Microsoft has taken legal action against eight software dealers in the US,
Canada, Egypt and the Netherlands following hundreds of reports to its
anti-piracy hotline.
The dealers are alleged to have engaged in the illegal sale of unlicensed
Microsoft software and software components, and the unlawful importation of
unlicensed software into North America from multiple dealers overseas.
The companies are accused of deceiving customers by selling unlicensed
software, or selling software under student or volume licences to customers that
were not eligible for such discounts.
Some of the dealers are also accused of selling illegal Certificate of
Authenticity labels that were improperly separated from their original software
packages.
"The legal actions announced today are part of our ongoing commitment to
protect consumers and support our partners by preventing dishonest dealers from
selling unlicensed software," said Bonnie MacNaughton, senior attorney at
Microsoft.
"The unlawful distribution and sale of this software has tangible negative
consequences for the marketplace.
"It undermines Microsoft's legitimate partners and deceives customers who
think they are receiving the full value of what they paid for, but instead
receive unlicensed software."
Microsoft is also working to identify and remove the source of illegal
unlicensed software, and has taken action in one of its lawsuits against an
alleged source for unlicensed software in the Netherlands.
This action follows information from a number of software dealers in the US
which settled prior lawsuits for selling unlicensed software.
Microsoft has alleged that HW Trading BV and its principal, Samir Abdalla,
received more than $3.7m from just three dealers in the US between March 2006
and May 2007 in payment, in whole or in part, for unlicensed software.
A second source of unlicensed software alleged to be exploiting the Egyptian
government's PC Initiative was raided by Egyptian law enforcement authorities on
30 April.
Computers loaded with unlicensed software, counterfeit software and software
components, and various other unlicensed software products, were confiscated in
the raid.
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