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SAP begins crackdown

SAP India, the German subsidiary providing business software solutions for enterprises, Friday decided to crack down on unauthorised training centres to check illegal use of its patented products. Armed with an order from the Delhi High Court - issued on a suit filed by the subsidiary and its parent company SAP AG - the local commissioner of Bangalore raided NeoLogik, an unauthorised SAP training institute operating from a suburb near here. The raiding party found three servers and 12 nodes running pirated SAP R/3 software. The hard disks containing the pirated software were seized and sealed. Elaborating on SAP's efforts to curb unauthorised training centres, SAP South Asia president and CEO Alan Sedghi said the global firm was committed to protecting the intellectual property rights (IPRs) and interests of students seeking authorised training in SAP technologies. "We will intensify our efforts to work with the law enforcement agencies across the country to fight software piracy and crack down on non-sanctioned training centres that defraud students," Sedghi said in a statement released here. SAP has set up a community of education partners across India to offer well-designed and accessible training on SAP technologies. Prospective learners should check the accreditation of any education centre prior to parting with fee. SAP's training partners in India are Siemens Information Systems Ltd and Genovate Solutions (I) Ltd.
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