PC software piracy in India drops to 65%
May 11, 2010 17:46 IST
More people are opting for licensed software, bringing down piracy levels to 65 
per cent in 2009 from 68 per cent a year ago, a BSA-IDC report on Tuesday said.

While the PC software piracy rate, or installations of unlicensed software on 
personal computers (PCs), has fallen, the dollar losses caused by software 
piracy continued to remain in the $2 billion range, it said.

"About 40 per cent of the desktop PCs sold in India [ Images ] continue to be 
white boxes (assembled), but the drop in piracy levels shows that people are 
now opting for legal and licensed software over the pirated ones," BSA 
Vice-President and Regional Director, Asia-Pacific, Jeffrey Hardee told 
reporters over a conference call.

The report, in its seventh edition, tracks PC software piracy rates in more 
than 100 economies worldwide.

The IDC study found that even though piracy levels remain high, anti-piracy 
education and enforcement campaigns spearheaded by the software industry, 
governments and law enforcement agencies have made commendable progress in 
bringing down piracy rates.

"In India, we have made significant progress in further bringing down the 
piracy rates as compared to 2008. However, our annual commercial value of 
unlicensed software still stands at a whopping $2.03 billion," Keshav S Dhakad, 
chair of the India BSA committee, said.

BSA has taken up various initiatives with the state governments of Karnataka [ 
Images ] and Maharashtra [ Images ], as well as with FICCI, and the department 
of industrial policy and promotion, ministry of industry and commerce, and 
ministry of small and micro enterprises, toward increasing awareness about 
benefits of using licensed software and protecting indigenous IT innovation 
opportunity.

Global PC software piracy has dropped in 54 of the 111 countries studied, but 
the worldwide piracy rate has risen from 41 per cent in 2008 to 43 per cent in 
2009, due to exponential growth in PC software deployments in emerging 
economies.

The United States, Japan [ Images ], and Luxembourg continue to hold the lowest 
piracy rates of economies surveyed (20, 21, and 21 per cent, respectively), 
while Asia-Pacific economies with the highest piracy rates include Sri Lanka [ 
Images ], Indonesia, Vietnam and Pakistan.

The 2009 BSA/IDC Global PC Software Piracy Study covers piracy of all software 
that runs on PCs, including desktops, laptops, and ultra-portables, including 
netbooks. This includes operating systems, systems software, such as databases 
and security packages, and applications software.

http://business.rediff.com/report/2010/may/11/tech-pc-software-piracy-in-india-drops-to-65-percent.htm

Vikas Kapoor,
MSN Id:[email protected], Yahoo&Skype Id: dl_vikas,
Mobile: (+91) 9891098137.


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