Best Practices: Dealing with the BSA and SIIA - Network World

Skip Links

DNSstuff.com
Get information about your IP
IP Information
50+ On-demand DNS and network tools

Small Business Networking

Videos

rssRss Feed
Get instant email notification when white papers, webcasts, executive guides are added to our library.  Stay informed and up-to-date with the latest on IT Technologies with Network World's Resource Alerts.

Additional Resources

RSS

FEATURED WHITEPAPERS

Endpoint Security: Data Protection for IT, Freedom for Laptop Users Absolute Software

The movement towards laptop computers has fueled an unprecedented number of data breaches. For IT and Information Security, encryption and training has proven ineffective against careless users and insider threats. This paper discusses these limitations and explains how endpoint security allows remote deletion of sensitive data, tracking of computers outside the network and the physical recovery of missing computers. Learn how you can ensure mobile data protection regardless of end-user interference.

RSS

FEATURED REPORTS

Executive Guide: Storage Heats Up HP

Get the latest on storage technologies that allow IT professionals to better cope with new IT demands. Learn how storage technologies can help you successfully tackle e-Discover, regulatory compliance, green data center initiatives and the data explosion. Get all the details now.

RSS

FEATURED WEBCASTS

Learn how to Create a More Efficient Virtualized Data Center Novell

Find out how you can consolidate Windows workloads and create a more efficient virtualized data center in this informative webcast, "Reduce Complexity and Cost - Windows Server Consolidation with Virtualization." Six concise webcast modules are available for your viewing. Watch them all consecutively or only the topics that interest you. The modules cover performance, user case studies, enterprise-level support, managing windows workloads, setup and configuration and the future of virtualization. Learn more today. Register below to learn more and be entered to win an Archos 605 Portable Media Player.

Best Practices: Dealing with the BSA and SIIA

By James E. Gaskin , Network World , 12/08/2006
  • Social Web 
  • Email 
  • Feedback 
  • Close

Beware the Business Software Alliance, and the Software & Information Industry Association. Their stated goals are to work for software vendors to prevent software piracy. Their actions, however, routinely terrorize and penalize businesses guilty of nothing more than sloppy bookkeeping and being confused by incredibly complex software licensing agreement contracts.

I first covered this display of corporate greed and bullying in The Software Protection Racket, Part 1. Many readers, appalled at the business practices of the BSA and SIIA when exposed, helped supply information for the next two columns, The Software Protection Racket Part 2, and Business Software Alliance: Outright Liars or Just Truth Challenged? followed by the fourth in the series, Readers Answer the Bully Software Alliance.

Dozens of readers and software industry executives wrote in response to these columns. One reader, an IT manager, went on a group camping trip that included an employee of the BSA. The BSA employee argued the entire week with our reader, convinced that no company actually paid for all the software they used and accurately tracked their license requirements.

This is only one case, detractors say, but this attitude radiates from the BSA constantly. Everyone is guilty, and the BSA is judge, jury, and financial executioner. Over two years ago I wrote about this issue in a column entitled No One Expects the Software Inquisition. Funny title reference to Monty Python notwithstanding, the use of the term Inquisition on my part was deliberate: they have the power, they have the deep pockets, and they can ruin any small business they want to ruin with their allegations.

The BSA and SIIA pick on small to medium sized companies, not huge companies with plenty of legal resources of their own. Attorney Robert Scott, who provided the legal background and explanation for the series of articles that ran this year, has defended a company with seven computers. You read that correctly - seven, not seventy or seven hundred.

1 | 2 |  Next >
Comments (1)
Login
Forgot your account info?

Best Practices: Dealing with the BSA and SIIABy Anonymous on January 19, 2007, 11:50 amAside from keeping software invoices in a fireproof safe openable only with the simultanious presence of keys held by two different people (or switching to open...

Reply | Read entire comment

View all comments

Add comment
Anonymous comments subject to moderator approval. Register here for member benefits.
Have a NetworkWorld account? Log in here. Register now for a free account.
First Name
Last Name
E-mail
Zip Code
IT Buyer's Guides

View All Buyer's Guides