Malaysia Says Piracy (Might Be) OK for Learning 464
mkbz writes "a Malaysian newspaper published a story quoting Malaysia's Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Minister, Muhyiddin Yassin, who condemned the use of pirated software for business, but also said they may turn a blind eye to piracy when it comes to education: "But for educational purposes and to encourage computer usage, we may consider allowing schools and social organisations to use pirated software." is learning more important than copyright enforcement? could each of the pirated works found in schools be written off as donations? how can this benefit both the people AND the software makers? Read the full article here."
Good for them! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Good for them! (Score:2)
In this case, you would potentially have machines that are being double-charged (or if they're runng, say, Linux - overcharged) at no risk of future sales. After all, the educational package included staples such as Office.
Piracy vs. Education? (Score:5, Interesting)
A lot of software, though... you don't really need that commercial version, you can get something free, especially in educational institutions. If all you need is office software for writing papers, then get Linux and OpenOffice, don't pirate copies of Microsoft software.
Maybe this should be common sense, but it seems like common sense really isn't all that common, especially when it comes to intellectual property issues.
Fair Use? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Fair Use? (Score:2)
Agreed.
WWTJD? (What would Thomas Jefferson do). He'd support this as valid fair use for sure, though obviously current law has deviated from his original ideals.
Re:Fair Use at for profit schools? (Score:2, Interesting)
Does it make any difference that in the process of making money they might also be teaching students
Money is plentiful ! (Score:2)
You sez:
"
Alas, someone who never set foot on Malaysia has the impression that Malaysia's schools has no money.
On the contrary, the money for the schools are PLENTIFUL ! Just last week, there was a new "bill" authorizing RM 5 Billion (almost 1.3 Billion) for the schools' computer project alone.
And there were, and will be, lots of other "Billion RM bills" for the schools.
The only problem in Malaysia is, the money were squandered by the officials - in other word, massive and rampant corruptions.
If there's no corruption in Malaysia, there is NO NEED for any "Piracy is Okay for Educational Purpose" thing.
I hope the BSA in Malaysia will spearhead the anti-corruption move now, that one of Malaysia's cabinet member has given his go-ahead for software piracy.
Re:Money is plentiful ! (Score:2)
Re:Piracy vs. Education? (Score:2)
So, you're saying you would do it, but that it's not OK. Wow, a thousand ethics philosophers are spinning in their graves, and many of them aren't even dead yet.
Educational use only (Score:5, Funny)
All files contained in this ftp are for EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY and must be deleted within 24 hours. No members of any law enforcement or governmental agency or anyone affiliated with stated agencies are allowed, and you must disconnect now.
Re:Educational use only (Score:2)
Re:Educational use only (Score:2)
Self-importance (Score:4, Insightful)
IP infringement is not theft (Score:2)
& Criminal legislation in regard to IP in the remaining countries is relatively new, since about 25 years ago.
Say with trademarks, until then you could sell fake fashion label stuff (fake Adidas Romes in the 70's) quite legally as far as the crimes act was concerned. Although Adidas could sue you for trademark infringement in the civil court. Plus the police could prosecute you for fraud if you did not inform your customers that the shoes were fakes.
It's due to corporate lobbying, about 25 years ago, that Copyright/trademark law also entered the criminal codes in the US & later elseware.
Re:Self-importance (Score:2)
It depend on the software. I have to use MATLAB for some projects for school. I could use in the labs but I would much rather code at home. If I only use it for school and delete when the semester is over I have no problem downloading a cracked copy on KaZaA lite.
Re:Self-importance (Score:4, Interesting)
Nobody's saying "I'm poor so I have the right to steal it." What people are saying is "I need to know how to use these things in order to succeed in life, but there's no outlet to let me do it affordably."
I'm a Lightwave animator. When I started using it, it cost $2,500. You cannot get a job using Lightwave unless you know how to use Lightwave. Here's the thing though, LW's not about pushing buttons, it's about being an artist who understands his/her medium. School can teach me how to cut clay, but it cannot teach me to be a scupltor.
The simple fact of the matter is that in order to use any 3D App, you have to be intimately familiar with it. Without a job, there's no way I can pay $2,500 to buy the software. (Plus that's really risky, what if you're better off with Maya?)
The resort is to 'acquire' the software. Is it right? No, it's piracy. Should Newtek do something about it if they know you have it? Yes they should, otherwise the floodgates open to people being able to legitimatley use LW without paying for it. Should Newtek look the other way? Oh absolutely.
3D Apps are unusual software because you can make a good living knowing how to use it. I learned how to use Lightwave, and now I have a job where I use it extensively. Not only has my company purchased a full license plus 2 upgrades, but now I have my own copy I paid full price for. My 'piracy' 6 years ago earned Newtek 2 full licenses, 2 upgrade licenses, and repeat business from me in the future.
One day, the licensing will be figured out such that it's okay to use unauthorized copies of software for educational use. Until it is, yes it is wrong. But there's a difference between being legally wrong and being ethically wrong. Newtek profited off me being legally wrong, but ethically right.
Re:Self-importance (Score:3, Insightful)
Personally, I'd rather not take that risk. Life's too short -- software authors have the right to demand whatever sum they want for their product, and capitalism should ensure that I can vote with my wallet. And I do exactly that: I get everything I need done with the free software I have.
On the other hand, I think the attitude that pirating software isn't stealing is a bit silly. It reminds me of Dr. Shipman, a UK serial killer who was recently imprisoned for dozens of life sentences. He killed only elderly people; does the fact that these elderly people were going to die in a few years anyway matter? No. He's still a murderer. And you're still a criminal.
