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Microsoft Sets Value Of Pirated Windows: $1

nick_davison writes "The BBC is reporting that Microsoft has reached a deal with the Indonesian government on pirated software - which is believed to affect around 50,000 government PCs. Under the deal, Indonesia will pay $1 per copy and agree to buy legally in the future. Indonesia's information minister, Sofyan Djalil, said, "Microsoft is being realistic. They can't force developing countries like us to solely use legal software since we can't afford it. They want us to gradually reduce our use of it." Somehow it seems unlikely the same rules will be applied to developing companies and poorer individuals in the United States."

22 of 581 comments (clear)

  1. How about by Doctrinal+Enforcer · · Score: 5, Funny

    An exchange for Schappelle Corby?

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    1. Re:How about by aukset · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Ah, in my opinion, its worse than all that. I consider it a human rights issue when people are subjected to show trials, without the benefit of innocence until proven guilty, and when a person is prevented from mounting an affirmative defense. Show trials like this one are the kind of stuff you normally think about when a spy plane pilot is shot down over soviet territory, not when a rather normal (as far as Aussies are normal) civilian is caught with some naughty plants in her luggage.

      Innocent or not, she wasn't even given the chance to defend herself. It seems obvious to me that the judges in this case had decided guilt from the beginning, and were expecting her defense to be a plea for leniency. This is not justice. This is the opposite of justice, and its an outrage. However, the fact that no western nation is actually DOING anything about this is indicidive of world politics today. Indonesia is important economically. Thats all that matters. Let Miss Corby rot in prison the rest of her life, as long as Indonesia's markets remain open.

      Such little, unimportant things like Human Rights are never going to get the attention they deserve from the west, not as long as our politicians, and the people they represent, refuse to grow some balls and make some (economic) sacrifices for what should rightly be percieved as the greater good.

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    2. Re:How about by The+Lion+of+Comarre · · Score: 4, Informative


      http://www.abc.net.au/worldtoday/content/2005/s135 6362.htm

      ...
      ELEANOR HALL: Is it the case that the Indonesian legal system is based on the presumption of guilt?

      TIM LINDSAY: No, that is completely false. As a matter of fact it is completely the opposite. The system in Indonesia is the same as the system in Australia, and our Commonwealth system. Article 66 of the Criminal Procedure Code specifically states that the burden of proof to prove guilt in a criminal case lies with the prosecution.

      In other words, that unless the prosecution can prove guilt, the person is innocent. So the common furphy that is being circulated in Australia in the media at the moment that people in the Indonesian system are presumed guilty until proven innocent is totally false.
      ...

  2. $1... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    That's still more than the average /. user values it at.

    1. Re:$1... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Windows - the 8-bit operating system.

  3. They got ripped off by saboola · · Score: 5, Funny

    That's at least a dollar more than I paid for it

  4. Value is only what someone is willing to pay. by Colin+Smith · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Somehow it seems unlikely the same rules will be applied to developing companies and poorer individuals in the United States."

    You scream Linux, OpenOffice and not bluff you'll get big discounts. MS is rich because people simply pay up. Start being an *informed* consumer, markets work better that way.

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  5. TCO by Tribbin · · Score: 5, Funny

    So this explains the MS sponsored TCO researches saying Windows is cheaper.

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  6. Should have held out for more! by rokzy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    fools! MS would rather PAY YOU to maintain its monopoly and mindshare than have you turn to linux.

  7. Their information minister is clueless by dstone · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The Indonesian information minister's statement is ridiculous: "They can't force developing countries like us to solely use legal software since we can't afford it." WTF? Why not? If you can afford Windows, give it a shot. If you can't, try OSS. It'll work. Maybe better, maybe worse. But you sure as hell can be forced to do things legally.

    It's not like they're being forced to pay outrageous prices for their sole source of food or something. They have a choice of software, and they choose an expensive, proprietary, non-free one. The shiny, fancy one. Guess what? It costs money.

    1. Re:Their information minister is clueless by SpiffyMarc · · Score: 4, Informative

      But you sure as hell can be forced to do things legally.

      Not by a corporation.

  8. Use free stuff by Tharkban · · Score: 5, Funny

    I always like to use free stuff.

    GPL - Free as in mine
    BSD/X11/MIT - Free as in not closed yet
    CDDL - Free as in slave labor
    Apache - Free as in complicated
    Microsoft - Free as in stolen

    Did I miss any?

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  9. Microsoft denies this by rgoree · · Score: 5, Informative

    A little more research on google news shows that MS is denying this report.

  10. Microsoft isn't the only company with lock-in by typical · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Look at just about *any* large software company that sells to businesses. Their goal is to get you locked-in to a software package, and then milk as much money as they possibly can from you. The real money to be made is in hidden costs. Sure, Bob the Purchasing Manager *thinks* that he's bought a copy of the software, but in fact he's signed off on spending money on the software package for the next fifteen years until the company is frusterated enough to ante up enough money to jump ship to another package.

    And the best tool of all in the software world to squeeze those-money engorged corporate udders is incompatibility -- file formats, APIs and protocols that only *you* can provide. (And user expertise in your software.)

