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April 17, 2006

China has escalated 'could ban baked computers' to 'will ban naked computers'.

The country's Ministry of Information Industry, the State Copyright Bureau, and the Ministry of Commerce recently said all computers made within China's borders, "should include a pre-installed operating system".

Now, "The ban will take place by the end of this year and is aimed to further protect intellectual property of software, said Wang Yefei, deputy director of the bureau, at a press conference," declares state news agency Xinhua.

"Government departments shall not purchase computers without legitimate software, and all domestically-made and imported computers are required to be sold with legitimate software pre-installed, said Wang."

Beijing will, "target governments of townships on protection of legitimate software this year, and in late April it will carry out pilot programs to fight pirate software in large-sized state-owned, private and foreign companies."

Chairman Bill once applauded the tendency of some people in China to use unlicensed software saying, "as long as they're going to steal it, we want them to steal ours. They'll get sort of addicted, and then we'll somehow figure out how to collect sometime in the next decade."

The next decade is here, and then some, and as a p2pnet reader observes, "Isn't that the way drug dealers work too? 'Come on, kid, try it, the first one's free..'

"It makes one look at these 'donations' of software from Microsoft in a somewhat different light."


Originally from p2pnet.net, remediated by yatta on Apr 17, 2006 at 11:37 PM


Comments

This is a big deal and indicates China has finally come to realize that if it is to have any hope of becoming the software outsourcing center it hopes to become, it will need to play nicer on IP. Bill Gates will probably now be giving President Hu great food later this week.

Posted by: China Law Blog at April 18, 2006 02:21 AM

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