Microsoft to Protect Russian NGOs From Politically Motivated Piracy Raids
On September 14, 2010, Microsoft announced it would give the Russian non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and some media, free software, after the computer giant was accused of assisting the Russian authorities in confiscating government opponents’ computers under the pretext of searching for unlicensed software.
On September 11, 2010, the New York Times reported that Microsoft allegedly ignored requests for help from the targeted organizations and that the company’s Russian attorneys assisted the police in seizures.
According to the report, one targeted organization was a popular environmental group, Baikal Environmental Wave, which organized protests following the government’s decision to reopen a factory that had been polluting Lake Baikal in Siberia, the world’s oldest and deepest lake and a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1996.
Faced with these accusations, Microsoft’s Moscow office representative stated the company is preparing free software packages for the NGOs and that it would announce more details soon. The company might also provide the NGOs with a new software license that would prove that they own legal software.
For more information, please contact Jelena Jankovic at our Balkan Regional Office.
Source: Agence France-Presse (AFP), The New York Times
Read more news on Russia or . Get our latest IP news or browse IP News Eastern Europe Archives.
Share:
September 2010 News
- Donald Trump Sues Lithuanian Beauty Pageant Organizer Over Trademark, Copyright Infringement
- Macedonia Adopts New Copyright and Related Rights Law
- Trademark Registrations Greatly Increasing in Russia
- Kosovo Parliament Approves New Trademark and Industrial Design Laws
- DuPont Defends Teflon Brand Against Russian Infringers
- Russian Court Affirms Bank’s Exclusive Rights to Cabbage Image
- New York Times to Launch News Service News.me
- Microsoft to Protect Russian NGOs From Politically Motivated Piracy Raids
- 20 Servers with Pirated Films Found at Polish University
- Knauf Awarded USD 160,000 in Case Against Russian Counterfeiter
- Russia Opens Software Piracy Case Against LG Electronics
- New Copyright Laws Published in Bosnia Official Gazette
- Estonian University Gets European Patent for Lactic Acid Bacterium
- REHAU Gets Well-Known Trademark Status in Ukraine
- Moscow Gorbushka Market Faces Uncertain Fate
- Russia Adopts New Rules for Destruction of Fake Drugs
- Romanian Customs Seize Coca Cola, Gucci, Calvin Klein Counterfeits
- Macedonian Customs Detain Counterfeit Phones, Sneakers, Apparel
- Hungarian Customs Seize Counterfeit Sneakers Worth EUR 1.8 M
- Bulgarian PTO Seizes Puma, Armani, Adidas Counterfeits
- Kyrgyzstan Accedes to Hague Convention Abolishing the Requirement for Legalization for Foreign Public Documents
- Moldova PTO Announces Public Consultation on EU Geographical Indications
- Azerbaijan Issues Patents for 39 Inventions in Period April-August
- Kazakhstan Roundtable on Copyright and Related Rights
- Azerbaijan Opens Data Center Aimed at Facilitating Trade