Re:Self-importance (Score:2)
I can understand you not respecting my decision. I hope you can at least see that I made the most of my situation. Both Newtek and I ultimately benefitted from it, but that didn't happen without LOTS of work on my end. I had to impress my employer in order to get hired. I had to prove to them that it was worth spending $2,500 for me to get the software. I had to demonstrate to them that the upgrades were worth the $500 price tag each time around.
Do all people who get unauthorized software go that far? I doubt it. As I said, I'm not denying it's wrong.
Cheers.
Self-importance indeed (Score:2)
By the way, what great propriatory software do you know of that you would replace Linux with if you could afford to? Let me assure you that money has nothing to do with my abandonment of M$ junk. Me thinks I smell a troll looking for someone to justify "stealing" or coppying M$ O$.
Training people to use M$ toys is a bad thing to do. The API, formats, and the system itself are all unstable. The time spent learning little left hand tricks would be better spent learning something real or more stable, like good comunity supported free code. The only thing worse than encouraging people to do study M$ trash is paying the M$ tax to do it.
Sorry if that sounds a little hard on Microsoft, but they broke my trust a long time ago. Far from assuring the world that they would mend their ways, they have justified their behavior and gone on to such abuses that the federal government noticed. Never deal with dishonest people. Free yourself from M$ today.
Re:Self-importance (Score:4, Interesting)
Good point. How about...
Re:Self-importance (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Self-importance (Score:2)
Re:Self-importance (Score:2)
Visio?? Smart Draw?? Try Dia!! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Self-importance (Score:2)
Also, I might add on your MS Office rant. I think that with Microsoft potentially pulling out of Mac support, you might see a more open Office format very soon. There will still be certain proprietary bits, but more and more it seems Office users are not using the new wiz-bang features incorporated into the new Office releases. I foresee Microsoft being pressured from all ends to open their Office formats once it is a Windows only product. It's a lot easier for Apple to drum up PR in this respect than it is for the open source community. Hopefully the Apple/Sun juggernaut that's forming in the Office field will work towards the common good.
Either way we're in for better
Proprietary software without open source equivs (Score:2)
Second, if more people posted
Third, do we _really_ need all of this stuff? If you're just starting out, do you need all of the whizbang features of Photoshop? Do we really need the macro capabilities of Word documents? Some people do. Most don't.
Sometimes we use software features to cover up our own lack of skills, and that's why people feel they have to go for the biggest, most featureful pieces of software - because they don't want to face the fact that they can't hack it with tools that don't have whizbang feature #42.
Sometimes we use software to make life more convenient for us. We already know how to do those funky things, but some tools make them easier to do than others. The more people use open source programs (maybe even contributing to them!), the better open source programs can be. It's just a matter of evolving software until it does what we want. Now some people can't take that, so they'll just stay with proprietary, expensive software - a dead end as far as they're concerned - but some people have the patience to work with and improve open source software. =)
Ah, but what about companies?
Why would the industry hire some open source free-as-in-speech-_and_-beer- geek instead of someone who cut his or her teeth on pirated copies of the software that the company uses (perhaps even legitimately)?
At first glance it seems that committing to open source as students penalizes us when we get into the industry and we're expected to know how to deal with MS SQL Server and stuff like that. We'd have to learn on the job - and that's valuable time! We'd have to learn how to do Photoshop and Flash and things like that!
But it's not as simple as that. While the proprietary software pirate might be familiar with the ins and outs of the software he or she used, there aer other things to consider. The open source geek would have demonstrated resourcefulness and ethics. Maybe the open source geek would be able to help the company save more money. At the very least, the open source geek would be able to adapt to the 'far superior' closed source proprietary tools that the company uses, and upgrading from an okay tool to a great tool is easier than going from a great tool to an okay tool.
And dare I mention that no one is being forced to be a graphic designer? (Okay, maybe some people are, but...)
If we tell people that piracy is okay, what we're teaching people is that they can ignore their conscience in order to earn the kind of money they want. Yes, some software companies set ridiculous prices for their software - prices far out of a school or student's budget. Yes, some companies are downright mean. That's no excuse. Do the right thing.
You always have a choice.
Re:Proprietary software without open source equivs (Score:3, Insightful)
You're forgetting that most people don't really even know what a file format IS.
Why do you think Microsoft no longer displays file extensions on files? Such things thoroughly confuse a large number of users. When you write something on paper it's not in a different "format", so formats don't fit into their paradigm of how documents should be. This is why you often find users trying to open documents in the wrong program.
Nobody really chooses
Talking about the virtues of formats like rtf and html won't make them prevalent. Only if they are the default format will they become prevalent.
Re:Self-importance (Score:4, Insightful)
You don't think that someone that used AbiWord in school couldn't figure out Word? Sure there are large differences between the two, but there are many differences between each version of Office as well. People can adapt and learn nuances of software relatively quickly. Schools should be teaching concepts and let the students apply them to what they use in the workplace.
Re:Improving future (was:Self-importance) (Score:3, Insightful)
So do you return the software when you are finished?
There is no comparison between stealing a car in a life threatening situation and stealing software. That's about the lamest analogy I've ever heard.
There is never an excuse to steal. Period. Justifying and rationalizing it because you claim it fulfils a *need* of yours is just egocentric and self-serving.
You don't *need* the software. You *want* the software. I agree that there is not necessarily a monetary loss involved in illegally copying software.
No 15 year old *needs* PhotoShop. No 15 year old *needs* MS Office. They want. And taking what one wants without regard for the law is called - gasp - theft.
If you want to protest the current state of the industry through theft, fine. But call a spade a spade and be prepared to pay the piper when he comes calling. Stop attempting - poorly - to justify your illegal actions through some amoral viewpoint you hold. Your morals and mine are irrelevant. It's the law.
If you don't like the law. Change it.
