China's intellectual property right (IPR) watchdog is doing all
it can to promote the use of legitimate software, officials said
yesterday in Beijing.
Licensed software is used in all government departments, and
being installed in more and more computers used by enterprises and
individuals, they told a press conference held by the State Council
Information Office.
To root out pirated software in its offices, the central
government alone has earmarked up to 150 million yuan (US$18.5
million) to foot the bill of licensed products. Local authorities
have also allocated funds for purchase of authorized software, said
the National Copyright Administration of China spokesman Wang
Ziqiang.
The country's piracy rate hyped by some in the United States to
be as high as 70 percent in government computers, and up to 94
percent in the entire software market is "groundless," he said.
Wang was asked to comment on a recent statement by US Commerce
Secretary Carlos Gutierrez, which claimed up to 70 percent of
software in Chinese government computers was pirated.
Another report by the Business Software Alliance (BSA), an
anti-piracy group largely comprising US software companies, alleged
that between 88 and 94 percent of software used in China is
unlicensed.
Wang explained government offices at various levels were
required to check how many of their applications were pirated.
They then submitted their needs for licensed software to
relevant government departments, which procured legal products for
them from software providers.
"Now that the governments, not individual offices, are paying
the bill, who would continue using pirated products at the risk of
violating statutes and shouldering possible liabilities?" he
said.
Gutierrez's statement, therefore, was not backed by facts and
was groundless, he said.
In response to the BSA's allegation, Wang said: "I've found
neither facts nor reasons to support the alliance's calculation of
the piracy rate in China."
China's software industry output hit 390 billion yuan (US$48.1
billion) last year. If pirated software had been 11 to 12 times as
much as that, it would have meant that the country's software
market was worth 4,000 billion yuan (US$493.8 billion), or 25
percent of the country's gross domestic product (GDP). "Could the
software sector alone make up 25 percent of a country's GDP?" he
asked.
Wang also said President Hu Jintao's meeting with Microsoft Corp
founder Bill Gates in Seattle on Tuesday was to give overseas
investors and firms confidence in China's determination to crack
down on intellectual property violations.
Piracy can be controlled with the consistent efforts of the
Chinese government, Wang said.
To prevent use of pirated software, Wang's agency and the
ministries of information industry and commerce mandated at the end
of last month that all computers must have preloaded legal
operating systems before they hit the market.
Now that authorized software is used in almost all machines in
government departments, China is promoting legitimate products in
enterprises, especially State-owned businesses, said Zhang Qin,
deputy chief of the State Intellectual Property Office.
(China Daily April 20, 2006)