The earlier
story told how a schoolteacher in Russia was being charged
with piracy for using illegal copies of MS Windows in school
computers. Reports are that he faces 5 years behind bars in
addition to having to pay 260,000 rubles ($9,650) in damages.
Well, the case seems to have had an impact. Mosnews
is reporting that the regional Ministry of Education has
decreed that schools will no longer use commercial
software. They're going to start with a locally
distributed, localized version of Linux and go from there.
Teachers aren't happy, because they don't know anything
about Linux and there is no one around to help them.
Teachers aren't happy, because they don't know anything about Linux and there is no one around to help them.
One moment while I pull out the world's tiniest fiddle.
If they know enough to order up a free Ubuntu CD and get it running on an Internet-capable PC, then they can get help with everything else. It's not like Linux is a deep dark secret or something. Or running Open Office requires a PhD.
Aside from a few gasps about teachers actually being required to give more than lip service to "continuing education," I consider this a very wholesome development. With the Russian school system teaching/learning OSS, I expect a wealth of useful contributions to the usefulness of said software.
Also, if Russian bureaucracy is anything like what I think it is, it will be years before this directive is resolved, confirmed and enforced countrywide.
more over not knowing Linux isn't a permanent condition. This is a school and they're teachers so you'd think that they would.. well... learn.
No No NO! Teachers TEACH, students LEARN. If teachers start learning, then they are students. And since it will likely be the students who will be teaching them, then the students will be teachers.
And that's just wrong. Next thing you know, you'll have disasters of biblical proportions — dogs and cats living in sin, mass hysteria!
It is sad that there are teachers who hate to learn, apparently more than they hate the risk of 5 years in a labor camp.
Really most X GUIs are not fundamentally different than Windows, just a few things in different places. It shouldn't be any more difficult than getting used to a new floor layout when changing jobs or moving.
Beyond that, of course, those who are willing to learn a bit more can benefit from a far more expressive text interface.
...mob, the guys who stamp out hundreds of thousands of copies for profit. Them boys fight back, cops or no cops, or they might even be the cops, or in the army, or the FSB. either way, they don't like having their rubles messed with and have been known to be rather proactive about it.
So-they pick on some defenseless teacher and some schools, etc. Boy, that's some manly men there! That'll show them durn pirates, we'll fine this poor teacher a years pay and send him to the gulag!
In fact, eventually (I wouldn't be surprised at all really) MS and the BSA and whatnot are going to probably be getting some personal messages from those blackhatskis over there to just backoff and accept the status quo as it is, OR, MS and a host of other digital copy peddlers will realise before this happens that they should drop cost down to maybe double duplification costs, max, for a full legal retail price, as the only practical and *safe* way to deal with their problem of "piracy".
They should do that everywhere, with software, music, movies-whatever.
I really don't think most folks care about paying for stuff-IF it isn't a pure gouge price. Getting obviously gouged seems to invoke the mindset of "ta heck with them crooks, who cares?" in a lot of people around the world.
Follow-Up: Russian School Teacher Facing Labor Camp
The earlier story told how a schoolteacher in Russia was being charged with piracy for using illegal copies of MS Windows in school computers. Reports are that he faces 5 years behind bars in addition to having to pay 260,000 rubles ($9,650) in damages.
Well, the case seems to have had an impact. Mosnews is reporting that the regional Ministry of Education has decreed that schools will no longer use commercial software. They're going to start with a locally distributed, localized version of Linux and go from there. Teachers aren't happy, because they don't know anything about Linux and there is no one around to help them.