YESTERDAY we showed that the Intellectual Property Owners Association (IPO) was dissatisfied with the ACTA's attempt to lump together counterfeiting and copyright infringement. These are separate types of offences that have as much to do with one another as patents and trademarks (which lawyers like to group under the "IP" umbrella).
Homeland Security Decides If It Just Keeps Interchanging Counterfeiting With Copyright Infringement, Perhaps No One Will Notice
We already wrote about the recent Congressional committee hearings on intellectual property enforcement, where IP Czar Victoria Espinel blamed China. However, there were other speakers there as well, and perhaps the most interesting was from John Morton, the assistant secretary of Homeland Security's Immigration & Customs Enforcement (ICE) division -- the group that recently started working for Disney and seized a bunch of domains using questionable legal theories. We're still trying to figure out what the hell immigration and customs enforcement has to do with internet file sharing, and here was a chance to set the record straight.
Every year, in May, we report on the latest release of the BSA's totally bogus stats about "worldwide software piracy." The stats are so laughable that even the firm that put them together for the BSA, IDC has claimed that the BSA is being misleading with the stats. In years past, we've done a detailed analysis of how the BSA's stats are misleading, but one bit of news that came out last year that was even more interesting is that in the majority of countries listed in the report, IDC does no actual surveys. Instead, it just makes up the numbers.
Glyn Moody points us to an article looking at the report's coverage of South Africa, and notes not only did IDC/BSA not survey anyone in South Africa, they're using these totally made up numbers to push for new copyright laws. As for how ridiculous the numbers are, well, here's the quick explanation:How was the 35 percent rate arrived at? It's a guess, or rather, a combination of guesses combined with some market data and presented as a final authoritative percentage.