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Ballmer Calls Linux "A Cancer"

davidebsmith writes: "In an interview with the Chicago Sun-Times, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer says that Linux and the open source movement is "good competition" because it will "force [Microsoft] to be innovative," but calls Linux "a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches." He also says that the inclusion of IE in Windows has been "great ... for innovation in the software industry" (except for Netscape) and that MS's new copy protections are just "bumps in the road" to "help customers understand when they are crossing the line . . . so they can't do the wrong thing." And he says a few more amusing things, also."

709 comments

  1. What is ours is ours and yours is ours. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Q: The new Windows XP software, I've seen a trial version, contains a number of free products--media player, a CD burner, an Internet firewall. Could that bundling hurt smaller competitors who make stand-alone software? Isn't this kind of bundling that you offered with Windows and Internet Explorer? Yes it is. You pay for it along with the OS. And make no mistake MS could not care a bit for those other companies and the property they speak of is their own. 3RD party windows software is dead. You develope it and MS collects on it year after year after year.

  2. Microsoft released Linux software by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Next time somone tells you that the GPL forces all work to be Open Source you can tell them that MS released Front Page Server Extentions for Linux. (not Open Source either of course) Yes I know it's crap but it proves Ballmer's statement is a complete fabrication.

  3. Re:This word by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    If LINUX is a "A Cancer"
    Then Microsoft IS the VIRUS you keep paying for.

  4. Sue Government for using GPL? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Balmer has a very good point, although he uses Open Source where he should really use GPL. Corporations pay taxes, have rights, and the government has responsibilties to them, just like individuals. Where government funding is used something like the BSD license would be much more appropriate than the GPL.

    I now suspect that when the GPL appears in court someday it will not be to test its validity, but to challenge its use in a taxpayer funded project.

  5. Re:Iocaine powder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The really funny thing is, Ballmer looks EXACTLY like Vizzini.

  6. Re:He's got a point. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Guess how much Microsoft pays in taxes? Look it up.

  7. Re:Honorable fights only work when... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Yeah, all us free software advocates need to quit being silent and start bashing microsoft for a change...um...

  8. Re:Interesting philosophy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Sure you can, if you don't "own" it. If you do the work of creating it, but do it for someone else, you do not "own" it.

    Artistic works-for-hire are like that as well.

  9. Re:What the GPL does and doesn't do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Both the BSD and GPL advocates claim that they deliver freedom to the user (the focus is more towards the user than developers). A great part of freedom (for users) is the ability to copy and use software free of charge, but these licenses place no such requirements. But freedom (for users) must include the concept of obtaining the software for no charge. Turn it around all you wish, you cannot persuade me that free of charge is not a central part of "freedom", for if many programs in my hardisk today would not could not have given me the freedom to use, copy, modify, distribute if I could not afford to obtain them free of charge. Neither the BSD, nor the GPL licenses explicitly grant me the software free of charge:: I must pay for them when such offer is made. Since I suspect that more users of Free Software use them because of the low price, it is easy to imagine that Free Software will not offer the same degree of freedom when BSD and GPL software are offered at high prices. Price is critical aspect for what most of us consider real freedom.

  10. Defamation of character lawsuit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Linus should get together with RedHat, SuSE, IBM and every other business that is banking on Linux and collectively launch a massive defamation of character lawsuit against Balmer and MS for making that nasty public comment.

  11. Open sauce != GPL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    Open source is not available to commercial companies. The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source.

    Nice to see Mr Ballmer has a good grasp on the industry. Then again, he does manage to flame open source and the government in a single sentence, quite clever really.
  12. Public domain vs GPL, and the public interest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Ballmer saith:

    The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody. Open source is not available to commercial companies. The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source. If the government wants to put something in the public domain, it should.

    Well, the part about making the rest of your software open source is plain BS. If you incorporate GPL'd source code into a program, and release that program, you have to GPL that program. You do not have to GPL anything else, nor do you have to pay any attention to the GPL at all unless you release.

    As for the government funding, this sounds like a legitimate complaint until you think about it. Free software is available to everybody. Anyone can use it for any task. Anyone can freely modify it for their own use. Anyone can sell it.

    The only important difference between software in the public domain and GPL'd software is this: no one can hijack GPL'd software. No one can take the result of thousands or millions of programmer-hours of work, add twenty lines of proprietary extensions, and release a commercial product that people will have to buy, under a restrictive license, if they want those extensions.

    So, in essence, Steve Ballmer is saying that it's ok for the government to fund software that goes into the public domain (which Microsoft could then embrace and engulf), but not GPL'd software (which is just as free in every way, except that no one can embrace and engulf it). So tell me Steve, why should a project that received government funds be something that you can take over? How is that in the public interest?

  13. Re:This word by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3

    To Moderators: This moderation you use...(+1, Funny)...I do not think it means what you think it means.

  14. Re:Damn... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3
    I'd love to see someone on slashdot actually prove his statement wrong.


    It's simple, actually. If I write some code to sell and I only need ( read: want ) a tiny bit from, let's say, a GPL'ed library, well then, I should just go ahead and write that little bit myself. End of problem.

    On the other hand, if I want to use a large amount of GPL'ed code and add my little bit and sell it as mine, well, it's not really mine at all. Hence I shouldn't be allowed to sell it. If there were a way to buy the code, then doing this would be OK. But there isn't.

    And that's it. Q.D.E.


    -JD

  15. Cancer-like properties of Open Source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3
    The distinguishing trait of cancer cells is that they have disabled the cellular machinery which puts a brake on their reproduction, so that they can reproduce without limit.

    Now look at RMS's three freedoms: the freedom to read the source code; the freedom to modify the source code; and the freedom to share the sources and binaries with others (yeah I know that's not exactly it, but I like the read-modify-share acronym).

    So, whereas closed-source software has limits on its reproduction, open-source software is explicitly designed to reproduce without limit, just like a cancer.

    Of course, unlike a cancer, open-source software helps your system live longer!

  16. Re:This word by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4
    I just looked up "innovate" in my handy-dandy MSWebster dictionary and got:

    in-no-vate (IN no vait) vt. - to take an idea from another company (cf. Apple)

  17. Re:Damn... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5

    You're kidding right?

    There's plenty that's "free" about the GPL just not what some people want to be free (i.e. free to exploit).

    You are free to read the source code.

    You are free to wall-paper your house with the source code.

    You are free to recite the source code.

    You are free to compile the source code.

    You are free to copy to source code to another media.

    You are free to give a copy of the source code as a Christmas present.

    You are free to modify the source code.

    You are free to learn from the source code.

    You are free to tinker with the source code.

    You are free to charge a fee for transfering the source code. Now this of course does not mean that you are free to do these things in anyway whatsoever. (i.e. you may not be allowed to recite the source code over an illegal FM transmitter. Nor are you violate the terms of the GPL). Nonetheless, only a shabby miscrosoft-like absence of logic would allow the conclusion that there is nothing free about the GPL'ed software.

    What's funny is that the napster-kid mentality and the anti-GPL mentality seem to be essentially the same. "I deserve to be able to profit from someone else's work."

  18. Newspapers by Mike+Hicks · · Score: 2

    I think Ballmer made an interesting comment about `pirating' of software in homes when he said that artists and organizations like newspapers need to get paid. However, I don't know of any household that gets more than one copy of a newspaper..
    --

  19. Re:This word by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 1
    Actually, I stole it from someone else who posted the exact thing here 2 or 3 years ago. :)

    -A.P.

    --
    Forget Napster. Why not really break the law?

    --
    "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
  20. Re:This word by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 4
    The word has become quite arbitrary at Microsoft.
    I'm hungry. I think I'll go innovate a sandwich.

    --
    Forget Napster. Why not really break the law?

    --
    "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
  21. "What customers want" by Alan · · Score: 2

    Q: The new Windows XP software, I've seen a trial version, contains a number of free products--media player, a CD burner, an Internet firewall. Could that bundling hurt smaller competitors who make stand-alone software? Isn't this kind of bundling that you offered with Windows and Internet Explorer?

    A: Just as with Internet Explorer, our job is to offer customers what they want. We are trying to provide more functionality at the same or better prices every day. [A]ll the new capabilities of Windows XP are open to software developers to add onto, to build value around. I think Windows XP ought to be a real boon to the kinds of innovations that come from smaller companies. The inclusion of Internet Explorer with Windows has been absolutely great ... for innovation in the software industry. Whether it was great for Netscape is a different question.


    I realize that it's not illegal or anything, but isn't what Ballmer's saying here really "our customers were going to other companies for their software, so we decided to bundle it so they don't have to go elsewhere"?

    This is of course perfectly legal (I think). If I had a company that made widgets and I could get more clients by adding feature X to my widget, I probably would. However, combine this with complete dominance of the widget market (or close to it, a monopoly however you look at it), this means that widget manufacturures who survive by making feature X are being squashed.

    1. Re:"What customers want" by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 2

      Lets see. Defrag is by Intel, or Diskeeper. Terminal is by Hilgrave or whoever. There are examples of just that happening.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
    2. Re:"What customers want" by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 3

      But he's right. If a vast majority of people expect to be able to play CDs on their computers, that should become an operating system function. But a bundled player will never be able to do everything, and people who want more out of their CD players will get a better one. This is like saying 'no motherboard should have sound and video built into it, because that will put Creative Labs and nVidia out of business. Nobody will buy a Live 5.1 or Geforce 3 if there's a ESS solo and ATI Rage Pro 2x built onto the mobo.' That is, of course, bullshit.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
    3. Re:"What customers want" by FrankNputer · · Score: 1

      Of course, if you build an ATI chip in your mobo, then ATI gets a cut. If MS really gave a shit about their "partners" then they could simply bundle the existing products as a "value-add", cut in the companies that created popular software fro THEIR platform, & let people upgrade later if they choose to.

    4. Re:"What customers want" by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      You mean, like the zip code, licensed from WinZip, defragger, licensed from DiskKeeper, TS licensed from Critix, etc?

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
  22. Re:A pox on both your houses... by Skyshadow · · Score: 1
    WOO! Packers! =)

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    Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
  23. Re:Microsoft -- the spiritual leaders by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2
    An interesting question.

    At any rate, Ballmer is psychotic. I don't see how his perceptions jibe with the real world at all. It's basically a 'nyah nyah I'm not listening' reaction. I believe he's totally sincere when he doesn't attempt to identify ANY area Microsoft doesn't plan to control, and I believe he's equally sincere when he says they're acting just as they always have: which we have a very clear picture of, thanks to the DoJ.

    The only remaining question to my mind is, at what point does government (ANY government) begin to realise Microsoft wants all of THEIR turf as well? They really are going for direct control. They really are. What else would they be doing around about now?

  24. Re:govment funding by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2

    No, he means 'available to everybody' in the sense of the IE-only British Government website recently in the news. Everybody has to have IE and Windows. Government should not fund anything unless it makes people have IE and Windows :)

  25. bumps in the road by Wansu · · Score: 2

    I wonder how these "bumps in the road" will be received. Most of the people in my company still use NT4.0 with service pack 6. We haven't deployed Windows 2000 yet, although a few developers run it. It's going to be expensive to upgrade. Think home users are going to go for that? If your home machine needs to have it's OS reloaded, it's going to be a big hassle. I suspect these "bumps in the road" will translate into gouges in the eye.

    --
    Wansu, th' chinese sailor
  26. Let's not jump to hasty conclusions by alewando · · Score: 5

    Chances are, it's a quote taken out of context or a wholesale fabrication by a reporter. Microsoft didn't get where it is today by putting its collective foot in its mouth like that, so when you hear a quote as absurd as "Linux is a Cancer" (which Microsoft itself knows to be a falsehood), take it with a grain of salt.

    FUD is your enemy, but don't compound the problem by restorting tooFUD yourself. Microsoft still deserves the benefit of the doubt, and we should always take a careful investigatory approach whenever we wish to report news that may be damaging to the reputation of either party. That's the approach Microsoft has historically used (see mindcraft and others), and it's the least we can do too.

    1. Re:Let's not jump to hasty conclusions by Znork · · Score: 1

      Umm... exactly why should a company that tries to falsify evidence in court be given any form of benefit of the doubt?

      Eventually, if you are consistent enough in your constant unethical behaviour, you forfeit that benefit.

      I dont think that Microsoft as a corporation any longer has any kind of concept of right or wrong or truth or lies. The corporate mindset is that of a severely spoiled child.

    2. Re:Let's not jump to hasty conclusions by jhoffoss · · Score: 2
      That's exactly mikej's point though; Ballmer states the terms of the GPL so loosely and slanderously as to make anyone who doesn't know better make the assumptions that you stated in your comment. Now, next time Joe Schmoe, CEO of XYZ corp. sits in a board meeting and someone mentions GNU/Linux/open-source software, Mr. CEO is gonna blow up and ban the words from the building for all of eternity.

      After all, who's gonna take the word of a few hacker-programmer geeks who are so bad they have to give their code away, over the big ol' Microsoft Exec?
      ---

      --
      Linux: The world's best text-adventure game.
    3. Re:Let's not jump to hasty conclusions by mikej · · Score: 5

      Q: Do you view Linux and the open-source movement as a threat to Microsoft?

      A: Yeah. It's good competition. It will force us to be innovative. It will force us to justify the prices and value that we deliver. And that's only healthy. The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody. Open source is not available to commercial companies. The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source. If the government wants to put something in the public domain, it should. Linux is not in the public domain. Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches. That's the way that the license works.


      I gave him the benefit of the doubt as well, and was rewarded with this :) He's saying that any company that uses open source software must give away all of their software, which is true only as long as "use" means "incorporate source code from". He's implying that anybody using linux to run a print server or somesuch is going to be forced to give away every line of code they've ever written. It's very well worded, extremely effective, and completely dishonest.

      --
      Ideology breeds Hypocrisy. Just how much is up to you.
    4. Re:Let's not jump to hasty conclusions by MillMan · · Score: 5

      A: Yeah. It's good competition. It will force us to be innovative. It will force us to justify the prices and value that we deliver. And that's only healthy. The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody. Open source is not available to commercial companies. The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source. If the government wants to put something in the public domain, it should. Linux is not in the public domain. Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches. That's the way that the license works.

      It doesn't look that way. He's referring to how the GPL works, so in Microsoft's view he's correct. If you think open source is a good thing, however, his argument doesn't really hold.

      I don't know where this "government funded research" thing comes from...maybe unix back in the 60's? That's an incredibly arrogant statement coming from an executive at a big corporation anyway. Look at how much nearly free research companies get by giving a few bucks (relatively speaking) to Universities. The public doesn't see any of the return on that money....is that fair?

      You know, normally I don't get worked up by whatever crap Microsoft exec's are currently spewing out, but this really bugs me from a philosophical standpoint. For me they are really starting to represent everything that can go wrong with capitalism in the information age.

      Maybe they really ARE that terrified of linux, even on the desktop where it isn't currently much of a threat. No one to sue, buy, or threaten. Thats tough for a modern day corporation to deal with.

    5. Re:Let's not jump to hasty conclusions by numberVI · · Score: 1
      Open source is not available to commercial companies. The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source.

      1) Open source isn't not available to commercial companies. Perhaps by design. Otherwise, FALSE. GPLed code is most certainly available to commercial companies, but they have to contact the copyright owner and negotiate different licensing arrangements. This could cost money, or the copyright holder may not be interested in doing such a thing. Thats life. If KM (me) has to pay to use MS software. MS has to pay to use KM software.

      2) The way the license is written I am not convinced that this guy has ever really read the license. If he has, I am convinced that he will refuse to demonstrate any practical comprehension or understanding of the license. He has already refused to reveal what license he is talking about. Perhaps he wishes to avoid provoking the wrath of an elder god (whose name is unspellable in the ASCII character set), or a space alien named xenu. I think he is just trying to critisize the GPL without drawing attention to it in the process.

      3) if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source. An intentionally sloppy, misleading statement. Ballmer refuses to be clear on this issue. Here he fully obfuscates the distinction between "open-source" and the GPL, and overgeneralizes the GPL with a single vague, offhanded remark.

      The Govt needs to release it's code in the public domain, as per the law. This being the case, wouldnt it prevent them from participating in/contributing to open-source projects covered by the GPL? Could the diff files resulting from their participation be released in the PD?

    6. Re:Let's not jump to hasty conclusions by shandrew · · Score: 1
      Steve Ballmer is notorious for saying ridiculously stupid, arrogant things. For example, during the DOJ investigation of Microsoft, he said "Janet Reno can go to hell."

      Apparently, this sort of personality makes for good CEOs, but i'm not sure why. He could use some pointier hair.

    7. Re:Let's not jump to hasty conclusions by sleeplesseye · · Score: 1
      "Chances are, it's a quote taken out of context or a wholesale fabrication by a reporter."

      Actually, chances are, it's not. Chances are the reporter recorded the interview and that the editors and legal councel for the paper reviewed the entire piece before it was published. Chances are you know absolutely nothing about about how the news is created, and chances are you never even read the text of the interview in question...

      Steve Ballmer said:
      "Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches. That's the way that the license works."

      Basically, he's saying something that is entirely consistant with what Microsoft has been saying about the GPL lately... that businesses shouldn't use any open source software that uses GPL because the GPL requires that they give away all the software they develop.

      This, of course, is a obvious misrepresentation of the GPL license. If it's not blaintant pro-Microsoft FUD, I don't know what is...

    8. Re:Let's not jump to hasty conclusions by malfunct · · Score: 2

      Government funded research should be public domain. That means no licence on the knowledge. They should publish it and make it freely available for everyone in the country no matter who they are and those people should be free to use it how they wish within the framework of laws we uphold. There should not be a law that says you cannot make money from knowledge obtained from public research, that should be dealt with by competition. If there is no value in the service or product, people will not pay for it.

      --

      "You can now flame me, I am full of love,"

    9. Re:Let's not jump to hasty conclusions by The_Rook · · Score: 1

      ballmer's absolutely correct. government should not fund open source research. instead government should charge a license fee to companies that take advantage of government funded research.

      --
      when religion is no longer the opiate of the masses, governments will resort to real opiates.
    10. Re:Let's not jump to hasty conclusions by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 2


      Did you even read the interview, stupid? The context in which Ballmer said "Linux is a cancer" is RIGHT THERE for you to evaluate.

    11. Re:Let's not jump to hasty conclusions by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 2
      Open source is not available to commercial companies. The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source.

      This may be well-worded, but is still completely false. Even disregarding the ambiguous definition of what it means to 'use' software, what Ballmer is saying by 'you have to make the rest of your software open source' is that if you use open source software for project A, but not projects B or C, you have to make all of projects A, B, and C open source.

      There is not a single software license I can think of for which such a claim holds true. Certainly not GPL.

    12. Re:Let's not jump to hasty conclusions by srand · · Score: 1
      I don't know where this "government funded research" thing comes from...maybe unix back in the 60's?

      I thought that was weird too. Just a guess, but could it be that he was referring to the security-enhanced version of linux the NSA released? I mean despite all of what Microsquish has been saying about Linux being a security threat because of its open-source nature, that has to make Linux somewhat more appealing to suits who are interested in keeping secrets.

    13. Re:Let's not jump to hasty conclusions by daniel_isaacs · · Score: 1
      Anyone else think MS uses the phrase "Open-Source" so much just to piss off RMS?

      --
      - Dan I.
  27. Re:From the interview by smartin · · Score: 2

    Hey, Steven. It's called Research!

    --
    The difference between Canada and the USA is that in Canada healthcare is a right and gun ownership is a privilege.
  28. Re:not the point by Danse · · Score: 1

    How much source code did you find there?

    They only give you as much info there as is beneficial to them. They don't do a good job of disclosing their file formats as well as some protocols. As I said though, you can get access to most anything you need, it's just gonna cost you... alot.

    --
    It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
  29. Re:not the point by Danse · · Score: 2

    Microsoft's point is that the situation is far worse on Unix. And, you know what? No matter how many windows service releases you can list, they are right.

    It's not really any worse. Hell, at least you can get open and honest documentation for most open source software. Often you can even get help from the creators if you can't find the answer you're looking for. Microsoft will offer you something similar, if you're willing to sign NDAs, give them all your money, and let billg make you his bitch.

    --
    It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
  30. Re:not the point by Danse · · Score: 2

    but guess what? If you are developing for a Microsoft system you don't need them.

