The annual global PC software piracy study from the
Business
Software Alliance (BSA), conducted by
IDC,
has reported that over a third of all packaged software installed on PCs
worldwide in 2005 was illegal.
But the report noted improvements in a number of markets suggesting that
education, enforcement and policy efforts are beginning to pay off in emerging
economies such as China, Russia, India, Central/Eastern Europe and the Middle
East & Africa.
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"The progress made in reducing PC software piracy in several emerging markets
provides some encouragement, but much more needs to be done," said BSA president
and chief executive Robert Holleyman.
"With more than one in three copies of PC software obtained illegally, piracy
continues to threaten the future of software innovation, resulting in lost jobs
and tax revenues."
Piracy rates decreased "moderately" in more than half of the 97 countries
covered in this year's study, and increased in only 19 countries.
The global rate remained unchanged from 2004 to 2005 as large developed
markets like the US, Western Europe, Japan and a handful of Asian countries
continued to dominate the software market, while their combined piracy rate
hardly moved.
Some positive changes were seen in the rapidly developing countries of
Russia, India and China.
Russia saw a four point drop in its PC software piracy rate, while India's
piracy rate declined two points. China, with one of the fastest growing IT
markets in the world, dropped four points between 2004 and 2005.
"This is the second year in a row with a decrease in the PC software piracy
rate in China. This is particularly significant, considering the vast PC growth
taking place in the Chinese IT market," said Holleyman.
Global losses from software piracy were estimated at $34bn in 2005, an
increase of $1.6bn over the previous year.
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