Sat, 06 Dec 2008 Microsoft targets auctions in counterfeit crackdown
63 actions are against people allegedly selling counterfeit versions
Microsoft continues to crack down on people it believes are counterfeiting and selling its software. On Thursday the company added another 63 legal filings in 12 countries against individuals who it says are selling counterfeit Microsoft products.
The 63 actions are against people allegedly selling counterfeit versions of Microsoft Office, Windows XP and other products at online auction sites, said Matt Lundy, senior attorney with Microsoft's anti-piracy and anti-counterfeiting team.
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Of the cases being filed, 16 are against defendants in the US, 12 each in Germany and France, and seven in the UK. The other cases deal with activity originating in Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Japan, Mexico and New Zealand.
Auction sites are especially dangerous for consumers because they allow counterfeiters to reach anyone who browses the Internet, giving them a broad swathe of potential victims, Lundy said.
In one case Microsoft is working on, a defendant operating in New Zealand was able to ship counterfeit software from China to customers in the US, he said. "This demonstrates the global reach that the Internet and online auction spaces can provide pirates," Lundy said.
Amazon.com, Craigslist, eBay, MySpace, PCWorld and PriceGrabber
Sites at which the alleged activity occurred include Amazon.com, Craigslist, eBay, MySpace, PCWorld and PriceGrabber, to name just a few, according to Microsoft.
A popular scam Microsoft is targeting in this round of legal activity is a fictitious marketing scheme called the "Blue Edition." In these cases, counterfeiters say they are offering a special edition of Microsoft software, called the Blue Edition, that is available very cheaply because it was part of a manufacturer's surplus of the product, Lundy said.
"It's critical for customers to understand that Blue Edition is fictional," Lundy said. "It's merely an attempt by pirates to fool unsuspecting consumers into buying this product."
Microsoft identified the Blue Edition scam through complaints from customers that came directly to the company or were posted at online auction sites when people realised their merchandise was counterfeit,
Lundy said. Most of the Blue Edition cases Microsoft is dealing with target customers in the US, he added.
Microsoft's continued legal activity to prevent the sale of counterfeit or pirated software is part of its Genuine Software Initiative, described at the company's Web site.
Microsoft also has a site called "How To Tell" that helps people determine whether the Microsoft software they were sold is genuine.
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Comments received
chris said on Sat, 06 Dec 2008
Maybe if customers got a hard copy when they bought their machines it wouldn't be as bad.
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