Microsoft has confirmed it is worried after after a New York Times article suggested that Russian authorities have used the company’s antipiracy policy as a context for raids on advocacy groups.
According to the article published 11 September, the Russian government raids are “under the pretext of searching for pirated Microsoft software.” Russian legal counsel retained by Microsoft to combat software piracy, the article suggested, had supported Russian law enforcement in these endeavours.
The article quotes complaints by advocacy groups that the “antipiracy” raids were used to confiscate files and crush internal dissent. Microsoft’s supposed response to the groups’ complaints was muted, although the company is now reacting strongly to the Times’ report.
Microsoft terminates contracts with candidates who violate those provisions, Kutz added. “We have to protect our products from piracy, but we also have a commitment to respect fundamental human rights.”
Kutz claimed that, as a result of discussions with activist groups, Microsoft would increase its monitoring and training of Russian counsel involved in its antipiracy program, publish the names and certifications of authorised Microsoft representatives in Russia, and work to increase internal awareness of its Infodonor program, which offers free Microsoft software to NGOs (non-governmental organisations).
On 13 September, Microsoft took additional steps to correct the issue.
“To prevent non-government organisations from falling victim to nefarious actions taken in the guise of antipiracy enforcement,” Brad Smith, Microsoft’s senior vice president and general counsel, wrote in a posting on The Official Microsoft Blog, “Microsoft will create a new unilateral software licence for NGOs that will ensure they have free, legal copies of our products.” The program would last until 2012, with an extension possible.
Furthermore, Smith added: “We’re creating in Russia a new NGO Legal Assistance Program focused specifically on helping NGOs document to the authorities that this new software license proves they have legal software.” That will supposedly include details for those NGOs with which to contact Microsoft in the event of questions from the authorities.
Smith also insisted that “we unequivocally abhor any attempt to leverage intellectual property rights to stifle political advocacy or pursue improper personal gain.” Microsoft will apparently retain an “international law firm” to independently investigate the problem.
The incident again illustrates the thorny issues involved in Microsoft’s dealings with nations that have less-than-stellar human-rights records. In such cases, the company’s desire to maintain solid business processes finds itself influenced by the government’s need to suppress dissent; those countries’ historic lack of transparency also hinders matters, preventing independent groups from evaluating whether any corrective policies have, in fact, been enacted.
In late 2009, New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof accused Microsoft of “craven kowtowing” to the Chinese government by offering “sanitized pro-Communist results” in response to Bing searches in Simplified Chinese for terms such as “Tiananmen” and “Dalai Lama.” Microsoft later claimed it fixed a “bug” supposedly responsible for Bing Image Search delivering uniformly pro-Chinese-government results to politically sensitive queries.
In addition to dissident and advocacy-groups issues, Microsoft and other tech companies have been forced to address the question of labor standards in countries such as China, where independent oversight is likewise difficult.
In August, Microsoft claimed it had investigated allegations of massive labour violations at the KYE Systems factory in China’s Dongguan City, in response to an April report by the National Labor Committee detailing conditions there.
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