Aussie Parliamentary Inquiry Into Software Pricing Announced 259
New submitter elphie007 writes "Australian consumers may finally see the end of being overcharged for software simply because they live outside the U.S. Minister for Communications Senator Stephen Conroy (champion of Australia's National Broadband Network) is reported to be finalizing the terms of reference for a parliamentary inquiry into software pricing in Australia. Last week, Adobe announced Australians would be charged up to $1,600 more for Adobe CS6. With the ongoing strength of the Aussie dollar against the U.S. dollar, Australians should really be paying less, not more for software & music purchased online."
To be fair (Score:5, Funny)
Re:To be fair (Score:5, Funny)
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All you have to do is script 180 degree rotation on every page.
And insert "cunt" wherever appropriate^Wnecessary.
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All you have to do is script 180 degree rotation on every page.
And insert "cunt" wherever appropriate^Wnecessary.
The amount of extra paper, because of this change, is probably where the extra cost comes from.
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Just rename the UK English...
It's not like the US doesn't know Engli...
Nevermind....
Re:To be fair (Score:5, Informative)
The US price is 1300. Even including GST, that is in nearly double the US price. Considering the Aus $ trade for $1.04 USD, that's outrageous even including currency exchange costs.
Re:To be fair (Score:4, Informative)
1300 is the price for the absolute cheapest version of Adobe CS6. The article says "UP TO" so we can assume that is for the most expensive version. The Adobe site says the Master Collection is $2600:
http://www.adobe.com/products/creativesuite.html?kw=p&sdid=JRSIM&skwcid=TC [adobe.com]|22178|adobe%20CS6||S|e|10550251960
Second, the article says it is "up to 1400 more", not 1600.
So 4000/2600 = 54% markup in Australia.
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US price= US$2599
Aus price= AUD$3949= US$4134
US/AUS= 2599/4134= 0.62
So not double but still a 60% increase (50% when you take into account GST)
Re:To be fair (Score:5, Insightful)
We don't want your soldiers. Take them home.
- Regards, The World.
Re:To be fair (Score:4, Informative)
That's a problem between you and your politicians.
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You and AC both have it wrong. They aren't subsidizing us, nor are we subsidizing them. We're both being anally raped by the corporations. Goods and services simply do not cost what we are being charged, even allowing for reasonable profits. Companies that have billions in liquid assets which they don't even have a use for are proof of that.
Oh - those drugs? Most of them are shit anyway. Where is the cure for cancer? Alzhiemers? Diabetes? I read an article just a few days ago, about the number of A
Re:To be fair (Score:5, Insightful)
jesus. no matter how stupid the topic is, you can find an apologist for it. Here're the rebuttal points:
1) USA is the most lawsuit happy country in the world. If the company can do business in USA, and the price covers the cost of lawsuits, then the same price will cover the price of lawsuits in Australia.
2) WTF are you smoking on development taxes? *NOBODY* pays fucking taxes on writing software, only on selling it. If you are talking about salaries of developers and so on, then shouldn't there be a *DISCOUNT* since it's so much cheaper to develop it elsewhere?!
3) I guarantee you Adobe has already figured out the taxing regulations previously, and it's fucking sunk cost. The cost of figuring out the tax regulations (as a delta against US tax regulations) do not recur yearly. If there are changes, it's the same kind of changes that happen in USA, and obviously Adobe USA can handle it, so why can't Adobe Australia?
You're full of shit.
Re:To be fair (Score:4, Informative)
Well I'll be honest. As a Canadian I know exactly what Aussies are going through, we've been dealing with it for decades and we're next to the US. It took a hell of a long time for it to change, the worst offenders were books. Seeing a list price on the back of $5.99USD and $11.99CDN with the dollar at parity broke the back of everyone on the issue. It was the same for software back about 15 years ago too. $49-59USD and $79-89CDN, until people said screw it and started ordering stuff from the US via backshop mailers who were willing to cut the price by $10.
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Don't get me started on books in Australia!
A novel here usually costs in the 20-25 AUD range. This is because there is a special book tax meant to protect Australian local publishers. It's ludicrous.
