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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.games
- Path: sparky!uunet!microsoft!hexnut!glenns
- From: glenns@microsoft.com (Glenn Slayden)
- Subject: Re: Aren't you worried?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan28.190140.205@microsoft.com>
- Date: 28 Jan 93 19:01:40 GMT
- Organization: Microsoft Corporation
- References: <1993Jan6.195528.62507@cc.usu.edu> <1k2q6rINNfg9@uniwa.uwa.edu.au> <1993Jan26.150913.22228@midway.uchicago.edu>
- Lines: 47
-
- shump@tartarus.uwa.edu.au (Scott Humphries) writes:
- >There was an article in the Sydney Morning Herald a few weeks ago about
- >software piracy, and in it was the story of a father who found out that
- >his son had acquired software from bulletin boards in Australia.
- >Software like Corel Draw, Falcon 3, and DOS 6 (yes, *6*). The father
- >was shocked that this sort of software was being distributed on the
- >BBoards and proceeded to call Microsoft (especially) and the other
- >companies to inform them. They were NOT interested. And this isn't
- >copying for friends, this is bulletin board (a commercial operation, no
- >less) distribution. Don't feel bad about copying; don't worry. If
- >Microsoft et al aren't worried, why should you be?
-
- You should be worried. Microsoft *does* go after even mom and pop
- bulletin board operatins, and so do other companies. I don't know
- who he called at Microsoft, but he should have been referred to the
- Software Publishing Association Anti-piracy hotline: 1-800-955-7721.
-
- Anti-piracy is obviously one of the major charters of the SPA.
-
- szgershe@midway.uchicago.edu writes:
- >Not to enter the pirate debate or anything, but what do you expect
- >from the software companies? Are they going to bust every BBS that
- >has illegal software?
-
- Yes, if it's discovered and reported.
-
- >Imagine the court fees.
-
- Image the losses: SPA estimate for 1991: $1.2 billion.
-
- >I don't think that
- >the software companies are the ones to call in this case,
-
- Call the SPA: 1-800-955-7721
-
- >If you know the right person, even a lot of BBS's that pretend to
- >be "clean" BBS's have illegal software to give. Right now, it's
- >just the way it is. Hell, they form groups that compete with
- >each other to see how fast they can crack a game, distribute it,
- >scan the manuals, etc. Practically a "business".
-
- In my group we just recently had lawyers bring over disks which
- had been downloaded, for us to certify that they were byte-identical
- (except serial numbers) to shipping copyrighted product, and this
- was from a small, neighborhood BBS in the United States.
-
- Glenn
-