Software

How's this for irony? US Navy hit with $600m software piracy claim

German software house says sailors are just the wurst


A German software developer has accused the United States Navy of illegally copying $596m worth of its product.

Bitmanagement Software GmbH claims that the Navy has copied "hundreds of thousands" of copies of its 3D modeling and tracking software BS Contact Geo without paying.

They have filed suit [PDF] in the US Court of Federal Claims asking for damages of "not less than $596,308,103."

Designed for 3D meetings, training, and collaboration, Bitmanagement touts the BS Geo software "uniquely enables interactive collaboration among multiple users in one virtual environment simultaneously, with high-quality graphics that appear crisp and sharp even on simple computers."

According to Bitmanagement's claim, it first began working with the Navy on a pilot program in 2011 that called for 38 copies of the software to be installed.

Following the trial program, the software developer claims that it was led to believe the Navy was going to expand the use of BS Geo by purchasing additional licenses for a large-scale deployment in 2013. During that time, Bitmanagement says it disabled the copy-protection software on BS Geo at the Navy's request.

Between 2013 and 2015, while negotiations for the licenses were going on, Bitmanagement claims the Navy proceeded to distribute and reinstall BS Contact Geo on at least 558,466 machines, despite only having paid for the initial 38 licenses.

"The government knew or should have known that it was required to obtain a license for copying Bitmanagment software onto each of the devices that had Bitmanagement software installed," the complaint charges.

"The government nonetheless failed to obtain such licenses."

Bitmanagement reckons that, at a per-copy price of $1,067.76 (€800), the Navy owes it roughly $596m for its use of the software. It is suing the US government for multiple violations of US copyright law. ®

Send us news
72 Comments

Microsoft teases deepfake AI that's too powerful to release

VASA-1 framework can turn a still image and a cloned voice file into a plausible video of a person talking

OpenAI's GPT-4 can exploit real vulnerabilities by reading security advisories

While some other LLMs appear to flat-out suck

What's up with AI lately? Let's start with soaring costs, public anger, regulations...

'Obtaining genuine consent for training data collection is especially challenging' industry sages say

British watchdog has 'real concerns' about the staggering love-in between cloud giants and AI upstarts

Billions in investment? Yeeeah, right – looks more like ensuring only select few developers thrive

Rust developers at Google are twice as productive as C++ teams

Code shines up nicely in production, says Chocolate Factory's Bergstrom

MPs ask: Why is it so freakin' hard to get AI giants to pay copyright holders?

Agreement on consent and compensation has failed to materialize

US Air Force says AI-controlled F-16 fighter jet has been dogfighting with humans

Robo-plane was made to restrain itself so as not to harm pilot or airframe

US government excoriates Microsoft for 'avoidable errors' but keeps paying for its products

In what other sphere does a bad supplier not feel pain for its foulups?

YouTube now sabotages ad-blocking apps that stream its vids

EFF lambastes latest 'lazy and deliberately malicious move'

Wing Commander III changed how the copy hotkey works in Windows 95

No, boss, I'm not just playing a game. I'm testing compatibility. Honest

IBM accused of cheating its own executive assistants out of overtime pay

Big Blue bosses retaliate against those seeking overtime, lawsuit claims

Debian spices up APT package manager with a dash of color, squishes ancient bug

2.9 gives a taste of what's to come