• The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
Menu
  • The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Pirates Steal $34 Billion in PC Software in 2005

    June 12, 2006 Timothy Prickett Morgan

    “Grrrr. Aaargh! Tie that scurvy dog to the yardarm!” With so many open source operating systems and office automation programs in the world these days, you might be thinking that software piracy would be a thing of the past. But not so, according to the Business Software Alliance, which estimates that some $34 billion in PC software was pirated from software makers in 2005.

    This was an increase of 5 percent compared to the amount of PC software pirated in 2004. Ironically, the rate of piracy was steady, but the amount of PC software sold increased at 5 percent, too. BSA did not say what effect that open source software had had on the piracy rate, but the advent of Linux and OpenOffice have surely been a factor. Still, one in three copies of PC software licenses are, on average, pirated, and as you might imagine, the companies that sell such software are pretty unhappy about it.

    The piracy rate (as a percentage of the total value of software sold and stolen) for PC software in the United States was 21 percent in 2005, and the U.S. market accounted for some $6.9 billion in lost revenues to software suppliers. The rate of piracy in China and Pakistan was 86 percent, and it hit 87 percent in Indonesia and 90 percent in Vietnam and Zimbabwe. The piracy rate was 36 percent across Europe, which is consistent with the 35 percent piracy rate worldwide for PC software.

    The BSA did not provide software piracy estimates for operating system, middleware, and application software on servers. But it sure would be interesting to see those numbers.

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    Tags: Tags: mtfh_rc, Volume 15, Number 24 -- June 12, 2006

    Sponsored by
    FalconStor

    Begin Your Journey to the Cloud with Hybrid Cloud Date Protection and Disaster Recovery

    FalconStor StorSafe optimizes and modernizes your IBM i on-premises and in the IBM Power Virtual Server Cloud

    FalconStor powers secure and encrypted IBM i backups on-premise and now, working with IBM, powers migration to the IBM PowerVS cloud and on-going backup to IBM cloud object storage.

    Now you can use the IBM PowerVS Cloud as your secure offsite copy and take advantage of a hybrid cloud architecture or you can migrate workloads – test & development or even production apps – to the Power VS Cloud with secure cloud-native backup, powered by FalconStor and proven IBM partners.

    Learn More

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    Admin Alert: Preparing Your i5 Shop for a Pandemic New in V5R4: OLAP Ranking Specifications

    Leave a Reply Cancel reply

TFH Volume: 15 Issue: 24

This Issue Sponsored By

    Table of Contents

    • Pirates Steal $34 Billion in PC Software in 2005
    • IBM Offers Contingency Planning Assessment Service for Pandemics
    • MKS Says Business Is Booming Enough to Give Dividends
    • Sales Up 8 Percent in the Third Quarter for SSA Global
    • IDC Projects Disk Array Capacity to Keep Exploding Through 2010
    • Pirates Steal $34 Billion in PC Software in 2005
    • Executives Complain That IT Is Broken and Can’t Keep Up
    • As I See It: Taking Care
    • Gartner Report Espouses the Virtues of i5/OS
    • The Dollars and Sense of Training Newbie RPG Programmers

    Content archive

    • The Four Hundred
    • Four Hundred Stuff
    • Four Hundred Guru

    Recent Posts

    • To Comfort The Afflicted And Afflict The Comfortable
    • How FalconStor Is Reinventing Itself, And Why IBM Noticed
    • Guru: When Procedure Driven RPG Really Works
    • Vendors Fill In The Gaps With IBM’s New MFA Solution
    • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 27, Number 27
    • With Power11, Power Systems “Go To Eleven”
    • With Subscription Price, IBM i P20 And P30 Tiers Get Bigger Bundles
    • Izzi Buys CNX, Eyes Valence Port To System Z
    • IBM i Shops “Attacking” Security Concerns, Study Shows
    • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 27, Number 26

    Subscribe

    To get news from IT Jungle sent to your inbox every week, subscribe to our newsletter.

    Pages

    • About Us
    • Contact
    • Contributors
    • Four Hundred Monitor
    • IBM i PTF Guide
    • Media Kit
    • Subscribe

    Search

    Copyright © 2025 IT Jungle