Everyone, and I do mean pretty much everyone, now orders books, electronics and computer games from overseas, usually the US or UK, because the likes of Amazon can sell you the item and ship it to you for half the price of buying local.
Re:To be fair (Score:4, Informative)
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It seems to be very variable by person. Maybe because I started my account in the UK I fall under different rules?
What they won't send me are computer games that have been banned here, so they must be applying some rules, but I can get electronics, books and most games.
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But there is an exemption if they've already been coloured in.
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Come on mate! We colour in our own wordy-books here!
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I made the mistake of looking up the price of a car I was interested in on their US site a while back. When I realised I was looking in the wrong place and found the australia site, it was a straight double in price.
This is not just a question of handedness, shipping and volume. These cars already come in right-hand drive because of Japan and Europe, shipping does not cost $30,000, and people buy a lot of Toyota's in Australia.
It's just a giant rip off
Re:To be fair (Score:4, Interesting)
That's after shipping the fuckers across to the other side of the world. How the hell does that work?
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At least australia wont send you to gitmo or send some fake FBI to arrest you with false warrants.
Dude, all adobe is selling is a serial # for activation, it doesnt matter where one lives. I know you americans are poor and cant afford 20 tacos for lunch daily with their 4 gallon coke drinks.
Stop asserting MAYBEs.
My AU$ converted to US$ electronically is done automatically via Visa or Paypal, and at only 1-2% rates. NOT your imaginary 10%, high street 711 stand.
Buying a serial # from USA is not the same as
Re:To be fair (Score:4, Interesting)
You really haven't been following the anti-association law stuff recently havent you?
In numerous states now, if you so much as talk to an outlaw biker you can get done for serious time, and in most the cases what designates an outlaw organization is not decided by judicial review but the whims of the police minister. Theres nothing in the language of the laws that says they cant declare an unpoular political group, like socialists, or activist group, like the sea shephards (Ok granted sea shephard is very popular in australia, just not with the government) to be an illegal organization and thus imprison people simply because they want to organize around their beliefs.
Our political masters have been taking notes from abroad, and its not looking good.
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Australia has a GST tax [wikipedia.org]. Just figuring out if you are liable for this will cost you a bundle.
Figuring out whether you are liable for GST takes about 5 minutes. Registering for GST would take a few hours. Nearly every company in Australia registers for GST, so the government made it extremely simple. These things are such a marginal cost that it is ridiculous to use them as a reason for significant price differences.
Re:To be fair (Score:5, Insightful)
They clearly don't. 10 years ago the AUD was worth US$0.50, now it's worth US$1. Software prices in Australia are not 50% less than they were (relative to US prices).
For example Office Professional Edition 2003 was announced at US$499 [pcworld.com] in 2003 in the US, but at AUD$899 [microsoft.com] in Australia. The AUD was worth USD$0.65 at the time. So the Australian version was USD$584 and USD$53 of that is GST giving a $32 or 6% premium over the US price which no one complained about since that's reasonable.
Now Microsoft Office Professional 2010 (2 PC/1 user version) is AUD$849 [microsoft.com] in Australia. It is USD$499.95 [microsoft.com] in the US. The AUD is currently worth USD$1.05. So the Australian version is USD$891 of which USD$81 is GST giving a USD$310 or 62% premium.
Notice even though the AUD has increased in value by about 60% in that time frame the relative USD/AUD prices have essentially remained unchanged (wooho a $50 reduction in Oz).
Australians wish they priced in USD, since then prices would have fallen by almost half over that time frame.
So how do you explain a 6% premium turning into a 60% premium? What massive changes product liability and taxation systems do you think happen in Australia?
Oh sure. It's real hard. If you are you selling it in Australia then you add 10% to the price and send that in to the government. If you are selling it outside of Australia then you do nothing. Wow, that's so complicated! All software qualifies for the GST making it even simpler to work out.
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except all of the point of sale costs are paid in Australian dollars, to Australians. The fact that the Australian dollar has doubled in nominal value compared to the USD is mostly irrelevant.
As was said, the legal arrangements are made by hiring Australians, the distributors are paid in Australian dollars. Even if you're talking minimum wage employees the minimum wage in Australia is 15.51 an hour, it's 7.25 in the US. That's your phone support, delivery, even local web hosting type stuff.
