Two US companies fined for using illegal software

13.01.2006

Jenny Blank, director of enforcement for the BSA, said the problem of unlicensed commercial software is ever present and that her group pursues each case that comes before it. 'A lot of businesses are failing to pay attention or make the decision that they don't want to pay the money for licenses,' Blank said. 'It ends up costing them more [due to additional fines] than if they'd bought the licenses to start.'

What often happens is that businesses buy one or two licensed copies of an application, then install it on more computers than permitted. 'That is the same as essentially walking into a store and stealing those copies,' she said. 'These are companies who are otherwise reputable. These are companies that if they needed a new computer, they wouldn't go and knock off a computer store.'

The following three companies also settled claims of illegal software use with the BSA recently:

-- NorCal Moving Services, a San Leandro, Calif.-based commercial and residential moving services company, paid a $75,000 fine for having more installations of Microsoft software programs on its computers than it could confirm it had licenses to support.

-- Patriot Performance Materials Inc., a Sanford, N.C.-based provider of armor products for personnel, vehicle, aircraft and architectural applications, paid a $70,000 fine to settle claims that it had unlicensed Adobe, Autodesk, Microsoft, SolidWorks and Symantec software programs on its computers.