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China Microsoft Software

China State-Backed Firm Apologizes For 'Home Developed' Software Based On Microsoft Source Code (scmp.com) 44

An anonymous reader writes: A Guangdong-based state-backed enterprise in charge of e-government projects in the Southern Chinese province has apologized after admitting that its "home-developed" software was based on open-source code from US tech giant Microsoft. Digital Guangdong, known as DigitalGD, published an apology last week after it was revealed that its CEC-IDE software application, which helps programmers write code, was based on Microsoft's Visual Studio Code (VS Code), with just minor modifications and certain functions added.

VS Code is available under the Massachusetts Institute of Technology licence, a permissive open source licence allowing for reuse even for commercial purposes. DigitalGD said this fact was not disclosed due to "negligence," and admitted that its description of its software as "self-developed" has met scrutiny and doubt from Chinese programmers. "We are deeply sorry and humiliated for this, and relevant teams have been ordered to make rectifications," the company said.
"Chinese authorities have repeatedly demanded 'safe and controllable' hardware and software for key infrastructure, rewarding businesses for indigenous innovations, but this has motivated some companies to make false claims about their products," notes the South China Morning Post.

A similar incident happened in May when a Shenzhen-based Powerleader announced a "home developed" Powerstar P3-01105 CPU that was later revealed to be Intel's Core i3-10105 Comet Lake CPU.
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China State-Backed Firm Apologizes For 'Home Developed' Software Based On Microsoft Source Code

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  • Who writes software from scratch these days?

  • Did nobody question the silly idea that nobody in the country had ever made an IDE before? For instance there's Visual FreeBasic, kinda of like VB but more C-like. (I don't use it and can't vouch for it, but it does exist.)
  • by Eunomion ( 8640039 ) on Thursday August 31, 2023 @03:39AM (#63811350)
    It's not the copying they see as the problem, it's the getting caught.
    • Morality is not universal.

      In a low trust society, it is ok to lie, cheat, steal if you can get away with it. It is the other party's fault for not checking carefully. If you get away with it, then big win for you. If you get caught, you failed. It is a big disgrace to fail.

      In a high trust society it is not ok to lie, cheat, and steal. People still do it, but even the suspicion is shameful.

      • Moral understanding is not universal, but moral sensation is a fundamental part of humanity. Normal people are just taught by authoritarian states and cultures to ignore their autonomous perceptions and wait for permission or incentive to do the right thing.
  • They should apologize for _incompetence_! Nobody sane will base anything on the crap that MS puts out.

  • DOS 6.0 used pirated code, and I think a few other versions had to be withdrawn for the same reason. Yet Microsoft faced insignificant consequences for their actions. So, from my POV, the Chinese were at least somewhat honest - albeit after some time - which is more than Microsoft were, and so those involved should face lesser penalties than the knuckle rap that Microsoft vaguely felt.

    (Internet Exploder and SQL Server are legally bought programs, so even though they claim them as their own software, it's di

    • by znrt ( 2424692 )

      So, from my POV

      the problem with your POV is that you haven't the slightest idea of what you are talking about. pro tip: actually read past the clickbait headlines and you will maybe avoid embarrassing yourself.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      In this case the software (VS Code) is open source, so they didn't even steal it. They just didn't want to tell the Chinese government where they got it from, because the government is paranoid about anything originating from the US.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      DOS 6.0 used pirated code, and I think a few other versions had to be withdrawn for the same reason.

      Nope. DOS 6.0 did not use pirated code. The problem with DOS 6.0 was DoubleSpace, which violated a couple of Stac's drive compression patents. So it wasn't pirated code, but rather simple patent infringement.

      In the end, the jury found that the patent infringement did happen, but was not willful, so Microsoft had to pay roughly $5.50 for each copy of DOS 6 to Stac as a license fee. (I think MS-DOS retailed ar

  • Assuming the translation is good, that's a professional-grade apology by a psychology expert.

    It sounds like somebody removed the MIT LICENSE file and replaced it with a claim of original authorship?

    Automated translation:

    Apologies
    2023-08-26
    On the evening of August 24, our company was informed that some netizens posted to discuss our company's CEC-IDE system, and the company's management attaches great importance to it. Our Division thanks netizens for their support and attention to the CEC-IDE system, sincer

  • Microsoft code is terrible. Whoever based their project on it should be fired for gross incompetence.

  • we got caught.

  • But just so happens they did as the PRC always tells them to do (copy and steal shit), and it shockingly happened to be an American company that had the best material to steal from.
  • While this example is not as egregious, the ASIAir/ZWO situation is. This is a company that has built a decent product with a large following by pulling available bits from OSS projects, modifying them to lock people into the ZWO device catalog and then claim it's all their's without giving any credit or even bothering to follow the license. The licenses involved are GPL and LGPL which specify certain responsibilities. When pushed about it the company has basically given everyone the finger about it. The ne
  • Add Loongson CPUs to that list. They're heavily based on MIPS64 and are fabricated by STMicroelectronics. At least they licensed the intellectual property for MIPS this time.

    China continues to insist that the Loonsoon architecture is "indigenous" technology, too.

  • "We are deeply sorry and humiliated for this, and relevant teams have been ordered to make rectifications," the company said.

    It's good to know China doesn't just get humiliated when another country says something true about them, but also when they call themselves out.

    (I'm referring to the fact that Chinese media always complains "the West is humiliating us!" as though that meant the West shouldn't have said whatever it said. There was a popular song that satirized this: Fragile [wikipedia.org].)

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

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