The President of Romania has told
Microsoft
chairman Bill Gates that computer piracy had helped his country to develop an IT
industry.
Speaking at the opening of a new technical centre in Romania,
Traian
Băsescu told Gates that without piracy his country would not have an IT
industry.
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"Piracy helped the young generation to discover computers. It set off the
development of the IT industry in Romania," he said.
"A bad thing became, in the end, an investment in friendship towards
Microsoft and Bill Gates; an investment in educating the young generation in
Romania which created the Romanians' friendship with the computer."
Gates made no reply. He was later presented with the Star of Romania by
Basescu. The honour is traditionally awarded for outstanding bravery during
wartime.
The most recent
global
study of piracy carried out by the
British
Software Alliance (BSA) found that 72 per cent of software in Romania is
pirated, despite copyright laws being passed 10 years ago.
"Software piracy has many negative economic consequences, such as local
software industries being crippled by competition with pirated software from
abroad, and lost tax revenues and jobs from the lack of a legitimate market,"
said the BSA report.
"These costs reverberate up and down the supply and distribution chains."
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