China blocks foreign software use in gov't

By Staff, ZDNet Asia
Monday, August 18, 2003 10:11 AM
A new policy by China's governing body will rule that all ministries buy only locally-produced software at the next upgrade cycle.

The move by the State Council is aimed at breaking the dominance of U.S.-based Microsoft on desktop computers, will eliminate Microsoft's Windows operating system and Office productivity suite from hundreds of thousands of Chinese government computers in a few years' time.

Gao Zhigang, an official with the Procurement Center of the State Council, told reporters that the new policy will be in place by year-end.

At a special congress held to encourage ministries to upgrade to WPS Office 2003, a China-made office productivity suite, Gao said that only hardware pre-installed with domestic operating systems and application software will be purchased by government. Those seeking exceptions will need to submit a special request.

The new policy is expected to increase the number of government officials using domestic-made office software from a third to 100 percent eventually. Gao said that the new policy is meant to support the local software industry and protect state information security.

Microsoft has been on a charm offensive, including granting the government inspection rights over Windows source code and creating a new CEO position for Greater China.

The new policy will continue till at least until 2010. These protections are standard and are not meant to discriminate against other countries, said the Council. China is a member of the World Trade Organization and it is unclear if the new bans contravene the body's charters.

"The domestic software industry is very insulated. There is poor interaction and partnership with user companies. The increased use of domestic software will make the China software industry more open," said Fei Lin, an official with the State Assets Supervision and Administration Commission.

The ban comes as part of China's efforts to challenge Western technology. Chinese software company Kingsoft used to take 90 percent of the market with its Chinese word processing tool, but lost nearly all market share to Microsoft Word when the product entered in the early 90s.

Experts say that the WPS system is the only product that will challenge Microsoft Office's dominance of the Chinese market.

In addition to commercial reasons for protecting local software, there are security concerns. China is placing official support behind the Red Flag Linux operating system, which they trust because the open-source code allows officials to see that there are no data spyholes installed by foreign powers.

Recently, China rejected globally-dominant MPEG for its own audio-video compression standard, known as AVS. China is keen to move its IT infrastructure away from the dominance of Western companies and the fees levied by such firms.

ZDNet China's Zhang Xiaonan contributed to this report.


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 20 comments

China hiding behind the Great Wall? Nothing new. The result will be the same - China being not compatible with the rest of the world. Just as they had to import the sparrows to replace the exterminated ones, they would have to mass-import Windows and Office, but the damage will be done. Bill Gates will surely survive this - most of his software installed in China was pirated anyway.
Posted by Alex on Tuesday, August 19 2003 04:54 AM

To Alex:

Bullshit. World = M$??? Please get your facts straight, the world does not equate to Microsoft. It is Microsoft which has consistently insisted on maintaining incompatibility with other OS and work productivity programs.

If China maintains focus behind Linux and other open-source office programs, it will be Microsoft that remains incompatible with the rest of the world.
Posted by JKhan on Tuesday, August 19 2003 03:17 PM

This is great. I hope other governments follow in their footsteps. Some are trying, such as Mexico and a handful of European countries, because people are starting to realize there are much better things available in regards to stability, portability, and security. Oh, and of course you can't beat the price of an open source operating system.
Posted by geniepants on Tuesday, August 19 2003 03:54 PM

SCO Bills Chinese Government for $100 Billion.
Posted by India Team on Tuesday, August 19 2003 08:45 PM

To JKhan:
1. Throwing around bull$#!t, while being a strong argument, is more fitting to a farm than a civilized discussion.
2. Posting the same thing twice doesn't make it look more persuading.
3. Like it or not, but Windows/Office is THE de-facto corporate desktop standard. While open-source made some inroads into server territory, it didn't take any share from MS. Quite contrary, Windows and Linux are both chewing away at Sun/Solaris and other flavors of Unix, with MS being in the lead.
4. Since when China became the trend setter for the rest of the world? Some cheap clothes and toys – maybe (even those are mostly designed elsewhere), but software? It’s the US corporate desktop and US back office where the current and future standards will be set. Others will have to follow – or stay behind.
Not that I am a fan of Bill, but let’s get the facts straight.
Posted by Alex on Tuesday, August 19 2003 10:19 PM

To Alex (or all M$ slave):

1. What's de-facto corporate desktop standard? If you wanna do business with Chinese, let use WPS, it is the de-facto Chinese government word processor now. Otherwise, let give up and do bussines with the rest of the M$ world.
2. Some ppl can only make their live by being the slave of M$, since they have difficulties to adapt the changes in the world. Face the fact, only stick with one platform, one language will give you a narrow career path. No "CORPORATE" will depend on a single platform.
3. I hope all other countries government won't follow the step of China, since they will make more and more so-call IT guys becomes jobless.
Posted by Loki on Tuesday, August 19 2003 11:25 PM

U.S. will have to follow suit and allow only U.S. made hardware and software to be used in U.S. Govt applications.
Eventually, due to the threat to U.S. economy/security, the standard will be enforced for Banking, Healthcare, Industry, etc.
They will also require only U.S. citizens to program/develop the hardware software.
Won't China love that.
Posted by smartboy on Wednesday, August 20 2003 02:15 AM

All developping countries have a huge interest in developping their own software on an Open-Source basis if they want to fill the numeric gap that separates them from developped coutries.