Re:i call bullshit (Score:2)
if you don't get paid for your product, you're still out the money and can't pay your staff.
Interesting (Score:2)
I'm sorry for that last comment, I had a moment of temporary insanity. Bad Malaysia. Bad. We here in the U.S. should extend our copyright terms another 90 years in retalitation!
Let's follow the logic, shall we? (Score:5, Insightful)
Tool B costs 1500 dollars and has a complex registration system that involves connecting to a registration server. (Yes, high-end tools do this.) University graphical art programs would rather use Tool C which costs $150 and a 'normal' registration system so that they can install it on more than one workstation. (1st instance of 'piracy)
Artist D knows 3d animation and modelling concepts. He's even spent a few hundred dollars on software. He is capable of doing the job for Company A, but doesn't know the tool. There is no way he can possibly afford to buy Tool B, but he *can* download it and the crack for its registration system of alt.binaries.3dtools.yadda.yadda... (2nd Instance of Piracy)
After Artist D demonstrates his mad graphic skilzz in his interview, Company A hires Artist D, justifying licensing of a new copy of Tool B at $1500 a pop. Despite 2 instances of piracy, the makers of Tool B have gotten their money and have a user who is using their tools in the industry.
The bottom line here is that because Tool B was used in an educational sense, it makes more money than it would if it weren't being used.
There are many high-end graphical tools that you can very safely plug into the 'Tool B' slot, like 3DSMax, Maya, Lightwave, and Even Photoshop/Illustrator. Despite the fact that these high-dollar tools are the most pirated pieces of software out there with the exception of games, the companies that make them are still raking in the dough. They scream and cry about 'lost sales', but they know as well as we do that if there wasn't at least some piracy of their products, they wouldn't have nearly so many business users.
Re:Let's follow the logic, shall we? (Score:5, Informative)
Alias|Wavefront have already picked up on this with Maya - they've produced Maya Personal Learning Edition [aliaswavefront.com], which is free, and provides all the features of Maya Complete, but it saves to it's own format and has render resolution restricted (I think).
Which is a good thing, because Maya is the most painfully hard-to-use program I have ever encountered, although the results it gives are really stunning.
Re:Let's follow the logic, shall we? (Score:2)
Re:Let's follow the logic, shall we? (Score:2, Informative)
and as its just for learning it of course comes with a watermark on your renders and it saves to a closed format that the comercial version cant read (to save companies trying to skimp on licenceing fees)
Err Maya.... (Score:3, Informative)
Its an interesting point but Maya is an example of a company that has already thought of this....
Re:Let's follow the logic, shall we? (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem is, the copyright holder (of either the software or the music, whatever the case may be) doesn't allow such "trials" to take place. The way I see it, there are two reasons for this:
1. The company realizes that there may be some benefit to them by allowing the piracy to go on (such as the case mentioned above), but they feel that the costs outweigh the benefits. They may or may not be right.
2. The company (incorrectly) does not see any benefit that can come to them through piracy. This lack of information may happen to be good for them (costs > benefits) or bad for them (benefits > costs).
The issue that I have, in either of the two cases, is that we as (potential) consumers have no right to make this decision for the company. Even if we violate copyright with the best intentions ("If I like this copy of Photoshop, I'll buy 50 licenses for my company."), we have still overstepped our rights. If a company is smart, they have invested a lot of energy into determining the price for their product, including educational licensing prices. I have to believe that Microsoft knows what is best for the company better than I do.
The Catch-22 of Educational Piracy (Score:4, Interesting)
Wouldn't we be better off if businesses recognized that 3D SuperMagic Dot Net cost $5k per copy and required a testicular implant -- and thus people with the background and skills to learn the application and do the job weren't likely to walk in with those skills and should instead be exposed to a training period where they (A) learned the application in a productive fashion that helped them get productive faster?
As long as we're willing to do the industrial training businesses want ourselves, why should we expect them to hire us without work-for-pay experience?
Re:Let's follow the logic, shall we? (Score:2)
Microsoft would probably be OK with it. (Score:2, Interesting)
Didn't Bill Gates say something of that sort a few years back, like "I'd rather have them pirate our software than someone else's."
Re:Microsoft would probably be OK with it. (Score:2, Interesting)
M$ might have not cared a few years ago when MS was flush with money and sales from companies also flush with money. However this is no longer the case, and MS has been doing everything to get cash from strapped companies. In particular M$ is trying to extorts as much money from schools as possible [aaxnet.com] with only the Linux counter threat [eschoolnews.com] saving taxpayers from a multi-million dollar theft.
Piracy vs sovereignty (Score:2)
Copyright holders need to realize that countries that are sovereign from the US may make decisions that are not in their perceived best interests. The countries have a right to do that. If the company has a problem with that, they have two choices. 1) Play politics in that country 2) Not do business in that country. Unfortunately, the third option is often 3) get US to get pissed at that country (not necessarily playing fair, IMO).
I think this decision will ultimately have two outcomes, 1) Students will start to like using certain pieces of software (in the copyright holders interest) 2) Students will have less respect for copyrights (not in the copyright holders interest)
Just my
-Sean
What about this.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Make software more affordable and people will buy it instead of pirating it. Yes, you will still have people who insist on having a free lunch, but I think this would curtail the problem considerably.
AutoDesk has expressed this as well (Score:2)
It seems like many companies (at least the smart ones) have a love hate relationship with the education piracy topic. In the Java world at least, I am seeing many companies get what I believe is the best license. Free to use for development etc. but production rollout of the product or the output of a product needs a commercial use license. I know at least the Resin servlet container and Oracle's Java IDE are like that.
-Pete
As a Malaysian (Score:5, Informative)
Like the Slashdotters who have posted before me, I've resorted to using Linux and other open source alternatives instead of pirated software.
