computer to see if it runs, most piracy reports count that as $60 in lost sales, nevermind that the going legal street price for Unreal is $10.
I base that on the many people I know who are doing without either legitimate or pirated copies because they can't afford or are unwilling to pay the unrealistic prices. Hundreds of dollars for MS Office might not seem high to a major corporation but it is outrageous to those of us who want quality software, but only have occasional use for it.
Yeah, piracy is wrong and should be stopped, but monopolization and Price gouging are wrong too, yet the monopolies have more money to spend combatting piracy.
Further, in churning out these clones and copies, they would be shipping a minimum of at least 1000 full standard size shipping containers per month around the world by volume alone. Further selling it in to a retail network, that would be approximately 20% the size of Walmart's! Thus all pirates would have a very high visible street profile!
If converted to internet data usage,absolutely no bandwith would be available anywhere for any user of the some 700 million home and business together with all plain vanilla international telephone users at the same time!
Also given the values claimed, they should also by rights, reflect in world wide government siezure of counterfit and illicit goods value!
As Prince Hamlet would say "O day and night, but this is wondrous strange!"
Sadly, with these wondrous statistic's, what a pity they cannot take my dog for walks on cold winter days!
Caveat Emptor!
- This Appears Wildly Inflated
- by R. U. Sirius May 23, 2006 4:54 PM PDT
- Where did they get these numbers? I have a hard time believing that if all piracy ended tomorrow that suddenly software makers would earn $34 BILLION more dollars.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
-
- doubtful percentages too
- by kabweza April 3, 2007 11:15 PM PDT
- in Zimbabwe, and inclined to doubt that we top the list. There's definitely not that much piracy around to talk about.
- Like this
-
(11 Comments)Also if this "study" is really just a Trojan Horse meant to gain acceptance of rootkit DRM, I'll wager we see a large uptick in the use of Open Source applications.