This is great news.
Posted by titus on Wednesday, August 20 2003 02:23 AM

This is not a war against the rest of world, but against M$, who continuously provide the largest viruses in this Planet. China has to use Linux, since no other choice. So not a big problem to communicate with outside.

About pirate softwares, that's funny but Bill Gates need to thank to them because without them, Linux will dominate for sure.
Posted by anonymous on Wednesday, August 20 2003 05:57 AM

us government already only allows us software and hardware
Posted by Abaddon on Wednesday, August 20 2003 07:12 AM

While I applaud the Open Source aspect of this, this mandate is a declaration of economic war.

If China were truly serious about fostering competition in software, it would mandate the purchase of software that interacts only with open, published, file formats and protocals. To deny all foreign firms from competing in this arena while reaping billions from "free trade" exports is beyond the pale.

If China forced MS to open its file formats this way, how bad would that be?
Posted by just_ducky on Wednesday, August 20 2003 11:30 AM

Yes, and as a matter of fact right now Microsoft is spending more money sweating over the inevitable advent of Linux - they just gave SCO a few million dollars to fight Linux. How dirty is that? M$ cannot fight when there is competition they cannot kill in a filthy way. M$ cannot kill Linux. M$ cannot compete when there is competition - because M$ never had competition.
M$ is dead meat in my opinion. It's just a matter of time. Just watch what happens in 2 to 3 years. I foresee about 15-20% drop in the use of Windows on the desktop.
Posted by Linux lover on Wednesday, August 20 2003 12:29 PM

The US should employ US programmers, but farms out to third world countries at the first opportunity. Money talks loud, and programmers in India already write quite a bot of Windos, and have for some time.
Posted by Peter Davidson on Wednesday, August 20 2003 12:48 PM

Shit this is the first time I agree with China's domestic policy. Although, who wouldn't give Microsoft the big FU anyway?
Posted by anonymous on Wednesday, August 20 2003 09:00 PM

One fact that cannot be denied is that China provides a significant source of cheap manufacturing for many US corporations. If the Chinese manufacturers required that US businesses dealing with them had to send correspondence to them in OpenOffice format, the US businesses could either look for other manufacturers to deal with or switch their office suites.

My guess is that they would switch office suites rather than have to set up new contracts, new supply lines and distribution channels.
Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, August 20 2003 10:10 PM

To smartboy: Totally agree. Only one question, how many software engineers do you think there are in the states who are US citizens?
Posted by Mir on Thursday, August 21 2003 05:43 AM

Does anyone remember the Key Escrow debacle?

Good on China I say. I am amazed that the British government didn't pass similiar 'laws' (this looks more like policy than Law, which are two very different things) after the US Government stole trade secrets from UK companies and passed them on to US companies www.techweb.com...
Posted by Jeremy Hooks on Friday, August 22 2003 10:29 PM

Does anyone remember the Key Escrow debacle? (*edited*)

Good on China I say. I am amazed that the British government didn't create a similar policy after the US Government stole trade secrets from UK companies and passed them on to US companies www.techweb.com...
Posted by Jeremy Hooks on Friday, August 22 2003 10:32 PM

I think this is a precedent to set in MS
lunk heads that they are reaping off
consumers.

Then they trumpet about piracy. Consumers
cannot afford the price while MS dominate and make billions.

This is a clear signal that asian countries are no fools. Look at what happen in Thailand. MS changing price plan, all asian countries should try to to the same thing to force MS to change. Otherwise, we should look for alternatives.
Posted by anonymous on Wednesday, October 22 2003 02:44 PM

This is complete crap. I don't like Microsoft at all, but come on people!! Can't you see how China is flexing its' muscle by cutting off foreign competition as it has for many years? Remember years ago when nobody could sell anything in China? Now since they are taking all of the manufacturing jobs from the U.S., and combined with the new training they are getting, they are getting on a roll. This combined with the flagarent government ban on a U.S. operating system!!! Sorry LINUX guys...I think I'll back a U.S. company, no matter how crappy they are perceived. It's time to end this LINUX debacle once and for all. Time to spank the Orient and all who oppose us with our own technologies.
Posted by anonymous on Sunday, December 14 2003 01:31 PM


Tech Jobs Now!

Search for your ideal tech job:

Save changes to all open Word documents at one time

Microsoft Office Suite

If your Word sessions often wind up with a lot of open documents, this obscure command can streamline the process of closing them and saving your changes.


Read more »



Do we need more delivery centers?

Blog thumbnail

As I wrote a while back in about "racing to subsidies", there certainly is an increased focus by governments to attract delivery centers to their region. To do that, many..... by Michael Rehkopf

Read more »

Tags

  1. antivirus
  2. apple ipod
  3. cnet networks inc.
  4. desktop
  5. e - mail
  6. hard drive
  7. intuit inc.
  8. mcafee inc.
  9. microsoft corp.
  10. microsoft windows
  11. microsoft windows vista
  12. microsoft windows xp
  13. norton co.
  14. pc
  15. performance
  16. security
  17. software
  18. tool
  19. web
  20. web site