Need local ph
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You're arguing that the costs for Adobe/Microsoft's Australian operations effctively double to price of the product they sell. Well, as an Australian business customer I fail to see any value-add from Adobe or Microsoft having an Australian presence -
Software distribution is handled by, shockingly, software distribution companies like Tech Pacific or Ingram Micro.
Distributors onsell products to retailers or resellers etc.
The resellers provide local sales support (eg sell the phyiscal media, preinstall it on
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the base price for sw is pulled out of a hat in the first place.
it's priced at what people are going to be willing to be paying at. it's not potatoes that have a market as such, it's not something that takes x amount to make and you need a 30% profit calculated on top of that.
the reason for adobe to even have an australian(or similar country) presence is purely for advertising and school lobbying and extra paid support(courses, shit like that, stuff that's actually high profit). and fwiw the price in their
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And if you think Adobe should adjust their prices according to the exchange rate... I'm sure you won't protest when cs6 is 2600 AUD, and the next day you wake up and it's 2800 AUD... and within 3 months, it's 4000 AUD..
By your numbers, when the exchange rate recovers, Adobe CS6 should go from 2600 AUD today to 5200 AUD.
Australians will appreciate the inflation.. yes?
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You're obviously trolling.. but 1 AUD is 1.047 USD
https://www.google.com/finance?q=CURRENCY:AUDUSD [google.com]
If you click on the 10 year chart, you'll see in 2008, it went from 0.97 cents to 0.6175 cents within 3 months. So it can recover (not saying it will, but it's possible).
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the AUD/USD exchange rate can fluctuate by 2% per day. On CS6, that would be a $50 change per day.
You can pretend that you wouldn't mind a 2% fluctuation, but people will care about a $50 change in the price per day.
Either Australians will be outraged it changed so rapidly (and Adobe's greed), or they will try to play the exchange rates to purchase at the lowest price, making demand very variable.
Probably both.
why do you calculate that rate change on an AUD$2600 base price rather than the actual USD base price, though?
Right now, 1 AUD is about 1 USD. Since CS6 is 2600 USD, it's also 2600 AUD (without the GST).
Excuse me, but I'd take a $1600 discount in exchange for $50 variability. I import a lot from the US, converting NOK to USD daily. It's really not that much of a problem. Milk, eggs, gasoline, fruit, fertilizer, salt, gold, wood, diamonds, the real value of the USD itself, interest rates, RAM, vinyl siding, hard drive, bunker C fuel oil, airfare, cigarette, broccoli, and liquid nitrogen prices vary daily. They don't cost the theoretical maximum expected value over the next 2 years. They cost what they
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> By your numbers, when the exchange rate recovers, Adobe CS6 should go from 2600 AUD today to 5200 AUD.
>
> Australians will appreciate the inflation.. yes?
Yes, because its based on reality, not profit mongering based on hiding information.
This behavior is why me and thousands of other internet-savvy Australians have setup virtual US postal addresses (me with myus.com)
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Didn't you just explain the entire markup?
adobe cs6 is $2600 usd + 1400 markup = 4000.. or 54% more - 10% GST = 44%
Coincidentally, that nearly matches the change in the exchange rates (according to you).
If I buy a microwave for $100 USD that was made in Mexico.. and the USD becomes worth more... They don't adjust their US price.. the manufacturer pockets the difference.
If Adobe software was priced at $4000 AUD, and the exchange rate changes, and they still priced it at 4000 AUD.. how is that any different. It's just keeping the local prices intact.
No, you're wrong. Adobe deals with the distributors here in Australia with a price list that is based on US dollars and fluctuates almost daily. If the AUD is suddenly worth less against the USD, the price goes up. Most resellers will, to a point, absorb some of this cost to keep a nice round figure for the price on their website, but even some resellers will quote against the current price and that quote will only be valid for a week as the price does move frequently.
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It is common practice to price things at "what the market will bear". When Australians stop bearing the price, the prices will come down. It's really that simple.
These liabilities you speak of? Well - if I'm offering free or almost free software, filled with disclaimers that the software may not be fit for any use whatsoever, then the consumer's perception of liability isn't going to be very high.
