Financial Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Friday, Sep 03, 2004

News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Info-Tech - Piracy
Marketing - Piracy


`90 pc of Adobe software in use are pirated copies'

Preeti Pandey

Mumbai , Sept. 2

SOFTWARE piracy continues to haunt software vendor Adobe India as the company's revenues are getting shot down.

"In India, 90 per cent of Adobe software is being used in the pirated version so the company revenues are substantially affected," Mr Naresh Gupta, MD, Adobe Systems India, told Business Line.

While China heads the list of countries having the highest rate of software piracy, India is not far behind, said Mr Partha Iyengar, VP-Research, Gartner (India).

According to IDC, software piracy in the country is estimated at 73 per cent with losses amounting to approximately $350 million (2003 statistics).

"Without piracy the numbers would be incremental revenues for these firms; so look at the loss to the company. There is also a multiplier effect what with corporates themselves using pirated software," Mr Iyengar said.

While Adobe's sales in Japan a similar market to India touches $250 million the Indian market contributed only $4 million compared to $2.5 million in China last year on account of software piracy, observed Mr Bruce Chizen, CEO, Adobe, during his visit to India last year.

For Adobe the loss amounts to the inability, "to invest the money in India-centric initiatives such as localisation of products. We are trying to combat piracy through consumer awareness and providing the original software at affordable rates," Mr Gupta said.

Meanwhile, the company will continue to invest in its Indian operations. This year Adobe would invest $10 million on (infrastructure) capacity expansion at Noida with plans to hire 150 people for its R&D centre by the year-end.

"Once the building is completed, the capacity will increase from accommodating 400 people to 800 people," added Mr Gupta. Interestingly, Adobe India has filed 20 patent applications till date in areas of mobile devices, image search and image compression.

More Stories on : Piracy | Piracy | Software

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



Stories in this Section
Reliance Info unveils post-paid plan Joy 499


DoT for retaining access deficit charges on incoming ISD calls
DoT to step up monitoring against illegal long distance telephony
Computer telephony integration centre
International telephony — VSNL to seek compensation from Govt for early loss of monopoly
Tata Indicom rings into Sivakasi, Virudhunagar
Mega fabrication facility for microprocessors
Infosys draws up 1:1:3 strategy for consulting biz
`H1B visa norm changes being discussed'
4 new IT parks in Chennai
i-flex board okays issue of warrants to IBM Global Services
Infineon plans for India centre
Consign Tech bags UAE deal
Keltron IT courses
Satyam recruits in a big way in Malaysia
Nasscom bids to bring academia, industry closer
BSNL value-added broadband set for commercial launch
`90 pc of Adobe software in use are pirated copies'



The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | Business Line | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2004, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line