    The smart purchaser stays the hell away from any proprietary file formats, APIs and protocols.

    The main reason that the open source world is nice for the corporate world is not the up-front price benefits. It's the fact that open source software inherently has non-proprietary file formats, APIs, and protocols, means that a choice of open source software ensures that you can't be milked (well, *too* much) or else someone else will toddle on in and start providing an alternative.

    Consider an example: People using Subversion for their source control aren't going to pay a cent for anything in the future. Even if Subversion cost $5000 a seat, instead of being gratis, it would still mean only a one-time payment. People using ClearCase have many years of rich milk-giving ahead of them.

    Microsoft lets people use Windows for minimal cost in areas that it wants to enter because it establishes one of the above pillars of lock-in -- it builds user expertise in their software. Any software with a different interface or behavior immediately represents a barrier to change. That retraining has a cost, that cost can have a dollar value assigned to it, and that dollar value is exactly how much Microsoft can milk you for in the future.

    Microsoft's most-used mechanism to help *spread* lock-in is not contracts or dirty legal tactics, but bundling. Get one element of lock-in into play (say, file formats, with Windows binary compatibility), and use it to get Windows deployed, then try to use that to get people to use another element of Windows that can provide its own lock-in benefits. The economic potential, the amount of money that Microsoft can milk users for, increases with every increment of lock-in.

    Microsoft didn't give away Internet Explorer for free because they love you and like petting kitties and giving candy to babies. They did it because (a) it builds user expertise in a feature of their software that then is difficult to move away from, increasing lock-in, (b) enough use of Internet Explorer results in network-spanning lock-in as people start dabbling in things like ActiveX, which are a big milk-producing mechanism for Microsoft, and (c) it provides another, significant, platform to use to introduce file format and protocol incompatibility, and thus further milk-producing lock-in. Internet Explorer is an *investment* in producing economic potential, lock-in, which they can cash in for loads of money over time in the future.

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  11. Re:Does that... by grub · · Score: 4, Funny

    Yeah, and it's a local call too.

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  12. Re:Someone send a memo to the RIAA... by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Someone PLEASE explain that one to me.

    * Some corporations are corrupt
    * Some governments are corrupt
    * Individuals are often powerless when the two get together
    * Resistance is futile
    * You will be assimilated

    Hope that helps.

  13. Re:They want the money by ArielMT · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... but they want to keep their customers.

    A very true observation. But it's not so much about money itself anymore as it is power and control. They want the guarantee of a steady flow of money more than the money itself, and the only solution that can put that guarantee in place is the lock-in of a single vendor solution. They're willing to all but give Windows away to establish that lock-in, and that's what this agreement is designed to do.

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  14. Small corrections by hummassa · · Score: 5, Insightful

    * Most corporations are corrupt
    * All governments are corrupt
    * Individuals are powerless when the two get together, unless they get together, too
    * Resistance is not futile, but is bloody
    * You will be assimilated quicker if you buy Nikes, eat at McD's, use MS products ...

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  15. Re:Quite unlikely by flossie · · Score: 4, Informative
    if MS had demanded the full price for each installation, they would be bashed for beating up on a small country.

    Whatever else Indonesia may be, it is not a small country. Indonesia is the world's largest archipelagic state. ... Area - comparative: slightly less than three times the size of Texas

  16. I Spoke to My Indonesian Girlfriend About This by ultimabaka · · Score: 4, Interesting

    And her exact words (after a five minute rant about how the guy was an asshole) were, and I quote:

    "Damnit this is awful. But it sounds about right. After that damned Suharto ran off with $30 billion dollars, there was no way in hell we could ever afford to pay for anything. But still, better for him to steal it than Microsoft."

  17. Now cheaper than gado gado from the local warung by j1m+5n0w · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I've been to Indonesia briefly. If I remember correctly, one dollar translates to about 10,000 Rupies, which will buy you a pretty good meal just about anywhere, or an unreliable CD containing mp3s of every Bob Marley song ever recorded, or 10 packs of ramen (ramen costs the same everywhere in the world), or about 5 or 10 angkot rides, or more biskuat than you can eat in one sitting. I stayed a few days in a hotel in Batu Karas for about about $4-$5 a night for a room shared with a couple friends. You can buy antibiotics for about a dollar or so I believe.

    I didn't see many computers there, so I don't know if Linux is very well established, but no one cares about piracy over there. The percieved cost of windows is about the same as the percieved cost of Linux: whatever it costs to get a burned copy from a street vendor. "Joe sixpack" is unlikely to own a computer (though TVs are very common), but if he does, he'll probably use whatever everyone else is using, which is probably Windows.

  18. Re:Hrm.. by dspratomo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm from Indonesia, even here I think only a few people buy legal, indonesian version of windows. Compared to pirated version it's still expensive. Please don't think that company over here is too poor to buy the software, they can buy $2000,- worth hardware. It's just not feasible under Indonesian business practice. It's cheaper to pay the authorities (read: corrupted police officer) than to pay microsoft. Mind you, this is one of the most corrupted goverment in the world, and the standard average salary in the goverment is very low

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