On the other hand, if I'm touting my software as necessary, trustworthy, efficient, and simply THE BEST solut
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Why would it be expensive to translate the American texts to Australian English? I would presume that once they were translated from American to any dialect of English the cost of translating to regional English dialects would be quite low.
Because you have to carefully read through all of the documentation and make sure that when someone talks about driving on the right side of the road, you change it to the left. Then you have to deal with bathtub whirlpools spinning in the opposite direction.
And don't get me started on the metric system.
All of that crap is time consuming and expensive. Somebody has to do it....
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Why would it be expensive to translate the American texts to Australian English?
Well I'm pretty sure the OP intended it as a joke, but on a serious note most software sold in the Australian market isn't localised anyway. For example in Windows 7 installed with Australia as the locale I have "color management" not "colour management". Microsoft Word comes with an Australian spell-check dictionary but otherwise all menus and documentation are American English. Not that I think many locals would really give a shit either way, especially if it meant paying more.
I can't think of any softwar
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I remember Trumpet Winsock (you know, the software that actually let you get online with Windows 3.1x) was written in Australia, and they didn't localise for the US market. There was an item in its help page addressing complaints about the "misspelling" of "dialler". :-)
Oh and we paid through the nose for an Adobe Connect license (for a client): turns out it doesn't support timezones +1000 or above. WTF!?! The extra money they charge is utter and pure greed, nothing more. They don't use it for anything like
Better beaches (Score:4, Interesting)
Devils Advocate (Score:5, Informative)
I went to purchase Diablo III from Blizzard's online store, and after signing in to my Australian (or SEA or whatever region) battle.net account the price went from US$Price to AU$(Price+20).
I tried to play devils advocate on this one, and what I came up with is that bandwidth and rackspace in Australia are much more expensive than other parts of the world.
But I get the feeling Blizzard don't have battle.net servers in Australia, and since most of their content delivery comes through Bittorrent (and who cares if they "seed" it themselves from the US with cheap bandwidth or AU), so I don't know why it costs so much more.
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Rackspace is more expensive, for sure. But We're talking a few extra cents, not $20 , for a game.
Largely the costs in hosting in australia are not bandwidth related (although some colos do charge stupidly for that) but power related. Because of the ridiculous price in power lately due to all the grid updates (no its not carbon price, that hasnt been introduced yet!) power is just stupidly expensive and that translates to expensiveness in rack hosting since a 1U rack can chew up quite a good few amperes of p
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That's the story, but when the profit announcements come out each year you'll see it's due to the "profit updates" instead.
For those outside of Australia, the truly insane thing we did is copied our electricity trading system wholesale from California at the height of the Enron debacle. It is operating as designed with rising prices for the consumer and crumbling infrastructure - but mostly fatter and fatter profits each year in a m
Re:Devils Advocate (Score:4, Interesting)
Which is unfortunately irrelevant because Blizzards "Oceanic" servers are all in racks in the USA.
There's been articles about the servers being in the USA, (can't remember where and the first page of google only shows complaints on forums), but either way a quick ping will show you that wherever they are there is half a world's length of wire and fibre between your net connection in Australia and where their servers are.
However Blizzard are just one of many that is price gouging by location. Apple used to be so bad at it that people could fly from Sydney to Hawaii to buy a laptop, spend a weeks holiday, fly back, and still have change left over from what they would have paid to buy it locally. That may be hardware with real shipping costs but the real shipping costs would be a tiny percentage of the markup.
latency is high, why not sinapore (Score:3)
Singapore has Amazon EC2 servers, is closer to AU for low latency, so why cant they have servers there?
Yeah telstra run by idiots who couldnt figure out how to reduce costs if they were even told how to. Outdated, and over paid managers.
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Outdated, and over paid managers.
It's a worldwide phenomenon. No need to blame any Australians on that account.
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You're quibbling with details, nothing more:
This is more about latency than anything else.
Damned straight. I'm not even a gamer, and I get this. Some manager decided latency from AU to $wherever wouldn't work, the dork.
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It's not as simple as you think (Score:2)
The worst part is that this pricing disparity is heaping insult upon injury.
