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Piracy kickstarted Romanian software industry
Information Technology News
Piracy kickstarted Romanian software industry | Piracy kickstarted Romanian software industry |
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| by Stephen Withers | |
| Monday, 05 February 2007 | |
Pirated software - especially from Microsoft - kickstarted the Romanian software industry, according to President Traian Basescu.Featured Whitepaper
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What's remarkable is that he said this in front of Bill Gates at the opening of Microsoft's global technical centre in Bucharest. Gates apparently ignored the remark. It is not surprising to hear that young people in a nation with relatively low incomes have been using pirated software, and it can be argued that such behaviour actually benefits large vendors: no loss of sales occurs if the people involved would not have been able to afford legitimate copies, there is pressure on them to 'go legit' as they enter the workforce (especially when working in software development), and the vendor gains from increased mindshare. In recent years, Linux would have been the obvious alternative to pirated software for the young Romanians. What do you think Microsoft would have preferred - a Romanian software industry built on experience gained on Linux or on pirated Microsoft products? That said, software vendors can't be seen to be going soft on piracy for fear of weakening their positions in developed markets. The surprising thing is that a senior politician was so unapologetic about piracy. The country is one of the leading nations in eastern Europe in terms of IT, due at least in part to government policies dating back to the 1970s. Romania's IT culture also has a reputation for producing hackers. A recent example was the December 2006 US grand jury indictment of Victor Faur, alleged leader of a group that hacked a number of computers at the US Naval Observatory, Jet Propulsion Laboratory and other federal institutions. He is also being prosecuted in Romania, which has led Eastern European nations in the introduction of anti-hacking laws. Such laws probably also helped the development of Romania's offshoring industry.{moscomment} |
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