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Business Software Alliance "Grace Period"

The BSA is running (until January 31) a "Grace Period" for "voluntary compliance" in the cities of San Francisco/Oakland/San Jose, Houston,Norfolk/Richmond, Nashville, Indianapolis, Bozeman, and Orlando. Small businesses recieve a card in the mail, having been assigned a tracking number, so you know you're in their files. In previous press releases they state that they send out up to 700,000 of these cards simultaneously. Scanning their reported settlement victories, they then seem to pick 2-4 business to destroy. If the businesses don't go along, the BSA hires the Federal Marshals as mercenaries to help ensure compliance with their extortion. Microsoft, unsurprisngly, is a big supporter of this and pushes it to vendors as a chance to strengthen customer relations. (this is a powerpoint document, but thankfully you can also have it: translated via google). CD: Here is a link to the press release on this matter.

2 of 490 comments (clear)

  1. Where are they getting tips from by Lokni · · Score: 5, Informative

    I run a one person operation out of my house and I got one of these letters. What do they do, go down the list of businesses in an area and figure EVERYBODY is pirating their software? I am ingnoring everything they send me. If they want to send a federal marshall to my house, I will see their ass in court. I haven't run windows for about 2 years now, and have never had any employees to rat on me for using "illegal software." Pirate my ass. More than anything this makes me want to start doing file sharing on every piece of software I own.

  2. What self-audit software? by wideangle · · Score: 5, Informative
    You mean Belarc Advisor?

    It's free, and doesn't report anything back to anyone.
    In other words, it's not spyware or adware.

    Actually a pretty useful tool.
    Not only tells you what you have on your system,
    but reports free memory slots and current CPU speed as well.

    Print the output, use as a handy reference.
    Should you ever reformat, the list might come in handy.

    You'll likely discover software you didn't know you had.