Canada’s software piracy rate decreased three percentage points from 36 percent to 33 percent in 2005, falling below the worldwide piracy rate, which remained stable at 35 percent, according to the Canadian Alliance Against Software Theft and the Business Software Alliance.The two organizations recently released findings of a global software piracy study that indicates losses to the Canadian economy due to software piracy were 943 million Canadian dollars (US$850 million), down C$166 million from 2004. Canada is also among the top 20 countries with the lowest software piracy rates worldwide.The independent study, conducted by IDC, shows some improvements in a number of markets that indicate antipiracy education, enforcement and policy efforts are beginning to pay off in emerging economies such as China, Russia and India, and in Central/Eastern Europe and the Middle East and Africa. However, losses from software piracy worldwide amounted to US$41 billion in 2005, an increase of US$752 million over the previous year.“It’s encouraging to see progress being made in reducing Canada’s software piracy rate and how it is approaching the rates found in countries such as the United Kingdom, Germany and Australia,” said Jacquie Famulak, president of CAAST. “However, more than one out of every three copies of PC software put into use in Canada in 2005 was still obtained illegally. This continues to have an impact on our economy, and local software vendors, suppliers and channel partners in the wholesale-to-retail distribution chain are among the most deeply affected. This year’s study shows that software piracy can indeed be lowered, but also that more work needs to be done.” Some positive changes were seen in rapidly developing countries such as Russia, which saw a four-point drop in its PC software piracy rate while India’s piracy rate declined two points. China, with one of the fastest-growing IT markets in the world, dropped four points between 2004 and 2005.By CIO Canada staff, ITWorldCanada.com Keep checking in at our Security Feed for updated news coverage.Or subscribe via RSS. Related content news UK government plans 2,500 new tech recruits by 2025 with focus on cybersecurity New apprenticeships and talent programmes will support recruitment for in-demand roles such as cybersecurity technologists and software developers By Michael Hill Sep 29, 2023 4 mins Education Industry Education Industry Education Industry news UK data regulator orders end to spreadsheet FOI requests after serious data breaches The Information Commissioner’s Office says alternative approaches should be used to publish freedom of information data to mitigate risks to personal information By Michael Hill Sep 29, 2023 3 mins Government Cybercrime Data and Information Security feature Cybersecurity startups to watch for in 2023 These startups are jumping in where most established security vendors have yet to go. By CSO Staff Sep 29, 2023 19 mins CSO and CISO Security news analysis Companies are already feeling the pressure from upcoming US SEC cyber rules New Securities and Exchange Commission cyber incident reporting rules don't kick in until December, but experts say they highlight the need for greater collaboration between CISOs and the C-suite By Cynthia Brumfield Sep 28, 2023 6 mins Regulation Data Breach Financial Services Industry Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe