2 Results for piracy

Nanchang Requires Internet Cafes To Use Linux: Misses the Point Purposely?

It's not breaking news that software piracy is a colossal problem, especially in China. ComputerWorld reports on how the piracy issue is prompting Nanchang, the capital of China's Jiangxi province, to require internet cafe operators to replace pirated Windows versions with Red Flag Linux. And there's the rub: they must replace pirated software with Red Flag Linux for 5,000 yuan ($725). The price includes two years of support, and the license lasts a lifetime. It is unclear whether this license is per seat, or per business location, or whether system and security updates fall into the support area. There is some confusion on whether purchasing a legal Windows server license is an option. There is no confusion, it seems, on this front -- Red Flag Linux is the Linux cafe owners must use.

Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols surmises this has got to be the worst way to market Linux. I'd hazard a guess it's not marketing going on in Nanchang, but his worries are spot on.



Battling Piracy, BayTSP-Style

Original Post authored by Chris Albrecht on 10/3/2007 on NewTeeVee

NBC Universal (GE) President Jeff Zucker wants more technological solutions to be used in the battle to combat piracy, and is specifically calling on ISPs, video-sharing sites, universities and others to implement better filtering systems. But until - and even if - that happens, content companies will have to rely on the services of copyright monitoring and enforcement services like BayTSP.