News (8)

  • How to curb digital piracy

    Former White House staffer Jonathan Greenblatt believes Hollywood can respond to the challenge of new media but that it must first must reconsider its audience. Otherwise, Tinseltown's future is sure to turn ugly.

  • China software reclaimed from pirates

    Pirates selling software such as operating systems for US$1 had been a major roadblock to software development in China, but new ultra-strict laws have begun to work. Do they go too far?

  • Climbing the Great Wall: China’s IT future

    Given the gloomy outlook around the globe, China is one of the few countries that can excite just about any high-tech exec. But is the Beijing bubble about to burst? ZDNet Australia investigates.

  • Curbing digital piracy in the post-Napster world

    Is the Internet a happy global village or a borderless black market where stolen content flourishes and pirates lurk around every corner.

  • Russia gets budget version of Windows

    Microsoft will release a low-price version of Windows in Russia by the end of the year, an effort to wean consumers in that country off pirated software and Linux.

Features and Case Studies (2)

  • How to curb digital piracy

    Former White House staffer Jonathan Greenblatt believes Hollywood can respond to the challenge of new media but that it must first must reconsider its audience. Otherwise, Tinseltown's future is sure to turn ugly.

  • Is Ballmer's $100 PC possible?

    Microsoft's chief executive may well think that a $100 PC will solve the problem of software piracy - but it's a question of who is willing to bear the cost.

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