Not only do we pay more than US based customers, but our downloads
aussies can do it (Score:2)
Us aussies can sell software to usa cheaper, and bandwidth is not an issue, we find ways to do it fast, get closer proxies etc...
Prices are what the market will bear (Score:4, Insightful)
We Australians pay high prices for a simple reason - our market can bear the prices. The strong Australian dollar coincides with higher wages and costs of living, and any professional who needs photoshop will buy it, albeit begrudgingly. Adobe provides discounts for students and other groups, but the prices are still quite high.
This is basic economics: charge as much as possible to each customer, also known as price discrimination [wikipedia.org].
The same goes for "luxury" cars. Let me give an example. Here in Australia a new BMW M3's recommended retail price is $154,000 AUD. In the US, it is around $60,000 USD. Government taxes, extras, shipping costs, etc only account for a very small percentage of this difference. How does BMW sell any cars in Australia? Enough people are willing and able to pay the price.
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How does BMW sell any cars in Australia?
Because importing a BMW from the US is a pain in the butt; not to mention, the car would then have left-hand drive, which Australian customers are unsued to. On the other hand, routing a download from the US, or spoofing an online service into thinking you're buying from the US is trivial.
Also, you can't torrent a BMW.
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Ok, I mean importing for a private individual. Companies have economies of scale, trade agreements, offshore assembly, etc etc to reduce the actual cost of importation.
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Your BMW example isn't the best example as that BMW M3 will have both import tariffs and fees (designed to protect what is left of the local car manufacturing industry) and luxury car tax (introduced by the Howard government in order to ensure the difference in the tax rate between luxury cars and normal cars remained the same under the GST as it did under the old wholesale sales tax system)
Lets look at a better example:
Take the LEGO Star Wars Super Star Destroyer. In the US you can buy one for US$399.99. T
Re:Prices are what the market will bear (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not just the tariffs or the taxes. How do you explain that even cars made locally in Australia cost more than the same model in New Zealand? They have shipping costs, taxes, and tariffs too, yet a locally made car somehow costs more here!
I just found an informative page [customs.gov.au] for importing a car into Australia. It has a worked example for importing a car worth $56K into Australia. The total payable tax plus tariffs is $11.5K. Doesn't exactly account for a BMW going from $60K to over $130K, does it? Where the hell did the other $60K increase in the price come from?
I once worked as an IT contractor for a car importer that had an exclusive deal with a manufacturer to import cars into Australia. I asked one of their senior staffers why cars were more expensive in Australia. He basically admitted that all of the importers jack up the price because they have an effective monopoly position (for their brands), and can get away with it. There's a sort of gentleman's agreement between them to maintain this status quo and not compete on price. This works because importers often import several brands, so there's only a few of them catering for the entire market. It's not the taxes, the shipping, the retailers, or the manufacturer. Nameless middle-men obtain exclusive rights to import, and then milk the market for everything that they can.
It's blatantly obvious if you know what to look for. For example, I wanted to get a nice sporty car, like the Nissan GT-R. Here in Australia, it's over double the cost of what it is in Japan or in the US. I worked out all the taxes, and it still didn't explain most of the difference. I looked into importing one direct from Japan -- I'd still have to pay all of the Australian taxes and tariffs and pay an additinal overhead for organising the whole thing, but the end result would still about 30-40% cheaper. However, it turns out that I wouldn't be be able to get my imported car serviced! The "official" importer also controls all of the parts and servicing, and they'll refuse to do business with you if you own a "grey" import. You can have it serviced elsewhere, but with a small-volume model like the GT-R, it's a risk. Compare that to, say, buying an iPad in America. Apple will repair it for you in Australia happily.
There's no way to do the equivalent in America because the market is too big, there's too many importers, and hence there's enough competition to prevent a successful collusion from forming.
This is why I don't buy anything except food and clothes from local retailers any more. I get all my gadgets and software online. Lots of other Australians shop online from overseas too. It's probably harming our local businesses, but fuck them and their greedy price gouging.
It's about time the ACCC started investigating this. First software, then I hope they look into cars next...