    Not everyone develops for MS OSes. I use MSDN quite a bit since I have to use MS products at work. I know what they have there. Sure, as long as you're just developing solutions for MS products with MS products, you're fine. You don't really need to know how the stuff works, just that it does. But if you're trying to say... import a Word document into an app you're writing, then you're pretty much screwed. They don't give you everything you need to know. They don't want people to have that info. That's what I'm talking about.

    Now, when it comes to Linux, you don't have a central repository like MSDN, but it's still pretty easy to find answers (MSDN isn't exactly simple sometimes either depending on what you're looking for). If I can't find info in the docs, there are several good websites with tons of info on just about every aspect of Linux. Additionally there are message boards, usenet groups and irc channels where you can usually find answers as well.

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    It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
  31. We shoud all thank Mr. Ballmer by defile · · Score: 2

    Thanks to the spirit of consumer advocation, Microsoft has provided the public with some very unsettling news. Open source is bad for businesses! Luckily, through a complete coincidence, Mr. Ballmer works at a company that can save you from open source! That's right, if you buy Microsoft products instead, you can totally avoid the cancer!

    It's through selfless efforts like this that makes Microsoft such a great company. Thanks Microsoft! Where would the world be without you?

    Really people. What did you expect him to say? Yeah, that's right. Linux is totally superior to our software in every way. If you switch to open source today, why, you're no longer our bitch! You can totally stop putting up with our crap like constant bluescreens, ridiculous licensing schemes, forced upgrades, and no source code. In fact, you'd have to be crazy to put up with us. What's wrong with you people?

    This could be sort of justified if a reputable consumer advocate group said "avoid open source for the following reasons". But it's not.

    1. Re:We shoud all thank Mr. Ballmer by Protohiro · · Score: 1
      Yes, this is dishonest crap, and yes, no one should trust advice from people who stand to gain from you choice. But peoples do. Companies make ridiculous assertions all the time in their pr, and people buy it.

      Like movies. I hear time and time again that such and such movie is "supposed to be really good" from friends, usually before it comes out. Where did they hear it was good? From the PR departments of the studios of course...but that didn't stop them from buying a ticket.


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      "Against stupidity the very god themselves contend in vain" -Johann Schiller
  32. Re:He's right, but he's stating it wrong.... by rlk · · Score: 2

    I also don't mind requiring code developed under those circumstances to be distributed in the public domain. However, that's a red herring. There's no problem at all (in my view) with the NSA distributing their Linux mods; they can distribute them in the public domain, since that can be incorporated freely into GPL'ed code.

    The GPL only requires that you distribute a derived work (containing previously GPL'ed code and your code, which you still hold the copyright to) under the GPL. You can still distribute the code that's purely your own under any additional licenses you please, when that code is distributed by itself. It's only when it's distributed in combination -- as a single work -- that it must be distributed under the GPL. That's why there's no problem with incorporating BSD licensed code into GPL code. The BSD code can still be distributed as it was before; the GPL only applies to the instance that was incorporated into the GPL'ed software. The thing you don't want to do is put GPL'ed code (that's covered only by the GPL) into something else, if you're not prepared to distribute the combination under the GPL.

    The potentially thorniest issue that I see is what happens if you use macro, constant, and variable names from GPL'ed header files. Use of the macros per se isn't an issue; they could be rewritten (the header files just describe an interface; that description can be rewritten). However, if the names themselves are considered to be subject to copyright there could be an issue.

    IANAL, so take it for what it's worth (i. e. nothing).

  33. Re:But you've twisted it out of context by sjames · · Score: 2

    His point was that when the government funds it, it isn't *your* code, but public code. You really don't need to be pro-microsoft to see that . .

    I see that just fine. It's just that since I helped pay for it, I would rather that it remain free (via GPL) rather than get snapped up, modified a bit, and sold (rather licensed or rented) to me.

    The reason (in theory) that government funds code is for the public good. If GPL will cause more code to be contributed to the public good, then the tax money will provide greater returns.

  34. But you've twisted it out of context by hawk · · Score: 2
    He called open source good competition in general. He then went on, though, to confuse "open source" with the GPL and other viral licenses.


    His point was that when the government funds it, it isn't *your* code, but public code. You really don't need to be pro-microsoft to see that . . .


    I don'[t find myself agreeing with microsoft a lot, but he's right about this one. If the government is paying for it, it should be public domain, or at least under a free license, not encumbered with te GPL. Under the GPL, you really do have a government subsidy competing with private business.


    hawk, who has never (to the best of his knowledge) been called pro-microsoft by anyone of reasonable intelligence

    1. Re:But you've twisted it out of context by Fred+Ferrigno · · Score: 2

      Surely this must be the right way to license software which is paid for by taxpayers?

      Effectively, you want the government to impose licensing restrictions to use something we, as a people, own. It is not licensed to us. Unlike every other piece of software -- even Linux and the BSD's -- we own it, in the true sense of the word. And, as owners, we have every right to do whatever we will with it, including incorporating it into a proprietary, closed source product sold for profit.

      But that software must remain available to everybody who paid for it.

      Why would placing it in the public domain somehow remove it from public use? That is the whole point of the public domain. The GPL will only dissuade people from using what is rightfully theirs and limit how they can use it.

      --

    2. Re:But you've twisted it out of context by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      No, it isn't.

      Goverment fund code, the goverment funding came from *you*.
      Now, they release it to the public.

      You go and change the code, why would there any limitation on what you can do with it?
      In essence, *you* paid for it, so you can't use it the way you want?

      The right way to license software which was paid by the tax payers is to release it under public domain.
      That way, everyone can use it, to whatever they want.

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
    3. Re:But you've twisted it out of context by ctid · · Score: 1

      I could not disagree more. Under the GPL, once the public has paid for the development of the software, everyone can always get access to the source code. So if my taxes pay for some researcher to develop software, that software is available to me for ever Note that it's also available to commercial software organizations who get exactly the same rights to the software as any other taxpayer. But that software must remain available to everybody who paid for it. Surely this must be the right way to license software which is paid for by taxpayers?



      Failure is its own reward.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
  35. Re:Damn... by jirka · · Score: 1
    Think of a republic, in a free state, you don't have the freedom to kill someone else, that's not a freedom really, cuz you're just taking away someone elses freedom.

    Same thing with GPL, the only things you are not allowed to do is to deprive others of the freedoms you enjoy or to make it possible to deprive others of those freedoms.

    I mean if I release some software I want everybody to have equal access to it. Somebody shouldn't have more rights to it just because he made some modification.

    So you are misusing the word free in this case.

  36. Re:This word by jirka · · Score: 2
    This is sort of like the tyrant saying to people crying for a republic: Before I came along you were living in caves.

    I don't believe in being able to own knowledge. In the past it was the kings and emperors owned all knowedge (see the story of where copyright came about). Now since we got republics, we sort of started wondering who to give information to, so we just pick the rich and ruling class apparently.

    How come we all can agree that things like schools, military, and zero gravity toilets are neccessary for public good and are all willing to pay the government to support it. But we can't agree that software is for public good and it must be a viable product (thus we need to make up the notion of ownership of knowledge) for us to use/buy/do it.

    Note I have only one thing against miscrosoft and it's products, the fact that they're proprietary. And thus I cannot use them, and I will not use them because I don't like giving up my rights and I don't like giving up the community's rights in order to be able to change the font in an easier way.

  37. Re:License issues by Frater+219 · · Score: 2
    The way the license[gpl] is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source

    That's pretty much what Mundie said. Seems that that's the Company Line. And I think RMS, O'Reilly, et. al. addressed that pretty well.

    Let's see ...

    1. Craig Mundie has made a false statement. GPL does not require you to "make the rest of your software open source"; only software that is derived from copyrighted, GPLed software.
    2. Craig Mundie knows it's a false statement. He has responded to refutations of his statements; therefore, he has read said refutations, and knows that he's wrong.
    3. Craig Mundie is making this false statement maliciously. He's doing it in order to hurt his open-source and free-software competitors.

    I believe the lawyers have a word for what happens when someone knowingly makes a maliciously false statement in print. I believe that word is libel.

  38. Simpsons Para-phrase by Sabalon · · Score: 2

    Thus spake Steve Ballmer:

    "Linux is a cancer on intellectual property, and we (Microsoft) are...hey Bill, what cures cancer?"

    Ever notice that Ballmer looks like Frankenstien's monster?

  39. Re:Damn... by jmalicki · · Score: 1

    Not to mention that Kerberos has been un-"embraced-and-extended" in Windows 2000 service pack 2 and is now compatible with MIT's. Don't chalk up to malice what you can to incompetence.

  40. If Linux is a Cancer Windows Must Be A Parasite by Ranger · · Score: 1

    Host: If you were a parasite what kind of parasite would you be?

    Microsoft: Elephantitis.

    Host: Why is that?

    Microsoft: I'd be able to bloat testicles to the size of canteloupes and the owner will think they have something of real value.

    Host: But that'll make them impotent.

    Microsoft: Your point being?

    --

    --
    "You'll get nothing, and you'll like it!"
  41. Re:This is funny too... by Jason+Earl · · Score: 2

    The average Joe isn't going to think Office XP is cool because it will be the first version of Office that he has to pay full price for. Most MS Office users "borrow" copies of the software from work. They figure (incorrectly) that since they use the software for "work" that it is all right to do this. Heck, some MIS managers even think that the license actually allows this.

    Microsoft is turning the screws up on everyone big businesses and small businesses alike. Microsoft now owns the office suite market, they have driven out Corel and Lotus, and now everyone is going to pay.

  42. Re:Only a slight twist on the truth... by Jason+Earl · · Score: 2

    Microsoft is not going to try to contest the GPL in court. Microsoft is an intellectual property company. Attacking the GPL would weaken copyright, and copyright is what allows them to make big fat piles of money. However, Microsoft is going to trot out all of their top executives and have them say things like "Linux is un-American" or "Open Source software is a cancer."

  43. Re:Responsibility... by Jason+Earl · · Score: 2

    I think that Balmer has a point when he states that Microsoft is simply making it clear what is and what is not legal. Microsoft's licensing is quite complicated, and I for one will be glad when their software gives me a better idea as to whether or not I am in compliance.

    It is Microsoft's prerogative to enforce their license as they see fit. Just because I happen to like Free Software does not mean that I want to steal someone else's copyrighted work.

    I even think that this will be good for Linux. Consumers hate being treated like criminals, and they dislike jumping through hoops to use something that the have paid for even more. Linux's lack of licensing fees will look especially attractive once Microsoft starts enforcing their licenses.

  44. Re:From the interview by mattdm · · Score: 2

    OpenBSD can't use GPL code, because you can't do what you want with it, and that is against Theo's belief.
    Apache can't use GPL code, because that would require GPLing the whole thing.


    The problem with Ballmer's statement (and with yours) is that he doesn't explain what he means by "use", and he seems to strongly imply that he means what a normal computer user means -- for example, when I "use" gcc, I type a command line and execute a program that compiles some code. When I "use" Linux, I browse the web and play games and code and so on. Of course, the OpenBSD and Apache people can (and do) "use" GPL'd code in this sense all the time. They can even go a step further and hack and and modify and "use" the code in a programmer's sense, as long as they don't make proprietary modifications.

    Most people here know better -- you obviously understand the implications of the GPL vs. less restrictive licenses / public domain, and that's a legitimate point -- but it goes right over the head of the vast majority of people to whom Ballmer is speaking. To them, the message is: "If you use open source software, everything you do will be forced to be open source. Linux will destroy your intellectual property!"

    Ballmer's not an idiot -- of course he knows all this. It isn't a "mistake" he's making by accident -- it's a calculated move.

  45. Re:From the interview by mattdm · · Score: 3

    If you accept the incorrect usage of "open source" to mean "GPL'd code" then this statement makes perfect sense.

    I'm afraid it still doesn't. Or rather, it makes sense but just isn't true. Anybody -- Microsoft, OpenBSD, whoever -- can use and modify GPL'd code to their heart's content, and it won't "infect" their other code at all. Ballmer claims that if a company uses any open source [GPL'd] code, that company has to make all of their IP available. That's simply not the case.

    That said, I agree that it's good that all goverment products are in the public domain. That's a great way to do this -- it just isn't a reason for the goverment (or any company) to not use open source / Free software.

  46. Re:Only a slight twist on the truth... by sheldon · · Score: 2

    Hmm, seems to me that if you have both Windows 2000 and Linux crashing on your box... you may just have a hardware problem.

  47. Re:How about a letter to the Chicago Sun-Times? by sheldon · · Score: 2

    Remember the good old days when a magazine or newspaper would say something remotely negative about the Amiga? Or OS/2?

    And how the zealots would flame them to death in a letter writing campaign.

    It got to a point where journalists would either refuse to say anything about the products, or do it as a joke to see how much of a response they would get.

  48. Re:From the interview by sheldon · · Score: 2

    When I first got into computing there was no GPL, there was no Shareware...

    There was commercial software and there was public domain software. Commercial software was Microsoft BASIC, Infocom's Zork, Turbo Pascal. Public domain consisted of things such as Modem7, Hunt the Wumpus, etc.

    You can't make public domain software disappear. Microsoft or Sun or any other "evil" corporation can't make the software vanish from the face of the earth by looking at it.

    What they can do is take it, improve upon it, modify it, enhance it, and sell that new version.

    They are not charging you for the original software, they are charging you solely for their enhancements.

    God I am getting so sick of having to explain this point to mental midgets.

  49. Re:Damn... by sheldon · · Score: 2

    "Do you believe that Microsoft, et all, have some RIGHT to code that they had no part in writing? "

    If it was funded by tax payer dollars...

    The answer is YES.

    This is what Ballmer said in the article we're discussing.

  50. open source vs. microsoft source by David+Jao · · Score: 2
    In his cancer sentence, Ballmer deliberately and misleadingly lumps all open source software into the same category as GPL software. Many here have already pointed out this mistake.

    However, a point that no one has yet made, that I think deserves to be made, is that source code for closed source programs like Microsoft Windows is not allowed to be used in other programs AT ALL. What right does Mr. Ballmer have to complain about GPL restrictions, when his own software carries far worse restrictions?

    Why is there a double standard, whereby Mr. Ballmer may choose any restrictions he wants on Windows code, but any licensing restrictions on Linux code is automatically considered "a cancer"?

  51. Coming soon in the news: by acb · · Score: 2

    After meeting with "industry representatives", President Bush signs an executive order banning the use of taxpayer funds for open-source software projects; justifies it as defending America's software industry and its right to innovate.

  52. Selective amnesia by Storm · · Score: 1

    Funny that Micro$oft says that Linux is "a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches." I'll bet he didn't have any problem sleeping when M$ (allegedly) "borrowed" code from Caldera.

    --
    --Storm
  53. Re:From the interview by Nugget94M · · Score: 2

    So GPL is "free" if I'm willing to accept a creative redefinition of the word "free". And I can "use" GPL'd code as long as I'm willing to accept a creative limitation of the word "use".

    Gee, what a deal.

    You can play with these verbal gymnastics all day long and it won't conceal the fact that GPL'd code is inaccessable to developers unwilling or unable to GPL their own code. Whether this is a feature or a liability is the only difference that your personal perspective makes on the situation.

    I'm content to let you appear in this discussion as the clever pundit if you'll let me continue being the one who is being correct.

    Cheers.

  54. Re:Thanks for your "insightful" comments by Nugget94M · · Score: 2
    I am no expert on the Microsoft security model

    Well, at least you're honest.

    Kerberos work ok within a standard Kerberos environment? No?

    And here's why you're clearly not an expert. The answer to your faux rhetorical question is "yes". Microsoft's Kerb5 implementation in Win2K interoperates with MIT Kerberos quite beautifully. Moreover, the additions which Microsoft made to the Kerb protocol were compliant with the protocol. Additionally, the changes made only serve to make Kerberos more useful in a windows environment. If you aren't running windows they offer no benefit so there's no incentive for non-windows shops to move away from the MIT (or other vendor's) kerberos implementation.

    A key component of "embrace and extend" is that you have to encourage users to migrate to your implementation. None of the extensions Microsoft made to Kerberos do anything to encourage migration.

    Why don't you leave the pontificating about Microsoft's use of Kerberos to those of us who actually use Kerberos in a mixed-platform environment?

  55. Re:Iocaine powder by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

    Er - I thought that Vizzini was a hunchback. Ballmer's just balding.

    --
    -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
  56. Re:Iocaine powder by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

    What? Fessick is a Turkish giant! He's in amazing shape. Vizzini is a little bald guy with uneven legs and a bit of a hunchback - that's why he needs Inigio and Fessick: to act as his brawn. I don't recall if the Albino also had a hunchback or not, but he had enough problems ;)

    --
    -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
  57. Re:GPL, not Linux by Genom · · Score: 2

    Contrary to popular opinion, you *can* get paid money to write GPL'd software. Nothing prohibits a company from selling GPL'd software, as long as the source is available to those who buy the binary distribution.

    Granted, the company I work for makes their money from support services, rather than directly from the software - but that doesn't change the fact that there are a good number of people who work here, getting paid to write GPL'd software =)

  58. Re:From the interview by Genom · · Score: 2

    Granted, the farther away from the OS you get the less distasteful it is, but the issue still stands that public funds have payed for substantial development which is inaccessable to much of the public.

    Hmm...How exactly is GPL'd code inaccessible to much of the public? Anyone can get their hands on the code. Anyone can tinker with it. Anyone can use it. The only real catch is that if you modify it, that you release those modifications under the GPL as well. I fail to see how requiring that additions/modifications be released in such a way that the code remains publically accessible limits the public's rights to *access* the code.

  59. Re:From the interview by Genom · · Score: 2

    I'd argue that the code is still *accessible* to them - they have the right to access it and use it, but can't incorporate it into their own, non-GPL'd project.

    They could still learn, quite freely, from the GPL'd code, as long as they didn't use it within their project.

    That's one area where the lines get blurry, however - what exactly is the line between "learning from" and "using"? If I don't quite know how to parse a mbox-formatted mail file, and I look at some GPL'd code that does, and I see that they're splitting it at the From_ line - is it then "using" if I make my own project split at the From_ line, as long as I wrote the actual code myself, rather than copying it? (RFC's aside - yes, I know the proper process - I was grabbing for an example to use ;) )

    The line gets a little blurry there. Some would say that my reading of the GPL'd code may have influenced my actions in such a way as to require my work to be considered a "derivitive" and thus covered by the GPL -- the other school would say that since the code in question was written by me, and not copied verbatim, that it's *my* code, and I can do as I damn well please with it - regardless of what I used as a reference to learn from.

    The latter is what I personally believe, although I would probably release it GPL'd anyway - but as the concepts and processes involved become more and more complex (mine was a VERY simple example) so does the decision as to whether "learning from" becomes "using"...

    Oh heck - it's Friday afternoon - time to call it a week and take off for home - this is way too deep a discussion for 5pm on a Friday =)

  60. Re:From the interview by Genom · · Score: 2

    ROTFL!

    Someone blessed with modpoints mod this one (+1 Funny) for me =)

    A good laugh on a Friday afternoon!

  61. Re:License issues by spitzak · · Score: 2
    Comon, surely you can tell the differece between "use opensource software" (which is what Ballmer said) and "use the source code to opensource software" (which is what the people being bitched about in that article did).

    Unlike you, some people who argue against the GPL are actually intelligent, and things like this greatly diminish any respect they can get, here or anywhere!

  62. Re:heh by suitcase · · Score: 2

    Sometimes, it is better not to respond to posts like that. It was just a little statement that the guy knew many people would find amusing, not a statement of fact. Congrats on your mom getting better though! :)

  63. Gay butt sex circle of death... by Odinson · · Score: 2
    This post is not intentded as flame bait but will be :).

    This post is not intended to offend those who actually like butt sex 8P

    If you take things like this too seriously consider killing yourself, life is way to harsh.

    For once fuck karma...

    I saw a picture of the BSD demon doing Tux up the butt. It kinda pissed me off but then I though about it.

    If the BSD demon does tux up the butt: Biggest complaints from BSD folks about linux are lack of general leetness, security and VM issues.

    Then Bill Gates is doing the Demon up the butt: He rips off their code every day, and now trashes their licence in return.

    And then Tux is doing Bill Gates up the butt: Because he can't use their code. If he did and got caught he would be sued into oblivion.

    So who is BSD's hero now?

    Stunning image isn't it?

  64. cancer? i would have thought virgo... by kevin+lyda · · Score: 1

    wasn't linus's post to comp.os.minix in september?

