Microsoft Battles Pirated Software As A Security Risk
#1
Posted 29 December 2012 - 01:00 PM
#3
Posted 29 December 2012 - 02:01 PM
But I suspect there is some truth -- but much more hype about malware coming from cheap hardware and pirated software. Especially considering the source -- Microsoft - the world's biggest software seller.
Folks here might think of some of these pirate sellers as shady, fly-by-night firms. Some are. But piracy is also a big business in many parts of the world. And like businesses elsewhere -- they too want repeat customers.
It is a trivial thing for sellers to scan master copies of their software before mass loading them onto their products. And I suspect most do. I know I would, if I were one of them.
#4
Posted 29 December 2012 - 05:57 PM
I'm not a fan of using pirated software, but when certain programs cost as much as 1000 USD, then that's another story though.
#5
Posted 30 December 2012 - 03:56 AM
Bullsh*t... you send your legal eagles over there and jack them up now and do it in a big way!!! WTH... are they afraid they will hurt their feelings or cause bad blood between the US and their sh*tty-ass country.
Please... go make an example out of them. And I agree with you SilverXtreme, Thailand should be next... then Italy, Russia, India, etc... Make it a whirlwind tour of ass-kicking for all to see!
#6
Posted 30 December 2012 - 05:31 AM
Microsoft also installs an update (KB971033) on everyone's PC that every 90 days assumes you're a thief and validates your copy of Windows 7 and then contacts Microsoft using your Internet connection that you paid for.
To hell with preventing piracy. Until corporations stop THIEVING from the rest of us, why should anyone else play fair?
#7
Posted 30 December 2012 - 05:40 AM
Microsoft = RAMPANT TAX DODGER AND EXPLOITS THE POOR
Before you give me this crap about sweatshops developing poor nations - THEY DO NOT, because the workers never earn enough to stimulate domestic demand. No nation has ever developed its economy based on sweatshop labor. No rich country ever got rich by opening up its economy for foreigners to exploit. China doesn't play by the rules for a reason.
#9
Posted 30 December 2012 - 09:48 AM
Do you still remember your high school History book -- those b/w photos of immigrant girls assembling flowers in their tenement homes, or toiling in textile mills, or boys working in Pennsylvania mines?
Do you think that all those "tired and poor" coming ashore got great jobs in the US back one or two centuries ago?
In many (if not most) cases -- countries with a large pool of unskilled workers toil in sweatshops. Don't ever think that our country (the US) got rich by bankers pushing paper (and now electrons) around. The foundation of our nations wealth was built on the backs (and blood, sweat and tears) of those immigrants! You and I are beneficiaries -- so we will do well to understand unskilled labor -- and not to view it with disdain.
And yes, Japan, Taiwan, Korea, Singapore... all built their economic foundation on sweat labor. And then moved on to become rich.
#10
Posted 30 December 2012 - 01:17 PM
#11
Posted 31 December 2012 - 05:47 AM
Microsoft tried - slightly - to address this with it's "starter" versions of windows AKA, crippled, but people soon found these to be very limited in usability.
#12
Posted 31 December 2012 - 06:49 AM
While in India one co-worker, an electronic technician having 9 years formal education and about 3 or 4 month of technical school in electronics, invited me to his home for dinner. This is a family of 3 children in age between about 7 years to 11 years old. Living in a two room home that I estimate to be no more than 750 square feet size.
While there he proudly displayed the "new" computer system his children were using for required school work. A refurbished Acer Pentium-3 with 80 Mb memory, 30 Gb HDD and Samsung 14 inch tube display, running a pirate copy of Xp and MS Office-2000, AKA, already very old and mostly illegal. This system had only a few month prior cost him the equivalent of U.S. $125. his salary monthly was $240 so this was a major expense to educate his family.
What I am saying here is that a big part of the problem of piracy is caused by sellers not marketing within the standard of living of the country of business.
Laws be damned!
#13
Posted 31 December 2012 - 08:25 AM
#14
Posted 31 December 2012 - 08:28 AM
Quote
Two words: It's China. Chinese courts side with Chinese companies. Microsoft would be fighting a losing battle on their enemy's home turf. That's why they're not going the legal route. It hasn't worked for Hollywood or any other big industry that's fallen victim to Chinese piracy.
#15
Posted 31 December 2012 - 01:11 PM
Solution all around - Use Linux!
#16
Posted 31 December 2012 - 06:34 PM
Quote
Yeah...good luck with that!!
Of the billions of PC users less than 5% opt to use the "free" and "open" Linux, that is why until the introduction of Android in smartphones, the Linux OS was dead for end-consumers, they'd rather pirate any versionof Windows!!!
#17
Posted 31 December 2012 - 06:45 PM
richard2394729, on 30 December 2012 - 05:40 AM, said:
Microsoft = RAMPANT TAX DODGER AND EXPLOITS THE POOR
Before you give me this crap about sweatshops developing poor nations - THEY DO NOT, because the workers never earn enough to stimulate domestic demand. No nation has ever developed its economy based on sweatshop labor. No rich country ever got rich by opening up its economy for foreigners to exploit. China doesn't play by the rules for a reason.
You forgot to include Apple and Google as top-tax dodgers in your blind hate towards Microsoft...
This is for you:
WinTard, on 30 December 2012 - 01:33 AM, said:
Badass62qn, on 29 December 2012 - 04:26 PM, said:
Oh really?
Some people are simply iD10Ts.
Without Chinese financial backing, there would be NO US economy. Um, what's that Financial Cliff coming up?
Google China finances the US for substantiation:

Remember all the financial crashes in the USA lately? No? Well the last mortgage crisis, could very well happen tomorrow, again, yet this time it will be much worse!
Hey what happens if the US defaults like Greece? There was a near-call not long ago.
Believe it or not.
Red-necks will self-exterminate, alas poor gene pool of natural selection. It's Darwin at work here. But some are proud of the USD $16+ Trillion dollars deficit, in the name of patriotism, no less.

Head in the sand much? Like an ostrich?
~~~~~~~~~~
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity.
~ Robert A. Heinlein
Ignorance is trainable – Stupidity is terminal.
~ Jerry Fleming
Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity.
~ Hanlon's razor
Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it.
~ George Bernard Shaw
In Dr. Johnson's famous dictionary, 'patriotism' is defined as the last resort of the scoundrel. With all due respect to an enlightened but inferior lexicographer, I beg to submit that it is the first.
~ Ambrose Bierce, American writer
#18
Posted 03 January 2013 - 04:22 PM
In this country people work a 12 hr day, for approx $2.00 (pre-tax). That's $2.00/Day, not per hour. When that worker goes home, he has to feed his/her family on his $2.00. Then some self-righteous American tells him that he must pay $400 for a "legal" Win7 DVD. Instead he goes to ANY computer store & buys one of the 5 million "pirate" Win7 DVD's for 80 Peso (approx $2,00).
Who is the pirate here? The company selling the 2nd. 5 million Win7 DVD's, OR Mickeysoft for selling the same $2.00 Win7 DVD for $400?
I live in a country where it is impossible to find "REAL" software. Even if you buy boxed/shrink wrapped software in a store, it's Pirated. Same for all CD's, DVD's (no Blu-rays here yet). Are you hungry? Go to every grocery store in the country, & ALL the USA branded food.......is counterfit. Does all this "piracy" bother me, Absolutely NOT!!!!!
MLStrand56
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