Having said that, I do understand the reasons that motivate many Malaysians and other citizens of developing and third-world countries to pirate software. One of the main reasons is that commercial software is usually sold at the equivalent price of US dollars. This means that software is almost four times as expensive in Malaysia. A US$100 software sounds relatively cheap here in the US, but in Malaysia it would cost almost RM400 (RM = Ringgit Malaysia). Many individuals, educational organizations, and so forth find such prices ridiculously high. Imagine buying 10 licenses: it would cost US$1,000 here, but it'll cost RM4,000 there. Therefore they resort to pirating software.
It would be good if software companies here in the US provide alternative prices for developing countries. It's really unrealistic to expect people to pay for software at such prices. Maybe they already do that, but I don't know.. I use Linux.
Actually it would be even better if governments advocate the use of open source software. But first, open source software must get its act up as a viable alternative for commercial software. At the moment, it's not "there" yet, for many desktop applications anyway.
Re:As a Malaysian (Score:2)
I'm sorry, but no one in this country will go hungry, should your schools ever decide to infringe our dubious copyrights.
Re:As a Malaysian (Score:2)
Re:As a Malaysian (Score:2)
Don't know about Malaysia, but in the laws of most countries copyright infringement is distinct from stealing.
Re:As a Malaysian (Score:2, Insightful)
Pirating software is still stealing software, no matter how you look at it.
No. If I steal your installation disks, I have stolen your software. But if I merely copy them (which is not real piracy[1] at all), I have stolen (deprived someone of) nothing. All I have done is illegally copied them. It may be an offence, but it isn't the offence called THEFT.
Think of a hammer. If I take your hammer, that is theft - I am depriving you of the use of your hammer. If I see some gadget you have made, and I build an exact replica - I haven't deprived you of anything. You still have your gadget exactly as it was before I copied it.
What's more, I haven't even deprived you of the money you might want me to pay for copying the gadget. Why? Because there is no guarantee that I would have bought it at the price you charge. That is why estimates of the value of illegally copied software are quite ridiculous - they assume that the demand would remain steady even if the price were severely increased (from zero for illegally copied software to hundreds or thousands of dollars if bought) ... I really doubt that demand for any software is THAT inelastic. Only some users must have a particular version - most others can use alternatives. Even MS sells Works for people who won't buy Office. That is why so many companies are now considering Linux instead of paying MS's new prices. The software market IS price-sensitive.
Illegally copying software is illegal - but the government can determine which instances of copying are legal and which are not. A government could pass a law saying that software licences do not apply to educational institutions. Of course, the governments of other countries may fight against such laws. And the country with the most significant software companies (the US) carries a lot of clout in international markets and trade forums. The Malaysian government is trying to have a bet each way, I think: Retain "strong" copyright laws as required by international trade agreements, but wink at breaches in certain local circumstances. Trouble is, the rest of the world can see them do it.
[1] When did you ever see a pirate movie where the raiders came on board and COPIED the contents of their victim's ship? (Gee, great gold chain you have here. Could I make one just like it?)
Re:As a Malaysian (Score:2)
Actually, copying software is only stealing software ONE way you look at it. To steal, you have to violate the boundaries of property and ownership. The boundaries of what are ownership is completely culturally specific. Some cultures have promoted slavery, ownership of people, such that if you freed a person who was owned, you were stealing. Most cultures today would call such ideas ludicrous, because we no longer accept that people can be owned.
You say copying software is absolutely and definitely stealing. This is only true if exclusive rights to a certain set of computer instructions can be "owned". There IS no absolute answer to that, and there can be no absolute answer to that.
Ownership is simply a mutual societal agreement. We all agree cars are owned, so we have created penalties for taking someone else's car. We don't think air is owned, so breathing air off of someone else's property does not require compensation.
Why then have some cultures chosen to consider sets of computer instructions ownable? The truth is, it's primarilly because people who thought they could profit from such an idea payed lawmakers to promote such an idea, and the idea spread. As soon as words such as "pirate" and "theft" were used, people started to get the idea that maybe software could be owned. Don't underestimate the value of labeling and defining something to change the public's view of the world.
Now we have a software "industry" that "produces" software which is "pirated" by a process of "software theft" by "hackers".
Just as easily we could have a "field of computer science" that "invents" software which is "shared" by a process of "scientific communication" by "scientists".
Those two paragraphs describe the exact same phenomenon. The first is a criminal act, the second a well respected act which benefits all of humanity. The only real difference is the labels, how we define things, and the cultural values which come from that.
As a person from Malaysia, you should respect that each culture has a right to choose its own cultural values. There's nothing inherently wrong with them choosing to think of it as sharing, education, scientific advancement, and the betterment of their society. The only think that is inherently wrong is for us to respond, "No, the way we look at it is absolute, and is the only way to see it!"
Re:As a Malaysian (Score:2)
But if they did that, there would very quickly be a large market for people to buy the Malasian edition of 3D Studio Max ($100 USD equivalent), bring it to the US, and sell it for $150, as compared to the $$$$ USD it sells for normally. Of course, the way to prevent that is.... region codes like in DVDs. Eh, sorry, what was that about free trade again? :-)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Finally, some sense. (Score:3, Interesting)
By allowing the software companies to write off software used in nonprofit institutions, they are in essence getting the same thing as if they sold the profit--only the number goes on the other end of the stack, on the debt side, and cancels a part of it. It keeps them happy (there is a simulated positive cash flow), and keeps the nonprofit organizations happy because they don't have to spend as much on licenses.
Perhaps if a large software manufactuerer were willing to announce such a policy in the United States...If you're an educational organization, catalog the number of pirated copies of Microsoft software, and send it, along with a copy of a certificate of tax excception and a signed affidavit of compliance to Microsoft Piracy...the promise being MS won't take action against you for the declared copies. Forget to declare some, and you're in trouble...