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I think you missed the part where car import deals are dealt exclusively and unofficials are treated with hostility by the official service chain.
sure, you could source your cars from uncooperative overseas dealers I suppose, but it's a big hassle. and then the troubles of not being able to use their trademarks in marketing material etc.. who buys discount luxury cars anyways? if they do then they buy them used. and I'm pretty sure australia has couple of businesses bringing used luxury cars from japan.
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Then why can Volksw
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No, the LCT doesn't even come close to explaining the price difference.
It's just flat-out gouging by BMW (Mercedes, Au
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Your BMW example isn't the best example as that BMW M3 will have both import tariffs and fees (designed to protect what is left of the local car manufacturing industry) and luxury car tax (introduced by the Howard government in order to ensure the difference in the tax rate between luxury cars and normal cars remained the same under the GST as it did under the old wholesale sales tax system)
Funny one of our work mates went and imported 5 BMWs. Kept one, sold the other 4, and the proceeds basically paid for the one he kept. Sure it was a major amount of paperwork and hassle to get it done, but he effectively ended up with $60k profit as a result.
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According to wikipedia [wikipedia.org] US per capita income is well above AU, being topped only by Norway and a few city states.
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That's the above posters entire point!
It should but it doesn't.
Instead of paying the equivalent of $60,000 US ( ~$57700 AU) people are paying $160,000 US - truly insane price gouging. Of course the dealers pretend to cut people a good deal below the recommended price but it still ends up as an insane markup
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it buys more american product.
but it it buys it for the bmw import license holder, not for the guy buying the bmw.
Good (Score:4, Insightful)
Excellent. I'm sick of the exploitation of software pricing in Australia. Price ratios haven't shifted at all since the 90s when the AUD was worth 0.6 USD. Now 1 AUD > 1 USD.
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Prices are already insane there (Score:2)
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There seems to be a duty on "luxury" items or something. An inflatable camping mattress that would have been less than USD$30 was AUD$130, and other prices in the camping store were similarly crazy. If you're outfitting as a camper there, you can probably save by flying to the U.S. to buy your stuff.
No duties on most items, Almost everything that is not alcohol, tobacco or has a motor has GST only (Goods and Services Tax, a flat 10%). Camping gear is no exception, no special duties on it what so ever.
It's distributors profiteering. With tax, a $30 item in the US should cost $33, maybe you could stretch that to $40 with shipping. Yet Distributors price it at a 100% or greater mark up compared to the US prices.
BTW, smart Australians are already buying from overseas. Shoes, clothing, computers, elec
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It's not shipping you need to account for (most of this stuff is going to be coming from Asia anyway, so shipping to Australia should be cheaper), it's the higher wages and better working conditions in Australia, and the insane rents vendors have to pay thanks to our world-leading real estate bubble (last time I checked, Sydney had the most expensive commercial real estate *in the world*, beating out places lik
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If its high priced, blame the high rents shop have to pay, because of the greed of bankers ironically lending more $ , driving up realestate prices.
btw, they are $30 in au, check here http://www.aussiedisposals.com.au/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=230&osCsid=2ede5ca184907bbedd1e18cd3112eebd [aussiedisposals.com.au]
Here's to hoping - Europe as well? (Score:3)
There used to be a great document at http://www.amanwithapencil.com/adobe.html [amanwithapencil.com] that detailed the situation in 2007 for the UK. Thankfully, there's archive.org
http://web.archive.org/web/20100702205054/http://www.amanwithapencil.com/adobe.html [archive.org]
Adobe even replied to some inquiries, and you can see some of their excuses in:
http://web.archive.org/web/20100526120202/http://www.amanwithapencil.com/adobe_spin.html [archive.org]
The UK, just as Australia and Europe, were - and still are (at one point it was even cheaper to get the boxed version than to get the download version) - basically being screwed over (and good luck checking that - their various international websites make it a pain in the ass to compare pricing) and the only reason for this is that the market will pay anyway.
Why? Because 1. It's Adobe's products. If you have an interest in them, you're probably in an industry where you have little choice, so you'd probably pay twice the price and limit yourself to some grumbling on twitter, and 2. you probably earn the price of these products back on just a handful of jobs, after which you'd only have to worry about the upgrade pricing.
