Chinese police, Microsoft and the U.S. FBI helped bust a major Chinese piracy ring
A multi-year investigation by Chinese
police investigators and the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation led
to the dismantling of a piracy ring responsible for pirating and
distributing up to $2 billion of software. The two-year
investigation led to the demise of two criminal organizations -
located in Shanghai and Shenzhen - and included up to 25 arrests
according to officials from both nations. Police found pirated
software valued at $500 million after conducting the raid in
Shenzhen.
Using information provided by the FBI Los Angeles
bureau and Microsoft, the China Public Security Bureau (PSB) was
finally able to target sources responsible for pirating large amounts
of software from companies such as Microsoft and Symantec.
During
the investigation, authorities
were able to track more than 50,000 copies of software which was
considered "sophisticated-quality." As many as
290,000 counterfeit software CDs were also confiscated during the
raids in Shanghai and Shenzhen.
"This case represents a
milestone in the fight against software piracy - governments, law
enforcement agencies and private companies working together with
customers and software resellers to break up a massive international
counterfeiting ring," said Brad Smith, Microsoft general counsel
and senior vice president. "This case should serve as a
wake-up call to counterfeiters," he added.
The FBI
reported that it believes the majority of the software (70 percent)
was distributed to users in the United States, while the remaining
pirated goods went to countries like Canada, the U.K., Australia and
Japan.
The China PSB continues to be engaged in a long but
tiresome battle
against piracy, as China remains the leading
source of pirated goods in the world. The Business Software
Alliance reported that 82 percent of software used in China is likely
pirated.
"We are going to continue to work with them to make sure they understand the reality of the Internet. A lot of these people don't have Ph.Ds, and they don't have a degree in computer science." -- RIM co-CEO Michael Lazaridis
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