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In: Computer Science

A court of law in a developing nation has awarded substantial compensatory damages to Microsoft Corporation,...

A court of law in a developing nation has awarded substantial compensatory damages to Microsoft Corporation, Adobe Systems and Quest Software restraining a company based in the national capital from using or distributing their pirated and unlicensed softwareThe court's order came on a suit filed Microsoft Corporation , Adobe Systems and Quest Software against a firm..after they came to know that the company was using their unlicensed software programs on its computers. Source: Based on a news item published in https://clo.economictimes.indiatimes.com/ With reference to the above news clip, do you think that software manufacturers should be more tolerant of the practice of software piracy in developing nations both at individual and organizational levels? Why or why not? Explain

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Expert Solution

No, software manufacturers should not be more tolerant of the practice of software piracy in developing nations both at individual and organizational levels. Here are some estimates attempting to measure the loss caused by piracy  are problematic because of their methodology. A variety of problems arise:

Decrease in Sales of Legal Copies

The number of additional authorized copies that would be sold is not equal to the number of illegally duplicated copies. Pirates typically sell their wares at prices substantially discounted from street prices; the substantial price discounts induce some people to purchase the product who would not otherwise do so. In addition, some unauthorized copies are produced for noncommercial reasons (e.g., making a copy for a friend). There is a substantial difference between getting a copy for free from a friend and having to pay the street price; hence some of these copies would not be purchased if the consumer had to pay something approximating the street price.

Retail Price Effects of Piracy

Street prices are affected by the extent of illegal commercial copying. The availability of inexpensive, high-quality illegal copies reduces the demand for legal copies to the extent that some users buy illegal copies instead of legal ones. Interestingly, the effect on the street price of legal copies can either be positive or negative.

¬Positive:  The street price will rise if most price-sensitive consumers switch to illegal copies while the most price-insensitive consumers do not. The resulting market for legal copies will have less price-sensitive demand, thereby causing the manufacturer's profit-maximizing price to increase, which partially offsets the reduction in sales attributable to piracy.

¬Negative:  The street price will fall if consumers do not differ very much in price sensitivity. In this case all consumers are equally likely to buy from a pirate  if given a chance, so that the effect of piracy is to make the demand for legal copies more price elastic.3 If demand is more elastic, the profit-maximizing monopoly price falls and the proper calculation of the loss to rights holders must include profits lost on legally sold copies (because piracy forced the price down), as well as profits lost from pirated copies.

Estimating the Amount of Piracy

Assuming that the extent of unauthorized copying can be estimated with reasonable accuracy, one can not assume that all unauthorized copies are illegal and representing piracy.  In fact, the exact definition of what is and is not an example of legal copying is a matter of controversy.  Different opinions on the legality of various actions lead  to different statistics on the extent of and hence economic consequences of piracy.

The Expectation of Piracy

The expectation of illegal copying may cause some products not to be marketed at all, because the manufacturer does not believe that legal sales would be sufficient to recover the costs of production and distribution. In this case the loss to rights holders is the profits and royalties that would have been earned had the product been created and brought to market. Consumers also suffer a cost in this situation, equal to the difference between the value they would have placed on this product less the price they would have paid for it.

Non-profit Losses

There are of course also losses from piracy that do not (directly) concern profits. Counterfeit  copies of movies, for example,  can degrade the reputation of the movie maker in the eyes of viewers who see those badly made copies.

A Past Piracy Problem

In June of 1996, the largest ever video piracy operation in the United States was dismantled in New York.  The nationwide conterfeit business sold more than 100,000 pirated videos a week, grossing approximately $500,000.  The investigation, dubbed “Operation Copy Cat”, culminated when search warrants were executed by the New York City Police Department, assisted by the MPAA, on 17 locations, including four labs.  Authorites arrested 36 people and seized 817 VCRs, 77,641 pirated videos, $40,000 in case, 37,000 blank cassettes, more than 100,000 sleeves, lables and other sophisticated equipment used in the duplicating process.  The economic impact on MPAA member companies is estimated to be more than $87 million a year.


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