It's one market I wouldn't mind Apple upsetting, not one bit.
Precisely one reason for higher prices .... (Score:2)
... is that the market will bear it. All the claims about increased cost are bogus: the non-US sales are delta sales of software.
Software has a fixed developement cost (plus the localization), so if cost were the issue, customers in non-US locations should ONLY pay for the delta cost to develop the local version.
You americans are THEIVES!!! (Score:3, Funny)
Comon now, you can sell stuff cheap in singapore, or to mexico, or to canada, but let it pass through one middle mad on its way to australia and that FAT asshole prick will bump up the prices 30%. Its like USA is so advanced , but asking it to ship products outside USA zones is like asking them to ship to mars or something. Yet UK/europe/asia, they can ship anywhere TWICE as quick. Why is it stuff from UK arrives in 1/3rd the time than USA stuff? Is it the DHS scanning 50 planes/hr ?
And adobe, screw your resellers, just sell your shit 100% online.
Resellers OFFER NOTHING in the internet world, sure in 1990 they did advertise and offer support, today none.
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You're not alone. Americans can't figure out how to ship things anywhere outside the country. Half an hour from the border in Canada might as well be the moon as far as most American companies are concerned. Of course, they might have a point - last time a friend in the US tried to send me something via the US postal service it got returned, address unknown. The address was correct, it just had "Canada" in it.
Re:You americans are THEIVES!!! (Score:4, Interesting)
Wrong train of thought. Australian import duties are quite low for most goods (alcohol and tobacco are exceptions). For the most part all you really need to do is pay 10% tax on a container load of goods.
But the problem goes way beyond. I ordered a camera lens from B&H in the USA. I paid $70 shipping. It was over $1000 so I paid 10% tax ($180), it arrived on the weekend so I got a double whamy of a customs good holding fee $50, and for some reason UPS charged me again for the privilege of customs delays $30. I paid a total of $300 to get this over the listed USA price and the end result was it was still $250 cheaper than the cheapest price I could find anywhere in Australia.
ebay thing? For that the problem is Australia Post. I received a faulty product from America. USPS shipping was $7 to get this thing slightly larger then a letter over here. The company asked to ship it back and I went to the local post office. Our post office said it was slightly too thick to be a letter, no matter we'll send it to the USA for $55. !!!!!!! My father is CEO of a direct marketing company here. They have some 10000 subscribers in the USA and they have worked out it is cheaper to get the letters printed in Germany and bulk shipped to Hungary where they get inserted into envelopes and sent via Hungarian Post to the USA than it is to print them themselves and ship them direct to the USA. Can't do it internal to the USA unfortunately due to some rules about the contents of the mailings.
This is Australia. Everything is upside down here remember? We enjoy getting raped in the wallet here mate.
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I have a better idea... (Score:4, Insightful)
Absent legal barriers, arbitrage in software should cost next to nothing, especially now that much of it doesn't even come on shiny disks anymore. See to it that Australian customers can legally import goods from the location of their choice, and that middlemen can import goods from the location of their choice for domestic sale, and the price difference should collapse in a loud puff of nebulous whining about 'intellectual property'...
The whole notion behind the term 'grey market' is pernicious. It Should Not Matter whether the manufacturer/seller of a good is pleased by the ultimate destination of the goods they are selling. Yes, we would all like to enjoy perfect price discrimination. No, that isn't a good argument for letting us do so. In the absence of absurd restrictions on arbitrage, various pricing shenanigans, release-date bullshit, and other nonsense simply collapse.
Such restrictions would be one thing if they were applied evenhandedly, if the producers weren't already shopping all over the world for the lowest prices, laxest laws, and sweetest tax breaks; but they are not. You want cozy protectionism for your retail prices? Well, perhaps you shouldn't expect to enjoy worldwide free trade on your input prices... You want worldwide free trade for the things you buy? Well, that's nice, you deserve no less than worldwide free trade in the things you sell.
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"why don't we just adopt some of that 'free trade' stuff"
Canada has had free trade with the US for more than a decade. There's a picture in one of our history books of my grandfather protesting against it. It only applies to corporations. Individuals still get to pay duty, and the corporations aren't likely to pass on any of the savings.