The Malaysian government has a very different stance than we have here in the US, but it seems to be one that will be beneficial for all parties involved.
Re:Finally, some sense. (Score:2)
Possibly easier to adopt but certainly not easier to support. Linux is a hassal enough when I try to support a single workstation that was going to be a Windows replacement...Plus, on new hardware, Linux seems to lag a bit or require tricks to get it working right. In addition, it's less tolerant of abuse than Windows is -- what generates kernel panics or unuseable kernels in Linux generates a bluescreen you can boot "safe mode" to repair, but Linux (to my knowledge) doesn't have a "safe mode" to fix something if you screwed it up.
Please note that I am not bashing Linux -- I see your point 100% about it being easier to roll out from a licensing standpoint, but the support nightmare and confusion of Windows users wouldn't be worth it. Linux has a ways to go before it can truely replace Windows in every environment -- but it is approaching the time when it will be a real competitor, not just a hobbiest's OS. Even in the passed year, it's come a long way.
Piracy is just as wrong in education! (Score:2, Insightful)
I expect everyone to act responsibly and condemn piracy. It is a task for government to act against software piracy. That is a way of keeping the market open and honest.
Monopolies were born from and are sustained by piracy. How do you think Microsoft software got so widespread?
The corporate world abuses the lack of government attention to software piracy in any way they see suitable to their own corporate strategy.
By not reacting against piracy, you allow a convicted monopolist to undercut competitors (Free Software in this case) on pricing. And education is a key area where finally some competition might be taking off in the near future.
But not if this minister gets away with his irresponsible deed. Maybe we should ask the BSA to react if they haven't already?
That's why educational discounts exist. (Score:4, Insightful)
Microsoft gives ridiculously deep discounts to educational institutions. I have friends who go to Indiana University. At the bookstore there, you can pick up Windows XP Professional (no activation required) for $5. The entire 5-CD version of Visual Studio
Condoning pirated software in these cases is simply unacceptable. I find it discouraging that a government would encourage educational institutions to pirate software instead of ironing out legitimate deals with software makers.
Re:That's why educational discounts exist. (Score:3, Insightful)
Usually this is because the University has a site license for the software that allows them to do this. The license is paid through tuition and student fees, so you are paying more than just the $5 media cost for the software.
Re:That's why educational discounts exist. (Score:2)
You are still paying a very high price for the software, it's just rolled into your tuition costs. It's really quite underhanded, considering you cannot opt-out.
I don't believe you (Score:2)
Here's the link. (Score:2)
More information. [indiana.edu]
Re:I don't believe you (Score:2)
Re:That's why educational discounts exist. (Score:2)
I find it encouraging that a government would put public education over corporate profits on their national agenda. This is not that far-fetched or anticapitalistic as you make it seem. In the US all corporations are chartered in the public interest - while these charters are rarely the subject of debate, at least by law corporations are supposed to operate in the public interest, and they are generally outlawed from doing things obnoxious to the public interest (e.g. polluting, selling illegal drugs, etc.). It seems a fair use exception to EULAs that allowed copying software for educational purposes would not be that unreasonable under the circumstances.
Also, I agree that corps should be encouraged to behave responsibly by giving to educational institutions. But most of the big software corporations do very little in real terms other than enough to get good P.R. for it. Your example about "ridiculously deep discounts" from MS assumes that is all they charge - the real charges for that software are levied on the educational institution in the form of large licenses. At the university where I work we have such a license to allow students and faculty to copy windows, etc. for a nominal cost above the price of media, but the institution paid for those licenses to the tune of millions. On top of it, the license is not advertised, which means that many students pay full price for the software anyway.
Perhaps a license to "pirate" is not the answer, but what is valuable here is that one country is at least raising the issue that the way we look at the relationship between software copyrights and legitimate state interests might neede to be rethought.
$5? not quite (Score:2)
This is all well and great for students who choose to use Microsoft products, but there is no opt-out, you have to pay that percentage through tuition even if you do not use it. It's bad for OSS uses, and even worse for students who doesn't own a computer.
Re:That's why educational discounts exist. (Score:2)
Microsoft gives ridiculously deep discounts to educational institutions. ... If you can't afford $5 for Windows XP, how can you afford $8 from Linux for Cheapbytes, or the bandwidth for downloading the ISOs, the CD burner and blank CDs to burn them?
Once you leave school, you cannot use the software any more. And you cannot buy the upgrade, which means that you will have to pay full retail price once you are no longer a student. And by that time, you are already ``locked in'' to the proprietary office suite/development software/operating system/etc.
And then there's always the ``freedom'' aspect of Free Software over closed, proprietary software. Far too few students concern themselves with that aspect though.
Re:Exchange rates, economics, etc. (Score:2)
We had the Dutch Guilder, which was worth almost one German Mark (DFL 1,10 =~ 1,00 DM). The Belgian Franc was only worth DFL 0,06.
This of course means that in Belgium you paid almost 20 times as many Francs for Widget A than you paid Guilders in The Netherlands.
The problem in Malaysia is that the prices of the import software products are approximately equal to their prices in e.g. the US. Since people in Malaysia (on average) make much less money than people in the US, these software products become very expensive.
The exchange rate doesn't matter here: the problem is that money is worth a lot more in countries like Malaysia.
Piracy is NOT the answer... (Score:2)
Question posed by the writeup (Score:2)
how can [piracy] benefit both the people AND the software makers?
Seems kind of unlikely, doesn't it. Perhaps if a benevolent alien race someday visits Earth and rewards the founders of those companies that allow piracy for educational purposes with a vial containing a potion of eternal youth... bet you never thought about that! (Hey, you can't prove it won't happen.)