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    US Citizen living abroad? Register to vote!
  65. Re:The fallacy here... by johnnyb · · Score: 2

    In a way, it still needs that protection. Take RMS's example of X. It was released under BSDish license. However, the end users got no such freedom, because of the licensing of the UNIX vendors. Even though the code started free, the freedom stopped before it reached the users. This effectively makes it non-free for the user.

  66. Re:So, what if TCP/IP were GPL'd? by johnnyb · · Score: 2

    In addition, you are also allowed to study the code to write your own implementation. So, I can use the GPL code as a reference for my own implementation.

  67. Re:He's got a point. by Rasputin · · Score: 1
    While the term 'cancer' is overblown, why should the government be funding projects that eliminate the opportunity for companies to sell their products? That's not fair. The companies pay taxes, too.

    First of all, if we're speaking of the US government, I belive that any software it produces is automatically public domain. It would be interesting to see if they have the legal right to publish under GPL at all.

    Second, even if a US government agency did Copyleft their software, nothing prevents the company from using or selling it. The companies in question might choose not to use it because they don't want to open up their modifications. Nobody's eliminated their opportunity to sell their products.

    Both of these statements appear to be red herrings.

    --
    "I once preached peaceful coexistence with Windows. You may laugh at my expense - I deserve it." Be's Jean-Louis Gass
  68. Re:Interesting philosophy... by The+Mayor · · Score: 2

    Whoa! Are you making the accusation that Netscape used code from the Mosaic project? Care to substantiate that any? As I recall, when Netscape was founded, they were *very* careful not to use a single line of code from the Mosaic project.

    --
    --Be human.
  69. Separated at birth? by Anonymous+Commando · · Score: 1

    Steve Ballmer: "Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches..."

    Agent Smith: "Human beings are a disease, a cancer of this planet, you are a plague, and we are the cure..."

    Spooky...
    ________________________

    --
    Corporate Jenga: You take a blockhead from the bottom and you put him on top...
  70. Re:Install XP by October? by Doctor+Memory · · Score: 1

    It may not be a licensing policy, it may be a support policy. Like doubling the price of support contracts for anything release prior to Win2K. Or even not offering them at all.

    --
    Just junk food for thought...
  71. Re:Damn... by Moonwick · · Score: 1

    The challenge is that he's right. There's nothing "free" about the GPL if you're a developer that doesn't have the same views as RMS and the rest of the free software movement.

    I'd love to see someone on slashdot actually prove his statement wrong.

    (Yeah, I think the rest of what he had to say was typical MS babble, but he hit the GPL nail right on the head.)

    --
    Only on slashdot can a posting be rated "Score -1, Insightful".
  72. Re:Damn... by Moonwick · · Score: 1

    The fallacy of the GPL is that it claims to be something that it is not. By itself, I have nothing against authors using the GPL for their own code. If they wanted to release their software under a license that required me to sacrifice my firstborn child to them in return for so much as looking at their code, more power to them.

    But the GPL claims that it is all about freedom, when in reality it tries to be as much of a virus as possible. It claims to make freedom its central goal, when in reality it exists to encourage the socialist ideals of its creator. Meanwhile, it has quite a following in the slashdot community of people who stand behind the GPL as a device of "freedom" and for "destroying the enormous cruel proprietary software juggernauts". Usually, said people then go on to criticize every aspect of closed-source software, especially the part about making profits.

    Making money off of hard work isn't nearly as evil as most GPL supporters try to make it sound. In reality, without the incentive of making money, most of the software innovations that exist today would have never been born.

    Also, it's a shame you had to pollute what was otherwise a well thought out piece by spouting some of the usual free-software propaganda about MS' Kerb implementation. Feel free to think that MS tries to "embrace and extend" open-source technology. The reality of the situation is that Microsoft did nothing of the sort; they merely took advantage of open-ended parts of the Kerberos architecture so it could fit in with the Microsoft authentication/security model better. Claiming that what MS did was immoral and unethical is silly, and won't gain you any respect from people who aren't rabidly anti-Microsoft like yourself.

    --
    Only on slashdot can a posting be rated "Score -1, Insightful".
  73. Re:From the interview by ocie · · Score: 3

    The slipery slope comes when you are talking about research at state universities. Should a grad student be able to release his/her research software under GPL, or should they be forced to use a BSD-style license? Of course, the stipends and cost of computer time for a few CS grad students doesn't add up to much in the grand scheme of things..

    --
    JET Program: see Japan, meet intere
  74. Oh Geez. by Mandi+Walls · · Score: 1

    Microsoft is probably upset because they can't muck with samba to make their lousy lan manager crap work better.

  75. Re:This word by Art+Tatum · · Score: 1

    The real problem is that the concept of "intellectual property" is illogical and is a recent distortion of Article 1 Section 8.

  76. Re:Well, the CEO is supposed to say things like th by mandolin · · Score: 1
    Apple, yeah, ditto for their CEO (or whaver Jobs' title is these days), whom it's apparently not safe to be with in an elevator.

    maybe my brain is turned off this friday and I just didn't get the joke, but what's the story behind this one?

  77. Re:He's got a point. by jimhill · · Score: 3

    Hold on a second.

    I assume you're speaking of the US government. Among the things that government is tasked with is to promote the general welfare and to secure the blessings of liberty. That means that they have a legitimate role to play in the creation of public goods. Public roads, public health, and now, public computing infrastructure. There's nothing wrong with private companies making money doing things _for_ the government, but when the work is done, the results belong to everyone. If that means that the opportunity for a person or a corporation to make money providing something which serves a public interest is lost, then so be it.

    The legal fiction that corporations are "people" who pay taxes and merit governmental protection is nice and it's one which has served the economy well in the past (discussions about its present state are deferred to other /. stories) but when there is a compelling public interest to be served by government spending, the loss of a corporation's ability or even a private individual's ability to make a profit in that arena is just too bad. Ideally, a compromise is reached wherein the public interest is served AND a sufficient profit can be made privately that the interest is served inexpensively by the most economically efficient body which competes to provide the interest.

    I suppose what I'm trying to say is that the kind of software that I'd expect the government to fund is critical infrastructure: BIND, TCP/IP, and so forth. And that kind of software should be made available at no cost, either under a free license or by release directly into the public domain. I wouldn't expect the government to gut Intuit by releasing a free Quicken knockoff.

    --
    Learn to spell: nickel, missile, lose, solely, amendment, speech, kernel, probably, ridiculous, deity, hierarchy, versus
  78. Re:From the interview by Nugget · · Score: 1

    Hey, that's a really interesting aspect of the disucssion which I hadn't considered. Thanks.

    I'm not sure what I think about that.

  79. Re:From the interview by Nugget · · Score: 1

    There is one major example or government funding GPL'ed code: NSA Secure Linux. While I agree that NSA Secure Linux is one of the more eggregious examples of the Government developing code which isn't released as public domain information, there are plenty of other cases as well. How would you consider Squid, which is GPL'd code whose development is funded entirely by the National Science Foundation? Granted, the farther away from the OS you get the less distasteful it is, but the issue still stands that public funds have payed for substantial development which is inaccessable to much of the public.

  80. Re:From the interview by Nugget · · Score: 1

    If the researcher feels strongly enough that they don't want to make their code available to everyone equally then they should back up that preference by finding a way of funding the research that doesn't involve my wallet.

    If I'm paying for it, I expect to be able to use it.

  81. The fallacy here... by Nugget · · Score: 2

    The fallacy of this argument is that it implies that incorporating public code into a commercial product somehow makes the original code no longer free. Public domain code remains free no matter what gets done with it. The GPL doesn't do at all what you claim. What the GPL does is require that new code written by others be released as GPL code. It does nothing to protect the original code, since that code needs no such protection.

    1. Re:The fallacy here... by Nugget · · Score: 2

      How do you explain XFree86, then? It sure seems to be popular with the users and it's never been touched by the GPL.

    2. Re:The fallacy here... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      An even better example is the Kerberos protocol. Admittedly, this is frequently brought up in any BSD vs. GPL argument, but I still think it's a really great example.
      In your example of X, at least there, the different vendors, while charging ridiculous sums of money for their X implementations, didn't change the network-transparent protocol underneath, which allowed a user of one vendor's X to view remote applications from a workstation using another vendor's X. So compatibility was at least maintained.
      However, in the Kerberos example, this is not at all what happened, since MS was more conniving than the X vendors. They realized they could take a standard protocol implemented by other vendors, add some proprietary extensions, call it the same name, and then coupled their market dominance, could squeeze out competitors. If you want to talk Kerberos to a Windows machine, you have to be using another windows machine. So MS essentially stole someone else's code and used it against the community as a whole.
      This can't be done with GPL code, unless MS wants to reverse-engineer it and write a completely new implementation (something they never seem to keen to do; probably too difficult for them. They'd rather steal or buy out).

  82. The balance is often the other way around... by Nugget · · Score: 2

    What if I wanted to take a 20 line function out of that piece of government-funded code and utilize it inside my two million lines of closed-source application?

    The reality is that no company could build a successful business by making minor changes to GPL'd applications and trying to sell that as a closed-source product? The amount of money you can charge for changes to an open source codebase are directly proportional to the value added by your changes.

    It's unfair to try to depict commercial use of open source code in this light. The reality of the situation is that most commercial use of public domain or similarly open source code resembles Microsoft's use of the BSD TCP/IP code, or Apple's use of FreeBSD's userland. Rather than cosmetic changes to a full product it's the utilization of a shared toolbox of lower-level routines and libraries.

  83. Re:From the interview by Nugget · · Score: 2

    Because both apache and openbsd are released under licenses which are less-restrictive and incompatible with the GPL.

    For either of these two projects to incorporate GPL'd code into their code they would have to change the licensing on their entire projects to the more restrictive GPL license.

  84. Re:From the interview by Nugget · · Score: 2

    Funny how you assume everyone shares your definition of "everyone". In your world, apparantly the set "everyone" consists solely of "people releasing their code under the GPL". GPL'd code is available and can be used by people who are willing to also use the GPL for the code they produce. BSD licensed code or public domain code is available and can be used by everyone. Surely you can see the huge difference in those two scenarios.

  85. Re:From the interview by Nugget · · Score: 2
    It is impossible to take something "out of the public domain" as you are describing. Once something has been placed into the public domain that is permanent and it will always be available to everyone equally.

    Code covered by the GPL isn't "in the public domain" since it has restrictions placed on its use.

    The GPL does not say "GPL code should be freely available always, even when it is being used by the private sector." -- what it actually says is "If you wish to use this code to your benefit, you must also use this same license for your code." Do you see the difference there?

  86. So, what if TCP/IP were GPL'd? by Nugget · · Score: 3

    Ballmer's point is that the GPL is not a "free" license in this sense. What if the government-funded TCP/IP development had been released under a license which prevented its use in any product which wasn't released as GPL'd code?

    The GPL restricts how code can be used, and government code should be provided without restrictions.

    This has nothing to do with "corporations" or their legal status. Let's not blur the issue. This is about how everyone's money is being used to develop code that not everyone can use.

    If we're all going to pay for it, we should all be able to use it.

    1. Re:So, what if TCP/IP were GPL'd? by cygnus · · Score: 1
      I think the difference is that TCP/IP is a standard.

      i think Nugget is alluding to the BSD TCP/IP stack in saying "TCP/IP development." Which *is* a specific product and is often appropriated by for-profit software companies, like Microsoft (who uses it in Windows).

      If that stack weren't under the BSD license and instead was GPL'ed, you'd be forcing Microsoft to write their own stack from scratch because they are a for-profit company and would lose their proprietary code if they used the BSD stack.

      so the GPL is biased toward not for profit software. which is fine if it's a grassroots movement. but if the gov't is funding GPL software, they're discriminating against for-profit software companies. and that gets into all sorts of hairy issues, considering we live in a capitalistic society, where the gov't is supposed to be a referee and not a competitor.

      --
      Just raise the taxes on crack.
    2. Re:So, what if TCP/IP were GPL'd? by cygnus · · Score: 1
      Discrimination could only exist as a legal issue if it interfered with A RIGHT TO EQUAL TREATMENT AND STANDING BEFORE THE LAW.

      analogy to publicly funded research that's released under the GPL: The government builds an interstate highway system, but vehicles carrying goods for sale or personnel working for a company are not allowed to use them.

      it's not that i think they have a right to make a buck and nothing can interfere with that.. it's that they have a right to equal access to a publicly funded product... "equal treatment and standing before the law," as you put it.

      next time you're gonna fling insults and type in all caps, login so justice can be served (i.e. so you'll get modded down and lose karma). also, make sure you understand the point someone's making before you flame it.

      --
      Just raise the taxes on crack.
    3. Re:So, what if TCP/IP were GPL'd? by sconeu · · Score: 2

      What if the government-funded TCP/IP development had been released under a license which prevented its use in any product which wasn't released as GPL'd code?

      Well, let's see, there's RFC 791, 792, and 793. If you don't like the licensing terms for existing code that implements this standard, go ahead and create your own implementation of the fully documented standard.

      Note: Licensing terms include such things as whether your source needs to be released, or even the cost of licensing a closed-source implementation! You don't want to pay me $$$ for my closed source implementation, do it yourself!

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    4. Re:So, what if TCP/IP were GPL'd? by ryanwright · · Score: 1

      This has nothing to do with "corporations" or their legal status. Let's not blur the issue. This is about how everyone's money is being used to develop code that not everyone can use.

      No, you're wrong. Everyone, including for-profit corporations, can use GPL'd code. They simply can't put that code in a product and sell it at a profit. Use = OK, making money off of it = NO. And this is how it should be.

      --
      -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
  87. Re:From the interview by Nugget · · Score: 4
    "Public domain" makes it available only to the first generation of people that touch it. It allows corporations to turn it into "Proprietary Software", which in effect means that the from that point on, the software is no longer "freely available to all".

    The problem here is that the "it" you're talking about no longer exists at that second generation. If a developer takes public domain code and uses it as a foundation of or a component of their own work then I don't understand how you can expect to have a claim to free access to the work they did. Any value that a developer is able to add to or extract from a piece of public domain code should be theirs to license as they see fit. He who does the work (or funds the work) should have the freedom to set the license. The GPL eliminates this freedom by requiring GPL on both derivative works and work which incorporate even small portions of GPL'd code into their codebase.

    Public domain is, and always remains public domain and "freely available to all". There's no way to remove something from the public domain.

    I want publicly funded software to remain publicly available and free to all. I don't want Microsoft or any other corporate entity to swallow it and never let it see the light of day again.

    Please explain how using code makes it unavailable.

    I do not believe that we, the people, our government, should be obliged to give anything for free to corporations.

    I have no idea what your mini-rant on coporations has to do with this. GPL code is equally inaccessable to anyone who wishes to do non-GPL development. That can mean a multi-billion dollar corporation and it can also mean me in my bedroom trying to develop software as a sole proprietorship. Hell, it can even refer to a non-profit organization or an open source developer like the Apache Foundation.

    I think your distaste for corporations is clouding your judgement on this issue.

  88. Re:From the interview by Nugget · · Score: 5

    If you accept the incorrect usage of "open source" to mean "GPL'd code" then this statement makes perfect sense.

    I presume that what Ballmer meant to say was "The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds GPL'd work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody."

    This is an understandable viewpoint. GPL'd code is not accessable to everybody. It is only accessable to developers who are willing to release their code under the GPL license which excludes large portions of the community. Government-funded GPL code is inaccessable to the Apache Foundation, it's inaccessable to the OpenBSD developers, and it's inaccessable to any commercial developers who are working on closed-source products.

    If tax dollars are funding a project, then the results of that development should be available to everyone and not just people who use one particular license. This is the rationale behind the laws which prevent the government from enjoying a copyright on the data it produces.

    Government code should be public domain, not placed under a restrictive license like the GPL.

  89. Re:He's got a point. by kcbrown · · Score: 1
    The companies pay taxes, too.

    No. The customers of companies pay taxes. Don't believe me? Then consider this: companies will price their goods such that they make a net profit, that is, a profit after everything else has been paid out: salaries, money for capital investments, depreciation, taxes, etc. So any taxes that a company pays are actually being paid by their customers in the form of higher product prices. Of course, whenever the customer is a company, the same principle applies. Apply it recursively until you get to an individual, at which point the recursion stops.



    --
    --
    Use 'slashdot stuff' in the subject line in any email you send me if you want to get past the spam filter.
  90. Why You MUST Take Him Seriously by FFFish · · Score: 2

    Microsoft has Linux in its target sights. Be afraid, be very afraid.

    Above all else, remember that Microsoft is not addressing you. They're addressing your boss, who by definition is almost certainly not capable of completely understanding the complexity of the situation and by default doesn't even want to try thinking about it.

    Microsoft can and will convince the people who make the decisions to avoid Linux like the plague.

    The only chance there is to avoid this assured outcome is to gain control of the bosses' minds.

    You must couch your persuasive arguments in simple terms, as soundbite-compatible as possible. You need to implant memes that paint Microsoft with a tarry, black brush; and make Linux look like a glowing angel.

    "Linux is a cancer" is the perfect meme. It's memorable, and it's nasty.

    You much create countermemes -- and you must be able to get them publicised to the same extent that Microsoft can. And that, I suspect, is impossible. It may be impossible to win the war, simply because Microsoft owns the territory, the media, and the minds of your bosses.

    --

    --

    --
    Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
    1. Re:Why You MUST Take Him Seriously by lazuli42 · · Score: 1
      You're absolutely right!

      I have a suggestion for a meme that we IT types might be able to pass up the chain through our managers and up to the CTO|CIO|CEO types:

      Microsoft is afraid of Linux

      Whatcha think?

      --

      "There's companies that are just so cool that you just can't even deal with it," - Bill Gates, about Google

  91. A Cancer? But Ballmer's Got the Cure! by Kozz · · Score: 3

    The licensing could be a bitch, but check out their cure!
    http://bbspot.com/News/2000/12/ms_cancer.html



    Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum viditur.

    --
    I only post comments when someone on the internet is wrong.
  92. Intellectual Property Protection by RichMan · · Score: 1

    Watch that intellectual property flag. As Windows XP now supports protection for intellectual property on commercial CD's and on web distributed materials, how long before the "Linux, by providing a mechanism to circumvent IP protection measures, is a violtation of DMCA" flag gets raised by Microsoft.

    All this Linux and the GPL are cancers, etc are just the opening shots. Expect a well planned campaign from Microsoft.

  93. It's a service. by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 2
    You should get paid to write software. You are providing a service that requires education and effort. You just have to stop thinking in terms of the unit-sales model that is less and less enforceable. There are thousands of careers that don't rely on IP laws to charge for services rendered.

    Not that I blame you; after all, if the person who invented cheesecake could get a royalty check any time anyone else made one, I'm sure that chefs would also be big advocates of intellectual property law.

  94. Re:Outlook Express by mattkime · · Score: 1

    apparently you aren't familiar with karma whoing.

    --
    Know what I like about atheists? I've yet to meet one that believes God is on their side.
  95. Outlook Express by mattkime · · Score: 4

    I heard you can't get catch cancer from computers unless you have Microsoft Outlook installed.

    --
    Know what I like about atheists? I've yet to meet one that believes God is on their side.
    1. Re:Outlook Express by e-Motion · · Score: 2

      Actually this brings new meaning to the bbspot article:

      http://www.bbspot.com/News/2000/12/ms_cancer.html (Office 10 will cure cancer).

  96. Sue for defamation by Angst+Badger · · Score: 4
    If another company was lying about my product in order to hurt my business, I'd sue them for defamation.

    Microsoft is lying about Linux in particular and GPLed software in general, and the FSF ought to haul them into court over the issue. Sure, the GPL is viral, but simply writing software to run under Linux does not compromise your IP rights unless you use GPLed code to do it, which is certainly not necessary.

    The other thing that strikes me, as it usually does when the GPL comes up, is how distributors of closed software are quite insistent that you must respect the terms of their licenses, but bitch like spoiled children when an open developer insists that they respect the terms of his. Closed source developers need to clue into the fact that they can't have it both ways. If you want to protect your own intellectual property, you must refrain from stealing others. It's like arguing that because some women are prostitutes, it's okay to treat all women like prostitutes, and it reflects pretty much the same personality type.

    Nuff said.

    --

    --
    Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
    1. Re:Sue for defamation by matt-fu · · Score: 1

      Sue for defamation? Microsoft? This should be marked as "Funny", not "Interesting".

  97. What's this with the word 'innovate' and Microsoft by Paladeen · · Score: 2

    A: I think there is a lot of great stuff going on in Chicago. There are a lot of innovative users in the Chicago area, which is exciting. We have a lot of great partners. I'll be on stage with a company called Genesis [Consulting], which I'm very excited about. We have a local partner named Calypso [Systems]. We literally have dozens of partners doing very innovative work with customers here.

    Why is it that every time I read an interview with someone from MS, I get the word 'innovate' thrown in my face in every other sentence? I remember a column in the Economist by Bill Gates, and naughty little Bill used the word no less than eleven times! I think MS is suffering from a serious inferiority complex. =)

  98. Re:Damn... by Knuckles · · Score: 1
    There's nothing "free" about the GPL

    Someone writes code. He/she copyrights it and puts it under a proprietary license. Someone else wants to use that code. Calls original coder: "Can I use it?" Original coder: "Sure, I want $$ as compensation"

    Anotherone writes code. He/she copyrights it and puts it under GPL. Someone else wants to use that code. Calls original coder: "Can I use it?" Original coder: "Sure, I want your contribution to the source pool as compensation"

    See? No difference. He/she who writes the code chooses the terms. Don't like it? Don't use it

    --
    "When I first heard Daydream Nation it quite frankly scared the living shit out of me." -- Matthew Stearns
  99. Re:Damn... by Knuckles · · Score: 1
    But in the first case, there is no pretense of it being free

    You aren't talking about free as in beer, are you? Now, it's clear that the GPL does impose restrictions on the distribution of the code. It still frees the code, simply because if the code is not GPL'd but only copyrighted, you can't do anything with it, unless you are the copyright holder. The BSD licenses free the code even more, that's true, and I understand and have a lot of sympathies for people that use it (or other free licenses). But I still think that the GPL frees humanity (as opposed to the code) more than the BSD licenses do.

    --
    "When I first heard Daydream Nation it quite frankly scared the living shit out of me." -- Matthew Stearns
  100. Re:Not so fast by Locutus · · Score: 2
    sorry but Microsloth only paid Spyglass after they had to threaten to expose the financial books of Microsloth. It must have been in the contract that Spyglass could do that. After the legal request that Microsloths books be opened, Microsloth offered a single payment for the rights to the source code to Mosaic.

    I guess that was Spyglass's exit strategy. Just like all the other Microsloth "partners". When you take money from Microsloth, your door will be closing soon. IMHO

    LoB

    --
    "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
  101. Re:Not so fast by Locutus · · Score: 2
    Anyway, if your are rooting against "Microsloth" (gee, I bet that bit of juvenilia make you feel witty and a big hit with the ladies), you should encourage stupid business decisions such as their deal with Spyglass.

    Oh, believe me I do love to see them pushing out new buzz words/strategies each month. Screwing companies out of the IP like the attempted with Spyglass shouldn't be accepted no matter how big the monopoly is.

    By the way, Mosaic wasn't obsolete when they licensed it. You colored the facts just like a true Microsoft lemming.

    LoB

    --
    "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
  102. Re:Not so fast by Locutus · · Score: 2

    Are you kidding? Do you know how much money I've saved by not using Microsoft junk? As a software developer ( computer savy ) all my friends keep asking me to help them fix their Windows machines so I'm not without some of the head aches. I'm refusing most requests these days because it hurts so much. I do offer to freely install Linux on any of their computers though.

    Yes, I could have made a lot of money fixing Microsoft products but that is like Hell where you keep doing the same things over and over and over again.

    If using OS/2 was "hurting" then all I can say is "thank you sir may I please have another?". :)

    LoB

    --
    "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
  103. Linix definitely IS a cancer by PD · · Score: 1

    No chemo, no radiation, no surgery, no intervention possible. This cancer WILL kill Microsoft eventually.

  104. Proof: Bill Gates is Alfred E. Newman by ch-chuck · · Score: 1

    This may get mod'd OT but I want to introduce my page that shows undisputable proof that Bill Gates is actually Alfred E. Newman: see it yourself at

    http://www.widomaker.com/~cswiger/bgisaen.html

    Thank you.

    --
    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
  105. do what now? by Si · · Score: 1

    Q: The new software also allows a user to install it only twice. You have recently cracked down on corporate piracy and large-scale pirating operations. Are home users next?

    So...when XP crashes, taking your system partition with it, and the (previous) remedy was to re-install, you can only do this twice? then what? buy another copy?

    Maybe MicroShaft are trying to imply the new software will crash fewer than twice. Would be funny if it wasn't so pathetic.



    --


    Why is it that many people who claim to support standards have such atrocious spelling and grammar?
    1. Re:do what now? by Hostile17 · · Score: 1

      and the (previous) remedy was to re-install, you can only do this twice?

      The initial install at the factory will count as 1 install, so you will only get 1 reinstall. The upside is with the new subscriber system, you will have to upgrade every year anyway, so you should get an extra reinstall with each upgrade.


      --
      Fascism should more properly be called corporatism, since it is the merger of state and corporate power - Benito Mussoli
  106. Re:Real Life Isn't About Who's Right and Who's Wro by DavidTC · · Score: 1
    As far back as I can remember, Microsoft has never publically stated that Linux is purely evil;

    Did you read the article? Hell, did you even read the friggin title of the page?

    Hint: Cancer is considered a very Bad Thing.

    -David T. C.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  107. Re:Linux is a cancer of teenage elitism by tuffy · · Score: 1

    Yeah. We all know teenagers have never been elitist until Linux came along...

    --

    Ita erat quando hic adveni.

  108. This is like listening to Saddam Hussein's rants by crovira · · Score: 2

    My respect for this individual is heading deeper and deeper into negative territory.

    FUD works with whispers and subtle calimnies.

    This guy is going at it hammer and tongs and starting to look like his grip on reality is slipping.

    They will try to keep the world on the x86 long past the point where it can be demonstrated that security on that platform is lousy because they are too inept to move off of it and the alternative it oblivion for M$.

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
  109. Re:From the interview by LWolenczak · · Score: 1

    Somebody brought up a very long time ago, that any software bought by the goverment techniclly becomes public domain......

  110. A Happy Plague by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 2

    [magnanimous with Battle Hymn of the Republic swelling in the background] Linux is a Cancer of Liberty, and a Plague of Innovation. It is a blight on the harvest of the proprietary dicatatorship that has held the World under it's soiled foot with dirty tricks and corporate power plays. Steve Ballmer will be the first guy against the wall when the revoloution comes...(well maybe not that last part ^_^)[/magnanimous]

    --
    by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
  111. Say the same lie often enough... by lar3ry · · Score: 4

    And people start to believe it.

    This propoganda tactic was in use before World War II, and apparently, it still works.

    Even in politics, say the same lie often enough and it gets believed. President George Bush (Sr.) would dismiss civil rights legislation as a "quota bill." Now, President Junior does the same thing, saying that his "Lets Give Lots Of Money To The Rich Guys" tax policy as "favoring the poor."

    In the high-tech area, we're hearing Allchin, Mundie, and now Ballmer repeating that "open source is not available to commercial companies."

    This is a lot of horseshit. It's available to anybody and everybody. However, if you don't want to use it, then don't.

    The GPL license (which the GNU folks will repeat over and over is NOT OPEN SOURCE), is a license to use a piece of software. It is no different than the license in which a person runs Windows, Office, or any other Microsoft product. One can say that using the same reasoning, Microsoft software is not available to commercial companies. Of course, that is, commercial companies that do not wish to abide by Microsoft's licenses, which is much more stringent with regard what you can and can not do than any interpretation that I've ever heard of the GPL.

    If you don't like the license, don't use it. Microsoft has that right with regard to the GPL. However, Microsoft is not every commercial company. There are many companies, including IBM, Sun, RedHat, and others, that are only too happy to abide by the GPL.

    But you have to give the Microsoft flaks du jour credit for continuing to play the "most so-called journalists are so f*cking stupid that they don't know the GPL from TNT" card.
    --

    --
    "May I have ten thousand marbles, please?"
    1. Re:Say the same lie often enough... by gmhowell · · Score: 2
      If you don't like the license, don't use it.


      Exactly the point. M$ is deathly afraid that people will figure out that licenses are OPTIONAL. If you don't like it, don't use it. That goes for M$ stuff as well. Don't like the 'only installable twice' routine? DON'T USE IT!

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    2. Re:Say the same lie often enough... by bnenning · · Score: 3
      Now, President Junior does the same thing, saying that his "Lets Give Lots Of Money To The Rich Guys" tax policy as "favoring the poor."

      This is the big lie that liberals keep repeating, desperately hoping to convince taxpayers that the government can spend their money better than they can. First, the government cannot "give" tax cuts to anyone, since it's not their money to begin with. All they can do is take less. Second, the tax reductions are greater on a percentage basis for the poor. For example, the 15% tax bracket drops to 10%, a 33% cut; while the top 39.6% bracket drops to 35%, only a 12% cut. Yes, the rich will still save more in absolute dollars, but that's because they pay so much more.

      The crux of your argument is correct, that Microsoft is blatantly lying about the GPL and clueless reporters are not calling them on it. But introducing partisan political commentary only confuses the issue and annoys half of the readers. (Yes, I know I've annoyed the other half now...)

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
  112. Begs the question by Dan+D. · · Score: 1

    If a slashdot editor posts an article like this ... are they trolling for comments?

    Does it make a sound?

    --
    People who quote themselves bug the crap out of me -- Me.
  113. Re:NSA Linux violates this by jms · · Score: 2

    On the other hand, one could make the argument that the specific changes made by the NSA are public domain, but the combination of those changes with the Linux kernel results in a work that is only distributable under the GPL.

  114. Which license, Mr. Ballmer by grub · · Score: 2

    "The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source. If the government wants to put something in the public domain, it should. Linux is not in the public domain. Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches. That's the way that the license works."

    Dear Mr. Ballmer,

    The Linux license is not the be-all, end-all for open source licenses. Using one large brush to paint all open source as "cancer" is just more Microsoft FUD

    You have some BSD code in some of your products and gladly adhere to the BSD license, don't you?

    grub

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:Which license, Mr. Ballmer by catfood · · Score: 1

      re-quoting Ballmer:

      The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source.

      At the risk of being modded "redundant,", no, that's not how the GPL is written. Unless you redefine "your software" to mean something entirely different from what it normally means.

    2. Re:Which license, Mr. Ballmer by catfood · · Score: 1
      Let's say that MS bundle a GPL program on Windows CD. This mean that all of Windows now must be GPLed.

      No it does not.

      The GPL is here. It claims no such thing.

      Please stop promoting FUD.

    3. Re:Which license, Mr. Ballmer by Dr.Evil · · Score: 3

      You have some BSD code in some of your products and gladly adhere to the BSD license, don't you?

      <flamebait>

      Of course they do - there's no work involved in adhering to the BSD license. It's a perfect fit for a company whose attitude toward "intellectual property" (a misbegotten term if ever there was one) is roughly, "What's mine is mine, and what's yours is mine."

      </flamebait>

      Seriously, though, Microsoft knows that BSD-licensed stuff will just keep on keepin' on (ripe for their picking) for a while, since it's still under the radar for the most part. It's GPL-licensed software (which they can't co-opt without giving their users the code) that they fear. Of course, the GPL is about freedom for the user, which is what Microsoft really fears above all.

      Standard BSD disclaimer: I don't have any problem with the BSD license. Even the FSF defines it as a Free Software license. If an author wants to release their code into the wild and has no qualms regarding what happens after that, more power to that author. I just wanted to point out that Microsoft doesn't care about user freedoms, only their own freedom to use and subsequently lock up any code they see, and the BSD license plays right into that, for better or for worse. Now flame away...

      --
      Right...
    4. Re:Which license, Mr. Ballmer by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      Let's say that MS bundle a GPL program on Windows CD.
      This mean that all of Windows now must be GPLed.

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
    5. Re:Which license, Mr. Ballmer by esarmiento · · Score: 1

      "Of course, the GPL is about freedom for the user, which is what Microsoft really fears above all." The GPL is not about Freedom. There are numerous restrictions in both the GPL and the LGPL.The BSD gives more freedom to the user than the GPL license. Using the BSD license, users are allowed to relicense the software, distribute only binaries, if they please. There are no restrictions. That is what I call Freedom. Most of all, because of it's unrestricted nature, the BSD License promotes commercial software. So what if Microsoft is using BSD code? Doesn't that just validate the fact that open source software is mostly better developed? Even if Microsoft grinds up all the code, projects like FreeBSD will still be working on their soruces. It would be impossible for Microsoft to release a Windows update every week. This is also flaimbait. :-) Sorry.

  115. Re:This word by Loligo · · Score: 1

    >in-no-vate (IN no vait) vt. - to take an idea from another company (cf. Apple)

    I think you mean (cf. Xerox).

    -LjM

  116. OT: Inspiron 8000 w/ GeForce2...good? by FallLine · · Score: 2

    Hey, I'm about to order an Inspiron 8000 for myself (my company is picking up the bill). I've been trying to decide between the 32mb ATI card and the GeForce2. How well does the GeForce2 really perform on them? All our 8000s are running ATIs, but hey, for an extra 100 dollars.....

  117. OBJECT!!! by Sangui5 · · Score: 2

    I presume that what Ballmer meant to say was "The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds GPL'd work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody."

    Well, maybe in an ideal world government money would only be spent on projects available to everybody (BSD licence/public domain). But there are numerous examples of the government paying for work, and then the researchers patenting it, and making a commercial product out of it. Now, I don't know about you, but GPLed code is a lot better than unreleased, patented, proprietary code.

  118. Only a slight twist on the truth... by Mr.+Flibble · · Score: 5

    The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody. Open source is not available to commercial companies. The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source. If the government wants to put something in the public domain, it should. Linux is not in the public domain. Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches. That's the way that the license works

    Open source is not available to commercial companies. Hmm. Linux is Open Source right? I use Linux here at work - for a commercial company.

    The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source. Maybe I read the GPL incorrectly, but, um... Isn't that the point? (On another note, our company uses Linux, but releases closed-source binarys of our primary product. No problems with that!)

    Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches. Again, thats rather the point, but it does not "attach" itself to everything it touches, Q3A is not GPL'ed but it runs on Linux just fine.

    But then who am I kidding right? This is Slashdot. We all know this (Apart from the newbies and trolls). I am just preaching to the Choir. What I am interested in is the exact gist of these comments. What is Balmer trying to accomplish here?

    We know he mentions competition (to keep the Justice Dept. off of his back) and Microsoft is consistantly trying to poison the GPL, but not Linux... I think MS is more afraid of the GPL than anything else, if they can disparage the GPL, they can (they believe) damage the free software movement. I don't think that they will be sucessful, but they will through this strategy keep Linux off of the desktop (but not servers) for some time to come. (At this stage, IMO Linux is not ready for the mainstream desktop user, and maybe it never will be, thats not a bad thing though.)

    Anyone else have a take on what they think Microsoft is up to?

    --
    Try to hack my 31337 firewall!
    1. Re:Only a slight twist on the truth... by HiThere · · Score: 2

      Why should they steal from Linux when they can just take from *BSD? There aren't many ways in which Linux is that much better, are there?

      Something else is going on. Unless they're so in love with stealing that free code isn't good enough for them (but they took the TCP stack).


      Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    2. Re:Only a slight twist on the truth... by Anomie-ous+Cow-ard · · Score: 1
      What is Balmer trying to accomplish here?

      I can only guess, but it looks like he's laying a foundation so people will see it their way if/when micros~1 decides to sue to stop an Open Source project that uses government money (e.g. university research funded by NSF grants).

      Open source is not available to commercial companies.

      This quote is especially funny. Sure, the source code isn't available for inclusion in commercial software (which is the only truth applicable to that statement). But the source code isn't available to anyone if the source is closed. And interestingly, the GPL may actually be very appropriate for research-developed software: it requires that anyone extending that research contribute back to the body of knowledge.

      /me braces for "No, the GPL is evil!" flames. And yes, I have heard the arguement that the GPL cannot apply to a government-developed project since the government may not hold copyrights. But that doesn't apply to every government-funded project.

      -----

      --

      --
      perl -e'$_=shift;die eval' '"$^X $0\047\$_=shift;die eval\047 \047$_\047"' at -e line 1.

    3. Re:Only a slight twist on the truth... by Anomie-ous+Cow-ard · · Score: 1
      Damn, you're right. When I said "commercial" i meant "proprietary".

      Off I go for my 100 lashings.

      -----

      --

      --
      perl -e'$_=shift;die eval' '"$^X $0\047\$_=shift;die eval\047 \047$_\047"' at -e line 1.

    4. Re:Only a slight twist on the truth... by mpe · · Score: 2

      Microsoft is not going to try to contest the GPL in court. Microsoft is an intellectual property company. Attacking the GPL would weaken copyright, and copyright is what allows them to make big fat piles of money.

      Not so much copyright, but the interpretation of copyright which allows for software licences to exist at all.

    5. Re:Only a slight twist on the truth... by mpe · · Score: 2

      If I wanted to create a commercial product and I use some GPL source in it, I can still charge the people the cost of the product when i sell it. The only catch is I have to give them the source as well for no additional charge.

      You can actually charge whatever you like for GPL software. However what you can't do it stop someone else doing the same thing. Thus you have competition.

    6. Re:Only a slight twist on the truth... by Kwil · · Score: 1

      Pretty obvious actually.

      By calling it Linux/Open Source, he gets the Linux/Open Source community up and screaming, "That's not us, that's the GPL.."

      Then Microsoft just has its lobby groups talk to the senators saying, "The Open Source community itself has agreed that the GPL is a cancer that attaches -etc."

      Kwil

      --

      That Jesus Christ guy is getting some terrible lag... it took him 3 days to respawn! -NJ CoolBreeze

    7. Re:Only a slight twist on the truth... by DarkProphet · · Score: 5

      I think Microsoft is setting the stage for a real grandiose event.

      M$ has been on the warpath about the GPL lately (and spreading Open Source == GPL fallacies), and this is to fool the public. Why would the public care, you ask?

      They don't, and M$ knows this. (And really, is living proof that people don't read licenses, or M$ would go belly-up real quick, but I digress) What I think M$ is doing is harping about the GPL, because sooner or later, the GPL is gonna have to be tested in court. Guess who is going to be doing the testing? M$. They will try to show that the GPL is counterproductive to the software industry, and its mere existance is stifling the software industry's ability to make comparable products at a competitive price. They will argue that Open Source software stunts thier IP rights via "infection". This is not the first time that M$ lackeys have referred to Open Source/Free Software/Linux as some type of incurable virus that permeates anything it comes in contact with.

      Though, M$ has made a mistake which may prove to be quite crippling to them in a few years. They are fighting on _WAY_ too many fronts. They have *XP, they have .NET, they have xBox, and they are fighting Open Source. Any battle fought wrongly by M$ stands to bite them in the ass later. Its possible that an action they take on one front will affect them negatively in another. The consumer will be affected as well. Its getting to the point where even Joe Sixpack is becoming aware that they have alternatives to having a BSOD everyday. (I thought W2K was supposed to cure that... it doesn't on my box at least).

      M$ is fighting the GPL, because it offers a strong alternative to the masses. The general public can't quite grasp what GPL (or other Open Source) software means to them, because its still a bitch to get an alternative OS installed, much less use it for daily work.

      In the case of Linux anyway, we've made good progress in this department, but any Linux distro I've used (RH, Debian, Mandrake) are all still a pain in the ass to install and get set up. Don't expect the general public to really warm up to anything besides M$ until you can simplify things. Apple is very aware of this, and thats how come OS X exists. The problem with Open Source software is that we don't fucking need 15 different text editors. I think development energies could be focused in more productive ways. Don't get me wrong, its nice that there is so much choice, but it might be a better idea to concentrate on the OS that that software will run on first instead.

      From the consumer prospective, Windows came first, and beget windows software later. In the case of Linux, it looks more like the software is a higher priority than the OS. Thats cool, but dammit, Linux needs a SIMPLE installer, and a stable standard GUI (or two). Tell me why it is that Mandrake 8.0 (or RH 7.x)_CRASHES_ for no apparent reason! Not just X, but the whole damned system. Maybe its the 2.4.x kernel. RH 6.1 was a helluva lot more stable for me.

      Don't get me wrong, its just that I consider myself to be good with computers, and even I have a helluva time. Do you expect Joe Sixpack to put up with it? No sir. Meanwhile, M$ is going to try to destroy the GPL/Open Source so that the day Joe Sixpack can say "Hey, this Open Source stuff really works well" never comes.

      Its the same tired old game M$ has been playing for years to ensure thier survival. Its the same principle they used when bundling IE with windows to kill off Netscape. You can tell M$ tried hard, because IE works WAY better for me than any version of Netscape/Mozilla does, sorry.

      It won't work that way this time around though. Open Source software is the only thing that can provide healthy competition for M$, and if they destroy it, I doubt any other corporation is gonna be able to compete with the demons in Redmond.

      --
      What could possibly hurt the security of the American people more than giving our own government the ability to hide its
    8. Re:Only a slight twist on the truth... by ahzz · · Score: 1

      jimminy cripes! for a second there I thought you were MSFT spreading some more fud because you hadn't read a few books. 8-P

      anyways, the reason rh 7 and mandrake are crashing is probably because you have some bad hardware. OR it's the TESTING VERSION OF GCC that redhat STUPIDLY AND MORONICLY included with thier distro.

      ANyways, for really simplified, have you ever taken a person that is TOTALY new to compuets? no experience whatsoevere, and had him install a linux, and then install windows? no?

      Guess what! That has been done and the windows install is JUST AS HARD as most of the gui installers for linux are.

      You are saying linux is hard to install because you try to use preconcieved notions about the quirks of windows on linux. I say forget anything and everything you have evern known about windows, then try installing someone like progeny. oh, 12 or 14 questions. really simple ones, like "what size is your monitor" "17", "what tasks do you want to do?" "this. and this". "what is your network information" "DHCP thank you" "rebooting" "welcome to progeny",

      The simple installers exist. Just try not to make them behave like windows installers. THEN they will be easy. :) It is your preconcieved notions of how an installer should look, feel, and what questions to ask that make it hard. Not the installer itself.

      --
      What? me have a sig? don't be ridiculous.
    9. Re:Only a slight twist on the truth... by subsolar2 · · Score: 1
      Hmmm, well I'm running RH 7.1 on one server here and my desktop and neither of them have crashed, not even the X server. Windows 98 SE often crashes or runs out of memory from running apps.

      RH 6.2 (currently I have a server that's up over 200 days) is probably better than 7.1 is. But HR 7.1 is better than 95/98/ME and probably NT/2000 by a good margin.

      It's also a fallacy that how "hard" linux is to install vs windows ... neither is easy to install, they are just different. Consumers don't give a damn how hard the OS is to install since PCs come with the OS installed. They only care a bout a few things.

      1. Does it run the application I want.
        Linux need some help here, no MS office for linux!
      2. Is it hard to do what I want.
        Linux is getting better, but needing to be root to do some things is a pain. Windows NT/2000/XP all have the root issue also.
      3. Can I get help from the PC mfg or joe down the street.
        Linux is doing as well here as NT/2000/XP is on pre-installed systems. You can get phone support from HP, IBM and Dell for linux if it was installed when you got it. Also there are more joes that know how to use it.

      It's a fallacy that linux needs to be easy to install to get accepted. It's all about the apps and the support you can call on!

      - subsolar

    10. Re:Only a slight twist on the truth... by dvNull · · Score: 1

      Sure, the source code isn't available for inclusion in commercial software

      Not really true, If I wanted to create a commercial product and I use some GPL source in it, I can still charge the people the cost of the product when i sell it. The only catch is I have to give them the source as well for no additional charge.

      I am not obligated to give the source to anyone else except the people who have my app.


      Just a reminder to all :

    11. Re:Only a slight twist on the truth... by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      BSD Sockets is an *interface* (an API) to networking.
      Winsock is an open standard that allow people to write networking code for Windows, as well as write the networking stack.
      MS doesn't use the TCP/IP stack from BSD, though.

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
  119. Re:He's right, but he's stating it wrong.... by gorgon · · Score: 1
    Actually, what Ballmer is saying (in an inflamatory, and overly-broad way) is that the US government should not modify or contract modifications to GPL (or other GPL-like) licensed work, and I agree.
    There is nothing wrong with the government dual licensing modification in GPLed software. It could be under the GPL to conform with the GPL's requirements, and public domain so that anybody can use it with whatever software they wish. Where's the problem with that?

    --
    I hope we shall crush in its birth the aristocracy of our monied corporations ...
    --

    And I'd be a Libertarian, if they weren't all a bunch of tax-dodging professional whiners.
    Berke Breathed
  120. Re:Dual License -- No go by gorgon · · Score: 1

    That was exactly my point. NSA's modifications can be public domain, while the projects themselves remain GPL. The NSA owns their patches, so they can release under as many licenses as they wish.

    --
    I hope we shall crush in its birth the aristocracy of our monied corporations ...

    --

    And I'd be a Libertarian, if they weren't all a bunch of tax-dodging professional whiners.
    Berke Breathed
  121. Re:He's no John Madden by computx · · Score: 1

    How is M$ going to enforce this 2 install limit?
    through the net? a cd is a read only media right?

  122. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by Kismet · · Score: 2

    While smart people don't feed trolls, the general public does.

  123. Re:Damn... by warlock · · Score: 2

    Does your point proove that if Kerberos' reference implementation was GPL'd instead of BSD Microsoft could not have embraced and extended it?

    Wether Microsoft used existing BSD code or not is irrelevant anyway.

  124. Re:Damn... by warlock · · Score: 3

    Oh, please... they could have "embraced and extended" Kerberos even if it was GPL. There is no indication that they used any code from available BSD licensed implementations, and there's every indication that they have competent enough developers to read the bloody specs and roll their own.

    Please don't spoil an otherwise good post with FUD like that.

  125. Re:This is scary stuff... by bruceg · · Score: 1
    Well, actually, isn't that what Microsoft is all about? Software for the masses. Most slashdot readers are probably not in this category. I wonder how many computer languages that the average slashdot reader knows. Compare this to the masses. They are lucky to be able to type a letter, and email it. This is where Microsoft fills a gap. They say their software is what their customers want. Why do you think that paper clip came about? I'd say they are right on, when it comes to giving their customers what they want. The paper clip is a good example of the masses using computers. They either do not want or have enough time to sit down and really learn the computer, so they would rather have something guide them along.

    Most slashdot readers do not fit this profile, and I'm hoping much of the next generation does not either. At some point in time, people will actually be computer literate enough, to not need all these Microsoft "helpers". I prefer to make my own littler "helpers" via a shell script and a cron job, or perl, or php, or, well I think I made my point. It would be great if everyone could do this, but I doubt that day will ever come. Microsoft will continue to feed off the ignorant, and Linux / *nix, will continue to attract the computer literate. I guess Microsoft must base their whole marketing startegy on the basis that the average computer user hasn't a clue about computers.

    Maybe the only cancer we have to worry about, is the number of challenged computer users still out there. They will continue to feed Microsoft, and make that cancer grow.

  126. Re:Since when are 9x and NT forks? by Quikah · · Score: 1

    Win9x, NT, 2k, etc I think can be considered forks of Win32.

    --
    Q.
  127. Re:This thread is an example of the Linux cancer by Photon+Ghoul · · Score: 1

    Your web site must be running on "something real", because it's not responding.

  128. Is Ballmer right or on crack? by johnnnyboy · · Score: 1
    Open source is not available to commercial companies. The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source.
    I believe Ballmer has it wrong here. I'll admit that I don't know the GPL definition thorougly but I do believe the GPL does not force the entire source to be opened. Couldn't a company use GPL source and still keep their own source code proprietary? I don't see why not. Their source is their source. But if they change the GPL source then that source should be open. Am I right or on crack like Ballmer is? john I would like to have some of what he's been smoking.
    --
    "If a show of teeth is not enough, bite ... but bite hard!"
    1. Re:Is Ballmer right or on crack? by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 1

      Well, if they use GPL'd code in their application itself, then the license by which they're allowed to use the GPL'd code requires them to put their code under the GPL as well. Same as the license for Microsoft's run-time stuff requires you to follow certain conditions if you want to ( or need to ) distribute it with their applications. You need to keep GPL'd code at arm's length from your application, or follow the code owner's license terms same as with any commercial software ( well, actually most commercial software will force you to follow their terms even if you keep it at arm's length )l.

      Then again, I don't think even Ballmer has any problem with being able to impose license terms on code you own. He just doesn't like it when other people require him to abide by those license terms.

  129. Re:From the interview by HiThere · · Score: 2

    You might look at some of Joan Baez's song copyrights, however, if you want to see just how little a change is needed. And then you can claim that everyone is derivitive from you instead of from the original. And then it becomes a question of who pays how much for lawyers, etc. (And how often are you willing to go to Redmond to defend yourself in court?)

    Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  130. Responsibility... by Nater · · Score: 1

    So, now that Microsoft has included copy protection (so that customers "understand when they are crossing the line . . . so they can't do the wrong thing."), does that mean Microsoft is going to start taking responsibility for future copyright infringements? I mean, if these copy protection things are really designed so that customers "can't do the wrong thing," whose fault is it if they do? Oh, right, it's that damn DMCA and its anti-circumvention clause.

    Consider this: The DMCA forbids the circumvention of effective access controls and copy controls (by effective, it means that they "have the effect of"). If there are circumventable at all, are they effective? No. Does the law still forbid their circumvention? We'll just have to see what the corporate lapdogs^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hcourts think.

    As far as the whole cancer analogy goes, if one were to just go along with it, what's the cure for Linux? Of course they want you to think Windows is the cure, but of course, it's worse than cancer, it's asphixiation. The real cure? BSD... but that's only if you buy the analogy in the first place.

    --

    I like to play children's songs in minor keys.
    "We're all sons of bitches now." --J. Robert Oppenheimer

  131. Re:Interesting philosophy... by Jon_S · · Score: 1

    Read the article! Yes, Ballmer does seriously confuse GPL with open source and Linux. But assuming he in fact does mean GPL, what he was specifically referring/objecting to was government-funded work. Not work of other companies. I thoroughly diasgree with Ballmer, but at least lets make sure we are arguing against what he actually said (or in the case of confusing Linux and "open source" with GPL, what he meant to say.

  132. Re:From the interview by Jon_S · · Score: 1
    Why the heck did this get modded as troll?

    I think it is a new form of "reverse-psychology" modding. Someone thinks it is a real good post, so s/he mods it as a troll. Then several dozen moderators load the page and see the -1 there and say "WTF" and immediately burn one of their +1 mod points. Six mods later, it is at +5.

  133. This is the best they can do? by aerobee · · Score: 1
    Typical m$ fud. The importance here is to un derstand the context in which it's being stated. In short, linux is good as competition. (It that all it is? I think not.) And Linux is bad because it ends intellectual property 'rights' (assumably bad for the software industry-the microsoft juggernaut) But what they fail to argue is what the effect is on the overall economy or the world community in general. They or anyone else cannot assume that 'intellectual property' is universally good or bad. That has yet to be determined.

    If M$ really wants to engage in true, substantive debate, then do so, but let's not submit spin-doctored meaningless drivel as words of wisdom.

  134. GPL, not Linux by maroberts · · Score: 1


    I do regard it as better to have a 'cancer' that makes everything public and modifiable than the alternative 'cancer' which swallows up and prevents innovation by others.

    --

    Donte Alistair Anderson Roberts - hi son!
    Karma: Chameleon

    1. Re:GPL, not Linux by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      But any of your customers may take *your* products, and sell it, or even give it away.

      You see why commercial software can't use the GPL?

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
    2. Re:GPL, not Linux by Assmasher · · Score: 1

      Only in a world where people do not make a living from Software. I like the fact that I get paid money to write software.

      --
      Loading...
  135. Take back innovation by maroberts · · Score: 1

    I think we should fight to reclaim the word "innovation" from Microsoft FUD campaign. After all, we all know that what is really meant is that Microsofts right to innovate in their proprietary fashion is being stifled by the GPL, whereas standard MS licenses and non open Source policies stifle everyone else's right to innovate.

    MS should use another word - suggestions anyone ?

    --

    Donte Alistair Anderson Roberts - hi son!
    Karma: Chameleon

    1. Re:Take back innovation by Cyberrunner · · Score: 1
      Crapnovate (new word), usage/meaning just enough innovation to look good but enough crap to force you to upgrade to the latest version. Root words Crap (we all know what that means) and Novation, which is defined as:
      N. (Law): Substitution of a new obligation for an old one, or the remodeling of an old obligation.

      Crapnovation, rings true.

      --
      One neuron said to another, acetylcholine!
  136. TCP/IP ccoulsn't have been GPL'd by Royster · · Score: 2

    What if the government-funded TCP/IP development had been released under a license which prevented its use in any product which wasn't released as GPL'd code?

    Reverse engineering for interoperability is still very legal.

    But you've also managed to confuse the issue by applying a software license (the GPL) to a technology (which might be patented rather than licensed under copyright laws). So, yes, a reference implementation might be licensed under the GPL, but that dosn't stop anyone from developing a compatable implementation from scratch.

    --
    I have discovered a truly marvelous sig, unfortunately the sig limit is too small to contain i
    1. Re:TCP/IP ccoulsn't have been GPL'd by rfredell · · Score: 1

      If the government funds the reference implementation then it should be public domain, not GPL'd.

  137. Re:TCP/IP couldn't have been GPL'd by Royster · · Score: 2

    And considering that the US Government can not under law copyright anything, anything they do really is PD. But that dosn't mean that if the US GOvernment contributes to a GPL project that the entire work becomes PD. Only the government contribution.

    --
    I have discovered a truly marvelous sig, unfortunately the sig limit is too small to contain i
  138. What ARE these government funded OS projects? by weston · · Score: 2

    You know, other than NSA Linux, I can't think of a single open source project funded by the governement. And I don't know that NSA Linux really counts: after all, it seems to me they just found something useful and are modifying it to fit their needs.

    So I'm curious to know what the government is funding....

    (And, theoretically, if the NSA didn't distribute it at all, they wouldn't even have to make their changes available, right?)

    --

  139. Letter I Sent To The Sun-Times by weston · · Score: 4

    I take issue with several sophisms that Steve Ballmer attempted to promulgate during his interview with the Sun-Times, printed on June 1st.

    Ballmer claims that "Open Source is not available to commercial companies. The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source." This is an out-and-out mistatement of what open source licenses do. In order to keep Sun-Times readers well-informed, perhaps an examination of the essentials of the two most popular open source licenses would be in order.

    The BSD license, originally created to cover software released by UC Berkeley, essentially requires only that you retain a notice attributing the original source of the software. Thus software under the BSD license is very close to the public domain -- all you have to do to use it in any way you wish is to appropriately credit the original author. You don't even have to post this credit in a prominent place (like the about box or documentation of a program). It only has to go in the code, and users might even remain unaware that a program uses BSD licensed software.

    One good example of this can be found in Microsoft's own Windows NT and Windows 2000. The IP stack -- an essential portion of the networking code -- is actually taken from code released under the BSD license. Microsoft has thus taken open source software and succesfully incorporated it into one of their flagship products -- all without resulting in any loss of intellectual property on Microsoft's part.

    The GNU Public license, originally created at the Free Software Foundation, is stricter in its requirements than the BSD license, but nowhere near as restrictive as Ballmer suggests. It is true that if you take code from
    a piece of GPL'd software and release a derivitave work based on that code, then you must release that derivitave work, with source code, under the GPL.
    The GPL makes this requirement in order to ensure people will always be able to freely use, inspect, and modify software released under the GPL. Software released under the GPL cannot be made proprietary.

    However, there is NO provision in the GPL that states you must release ALL your software under the GPL. Non-derivative works may be released under any license the copyright owner please. Thus, a company such as Corel can distribute their own version of the popular GPL'd operating system Linux and simultaneously sell their Word Perfect Office Suite in the traditional proprietary manner. They are not required to open source all of their products -- not even their version of Word Perfect that runs on Linux -- because these products are not derived from GPL'd software. This example neatly refutes Ballmer's assertion that "Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches." The GPL applies to and affects only software that is derived from other GPL'd software, allowing companies handle the distribution and licensing of their proprietary software in any way they see fit.

    It's worth noting that Corel and Microsoft itself are only two of many corporations and small businesses who are succesfully incorporating open source software into their operations. AT&T, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, and Sun have long used similar strategies. AOL, EBay, Red Hat, VA Linux, and others are among the growing powerhouses that have learned to harness and profit from the increasing popularity of open source. Far from being a cancer that is unfit for business use, open source has proved to be a boon for those who understand it.

    The verity of these points is obvious to anyone who has spent suffecient time familiarizing themselves with the essential facts about various types of open source software. Either Ballmer is simply uninformed about his competitors, or he is taking advantage of his opportunities in public forums such as the Sun-Times to intentionally mislead people about software which is competing (quite effectively) with Microsoft's own products. Given Microsoft's history, which do you beleive?

    Sincerely,


    --

    1. Re:Letter I Sent To The Sun-Times by ckedge · · Score: 1

      sophism? promulgate? verity?

      You're not writing a letter to "The New Yorker". What's with the 15th century English?

  140. Microsoft's "Only Problem"?! by brandon · · Score: 1

    Microsoft says:
    "The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody." This is one big bait and switch if I have ever seen one. Microsoft is saying that the governement should be spending tax payers money on things that are Availible to Everybody!

    First off, I don't know of any program, or funding, in the government that benifits Everybody. Microsoft claims though that money should only be spent on programs that do... I would like to see Microsoft prove that is even possible.

    Second, I guess I missed the headlines that Microsoft was now an advisor to the government. Last I knew, it was voters who choose people to represent the people and their ideas in the Government. Microsoft I guess thinks it has more wisdom than out government, so that they feel they must tell our government what is a good idea or not. That idea scares me, as in they are without any doubt, a dishonest company, and the constitution is for the people, not for the company.

    Fourth, trying to imply that any government funding of Open-Source projects is a waste, is poor form, and I think is just disgusting. That's like saying no one should provide any free service to anyone else, regardless what it is. I have always seen much more come out of people caring and helping others, than people being selfish and expecting something in return for everything they do.

    On a personal note, I've tried to give Microsoft a break, because they do have something that is pretty darn good, (honestly, they do) but I sure can't believe how they can pretend like they want to help people, but try to stop anything that could help millions of people, and improve the quality of life just so they can make money. That alone makes me upset and disgusted. I hope to see Microsoft put a muzzle on Balmer, and/or fire him with a statement that his statements are the complete oppisite of what the company wants to do for people.

    1. Re:Microsoft's "Only Problem"?! by brandon · · Score: 1

      With all the .Net and complaints about the GPL and other Open-Source ways, it is making me wonder that Microsoft is building their own Open-Source License. Microsoft continues to be attacking specific portions of the GPL. Namely parts related to IP and commercial areas. If Microsoft comes up with a license, they will want as many companies and people to use that license. My belief, is that in that license, it will have a part that will create major problems with software such as Linux and other software using licenses similiar to GPL.

      My hope is that Stallman, Linus, and others should consider this, and maybe start getting the medias attention before Microsoft announces their own license, that way companies and people will know that GPL like licenses are what is the best, and not to jump on a license that Microsoft will be coming out with. Getting this out before Microsoft announces their license would be the best, and not let Microsoft try to PR their license above others.

    2. Re:Microsoft's "Only Problem"?! by towatatalko · · Score: 1

      What they're trying to do at M$ is to define the terms and the territory relevent to their views. Once that is done they may try to start legal process. Say, they will try to undercut GPL by making it legal to mix open source code under GPL with propriatory code and the end result to be propriatory controlled by them under some new license type. Their claim is likely to be that GPL stifles competition, because not every company wants or can use GPL if they have to make their code public. In other words, as it is now GPL can't be "extended" with propriatory code, which M$ always does. They may claim their use of GPL software will be aimed to improve it. Since M$ is a big part of US economy, the argument could go, it should be allowed to grow further by using GPL but not releasing is as such. Can it be done? It is likely they'll try something since their market share is getting eroded by GPL's like software.

      --

      IP was invented for the sake of lawsuits.
  141. Microsoft creating their own IP friendly License? by brandon · · Score: 1

    Linus, Stallman, ESR, and others/.

    I hope this gets to people who may be able to help keep this idea in their minds, as I believe it may be very important

    Microsoft has been attacking specific parts of GPL and other similar licenses. Mostly about problems that may arise with IP and open-sourcing any project build on GPL'd software.

    With all of this being said by Microsoft, it sounds like Microsoft is setting a stage for the announcement of their own Open-Source license, that would be much like what is out there, except specific parts to protect IP, and allow building off of other Open-Source projects without releasing their own source, or a "private" like open-source/shared between companies type license.
    it would be a good idea to start a pro current license campaign
    that states that current licenses are the best solution, and that Microsoft may be planning a license that will appear good, but have deep down portions that will help a comercial company over an individual or a group. Microsoft has one of the best legal departments in the world. They would do this. Our current licenses MUST be pushed now, before Microsoft is able to capture the spotlight. If they do, companies will jump on Microsofts new license, and not take careful analysis of it before so. This would really cause problems for Open-Source as we know it today. You can be sure that Microsoft will have parts of the license that will cause problems for current Open-Source ways, and that are intended to allow Microsoft to gain control and to hurt Linux, Free-BSD, and other non-commercial OS's and software. Please, anyone who can help and has voice, begin to let the public and press know what Microsoft may be up to. Getting it out before, rather than after, can make a serious effect on how software may change in the future. Start letting friends, businesses, the press, government, and anyone else know what may be going on, and to jump on to what Microsoft may release in way of licensing. I would give Microsoft no more than 2 months from today for announcing their license. They have been setting things up, and planning how and what to attack. If we don't get things out now, our efforts may be hurt severally!

    Please! Please! don't ignore this, and Please start getting word and annoucements out!


  142. Microsoft creating their own IP friendly License? by brandon · · Score: 1

    Linus, Stallman, ESR, and others.

    I hope this gets to people who may be able to help keep this idea in their minds, as I believe it may be very important

    Microsoft has been attacking specific parts of GPL and other similar licenses. Mostly about problems that may arise with IP and open-sourcing any project build on GPL'd software.

    With all of this being said by Microsoft, it sounds like Microsoft is setting a stage for the announcement of their own Open-Source license, that would be much like what is out there, except specific parts to protect IP, and allow building off of other Open-Source projects without releasing their own source, or a "private" like open-source/shared between companies type license.
    discredit the goodness of current licenses, so that they license will be used over current ones. Because of this, it would be a good idea to start a pro current license campaign that states that current licenses are the best solution, and that Microsoft may be planning a license that will appear good, but have deep down portions that will help a comercial company over an individual or a group. Microsoft has one of the best legal departments in the world. They would do this. Our current licenses MUST be pushed now, before Microsoft is able to capture the spotlight. If they do, companies will jump on Microsofts new license, and not take careful analysis of it before so. This would really cause problems for Open-Source as we know it today. You can be sure that Microsoft will have parts of the license that will cause problems for current Open-Source ways, and that are intended to allow Microsoft to gain control and to hurt Linux, Free-BSD, and other non-commercial OS's and software. Please, anyone who can help and has voice, begin to let the public and press know what Microsoft may be up to. Getting it out before, rather than after, can make a serious effect on how software may change in the future. Start letting friends, businesses, the press, government, and anyone else know what may be going on, and to jump on to what Microsoft may release in way of licensing. I would give Microsoft no more than 2 months from today for announcing their license. They have been setting things up, and planning how and what to attack. If we don't get things out now, our efforts may be hurt severally!

    Please! Please! don't ignore this, and Please start getting word and annoucements out!

    --Brandon

  143. It's GPL (not Linux) that is the cancer by Skapare · · Score: 2

    For those not inclined to read the actual article:

    Q: Do you view Linux and the open-source movement as a threat to Microsoft?
    A: Yeah. It's good competition. It will force us to be innovative. It will force us to justify the prices and value that we deliver. And that's only healthy. The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody. Open source is not available to commercial companies. The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source. If the government wants to put something in the public domain, it should. Linux is not in the public domain. Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches. That's the way that the license works.

    So he did say "Yeah" to "threat" :-)

    The GPL affects a company like Microsoft that wants to not release the source of its own changes in a way similar to the proprietary code of a commercial competitor: they can't use that source. What Microsoft is probably most upset about is that unlike a commercial competitor, they most likely will not be able to do what they usually do with such a commercial entity: buy the license or buy out the whole company.

    He does point out that when the government (read: tax payer money) funds development that ends up being GPL licensed (as opposed to perhaps LGPL or BSD) that not everyone gets to freely use it the way they want. His point is that the government should be taking a neutral position on software development, and whatever it does fund should be essentially in the public domain, allowing anyone to use it anyway they see fit (as long as it's legal). I happen to agree with him in this regard. By allowing the funded developer to choose a licensing strategy such as GPL, the government is not taking a neutral position.

    Steve Ballmer's error is attaching the "cancer" label to Linux. Instead it should be attached to GPL and all GPL software. That may be good or bad depending on your preferences for licensing, and whether you want to allow a commercial entity like Microsoft to use it without obligations.

    This does tell me that Microsoft might be interested in using some of the GPL'd software out there. I'm not sure if that would be Linux, but it could be. Linux XP anyone?

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
    1. Re:It's GPL (not Linux) that is the cancer by Skapare · · Score: 2

      The problem is that these "certain conditions" are the problem. They are what I was referring to, so my original statement remains correct.

      Specifically the condition I'm referring to is the one which requires that all other code integrated or linked with the GPL code must also be distributed in source form under GPL. You know that's the case because eventually in your posting you finally reveal it.

      Your reference to "use" in "GPL is not a limit on use" is not referring to what Microsoft wants to do. Again, you know this; you're just trying to change the wording around to obscure this fact.

      What you need to show is that GPL benefits taxpayers more than another license such as BSD does. Suppose someone comes up with some new innovative software and releases it. Does the public (taxpayers if federally funded) benefit more if Microsoft can integrate it into their systems (as BSD license would allow) or not (as GPL would prevent, given that they won't release all the source to everything else they do)? Whether the code Microsoft develops would benefit the public if released is not the issue (if it were, I'd be in favor of releasing it).

      Personally, I would like to see the US government not buy anything from Microsoft unless it comes in as the low bidder, and meets all requirements of compatibility and quality. But I also do not want it to be funding development that ends up being used as a tool for particular eco-politicial manipulation (whether it's what I agree with or not).

      --
      now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
    2. Re:It's GPL (not Linux) that is the cancer by Skapare · · Score: 2

      Of course you are allowed an opinion. The issue is whether you can use taxpayer money to force your opinion on others. This is more than just inserting some comments in the case saying "Microsoft is evil and their source code should be released". Those comments would be just opinion and I'd have no problem with inserting them in funded development. But to attach a license that prevents anyone from distributing the result of taxpayer funded development in conjunction with their own development that doesn't have this same licensing is what the issue is about. And that is not what government funding and taxpayer money should be used for. If there are circumstances the code cannot be distributed, then it is limiting, and with GPL there are.

      --
      now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
    3. Re:It's GPL (not Linux) that is the cancer by dlapine · · Score: 1
      That's not true. GPL allows any user to freely use the software in any way they want, except one; they can't distribute it without certain conditions.

      Microsoft is more than interested in using GPL'd software, or they wouldn't be so public about its "infectious" characteristics. It's not that they can't use it, their problem with it is that they can't legally use it and distribute the results without distributing their work as well.

      To repeat: GPL is not a limit on use, it's a limit on redistribution. The Feds should be sponsoring more software development under GPL, as the benefits of such investments go directly to the tax payers, and not directly to the special interests of the corporate world.

      What's really sad is that the US government doesn't enforce any of its purchasing rules concerning single source vendors when it comes to purchasing PC's.

      --
      The Internet has no garbage collection
    4. Re:It's GPL (not Linux) that is the cancer by Phillip2 · · Score: 1
      "By allowing the funded developer to choose a licensing strategy such as GPL, the government is not taking a neutral position."

      Are you not allowed an opinion just because you are working for a university of other government organisation? This seems fairly strange to me.

      As it happens there are very good reasons for writing software under a GPL even if you are working for the government. Universities are partly commercial organisations. If M$ or anyone else wants access to academic software then I do not see any problem with this. They can use it under the GPL if they choose. Or they can pay a license fee and contribute towards the lab and the university that produces it. This is indeed neutral. M$ get treated the same as everyone else. Whats the problem?

      Phil

    5. Re:It's GPL (not Linux) that is the cancer by Phillip2 · · Score: 1
      I think you misunderstand me. I choose to work in the public sector for several reasons. If the government choose to screw around with these reasons that I leave. Many others will do likewise.

      The situation is quite simple though. I realise stuff under the GPL. If people want to use the stuff in another way, then that is fine by me. But then they can contribute to the lab, and to my career by giving me money.

      Besides the question of what to do with software that is already under GPL raises it head. Should I not contribute to stuff because of the license it is under, because of what others might want to do with it later.

      Phil

  144. Re:Gary is gone, down with the truth! by Skapare · · Score: 2

    I'm switching from GPL to another (perhaps BSD) licensing for my code. I'm not even federally funded, so doing this is strictly my own choice. But releasing my software under BSD would allow Microsoft to integrate some or all of it into their stuff w/o having to release their own source code. Doing this in no way inhibits anyone from using my original source code. Whether Microsoft chose to use my code or not, you'd have just as much access and rights to my code. Such a choice by Microsoft would not in any way diminish the value my code would have for open public use.

    The issue comes down to whether or not taxpayer funded development should be allowed to require a commercial software vendor to release their own code in source form just to be able to take advantage of that taxpayer funded development. You know by now what my opinion is.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  145. He's got a point. by cygnus · · Score: 2

    While the term 'cancer' is overblown, why should the government be funding projects that eliminate the opportunity for companies to sell their products? That's not fair. The companies pay taxes, too.

    Not that those products shouldn't exist. Just that the government that represents those companies shouldn't be undermining them.

    --
    Just raise the taxes on crack.
    1. Re:He's got a point. by deacon · · Score: 1
      Um, you mean, projects like public libraries?

      public parks?

      public beaches?

      public education?

      Or do you just mean that we should abolish the armed forces and the police and make people buy their own weapons to defend themselves with?

    2. Re:He's got a point. by BoyPlankton · · Score: 1

      Using that logic, then the government shouldn't buy software either. Buying software from one company inherently undermines the ability of another company to do business. The way you buy into open source is you support it.

    3. Re:He's got a point. by novastyli · · Score: 1
      > Just that the government that represents those companies shouldn't be undermining them.

      Well, the government does not represent only software compnanies. As RMS pointed out a few days ago, free software could help the rest of us enormously. And not only because it is cheeper.

      Because proprietary software takes our data hostage by withholding the file format. This should be enough reason for the government, who has to store enormous amount of data for a long time, to fund free software. Quality of the software would be another reason. And it is not as if they are spending a lot of money either.

    4. Re:He's got a point. by s4ltyd0g · · Score: 1

      Governments on all levels provide all sorts of incentives to lure large corporations. Tax breaks, low interest loans, whatever. These guys are making money hand over fist and all the while they're pissing and moaning about how unfair it is to be funding open source projects. Give me a break.

  146. Re:Interesting philosophy... by Pope · · Score: 5

    MS liscensed Spyglass Mosaic with the terms that Spyglass get a percentage of the profits of selling IE.
    MS gave away IE for free.
    Profits to Spyglass? $0.

    --
    It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
  147. Re:Interesting philosophy... by great+om · · Score: 1

    shouldn't spyglass get money for every copy of
    win98/ 2000/ME/Xp etc. etc. Because Iexplorer is
    an 'integral' component, and therefore it is sold
    as part of the Windows package?

    -just wondering

    --
    ------- Oh damn.... the Sigfile escaped... -Great OM
  148. Re:From the interview by Anomie-ous+Cow-ard · · Score: 1
    If you accept the incorrect usage of "open source" to mean "GPL'd code" then this statement makes perfect sense.

    I suspect his usage wasn't meant to be just "GPL'd code", but rather any code licensed in such a way that the source is available to any particular competitor (i.e. the OS movement) but that micros~1 can't integrate that source into their software. It's certainly a valid opinion for micros~1 to hold, just as I hold the opinion that extensions to at least some government-funded work should be similarly available.

    -----

    --

    --
    perl -e'$_=shift;die eval' '"$^X $0\047\$_=shift;die eval\047 \047$_\047"' at -e line 1.

  149. Microsoft's cancer by glen · · Score: 1

    To Microsoft, Linux is a cancer. It continues to grow, there's nothing they can do to stop it. And, it may eventually destroy them.

  150. A rational analysis of an irrational person by Badgerman · · Score: 2

    Let's take a look at Mr. B's statements on open source piece by piece:

    Yeah. It's good competition. It will force us to be innovative. It will force us to justify the prices and value that we deliver. And that's only healthy.

    TRANSLATION: We can use it to say there's competition. Note how we say we like competition but are engaged in monopolistic practices. This ought to keep the government off our backs!

    The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work.

    TRANSLATION: We're really afraid the government will get interested in open source.

    Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody.

    TRANSLATION: Unless the government funds our work, then you're SOL. Well, our products are available to everybody if you just sign this contract and fork over the money and don't worry about the bugs . . .

    Open source is not available to commercial companies.

    TRANSLATION: I'm either too stupid to read up on Open Source, or I'd better begin to spin FUD so fast it's centrifugal force could be used as artificial gravity.

    The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source.

    TRANSLATION: I'd better start that FUD. I'll lie, forgettng to note that OS code requires you only to reveal code based on/using it. Also, since intellectual property is a big area of concern today, this ought to scare people.

    If the government wants to put something in the public domain, it should. Linux is not in the public domain.

    TRANSLATION: If I state the obvious it may scare people.

    Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches. That's the way that the license works.

    TRANSLATION: I'll use the cancer metaphor, that always works! Of course it trashes the start of this paragraph when I was all civil and stuff, but I'm on a roll. And yeah, I invoke intellectual property that'll really scare people! I just hope no one actually reads the Linux liscenses . . .

    FINAL ANALYSIS: Stupidity and greed are more like a cancer than Linux.

    --
    "The Sage treasures Unity and measures all things by it" - Lao Tzu
  151. Misinformation by cthrall · · Score: 1

    > Government funding should be for work that is
    > available to everybody. Open source is not
    > available to commercial companies. The way the
    > license is written, if you use any open-source
    > software, you have to make the rest of your
    > software open source.

    What bunch of crap. Ballmer makes it sound like you have to GPL your product if you use a GPL'd compiler or editor. Idiot. I hope these guys are just shooting theirselves in the foot, 'cause all their recent talk of the government makes me very nervous that a McCarthy-esque Open Source witch hunt will happen.

    Anybody used strings on Windows yet to find illegal uses of GPL'd code?

  152. Re:'cancer' by mindstrm · · Score: 2

    No.
    You are simply not permitted to modify and distribute GPL'd code unless the resulting product is also under the GPL.

    That is not cancer. Try to use a piece of MS code some day; see how crazy their license is.

  153. It would be even more appropiate... by Asim · · Score: 1

    ...if he called Linux a virus.

  154. Re:This word by Ratface · · Score: 1

    That was a pretty innovative wisecrack.
    "Give the anarchist a cigarette"

    --

    A little planning goes a long way...
  155. sniff sniff by cruelworld · · Score: 1

    Is that fear I smell?

    1. Re:sniff sniff by GunFodder · · Score: 1

      It seems like Microsoft has increasingly felt the need to justify their IP-based business model. We should see every statement of this nature as a good sign. Microsoft is starting to feel the heat, and they are responding in the usual way: FUD. Any threat to IP is a threat to their very existence.

  156. tech ranking connection by gruntvald · · Score: 1

    I wonder if a casual reader noticed this connection:
    Microsoft's Chicago-based Midwest district office, which covers Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin, is the tech giant's biggest moneymaker in the country-----
    More seriously, in Chicago we do seem to have an inferiority complex about our place in the tech world. Rankings frequently put us toward the bottom among major cities in terms of our tech presence-----
    So - Chicago is the lowest rated tech city, yet the highest rated user of Microsoft products!

  157. Re:Vaccine not Virus - when will they get it? by sabat · · Score: 1

    It's all obvious enough, even to the general public. After all, it's not a Linux company that was called on the carpet 3+ times by the Justice Dept.


    ---

    --
    I, for one, welcome our new Antichrist overlord.
  158. Even better... by Chewie · · Score: 2
    From Netcraft:

    The site www.suntimes.com is running Netscape-Enterprise/3.6 on Solaris

    Check for yourself here

    --
    49 20 68 61 76 65 20 74 6F 6F 20 6D 75 63 68 20 66 72 65 65 20 74 69 6D 65 2E
  159. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by PatientZero · · Score: 1
    That won't entirely work. You see, Microsoft's game has been and continues to be to use the media to spread their FUD.
    Control the media and you control the mind.
    -- Jim Morisson
    Ignoring this wisdom is exactly what Microsoft is hoping we'll do. Granted, we can't ignore our game in playing theirs. What's our game? Continue writing great free software and building grass roots support. But we simply cannot ignore the media.
    The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source. ... Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches. That's the way that the license works.
    Simple lie. Since there's no protocol for handling lies in the media except by responding to them through the media, we must refute their lies when they show up -- especially when a senior executive is spouting them. As more and more people begin seeing the collective Microsoft nose lengthen, we'll see more progress.

    "The license"? As if there's only one. "[I]f you use any open-source software," your stuff is open source? This is obviously a blatent falsification, as your work is open if and only if you derive your work from it. Using Linux and the hundreds of GNU tools do not have any impact on your choice of licenses. How many ways can we say this to get the media to understand it? Or does the media already understand and simply ignore it (they know who's buying their advertising, after all)?

    The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody. Open source is not available to commercial companies.
    Let's set one thing straight right here. "Everybody" here is the same meaning as "everybody" in the US Constitution: people. Corporations do not have rights. LLCs, partnerships, governments, churches -- all organizations -- were not granted any rights, and they should have none. They are legal entities only and should not be treated as individuals.

    And even ignoring that, corporations are free to "use" free software, just as people are. What they are not free to do is steal the very intellectual property they are claiming to protect!

    Judge: "Mr. Ballmer, what exactly is your complaint against free software and open source."

    Ballmer: "Open source software endangers intellectual property of every American corporation."

    Judge: "How does it do that?"

    Ballmer: "The license prevents us from taking the source code, modifying it, and making it proprietary. You know, embrace and extend it."

    Judge: "So basically you're pissed that you can't steal their IP? And that somehow endangers your IP?"

    Peace PatientZero

    --
    Freedom to fear. Freedom from thought. Freedom to kill.
    I guess the War on Terror really is about freedom!
  160. Everything it touches!! by Bapu · · Score: 1

    I run Microsoft Word under Wine on GNU/Linux. I guess that means that Microsoft will have to release the source code to Word now. It's been infected with the open source cancer.

  161. Re:Cancer Metaphor by gmhowell · · Score: 2

    Not only that, but many cancers look and act somewhat similarly, but are functionally unique, and operate on quite different principals. ie Win95 and WinCE and WinXP.

    --
    Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
  162. Here's Mine by gmhowell · · Score: 2

    I recently read an interview with Mr. Steve Ballmer of MicroSoft (http://www.suntimes.com/output/tech/cst-fin-micro 01.html) in which he and the interviewer make several unchallenged statements that should be clarified.

    First the interviewer claims that Microsoft has never been in as strong a position financially. That is not true. Microsoft is down considerably from their highest stock price of less than 24 months ago, and their cash reserves are lower. Sales of Windows 2000 are much lower than predicted, forcing a slightly early rollout of Windows XP.

    Mr. Ballmer defends recent changes in their licensing policy on the claims that it will be easier and possibly cheaper to consumers. This is not true, at least in my cases, professionally and personally. Under the current software I have under license, I can place and use one and only one copy of that software on any computer that I choose. I can define what a computer is, and I have that license in perpetuity. In addition, should I require a reinstall of software on an existing machine, I am in no way limited.

    Under the new plan conceived of by Microsoft, I will be unable to transfer my license to a new machine; I will be forced to purchase a new license for that machine, whether or not I continue to use the old license on the old machine. Microsoft has a legitimate concern about this happening, but in any instance where my company has moved a license from one machine to another, the old machine has either been: stripped for parts, donated to a non-profit or employee AFTER the operating system has been removed, or it has had a version of Linux, BeOS, or BSD installed on it. In no way have I either violated the license, nor have I deprived Microsoft of income. Yet under the new scheme, I am to be considered a criminal, and not to be trusted to manage a simple license myself.

    Another problem with the new licensing scheme is the time-limited feature. Currently, I run Windows 98 and Windows NT. Many of the 50 licenses (personal and business) that I manage are older than three years. Purchasing the hardware at the end of our leases provides perfectly functional machines for as long as the hardware holds up. The new functionality that Microsoft periodically develops may be of interest to some consumers, but rarely has it been of interest to my company.

    As a taxpayer, I agree with Mr. Ballmer concerning government expenditures for software development. Any government developed software should be licensed under the public domain (which actually qualifies as no license). Unfortunately, I doubt that Mr. Ballmer shares my opinion. I believe that he would prefer that the government help fund software that is in no way open to the public. I can certainly understand his opinion, but I do not agree with it.

    Similarly, I do not think that Mr. Ballmer has an accurate grasp of the nature of open source software. Through comments made by him and Messrs. Allchin and Mundie, they seem to have grouped all Open Source Software under the GPL license. While this is a very popular license, it is not the only license that most people would consider open source. IBM, Netscape, and Apple all have open source licenses of their own that are friendly to hobbyists, scientists, professors, and the companies themselves. There exists the LGPL which allows a company to use open source components in closed source projects. Of most interest is the BSD license. Several versions of Unix are released under this license, as are many programs, utilities, and drivers. In this instance, Microsoft has taken code released under the BSD license and used it in their own products. Specifically, I refer to the TCP/IP stack used in Windows 95, 98, and NT. Despite using open source code, Microsoft did not have to open source their operating system.

    I would hope that in the future, you perform more hard hitting interviews, and that the interviewer be more aversed with the subject material he is discussing. I must say that I am impressed that the Linux question was raised, but the lack of a quality follow-up shows either editorial mis-discretion in shortening the story, or a basic misunderstanding (shared by Messrs. Ballmer, Allchin, and Mundie) of what exactly is open source (or Open Source, or Free Software).

    I can appreciate some of Mr. Ballmer's points, and can even agree with them. Despite using a mixture of many computer products, I do not immediately villify Microsoft. However, I do feel that the arguments that they are trying to make would find more support by others in my situation were they not quite so intellectually bankrupt.

    --
    Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
  163. Bashing GPL, not Linux by gmhowell · · Score: 3

    If you are correct that M$ is bashing the GPL and not Linux (which they are, but the question is are they attacking GPL directly, or only using it to indirectly attack Linux?) then it is quite interesting.

    M$ has many lawyers. Why would they attack the GPL unless it looked rigorous enough to hold up? Possibly the only attacks would also destroy the validity of their own licenses. No matter, it means that even though there has not been a legal challenge of the GPL, Microsoft is afraid to be the first.

    In a nutshell, that's a damned good thing. If even M$ is afraid to attack the GPL on legalistic grounds, nobody should, and that means that that particular argument (no legal test yet) is now pointless (if it ever had weight to begin with).

    BTW, anybody have any idea which projects M$ is specifically bitching about the US (presumably) gov't funding that they can't use? Sure, there is SELinux, but what about the Navy development of that automated ship? I certainly can't use that. IBM can't. But anyone can use SELinux.

    I know. It's typical M$PR. Anybody have Ballmer's phone number? Or how about the phone number's of some major investment houses? I mean, how can you put mutual fund money into a company heading by someone who is either: a) an idiot or b) morally bankrupt?

    --
    Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
  164. Re:heh by skryche · · Score: 1

    No cure for cancer.

    Does anyone else think this would be a great motto? I can see it on a T-shirt.

  165. Re:This word by kubrick · · Score: 1

    in-no-vate (IN no vait) vt. - to take an idea from another company (cf. Apple)

    I think you mean (cf. Xerox).


    No, no, Apple just xeroxed that idea from Xerox :)

    --
    deus does not exist but if he does
  166. They're right calling it cancer... by IkeTo · · Score: 1

    in their own meaning of cancer. Except that then their own software is a much bigger cancer. They say that it would be horrible to incorporate GPL software into a proprietary software. But what if you incorporate the proprietary software of another company, say the one of MS (MacroShit)?! For GPL'ed software, at least you can do it. For proprietary software, you'll have a hard time even trying: the source is unavailable.

  167. Re:More insight to Microsofties think... by Ctrl-Z · · Score: 1

    Just for that, it's exempli gratia, not gratis.

    --
    www.timcoleman.com is a total waste of your time. Never go there.
  168. Re:Honorable fights only work when... by Pengo · · Score: 2


    The whole ideal with linux is like an old Fairy tail where there is a ruler, and the real ruler. For example, the king might rule the kingdom, but he is merely a puppet to the evil wizard behind his throne.

    I see system administrators , the people who are doing the real work, as these 'evil' wizards. (Please take it evil with all effection).

    Most companies I have worked at, the CTO seems to be very geeky (And your lucky if you have one like that), but the CIO and IT admins tend to listen to the second tier admin/techs/engineers. If that tier (the most expensive one) isn't happy.. the organization isn't happy.. end the end it's this second tier that seems to make the decisions in the long run.

    They can rage a compaign on general public against the name of linux, but if the underlings (peasants if you will) don't buy it, nothing is going to fly.

    IBM & Apple didn't quite understand that, but seems that both organizations are targeting that group very aggresively if you think about it.

    :) Hoorah from the peasants !


    --------------------
    Would you like a Python based alternative to PHP/ASP/JSP?

  169. If you want to lead, you can't be boring by scotpurl · · Score: 2

    Leaders, as in, the people who have followers, aren't boring people, so I guess I should amend my statements. (Where's the edit function on old comments here?). Leaders rant a bit, they are quirky, they get in trouble, they make mistakes, they say things they shouldn't have, and on and on. But they're usually pretty interesting, and entertaining, to pay attention to.

    No one wants to follow a boring person. Charisma is optional (mcnealy).

    We're all excitement junkies, and we seek out interesting people to be with.

  170. A Google Search by scotpurl · · Score: 2

    Google search for Steve Jobs and elevator

    For those not willing to click, rumour out of Apple is that Jobs has fired several people for riding the elevator with him. There's more to it than that. The MacWorld.com link is probably best (in the search results).

  171. Well, the CEO is supposed to say things like that by scotpurl · · Score: 5

    Let's take a look around at the other big companies. Oracle has an egomaniac for a CEO. Apple, yeah, ditto for their CEO (or whaver Jobs' title is these days), whom it's apparently not safe to be with in an elevator.

    The companies that have the biggest following of loyalist fans also have these sort of banana-republic dictator personalities running the company. In order to gain new territory, you sometimes have to rally the troops (employees) and your allies (investors) by making bold, outrageous statements. Usually it's limited to something like, "we're going to make a lot of money this year," or "our new product is The Next Big Thing."

    CEO's are really politicians. And like everyone in power, they know a little secret: the masses don't want to hear the truth. People enjoy being lied to, and deluded, and misled. There's so much evil, selfishness, and contempt in the world that the masses don't want to hear it. An investor doesn't want to hear that another stock they own is going to tank. They want to hear that their stocks have all gone bullish. Customers don't want to know that they've purchased another mediocre product. They want to beleive that it will actually work as advertised, and cure the common cold.

    Repeat after me. It's propoganda. It's not the truth.

    Linux shifts the economy from product-based to service based (since the product is free + your time). IBM sells services, and they like Linux. Microsoft sells products, and feels their bottom line is being threatened. They have a right to make a product, and people have a right to buy, or not to buy, their product.

  172. benefit of doubt by Ranger+Nik · · Score: 1

    > But we can't afford to give Microsoft the
    > benefit of the doubt in everything they do

    exactly! exactly! giving a complete stranger the benefit of doubt is one thing - one thing i believe in very strongly, BTW.

    giving Microsoft the benefit of doubt ist plain stupid. it's like giving benefit of doubt to the nazis, or saddam, or the Borg...

    M$'s motivations have been known for more than 10 years now. they haven't changed. they won't change for as long as the company is successful - and why should they, they are making more money than anyone else.

    what i am surprised about is companies cooperating with M$. it seems they should be able to tell from history that there are only 2 possible outcomes if cooperating with M$: 1) you get majorly screwed, or 2) you get bought out. i guess it must be the greed when staring at the pile of money that is M$.

  173. Re:Interesting philosophy... by Lazaru5 · · Score: 1

    Ah, so philosophically stolen, as opposed to 'outright stolen', which is what the parent of my comment said, and the context in which my reply was made.



    --

    --

    --
    My comments and opinions completely reflect those of anyone and anything I am remotely associated with.
  174. Re:Interesting philosophy... by Lazaru5 · · Score: 2

    You can't steal something you yourself create. Those who went on to found Netscape Communications (Marc Andreeson and friends) are the very people who created Mosaic at UIUC.

    --

    --

    --
    My comments and opinions completely reflect those of anyone and anything I am remotely associated with.
  175. Re:From the interview by mvicuna · · Score: 1

    Hi,

    This would be a great thing, but the Gov't routinely sells or even gives away free the discoveries of scientists that it employees directly to bussiness. Usually if they hold the patent, which the gov't allows to be in their name but the gov't retains the rights to, they get a paid if it sells, but if the Gov't gives it away free, they get nothing even if the Company the Gov't gave the patent to turns around and makes money off the patent.

    The gov't routinely does not release gov't funded activity into the Public Domain. Its not doing this just for linux. Just like any of the other companies whine when they lose the patent bid, he's just angry that the NSA isn't improving Windows security for free.

    MarkV.
  176. Re:From the interview by fizzz · · Score: 1

    "So now they have code 99.999% funded by the taxpayer but the taxpayer cannot even use it without paying again for the ever so slightly changed player and for the encryupted music files and in higher prices to the OS maker who pays Microsteal to allow them to compile the code on their platform."

    But the original one is still in the public domain... Thus it remains your right to start from there and build whatever you feel is missing to make it a competing solution to this 'Microsteal' solution. And, if you feel like putting these changes of yours under the GPL, nobody can/will stop you...

    However, put your changes under the GPL and somebody else can make another fork of the original 99.999%, rebuild your functionalities or 'Microsteal''s functionalities and place this changes in the public domain (thus bypassing your GPLed code)...

    The claim Balmer is making is that when government money is used to write GPLed code it makes it impossible for companies to build on it (and make money of of the modifications). Were the work in the public domain instead, companies could build on it and make money of of those modifications... Considering the state of WallStreet, it is yet unclear how many investors would agree to a company writing code that would have to be GPLed and from which it is unlikely money could be obtained from a sell.

    Thus, companies are likely to stay away from any existing codebase that has a GPLed part in it (even if it is the result of a publicly funded project; i.e. government money). This, in itself, prevents whatever innovation the company could have brought to this codebase unless the company is willing to start from scratch.

    Whether or not you believe MS innovates is irrelevant; the statement applies to any company trying to make a profit from selling its product (and not selling support for the product like Red Hat).

    Anyways, I seem to have left my original reply: In your scenario of a big consortium building on some publicly funded work and adding little functionality to it before repackaging everything, you seem to have forgotten that the 99.999% that is the original public domain code is still available and still in the public domain. The 'big' consortium can't take that away from you...

  177. Re:Case in point... by halbritt · · Score: 1

    Noooo, all rich people are evil, they must all suffer!

    Wasn't it Nader that said something along the lines of (I'm paraphrasing here) "we should tax wealthy people in greater proportion because of the evil things they had to do to get rich in the first place." According to a lot of liberals, being a successful individual is a bad thing.

  178. Re:He's right, but he's stating it wrong.... by halbritt · · Score: 1

    Now, why is Ballmer WRONG? Because there's plenty of BSD-licensed and public domain code out there. BSD is clearly and open source license, and honestly I think Ballmer has chosen Linux as a target because he doesn't want BSD in his sights. There are several reasons for this: 1) he knows that the BSD camp is much more conservative and it would be harder to make wild half-truth claims about them 2) he is not technical and the word on the street (let's not fight over this, kids) is that BSD is faster and more stable than Linux; he likely believes this, right or wrong 3) if the debate is between Linux and Microsoft in government roles, BSD may never gain much more ground than it has now in that sector, and given the licensing, this is in MS' favor.

    Additionaly, Microsoft has used some BSD code in Windows. I believe the original TCP/IP stack up through NT4 was derived from the BSD TCP/IP stack.

  179. Re:One part I like by Shadowhawk · · Score: 2
    Sorry, guess again. Chicago is a very traditional town. Many of the largest banks in the world have offices here. In many cases, it's a miracle that much of Chicago ever migrated to Windows from DOS. It would be surely even more unusual to see these companies migrate to the "upstart" Linux.

    Mind you, this is not an absolute. There are Linux User Groups all over the area, and the two Chicago area offices I've worked at, had Solaris servers installed.

    Shadowhawk

    --
    My mind works like lightning. One brilliant flash and it is gone.
  180. Re:Iocaine powder by _Lint_ · · Score: 1

    Fessick is a Turkish giant! He's in amazing shape.
    No, he's dead.

  181. Insight into M$ Worldview by remande · · Score: 3
    Linux is a cancer to M$, because it puts code out of M$'s reach and requires (certain, obviously not all) additional code to do the same.

    A cancer is a malformation of growing cells within a body. If it is its own organism, it isn't a cancer; at worst it's probably blue-green algae.

    So if Linux is a cancer, what is the body?

    When I read the interview, they imply that the body is corporate software companies, specifically what we often call "closed source".

    We don't think that Linux is in that body.

    My guess is that M$'s problem is that Linux is eating at the body of possible code to write. That noosphere of possible code looks limitless to some; to Microsoft, it looks quite limited. And they want to own nothing less than the entire noosphere. Other companies are writing code; that's alright, M$ will buy them out sooner or later. When the faceless horde of OSS makes software, they are the cancer that eats away at the limited noosphere. OSS is stealing code and locking it away from Microsoft, who has manifest destiny over the entire noosphere.

    Heaven help us all.

    --

    --The basis of all love is respect

  182. Re:OT: Re:From the interview by spectecjr · · Score: 1

    Did you read the comments?

    No.

    They were all of the nature of "Hey, you're an idiot - fossil fuels are made from decaying vegetable matter, not from decaying dinosaurs".

    I don't take that as being 'in good fun'.

    Simon

    --
    Coming soon - pyrogyra
  183. Re:From the interview by spectecjr · · Score: 2

    Someone writes a nice program, then makes it available to you, along with the source, and all people do is bitch about the restrictions of the GPL. Get over it! Don't want restrictions? Then WRITE IT YOURSELF. Get off the box, people. That goes especially for you, Ballmer.

    You don't seem to get it. If the government funded the development, then that person DID write it themselves, and should be able to do whatever they like with it.

    Simon

    --
    Coming soon - pyrogyra
  184. Re:From the interview by spectecjr · · Score: 2

    That's funny. I thought the main point of the GPL was to ensure that the code - in this case the Government code that you refer to above - would continue to be in the public domain, in perpetuity. By being less restrictive, the BSD license allows Government code to be taken out of the public domain. It sounds like you are saying "government code should be freely available to begin with, then it should be co-opted by the private sector and made proprietary". What the GPL generally says is "GPL code should be freely availble always, even when it is being used by the private sector". Do you see the difference here?

    No, once it's in the public domain, it can never be taken out -- the GPL doesn't 'ensure that it continues to be in the public domain in perpetuity' AT ALL. GPL'ing it only affects people who use that source code as a basis for further development.

    Nice fallacious argument though. Do them often?

    Simon

    --
    Coming soon - pyrogyra
  185. Re:From the interview by spectecjr · · Score: 2

    Not sure I follow you: if the government funds it, then it's the government that gets to decide how it's released. Just like working for a 'real' company. The coder's been paid for it already, and his/her having lost something in exchange isn't exactly unheard-of.

    No, the Government doesn't get to choose - Title 17, U.S.C. Chapter 1 explicitly prohibits the Govt. from holding any copyrights.

    Simon

    --
    Coming soon - pyrogyra
  186. Re:From the interview by Flower · · Score: 3
    Well, that's exactly the way I feel about patents for government funded research. Why the hell should the people who created the RSA algorithm be allowed to patent their publicly funded work then only allow one company to use their algorithm?

    The difference is with the GPL you can't corner the market. Your code can be forked, incorporated, enhanced or whatever by anyone as long as they make the code available to anyone who needs it.

    Revoke the Bayh-Dole act first and then we can talk about no funds for GPLd software.

    --
    I don't want knowledge. I want certainty. - Law, David Bowie
  187. Re:Iocaine powder by Inigo+Montoya · · Score: 1

    I *know* Vizzini.. This man is not the real Vizzini.

  188. heh by GoNINzo · · Score: 5
    Just remind him what Denis Leary said...

    No cure for cancer.

    --
    Gonzo Granzeau

    --
    Gonzo Granzeau
    "Nothing the god of biomechanics wouldn't let you into heaven for.." -Roy Batty
    1. Re:heh by nmarshall · · Score: 1

      if linux is a cancer, does that make linus "The Cancer Man"?


      nmarshall

      The law is that which it boldly asserted and plausibly maintained..

      --
      nmarshall

      The law is that which it boldly asserted and plausibly maintained..
      --Colonel Burr 1783
    2. Re:heh by MrCreosote · · Score: 1

      Or Joe Jackson - "everything gives you cancer..."

      --
      MrCreosote Meow!Thump!Meow!Thump!Meow!Thump! "You're right! There isn't enough room to swing a cat in here!"
    3. Re:heh by glenkim · · Score: 2

      We should shave our heads, as afflicted cancer victims.

  189. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by Mr.+Bones. · · Score: 1

    Burlington Mills

    That's Burlington Coat Factory. ;-)

    Michael Sterrett
    Burlington Coat Factory NH office

  190. Re:Well, the CEO is supposed to say things like th by daviskw · · Score: 1

    Linux shifts the economy from product-based to service based (since the product is free + your time). IBM sells services, and they like Linux. Microsoft sells products, and feels their bottom line is being threatened. They have a right to make a product, and people have a right to buy, or not to buy, their product
    You're partly right. IBM sells hardware, they don't care what software it runs so long as it sells hardware. Microsoft sells software, Linux competes directly with their bottom line.

    --
    Beware the wood elf!!!
  191. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by VP · · Score: 1

    Or we can just point them to this: http://www.gnu.org/events/rms-nyu-2001-transcript. txt

    If you haven't read or heard RMS' explanation of the FSF philosophy, you should read it...

  192. Re:From the interview by VP · · Score: 1

    If tax dollars are funding a project, then the results of that development should be available to everyone and not just people who use one particular license.

    What do you mean by available? Obviously Microsoft wants to be able to take publicly funded software, and use it in its proprietary system. What are the chances that they won't tweek the code to be incompatible with the publicly available version (c.f. Kerberos)? Given their current monopoly on the desktop, this means that our tax dollars went to provide R&D and to increase the market cap of Microsoft!

    I think this should not be considered proper use of public funds, and I think the GPL is a better guarantee that the software developed with public funds will benefit all of the public, not just a mega-corporation....

  193. Re:Interesting philosophy... by nmarshall · · Score: 1

    what Ballmer means by government funded is code writen as a project at a university. aka they dont what any GPL'ed projects writen where the GPL code has traditionally been writed. they are trying to cut off linux's air supply.


    nmarshall

    The law is that which it boldly asserted and plausibly maintained..

    --
    nmarshall

    The law is that which it boldly asserted and plausibly maintained..
    --Colonel Burr 1783
  194. Re: Ballmer calls Linux "a cancer" by SpinyNorman · · Score: 2

    Linus Torvalds called Windows a "festering crock of shit"

    Bill Gates called Alan Cox a "long haired communist"

    and,

    Richard Stallman called Steve Ballmer a "capitalist toadie".

    More news tomorrow.

  195. Let's do it right this time by X-Nc · · Score: 1
    Ok, so it's now very obvious that MS has Software Libre in it's crosshairs. What can we do about it? Here is just one schlubs opinilns:
    • Do NOT flame back!
    • Let the issue sit for a couple of days; no one respond to it at all in public
    • Once some time to cool off has passed the "names" of the Software Libre community should get together and form a unified reply in a very calm and reasoned manor.
    • Do NOT flame back!
    • I hate to say it but ESR, and especially RMS, should not respond to this in any way whatsoever. While they may be right in what they say the way they say it doesn't help the movement at all.
    • Go on about the business of making Software Libre the best it can be
    MS is now going to turn it's marketing weight on us. That much is clear. How we, as a community, respond to it will make all the difference in the world. The key is to keep a cool head.

    A good analogy of this would be if someone were to call your mother many bad names. If you get all blown out by it it just makes you liik bad, like you're an unreasoning baffoon. However, when you realize that the person doing the name calling doesn't even know your mother or anything about her you see that they are just making noise. If you react as if it were all just noise and continue to proove your point with intellegance and reason, the name caller is them made to look the fool that he is.

    ---

    --
    --
    If I actually could spell I'd have spelled it right in the first place.
  196. Cancer and a cure by Tomy · · Score: 1
    2 [Latin, crab, cancer] a : a malignant tumor of potentially unlimited growth that expands locally by invasion and systemically by metastasis b : an abnormal bodily state marked by such tumors

    3 : something evil or malignant that spreads destructively.