"Should" is not "must" (Score:2)
I wonder how do you push vendors and resellers to set price government and voting nation would like in capitalism. Because, it's like, unless it's monopoly (and CS can be replaced with other software for some cases), they can do whatever they want and *you* have rights to ignore them, too. Come on, where's the problem?
Or current regime is not capitalism, but some kind of twisted "we all do right thing unless we doesn't like the outcome" in all cases (there are valid reasons when gov. have rights to say "sto
Check yourself before you wreck yourself (Score:2)
If you don't live here (in Australia) and think Australians should be charged (quite often) upwards of twice the price for things.. Fuck off and die in a house fire. You're a bad person. Well, no, that's not exactly true, what you are is a dick with an opinion (that is wrong). Please ed
All thank the grey market arbitrage! (Score:2)
In the end the only way to not get gouge in australia is to buy on the grey market from another country. Here instead of plowing through copyright laws by absolutely flouting them, you can bypass the arbitrary high price by going into the grey zone and buying from overseas resellers engage in arbitrage.
These companies have to get realistic, the government is already taking a dim view on this so it is unlikely, and the fact you have to go grey market often means it might be easier just to pirate the whole da
Why buy Adobe products anyway? (Score:2)
Protect small buyers at Apple's iTunes store, too! (Score:2)
I found a list of songs priced (presumably for the buyer in USA) at $0.99 each
When an Aussie went to buy some from within AU, prices jumped to $1.69 ea.
Calculus taught me that lots of DeltaPennies add up to BigBigs, eg, for Apple,
and I don't think it's fair to pay more outside USA than within, even for low-
priced items, such as songs.
This is to compensate for the CSIRO WLAN Tax (Score:2)
You reap what you sow.
Just kidding, Bruce.
Ob (Score:3)
So, how much do people who live inside him pay?
It's called a free market (Score:2)
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I know of people who have been able to get a set of 4 car tires bought from online stores in the USA, shipped to Australia AND fully fitted at a tire shop for LESS than it would have cost to buy those same tires in Australia. (and remember the shipping on car tires is expensive because they are heavy and bulky)
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A USA $50 retail item did not cost the NJ store $50, they bought it for probably $30 WHOLESALE.
So what I am saying, is why cant the Australian retail shop, buy USA products wholesale at the same wholesale price as the little tiny shop in the small town in NJ.
This is where we aussies are pissed off, retailers/shops dont buy things RETAIL, but WHOLESALE. And their wholesale prices from usa are either too high, or there is only ONE single importer that they must buy from at 2x wholesale price.
Look today, the P
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Apple?
I don't own any apple stuff, but whenever I've done price conversions between the US and Australian prices on the Apple website, they've been pretty close. I don't think you can point to apple on this one. Maybe third party resellers of Apple stuff?
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Apple currently look ok because they recently did a currency adjustment. Historically you'd be looking at a solid 30-40% price difference between buying the same Apple product in Australia vs the USA (even after accounting for local USA sales taxes).
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Actual free trade. Hence the reason so many corporations (and their pocket Governments) hate it.
This is already happening in Australia. Local retailers are getting smashed because so many people are buying everything from socks to laptops from foreign sellers.
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The newest version of gimp, in 2012, is still harder to use than the last time I bought Photoshop in 1998. And Photoshop produces better results.
Photoshop is a ripoff but Adobe's competitors are inexcusably bad.
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gimp developers are probably glad that adobe targets their software at noobs, so that they don't have to
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I use gimp almost exclusively for my graphics tuning needs.
but the ui sucks bigtime. fwiw gimp doesn't seem to be targeted at pro's either. just for people who know that gimp will do one thing for them and they'll use it for that, like saving a png with transparency, scaling something, adjusting some color curve etc. 99% of the use it gets is just glorified converter tool work. very rarely you hear about anyone using it for "photoshopping".
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maybe one way around it could be to lie in the interview (tell them you know adobe), and then when you're asked to produce something, install gimp, do the work, then say that you produced it with the adobe garbage. the resulting work would be the same, and surely it would be pretty hard for management to argue about the software, considering gimp is free.