By Shafraz Farook
Never has there been a greater time to be a pirate. Not since the days of “Black Sam” Bellamy has it been so lucrative either. The need to pillage and plunder, though, has shifted from the Caribbean Sea to the Internet. Gold coins and fine rum have given way to software discs and downloads, as software piracy has grown into a highly profitable venture.
In a global survey published by Business Software Alliance (BSA), Sri Lanka’s rate of unlicensed software installation was 79 percent in 2015. Simply put, 4 out of 5 people had installed unlicensed software products that were obtained illegally—pirated software. In monetary terms, that’s a commercial loss of USD 163 million to software manufacturers. [1]
The survey also presented findings about the prevalence of malware or malicious code, such as viruses, trojans, keystroke-capturing software, spyware and ransomware, in pirated software and on the websites and peer-to-peer networks where they were commonly shared and sold. It also quantified the cost in time and money for dealing with the effects of malware found in pirated software. And strengthened the results of a report [2] published by International Data Corporation (IDC) in 2013:
- 36 percent of downloaded pirated software includes malicious malware.
- 20 percent of pirated CDs and DVDs infect the host PC with malicious malware.
- 15 percent of software coming through normal delivery channels is improperly licensed or infects host PCs with malicious malware.