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Aussie Parliamentary Inquiry Into Software Pricing Announced

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."

5 of 259 comments (clear)

  1. Better beaches by rjames13 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If we lose the better beaches tax does that mean that New Zealand has better beaches than us?

  2. Re:You americans are THEIVES!!! by thegarbz · · Score: 3, 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.

  3. Re:To be fair by sg_oneill · · Score: 3, Interesting

    At least australia wont send you to gitmo or send some fake FBI to arrest you with false warrants.

    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.

    --
    Excuse the Unicode crap in my posts. That's an apostrophe, and slashdot is busted.
  4. Re:Devils Advocate by dbIII · · Score: 3, Interesting

    and what I came up with is that bandwidth and rackspace in Australia are much more expensive than other parts of the world

    Which is unfortunately irrelevant because Blizzards "Oceanic" servers are all in racks in the USA.

    But I get the feeling Blizzard don't have battle.net servers in Australia

    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.

  5. Re:To be fair by Antarius · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Some of the Australian made cars sell for less in the US than they do in Australia.

    That's after shipping the fuckers across to the other side of the world. How the hell does that work?