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Software Piracy At the Beijing Branch Office?

spirit_fingers writes "I'm the IT manager for a west coast design company that has a small branch office in Beijing with 5 employees, a few workstations and a couple of servers. Recently, it came to my attention that the Beijing office has been routinely installing and using pirated software on their computers — MS Office and Adobe Creative Suite, mostly. We're very buttoned up about being legal with our software here at the home office, and I consider it unprofessional and risky for our Beijing office to be engaging in this practice. When I called the local office manager on this, he shrugged and replied, 'Well, every other shop here does it.' So I was wondering if there are any IT manager Slashdotters here in the the US who may have experienced something similar with their colleagues in APAC, and how they handle a situation like this." Click the link for more of this reader's thoughts on the subject.
Up until now, the powers that be here in the States have had a relatively laissez faire attitude about what goes on at the Beijing office and our accounting department hadn't noticed that Beijing never submitted receipts for software, until I questioned them about it.

I have no doubt that "everyone else does it" in that environment. Frankly, I could care less what those guys do with their personal computers, but when it comes to company-owned gear my attitude is to stay legal no matter what anyone else is doing. And it's not like they need to do it to save money: the Beijing branch turns a tidy profit. It just seems to be an attitude so firmly ingrained in the culture over there that no one gives it a second thought.

My response (CC'd to our CFO) was to ask for copies of all receipts and serial numbers for the software they're using. and see what happens. This came down today, so I'll give them a day or two to come up with something.

3 of 614 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Given it'smostly MS Office and PDF stuff.... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I always felt plain text and HTML suffices for any and all communication requirements.

    I feel that way now, although I would either severely restrict the HTML (to facilitate WYSIWYG editing), or use ODF.

    But I'm curious -- did you actually get that multi-national company to use any open standards, or are they still doing Exchange and Word? I'm going to guess that buying the Office licenses will be cheaper, for many organizations like this, at least in the short term.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  2. Interesting understanding. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    MOD PARENT UP. Funny.

  3. Jejeje a que Chinos by vromo.blogspot.com · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Hasta lo mas curado tiene agua