-a
Education shouldn't be the focus. (Score:2)
Those students are going to use the software in school then go out into the workforce and use the software that they're familiar with. This means that employers are going to be using the software that most of the workforce is familiar with. And the corporations are much more likely to spend the cash on software than the starving college student is.
You're not going to make the money from the student or even the institution. You're going to make it from that corporation that will be spending the next 20 years buying upgrades. And when that graduate goes home from work, he's going to buy a copy to use at home. You'll lock that person in. To deny yourself that legacy by forcing the first purchase of a potential many, you risk losing all those subsequent sales, a foolish prospect indeed.
-Restil
A matter of public policy and license (Score:2)
In the U.S., public policy on Copyright is embodied in U.S.C. Title 18, and derives from Article I Section 8:
"To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries"
The idea of piracy is peculiar, in that it assumes that the Right in question is inalienable, rather than legislatively granted by the state. Further, it derives from the concept of individual ownership, and depends from that on a right to license use.
-
The apparent public policy in Malaysia seems to achieve the goal of promoting the Progress of Science and the useful Arts, without securing *exclusive Right*, but rather by securing *some* rights.
In fact, this is *not* beneficial to the Open Source Software movement, as such.
By ensuring that schools *and social organizations* are permitted to use the software for educational purposes, they will have established an egalatarian secondary market, where price of the software is no longer a factor. In this market, the *most fit* software wins... not the *least cost*.
One of the consequences of this must be that use of Open Source Software in such situations will decline: for all the vaunted peer review and quality, it's usability that wins in this or any market.
Familiarity will also breed commercial piracy (an area where the title "piracy" is still applicable, accoding to the article), particularly in the middle margins between educational institutions and large companies (e.g. small business started by recently graduated students).
All in all, this looks to be bad for Open Source Software advocacy, and bad for commercial software comapnies.
But good for Malaysia.
And that is the purpose of public policy in Malaysia, isn't it?
-- Terry
OK, then. (Score:2)
Vending pirates take the software for free, and then sell it to others at a reduced price. Result? The company loses X potential customers, thus reducting its revenues.
Educational pirates take the software for free, but keep it to themselves just so they can learn how to use it. They wouldn't buy it anyway, but when they get a regular/greater source of income, they may purchase a legitimate copy of the software to make up for it. Result? The company will lose 1 potential customer in the short term but probably gain a customer in the long term, thus increasing its revenues a little.
Who would YOU go after?
What a lame concept! (Score:3, Funny)
What crap! I understand that many people don't like Microsoft and are glad to screw them, but as a legal principal this makes no sense at all. What if you are a small company making educational software? How would you feel to suddenly hear governments discuss that maybe it was perfectly OK for your customers to steal your product?
Here's a more reasonable solution: Catch a big monopoly misusing their monopoly in the market with abuses that are clearly illegal, prove it in a trial, and rather than letting the monopoly choose their own punishment or threaten to break them into two monopolies, nationalize the bastards! Then you could give that software to any schools you want and still not muck with the copyright laws. The income could be used to lower taxes, and the extra layers of government mismanagement would help ensure that the smaller companies could compete!
That's a dangerous question... (Score:2)
But if copyright enforcement is more important than learning, isn't the act of learning piracy in itself? Lets say you read a book and learn the concepts it's addressing. By learning, you are copying the information to your brain, and you are capable of further infringing the owner's copyright by discussing the book with people who haven't read it.
Fair use? Nah that's just a liberal attempt to legalize piracy, like marijuana, for "educational" or "medicinal" purposes.
Suggesting the possibility that learning might be more important than copyright enforcement also leaves open the possibility that copyright enforcement may be more important than learning. And if you're still thinking about this tomorrow, I'm going to sick my lawyers on you for infringing my implied copyright.
If you don't allow it, you loose a possible market (Score:2, Interesting)
Same goes for music - how can you buy a cd without knowing you like it? Who has the money to gamble on it with the current price?
Furthermore, I play music, and I've been thinking... Imagine I make a cd. Some people will buy it (hopefully
Do I mind that those people enjoy my music? Not at all. I actually would prefer that people copy it if they can't afford it, and enjoy what I made. For free. How can I mind? If I don't allow those people to listen to my music, nobody gets anything out of it. If you really don't want or can't pay it, and like it, please, by all means, copy it. Give me at least the pleasure to know that someone likes what I do.
This is what I do too. I am a student. I download songs. The cds I really like, I have on a list. When I have money, I will pay for the cds. If I wouldn't download it, I wouldn't know it, and I would never buy it. And even if I wouldn't pay for it, maybe I pass it on to someone who does, or maybe I check out a concert of the band. Why do you make music? Only for the money?...
But, ofcourse, I am kinda leftish.
Now, this counts as much for software (I just can't explain as good as with music, because I don't really write software). You can't go to the shop and ask for something you don't know, or didn't try. So, you must try the product first. Learn it. Use it. Only then you can express your appreciation. Especially with this ridiculously high prices some programs have.
When these students graduate, they'll make money. And pay. Possibly even recommend your product. Look ahead, see it as an investment. If I would be Micro$oft, I'd give all my software away for free (except hard costs like packing and shipping) to development countries. It won't cost me a thing, because that software is made already, I don't have to do anything about it; and it's not like they will buy it anyway. That's where there's possible market growth, not in the US or Europe, those markets are pretty satisfied (that's probably why Micro$oft raises the price).
If they don't allow this 'pirating' to happen (mind, they don't really loose anything at all), free software or local companies will take the market when those countries come 'round (let's hope they do), and you've lost one of the only markets where you can still get rid of your products.
Well, at least that's my view. I wouldn't mind at all if open source philosophy in software, music etc will take over though.
