● 09.06.11

●● Cablegate: Microsoft Lobbies China to Attack Microsoft ‘Addicts’, Use “Minimum of Two-or-three Enforcement Showcases”

Posted in Asia, Microsoft at 6:19 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Summary: A look at how Microsoft is gently pressuring China to suit Microsoft rather than China

MICROSOFT along with its bully, the BSA, have been busy trying to make Chinese law a little more China-hostile, in order to increase Microsoft profits after it seeded the market. “They’ll get sort of addicted,” Bill Gates famously explained about Chinese people, “and then we’ll somehow figure out how to collect sometime in the next decade.”

↺ BSA

Disgusting. Greed, addiction, exploitation. Cornerstones of Microsoft?

The Cablegate cable from 5 years ago shows us how Microsoft gently blackmails the Chinese, promising jobs only if they change Chinese practices to suit Microsoft:

>

VZCZCXRO1395

OO RUEHCN RUEHGH RUEHVC

DE RUEHGZ #0810/01 2700601

ZNR UUUUU ZZH

O 270601Z SEP 06

FM AMCONSUL GUANGZHOU

TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 4043

INFO RUEHOO/CHINA POSTS COLLECTIVE

RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC

RUEHRC/USDA FAS WASHDC 0912

RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC

RUEKJCS/DIA WASHDC

RHHMUNA/HQ USPACOM HONOLULU HI

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 GUANGZHOU 030810

SIPDIS

STATE FOR EAP/CM AND DRL

USDA FOR FAS/ITP AND FAS/FAA

USDOC FOR 4420/ITA/MAC/MCQUEEN

USPACOM FOR FPA

SENSITIVE

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A

TAGS: ECON, EINV, KIPR, CH

SUBJECT: Microsoft Growing Rapidly in South China

(U) This document is sensitive but unclassified. Please protect

accordingly.

1. (SBU) Summary: Microsoft representatives told the Consul General

September 21 that with the company's rapid growth in Shenzhen and

elsewhere, they expect sales in South China to surpass those in Hong

Kong. Company representatives complained about weak copyright

enforcement and asked the Consulate to continue to highlight the

need for improved IPR protection with local government leaders. End

summary.

South China: a fast-growing key market for software

--------------------------------------------- ------

2. (U) The two representatives - Ni Jianbo, General Manager of the

Branch Office, and Zhong Weidong, Southern Regional Manager of

Microsoft's branch company in Guangzhou - were bullish on the

company's overall development and future plans, but more tentative

about prospects for protecting Microsoft's intellectual property

rights (IPR) in southern China. South China accounts for about 30%

of the Microsoft's overall revenues countrywide, of which half comes

from Shenzhen. Some of Microsoft's businesses, such as its

enterprise partnership group, have grown by 200 times since the

establishment of the Shenzhen branch office in 2005. Ni and Zhong

believe Microsoft's sales in South China will exceed that of Hong

Kong next year, while sales volumes in East China have already

surpassed those of Hong Kong and are expected to exceed those of

Taiwan next year. The Greater China market (mainland China, Hong

Kong, and Taiwan) is so important to Microsoft that it is one of the

company's seven key subsidiaries in the world that reports directly

Microsoft's headquarters in Seattle.

3. (U) Microsoft's clients in Shenzhen include China's giant

telecommunication groups of Huawei Technologies and ZTE (Zhong Xin)

as well as local governments. Microsoft established its branch

office in Shenzhen to provide a quicker response to local clients,

to save operation costs and to better compete with other software

companies, such as Oracle, which came much earlier than Microsoft to

Shenzhen. Currently Microsoft has three sites in Shenzhen, dealing

with sales, technical support, research and development and

training.

4. (U) According to Ni and Zhong, Microsoft is building close

relationships with the local government in Shenzhen. To demonstrate

its long-term commitment to Shenzhen, Microsoft plans to upgrade the

branch office into a branch company, which would then pay tax

locally instead of to the main office in Beijing, to make more

investments, and to merge its three scattered office sites into one

in Shenzhen. Following a nationwide "cooperation" model with local

governments, Microsoft is partnering with a local company designated

by Shenzhen Government to set up a cooperation program called "MSTC"

(Microsoft Training Center) which helps local governments by

providing technical support, training, and solutions to e-government

projects; this also ensures the use of legal software. In the

Guangzhou consular district, Microsoft has opened one MSTC in

Xiamen, Fujian Province, is planning to open one in Hainan next

month, and has plans to open a center in Guangxi.

Weak IPR enforcement remains a big challenge

--------------------------------------------

5. (SBU) Ni and Zhong commented that while local governments have

been making progress in IPR protection, copyright protection for

software was a low priority for local officials, particularly in

Guangzhou. Zhong said local Copyright Bureau officials focused

mainly on developing the local cultural industry, including

publishing and audio and video products. Local government agencies

have made little effort to enforce the rights of stakeholders in the

software industry (both domestic and foreign), despite Microsoft's

lobbying efforts during the past several years. According to Zhong,

the main reason behind the relative absence of copyright enforcement

was that software industry contributes a very small portion of local

GDP, the majority of which relies on manufacturing. They also

thought that officials might be concerned about the impact of

rigorous enforcement on the local business environment since many

manufacturers use pirated software. Local officials often do not

attend copyright protection seminars or events that industry

chambers such as the Business Software Association (BSA) or Chinese

Software Association (CSA) organize. Both Zhong and Ni said that

the lack of interest in protecting software copyright puts Guangdong

at a disadvantage when competing with Shanghai; in addition, lack of

GUANGZHOU 00030810 002 OF 002

protection will not help upgrade Guangdong upgrade knowledge-based

industries.

6. (SBU) Zhong, who had previously worked in Microsoft's branches in

Southwest China for three years, pointed out that officials in those

areas were more cooperative than Guangdong. Microsoft was

successful in getting enforcement action in Southwest China by

adopting a "top-down" strategy to build relations with local

provincial and municipal leaders and thus encourage them to order

local enforcement agencies to take more action. A similar strategy

in South China had not been as successful, though Ni acknowledged

this effort was new. In Guangxi, Microsoft got a commitment from

the local Copyright Bureau to take two enforcement cases, starting

in October. Zhong commented that most enforcement agencies just

want a few "showcase" actions they can point to and then do nothing

further. Microsoft's goal is to have local agencies do a minimum of

two-or-three enforcement showcases to achieve successes and hope

this will encourage them to do more. At the same time, the company

also realizes that it is impossible for local government to do too

many cases, given their limited resources.

7. (SBU) Zhong asked the Consul General to urge local government

leaders in Guangdong to be more cooperative in copyright

cooperation, since they found "Top-down" strategy is very helpful in

other areas where they also first encounter officials unwilling to

cooperate.

Comment

-------

8. (SBU) Microsoft's experience in South China highlights regional

differences in China's IPR enforcement. Enforcement is often

subject to local protectionism. Local officials often believe that

enforcement conflicts with the need to develop the economy in order

for them to get promoted. Until they can be persuaded that

enforcement actually helps development the economy, we will continue

to have problems such as those described above.

GOLDBERG

We sure hope that Goldberg understands why Microsoft’s behaviour is wrong. It knowingly turns a blind eye to counterfeiting when it suits it, later calling everyone a “pirate” and demanding payments or jail time. Microsoft makes entire nations look bad, collectively criminalising its own clients. █

↺ It knowingly turns a blind eye to counterfeiting when it suits it

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