Here's to rights back to consumer.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
OK to pirate? (Score:2)
Well, maybe, as a soveriegn nation has a wide responsibility to it's citizens.
BUT this is only a reasonable choice if all other avenues are exhausted, i.e. use of free software, approaching vendors for licenses that fit the particular circumstances, etc.
If Malaysia acts totally irresponsibly in this matter, what software company is going to export to Malaysia?
Simple choices. (Score:2)
2- Rip off foreign software companies, spend more money on the education itself and not the software, allowing a better workforce capable of competing with external firms to develop.
Yeah, that decision is really a hard one.
Of course there's a benefit... (Score:2, Insightful)
I benefitted by having the software on-hand to learn with, and since I became so familiar with it, and needed it for my career, I became a repeat customer of the products. Had I not done this in the first place, I'd be slinging fries (hey, my degree is in English) and Adobe, Macromedia, etc., would be out a paying customer. It became a win-win situation.
Multinationals - time to worry? (Score:2)
The multinationals lose all their power to control distribution within the country, and they can't even just deny the software to that country at all - because they can just download warez copies from other countries, that cease to be illegal the moment they cross the border of the country in question. They could try and get the country's ISP to refuse them service, but they're unlikely to accept that, especially since all those warez downloads will mean a fat payoff to the ISP for the bandwidth. The country gets a massive boost to its citizens quality of life (hey, all the fun stuff is FREE now!), and its trade gap evens out.
What would happen if some country did this? Would countries go to war over a breach of the Berne convention?
it's not "piracy" it's "fair use" (Score:2)
We, the people, have the right to decide what we protect under copyright and what falls under fair use.
Analogies between "intellectual property" and physical property are self-serving and legally inaccurate for the most part. People who say that "piracy is OK" have already given into the mindset. No, piracy is not OK, but copying should not and does not constitute "piracy" under many circumstances.
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:And exactly what are they learning here? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:And exactly what are they learning here? (Score:2)
Not very funny. If Malaysia acts up and tries to be an independent nation, Bush et Congress will courteously perform corporate bidding and punish Malaysia until it grovels.
It sort of reminds me of a case a few years ago when the U.S. actually pressured... Sweden was it?... to change its constitution in order to seal public records that contained the holy writings of L. Ron Hubbard. Seems their constitution required court records (and evidence) to be publicly available, and the Xenu story was introduced as evidence. The Boys From Hubbard took shifts keeping the material checked out at the library until the U.S. Guvmint pressured a constitutional change... for copyright or trade secret exemptions to the law, I think.
The U.S. has no compunctions about meddling with the world's laws if we don't like them. It's cool to be the New Evil Empire. All Hail!
Re:And exactly what are they learning here? (Score:2)
Re:thievery is what I call it (Score:2)
I sure wish that's the case. I'm Malaysian and my parents worked really hard just to put me through school, college, and university. The discriminatory government didn't help either, but that's a different story.
And in case you're wondering about my views on this topic, no I don't support software piracy and I think it's wrong.
Re:yes its ok (Score:2, Insightful)
Anecdote:
If you steal a Stratus from my car dealership, use it to earn money and buy a Viper, and return the Viper to me in exchange for the Stratus two years later, you've still committed a crime, whether or not the Viper is worth more and is a fair trade. Maybe I would have agreed to a deal (Stratus for Viper in two years) - but you have to give me the option, first.
-Erwos
Re:yes its ok (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:yes its ok (Score:4, Insightful)
For example, drugs are illegal, death penalty is legal, carrying a machine gun is legal in the USA. In Holland drugs are legal, most other "western" countries death penalty is illegal, machine guns in most places are illegal.
Now before you say this is stealing, it depends what you consider software to be. Is it a product or is copyright. If it is a product then by American definition there must be consumer protection against defects. Oh yeah wait, if you have bugs, tough! Therefore it is not a product, but copyright. And in copyright there is a concept such as fair use and host of other issues. And copyrights are held to different levels in different countries in different settings. Just like said here, education fine, corporate usage not!
So before you start comparing that quick lets first figure out what software really is!
Re:yes its ok (Score:3, Interesting)
It's easy to say in ignorance that companies should sell software to companies and give it free for people to learn, but they assume you'll pirate it anyway. Like Adobe said it wanted Skylarov jailed, but they didn't EXPECT it to actually happen. "Put all the software pirates in jail" is something the sales department would say (and they talk VERY loudly and forcefully). The CEO on the other hand would definitely recognise the learning effect of pirated software, but the massive cost of consulting lawyers to actually release two tiers of the product and splitting/forking the codebase to give a different free version are prohibitive. It took me 10 days to make a minor alteration to a shareware contract just to allow distribution. This is because at the end of the day every lawyer knows that a Judge can spend 8 hours debating the meaning of one word, and that your entire case will depend on the outcome.
This is why the BSA targets corporations only, they know that if they went after the public that the ACLU, FSF would bring a whole pile of trouble on their heads, and BSA's customers won't want to be associated with this so the BSA would lose its funding.
Re:yes its ok (Score:2, Interesting)
Such technology does not exist for cars, but it does for sound, video and other data. Data can be cloned endlessly, thus it has no value. So why are we artifically trying to keep something scarce that we can copy endlessly?
Re:yes its ok (Score:4, Insightful)
Stolen? No, of course not. The words "theft" and "stealing" are wrong for this situation.
I didn't buy the car from them, but they aren't missing it either.
That is true, and your point makes sense when we apply it to the cost of the physical materials and the direct labor to make the copies. The car company has obviously not lost those assets.
There is another factor, however. That is the value of the engineering. The car company spent money to create the information needed to build the car. This includes intellectual labor, like mechanical design, software, compliance with government regulations, documentation, and all kinds of other things. Someone has to pay for all this. Normally, the car company will simply add it to the sales price and everyone is happy.
With your scenario, the car company spends all that engineering money, and gets paid how? Do you expect that your neighbors will pay the cost so that you don't have to? Or do you suggest that the "rich" (eg, everyone else) pay for the engineering?
In many cases, scarcity is a major component of the "value" of an item. Making counterfeit goods reduces the value of the legitimate goods. For many cars, this is another important factor. If you make an unauthorized copy of a Ferrari, you are reducing the value of the cars owned by people who bought the legit ones.
Scarcity can also be an important factor in the value of software. Suppose I pay $1000 for a program that will do amazing things, for which that I can get consulting dollars. Part of the value in this purchase is knowing that my competitors will also have to pay $1000 before they can compete with me. Just like paying for an exclusive license or exclusive territory for something, the price I had to pay might be an important competitive advantage. I have paid for that advantage, and I do not think it is fair that some kid (who cannot afford the program) can use an unauthorized copy of the program to compete with me.
Re:yes its ok (Score:2)
You see, he's been trained as a professional corporate sycophant, people, so be careful. Very very dangerous.
He'll claim that you're only "rationalizing" no matter what valid argument you have. In effect, he shuts down any and all debate. Let's dissect it further.
Rationalizing, in its most proper form, is still a dubious psychobabble concept. If you were to apply it fairly, it would be in an example as such "the sociopath reasoned that the victim would die someday, so what is the difference if he let her live...". It means using reason in a way that stretches its definition, appearing to be reasonable when you actually aren't. This term is on shaky ground to begin with, but then Erwhos slides an earthquake underneath it.
Now, by claiming that you are rationalizing, he makes it seem that you shouldn't be taken seriously. That's right, no matter how serious you are, no matter how well founded your points, he undermines them pre-emptively. He refuses to even give them any credit, sincerity, honesty, wisdom... you don't get any of those, and he all but says he has decided before ever hearing a word out of your mouth.
In a way, it reminds me of how the religious are supposed to behave, nothing can ever disprove what they believe, and if it appears to do so the experiment can only be false.
Re:yes its ok (Score:3, Insightful)
Copyright infringement != Theft
Yes, it's illegal, but it's not theft. It's a different offense covered by a different part of the criminal code. Calling it theft equates intellectual property with physical property which is false.
Re:It is bad for the people (Score:2)
Oh pllllllluuuueeeessseee. Your killing me. What company really has the required skill set to take a OSS project and alter it to their own needs? id say relativly few.
But that true of most proprietary packages as well. A lack of local venders makes this an even bigger problem. At least with Free Software a host of local businesses can be grown to service these needs. In fact this would be a good place for the government to invest as a way to start a local economy in software services.
So they are still tied in to that proprietary system. Only now they are at the whim of a few hundred thousand coders who seem to change stuff in OSS projects at a whim (the linux 2.4 VM change...).
That was bad and it should not have been done the way it was. But I will except the point. Even then there were alternatives like the -ac line.
Something gets changed, and you can do 1 of 2 things:
1. Stick where they are and live with the older version 2. upgrade to the latest version
Kinda the same situation now isnt it?
This is also true. but because Free Software tends to stick to well documented open standards it is less likely the new version will be a must upgrade. If you do need to upgrade you have more choices in how you do it. If version lock or conflict does happen. Setting up an both does not present as large a problem.
only now the economy suffers as no one is buying software.
But lots more people will be buying software services from local vendors. This means the growth of a local industry. There are also national security advantages and economic advantages to not being dependant on far away places for your tools. There are social advantages in that local people can find jobs near there families.
I can really think of only one tool that can get into a corporate arena with any force, and thats openoffice. other tools jsut seem kinda amaturish.
I think this is a weak argument. The hammer and the screwdriver have not changed much since there invention. (at least in the modern age). With tools that can do the job, why even get on the upgrade rat race.
Dont get me wrong, i like OSS, jsut dont say "oooh piracy is advocated in the OSS arena" which is essentially waht u are saying.
No I am not saying that at all.
I am saying that making yourself (an individual or as a nation) dependent of someone else puts you at a state of lesser control.
There is a big difference between being interdependent and being completely dependent. Yes you will be interdependent but you will still have control over the software you have and can create more. You can use your resources to push projects in the direction you want them to go.
Unlicensed copying is not a problem in the Free Software world. There is no "piracy". In fact most Free Software Advocates are against unlicensed copying, it weakens the protections that protect Free Software, it removes some of the advantages, and it is constancy used as a stick to beet Free Software by calming the at Free Software does Advocate "Piracy"
Re:educate YOURSELF first, moron (Score:2)
Copyright infringement = misusing something that is legally someone else's
please explain the difference? they're two terms for what are essentially the same thing
Re:educate YOURSELF first, moron (Score:2)
No...
Stealing = taking away something that is legally someone elses, DEPRIVING THAT PERSON OF THE USE OF THEIR PROPRTY.
You can't steal an idea, or steal fire, or steal a song. You can use it, extend it, or sing it.
But you've deprived no one of property. It wasn't stolen. You are using a loaded word to semantically equate a non-harmful act with a harmful one -- a rhetorical game that works in America, sadly, since we use logic, but not reason.
Re:educate YOURSELF first, moron (Score:3, Insightful)
Which is misusing their property - using it as the owners did not intend their property to be used. Pirating software is stealing, like it or not, and it's not harmless. It's not harmless because companies spend lots of money and development time on trying to make it harder to warez - thus increasing the costs for people like me who actually pay for the software.
Re:educate YOURSELF first, moron (Score:2)
Re:In related news... (Score:2)
Re:In related news... (Score:2)