    In the nineties when irrational business types were replacing stable and powerful UNIX workstations with unreliable and sickly PCs running windows, I came to the conclusion that windows was indeed a cancer. Then a healer (rms) came along and wrote out a prescription (the GPL).

    I've never felt better.

  197. Re:Government funded linux by d^2b · · Score: 1
    It seems clear to me that M$ is going to push hard to prevent university staff from using or contributing to the GPL code base.
    I think (hope) this is unlikely to work. The reason that I personally am an academic is that I don't have to put up with very much of that sort of BS. This partly because the tradition of academic freedom, and partly because universities just don't exercise that kind of centralized control over their staff; the structures just don't exist. Now if the government gets involved, wierd shit can happen. But it won't happen quietly.
  198. Write your congress(wo)?men by musique · · Score: 2

    That's right, because they don't read /. They may take M$ seriously. I'm going to write mine. Tell them not to beleive the lies. That Linux relies on intellectual property rights to remain free. Corporations only believe in IP to protect their own rights, never the rights of the little guy. And while your at it, write in a word about McCain-Fiengold so that the corporate bribes can be reduced. If M$ can't give $100K to Senator Joe Blow, then he may be less inclined to listen to them.

  199. Hello? by mdemeny · · Score: 1
    It is the Chicago Sun-Times, after all.

    ;-)

  200. More interesting comment in the interview! by ajs · · Score: 2

    We have a big dream about what XML (a markup language for documents containing structured information, such as words and graphics) can do for the world.

    So, now everyone should throw this quote back at every MS source they can find (forums, service reps, sales droids, etc) and ask one question: "so, when is MS Word going to save to XML?"

    See? Microsoft can make the world a better place. They just choose not to. ;-)

    --
    Aaron Sherman (ajs@ajs.com)

  201. He's right, but he's stating it wrong.... by ajs · · Score: 3

    Actually, what Ballmer is saying (in an inflamatory, and overly-broad way) is that the US government should not modify or contract modifications to GPL (or other GPL-like) licensed work, and I agree.

    Woah up there, folks. First off, I write a fair amount of GPLed code, so don't assume that I'm an anti-GPL person.

    I do, however feel that the government should not be allowed copyright to its works (which has always been upheld in this country).

    Since the basis of the GPL is the control that copyright law allows, I don't see how the government can be allowed to distribute their modifications to GPLed programs any more than they could distribute their modified version of Harry Potter. In the Harry Potter case, they are given no permission to do so. In the GPL case, they are, but only under a provision of law that does not extend to them.

    Now, why is Ballmer WRONG? Because there's plenty of BSD-licensed and public domain code out there. BSD is clearly and open source license, and honestly I think Ballmer has chosen Linux as a target because he doesn't want BSD in his sights. There are several reasons for this: 1) he knows that the BSD camp is much more conservative and it would be harder to make wild half-truth claims about them 2) he is not technical and the word on the street (let's not fight over this, kids) is that BSD is faster and more stable than Linux; he likely believes this, right or wrong 3) if the debate is between Linux and Microsoft in government roles, BSD may never gain much more ground than it has now in that sector, and given the licensing, this is in MS' favor.

    The only counter-argument I see to the government/GPL case is if the government can contract to an external company to make changes to copyrighted works, and have the original copyright hold. I'm not even remotely a lawyer, so someone else will have to speak to that one.

    Either way, it's a cheap shot to just jam this into an interview as a sound-bite, and while I'm not losing any respect for him over it, that's only because there was none there to begin with.


    --
    Aaron Sherman (ajs@ajs.com)

    1. Re:He's right, but he's stating it wrong.... by Dirtside · · Score: 2

      To my knowledge, the U.S. Government cannot legally itself copyright info (i.e. if a government office, like the DoE, releases its annual report on energy consumption, that report enters the public domain and has no copyright license at all), but it CAN award contracts to private companies that can produce copyrighted work. It depends on the contract: if the contract says that All Your Work Are Belong To U.S., then the government owns the work and cannot copyright it; if the contract says the work belongs to the company, then the company can copyright it as usual.

      This is to the best of my knowledge; I could be wrong.

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    2. Re:He's right, but he's stating it wrong.... by CKW · · Score: 1

      > I do, however feel that the government should not be allowed copyright to its works

      I strongly disagree. The government isn't some alien entity. The government IS OURS. The government represents all of us. The government is our primary expression of "the public". If "we the people" use "our" money to write software, I want "us" to retain copyright of it, for "our" benefit.

      That does not include letting corporations (which operate in the interest of THEIR masters, their owners, which is only a subset of the public) derive benefit from it.

  202. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by mpe · · Score: 2

    MS: Linux will fork.
    Linux: Win95, Win98, WinNT, Win2000, WinXP...


    Missed out WinME also there are 3 versions of 95, 2 versions of 98, several NT's, etc.

  203. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by mpe · · Score: 2

    Although it is true that multiple versions of Windows exist, the incompatibilities between them are minute compared to all the Linux versions.

    It only takes a single change to break something anyway.

    Because Windows is distributed by only one entity certain guarantees can be made (APIs/browsers/utilities). This makes the development of complex projects easier. In fact, it makes it possible.

    Unfortunatly quite a bit of the Windows API is spread through libraries which applications can overwrite easily, with no decent versioning system.
    Things arn't helped by many app writers assuming that they should have total freedom to do what they want with the machine.

  204. Re:From the interview by mpe · · Score: 2

    If I take a piece of public-domain software and modify it, I can claim the modified version as my own and refuse to make it available to everyone. My modifications have no effect whatsoever on the status of the original public-domain release of the software.

    If you don't make very big changes and get your proprietary version better known than the PD version, then you might be able to block other peoples' use of the PD material. Simply by claiming that they are "pirating" your work...

  205. Re:From the interview by mpe · · Score: 2

    My opinion: the US government, and for that matter any other .gov, should want to work on GPLed/OSS projects because they want control over their own infrastructure, something that is denied to them if they run closed-source, restricted source, and licensed binaries on their own computers.

    There are quite a few areas of government where they definitly should be controling their own infrastructure. i.e. with computer software the magic words "national security" for things such as the control of warships. (This also means that the likes of "easter eggs" are right out.)

  206. Use of Software vs Source Code by Arawn · · Score: 2
    The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source....Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches. That's the way that the license works


    I think the nice people at M$ are having trouble understanding the difference between using open source software and using the code from open course software. While this could be pure M$ cluelessness and refusial to understand concepts that are forgen to them, I wonder how many other people aviod open sourse and free software because of simler concerns.

  207. Re:From the interview by Zurk · · Score: 1

    thats nice..but are you aware most government projects dont release the source AT ALL ?? be greatful that some research has taken the effort to GPL the source. most DARPA funded code (99%) and most NSF funded code (80-90%) cant be obtained AT ALL much less under public domain or GPL. there is NO requirement in the grants to release the code ..just to publish the findings to the funding agency or reputable journal which costs $$$ to read.
    be greatful youre getting anything from the researchers and stop whining about the license.

  208. Re:From the interview by Greg+Lindahl · · Score: 2


    There's an excellent reason to GPL goverment-funded
    work: some researchers don't want to do the work otherwise. That's why the PITAC report endorsed
    giving individual PIs the power to decide what license to use.

  209. Re:From the interview by Greg+Lindahl · · Score: 2


    Funny how you assume everyone shares your
    definition of "make their code available" and
    "be able to use it".

    GPLed code is available and can be used. BSD
    code is available and can be used.

    You must have been asleep for all those years
    that people were arguing about "Free Software"
    and "Open Source".

  210. Re:From the interview by Greg+Lindahl · · Score: 2


    Nope, I didn't assume that.

    Yes, I see that "available" has multiple definitions. That was my point. Thank you
    for agreeing.

    Now for the word "use": You can "use" GPLed code without GPLing your code. For example, you can use gcc to compile a commercial program.

    Keep it up, you'll eventually get it!

  211. Re:From the interview by Greg+Lindahl · · Score: 2


    You can be obnoxious ("verbal gymnastics", how polite) or you can hold a conversation. I see you've made your choice. But I would strongly disagree with your claim that this is a "discussion".

    Have a bad day.

  212. Re:This word by csbruce · · Score: 1

    innovate, vb.: 1. To appropriate third-party technology through purchase, immitation, or theft and to integrate it into a de-facto, monopoly-position product. 2. To increase in size or complexity but not in utility; to reduce compatibility or interoperability. 3. To lock out competitors or to lock in users. 4. To charge more money; to increase prices or costs. 5. To acquire profits from investments in other companies but not from direct product or service sales. 6. To stifle or manipulate a free market; to extend monopoly powers into new markets. 7. To evade liability for wrong doings; to get off. 8. To purchase legislation, legistators, legislatures, or chiefs of state. 9. To mediate all transactions in a global economy; to embezzle; to co-opt power (coup d'état). Cf. innovate, English usage (antonym).

  213. He's no John Madden by MadAhab · · Score: 3
    Hey, there are meatheads in the world who don't know when to shut up and then there are those who don't know when to shut up and really make asses out of themselves, only they don't stop and it gets kind of funny actually, and they sense this, and go further, but now it's just clowning and pretty soon it won't be funny any more so they stop.

    Well, I guess except for the funny part, maybe Ballmer is a John Madden.

    The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody. Open source is not available to commercial companies.

    Uh... Riiiight. So, er, that's why we need to fund closed source work that's not available to anyone? Or else, you mean that you support government funding for the BSDs?

    Seriously, the two-install thing is going to be a MAJOR hassle for a lot of folks. Sure rules out XP for scientists in Antarctica. "What do you mean you don't have a phone? Can't you go over to your friend's house?" As well as for students, people testing it, etc, etc, etc. Nice way to shoot yourselves in the foot, losers. I can't wait to answer the calls from relatives looking for computer support. "You can't? Twice? That's because they FUCKED you! What can you do? Throw it out."

    Boss of nothin. Big deal.
    Son, go get daddy's hard plastic eyes.

    --
    Expanding a vast wasteland since 1996.
    1. Re:He's no John Madden by Hostile17 · · Score: 1

      Seriously, the two-install thing is going to be a MAJOR hassle for a lot of folks.

      It is going to especially annoying when they find out the factory install counts as one install and so they get only one reinstall.


      --
      Fascism should more properly be called corporatism, since it is the merger of state and corporate power - Benito Mussoli
    2. Re:He's no John Madden by Hostile17 · · Score: 1

      How is M$ going to enforce this 2 install limit? through the net? a cd is a read only media right?

      I gather from various news articles on this subject, when you did a reinstall your system would immeadiatly connect to the internet and transmit your COA back to Microsoft and if this was reinstall# 3, Microsoft would refuse to validate the install and WinXP would refuse to fucntion without a validated COA. If the system could not connect to the internet, it would give you, what Microsoft would consider a reasonable time period, say 15 days, to connect and get validated or again WinXP would stop working. This is also how the subscription would work, after 350 days, WinXP would warn you to update your subscription within 15 days, ie buy a new validation or it stops working until you pay for the upgrade.


      --
      Fascism should more properly be called corporatism, since it is the merger of state and corporate power - Benito Mussoli
  214. Re:From the interview by CoughDropAddict · · Score: 2

    GPL'd code is not accessable to everybody. It is only accessable to developers who are willing to release their code under the GPL license which excludes large portions of the community.

    National parks are not accessable to everybody. They are only accessable to people who are willing to share them with everyone else. National parks are inaccesable to logging companies, real estate agents, and construction companies.

    Government land should be in the public domain, not placed under restrictive rules that require you to share.

    --

  215. Re:From the interview by Malcontent · · Score: 2

    "I presume that what Ballmer meant to say was "The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds GPL'd work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody."

    Hey I have an idea. Why presume what he meant. Why not actually listen to what he said. Either is is a moron and is unable to express what he means or he said exactly what he meant.

    He said no such thing. He does not need people like you to spin his words for him. His words speak for him not you. He has paid minions if he wants to retreat or backtrack.

    --

    War is necrophilia.

  216. Re:Interesting philosophy... by Dr.+Smeegee · · Score: 1

    I am pretty sure that MS bought Spyglass Mosiac and modified it into IE.

  217. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by befletch · · Score: 2

    Haven't we learned not to feed trolls? I hope that the Free Software luminaries give this guy the response he deserves this time: none at all.

    By stooping to his level, we're playing their game.

    If nobody responds to Microsoft's PR, then Microsoft's PR will define the terms of engagement. No, you don't want Free Software luminaries frothing at the mouth, but I think it is perfectly fair to say that the term, "cancerous" is probably more correctly applied to Microsoft's acknowledged policy of, "embrace and extend." Just say it calmly, rationally, and with decent grammar.

    --
    If you say, "now I'll be modded down because of X", I'll happily oblige.
  218. So Linux is just as forked as Windows? by throx · · Score: 2

    You can either argue that neither Linux or Windows has forked, or you can argue that both have forked. I personally see a fork as something where two separate codebases exist and no syncronization is done between them. This is not the case in any of the Windows or Linux lines.

    --

    Fear: When you see B8 00 4C CD 21 and know what it means

  219. Re:not the point by throx · · Score: 2

    Actually, have you every used MSDN? The documentation there is a hell of a lot better than you'll find for any version of Linux - even with the source code provided on Linux.

    I've yet to find any vendor that provides as good developer documentation as Microsoft does. Access to the source code does NOT mean you have the best possible documentation. There is a massive difference.

    Granted, some raw protocols or file formats are not disclosed, but guess what? If you are developing for a Microsoft system you don't need them. If you want to access a Word file you just use the COM interfaces provided by Word itself. If you want to talk SMB then you use the whole swag of WNet APIs. Comparing the source code to proper documentation is stupid - a properly documented interface would win every time.

    --

    Fear: When you see B8 00 4C CD 21 and know what it means

  220. Re:not the point by throx · · Score: 2

    Umm... and Unix doesn't?

    Any argument of forking is going to end up with Microsoft coming out above Unix whichever way you go, especially now they are retiring the Win9x line and going with the single NT kernel for everything.

    --

    Fear: When you see B8 00 4C CD 21 and know what it means

  221. Re:not just that... by throx · · Score: 2

    Where do people get this idea you need "billions in the bank" to get a response from MS? For my part (and I assure you I don't have billions in the bank), I've had timely responses from Microsoft on a number of developer issues including a few bugs I've found in the OS here and there.

    Of course, who am I to dispel people's beliefs that MS is an evil company and never listens to developers...

    --

    Fear: When you see B8 00 4C CD 21 and know what it means

  222. Since when are 9x and NT forks? by throx · · Score: 5

    Win95, Win98, WinNT, Win2000, WinXP are forks? I don't think so. This is pretty much the same as saying:

    FreeBSD 3.0, FreeBSD 4.0, Linux 2.0, Linux 2.2 and Linux 2.4 are forks. If you are going to respond to him then you could at least get YOUR facts straight!!

    Win9x has never been a fork on the NT project. While the FreeBSD analogy above is a little out, Win9x is really a version of Win3.0 with a whole stack of 32 bit junk tacked in wherever possible. You'd be much closer calling Warp and NT forks of each other, or even OpenVMS and NT forks. Hell, even Linux+Wine is probably closer to NT/2000/XP than Win9x is!!!

    --

    Fear: When you see B8 00 4C CD 21 and know what it means

    1. Re:Since when are 9x and NT forks? by TummyX · · Score: 1

      Where did you go to college?

      Writing conditional code to handle each of them does not mean it is a fork.

      I don't think you know what a fork is. Are you saying that ALL the operating systems you listed are forks? Forks off what? Remember a linear progression isn't a fork. You have to have a split in the direction of products. (Forks have 2 or more paths).

      Win95, Win98 are different versions of the same product. You will only write conditional code in order to make sure you don't use NEW features of Win98 on Win95.

      NT, Win2000, WINXP are different versions of the same product. They are a different product from the Win9x line and never derived from the same product.

      Win32 is an API set. WINDOWS NT implements Win32 ontop of the NT native APIS. Windows 9x implements (partially) Win32 ontop of a hacked win31 core.

      By your argument, Redhat 6 and Redhat 7 are forks. Just look at some linux apps like gnome. There are seperate install programs for each distribution! And many of them check the version. Some state only redhat 6.x, and you have to download another package for 7.x etc.

    2. Re:Since when are 9x and NT forks? by TummyX · · Score: 1

      You're one demented person.


      Forks are exactly that, one developer team taking the code of another and adapting it without putting everything back in the original version.


      Disregarding the fact that that definition is totally fucked. How doy ou know that Win98 was developed by a seperate team with a different codebase. Why isn't Win98 the result of everything being put back into Win95. Oh I know! It's cause it has a different name, Win98 not Win95.

      That is called an evolution. Changins in product versions doesn't constitute a fork. You need a split with at least two paths to be a fork.

      2.2 is based on 2.0. 2.4 is based on 2.2. There is no forking. They are new versions of a product. Just cause the new features of 2.4 aren't rolled back into 2.2 it means 2.4 is a fork? What kind of fucked up thinking is that?

      You're saying ICQ2000 is a fork of ICQ99?

      NT4.0 is a fork of NT3.51?

      You're fucked.

    3. Re:Since when are 9x and NT forks? by DerFeuervogel · · Score: 2

      Win95, Win98, WinNT, Win2000, WinXP are forks? I don't think so. Yes they are! If you write software that need to run on all of them then you need to TEST against all of them and you need to write conditional code that handles each of them. Thus you have a support issue for all of them. This is a fork. Sorry but nice try.

    4. Re:Since when are 9x and NT forks? by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      Win95, Win98, WinME are not forks, they are upgrades/new versions.

      WinNT, Win2000, WinXP are not forks, they are upgrades.

      It's quetionable whatever NT is a fork of Windows (Windows predate NT. ), on general, I would say that it isn't, because the different code base was there from the start.
      They didn't take Windows code and changed it to NT, they created a whole new OS.

      Win95 can be thought of as a NT fork, because it uses the same API, but is totally different from the inside.

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
    5. Re:Since when are 9x and NT forks? by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      No, I don't think so.
      Win9x can be considered a Win32 fork, but NT & Win32 are the same thing. (IE, Win32 was developed to NT, and NT always had it).

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
  223. Earth to Ballmer... Come In Ballmer.... by Steve+B · · Score: 1

    At the rate he's going, it's only a matter of time before he starts talking about Henry Kissenger and the Queen of England.
    /.

    --
    /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
  224. License issues by wiredog · · Score: 3
    . The way the license[gpl] is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source

    That's pretty much what Mundie said. Seems that that's the Company Line. And I think RMS, O'Reilly, et. al. addressed that pretty well.

  225. Let's Moderate Ballimer! by Delphinios · · Score: 1

    Okay! Let's see how he does on the slashdot scale!

    Informative = 0
    Intersting = 0
    Insightful = 0
    Troll = -5
    Flaimbait = -5


    This story would have been modded down so far if it were in the slashdot forums, that None of us would have ever seen it! Now that's "+1, Intersting!"

  226. Sad by EasyTarget · · Score: 4

    Clever set up. First he complains that people don't respect Intellectual property enough and need reminding. Then he whinges about his (totally false) lie that open source makes all other software open source due to Intellectual property issues.

    Nice example of telling a bare faced lie for spin purposes though, pretending that he does not understand there are -different- types of open source licence. Almost makes me believe he realli -is- stupid.

    EZ

    --
    "Oops, I always forget the purpose of competition is to divide people into winners and losers." - Hobbes
  227. Microsoft/Cancer by tirin · · Score: 1

    One should always remember the old adage "It's impossible to argue with a fool." I think this kind of posturing and chest-beating by MS is best ignored. Let the work (their's and the "cancer's") speak for itself.

  228. Wouldn't it be interesting... by Drunken+Philosopher · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't it be interesting if Microsoft changed their license to disallow the use of GPL code on their OS? Enforcability issues aside.

    --

    "There is a diminishing return on caution."
  229. It's the truth by cyberdemo · · Score: 1

    I know how people on this weblog will feel, but Mr. Ballmer speaks the truth in a direct and concise way. Linux tries to attach itself to everything out there, thanks to the virotic nature of the GPL that we all know about.

    Mr. Ballmer makes good points regarding software piracy too. Microsoft is giving us a great opportunity of watching our legal situation by taking care of the piracy monitoring herself.

    Now, the strongest point IMHO: Internet Explorer. It is the best, really. Coming bundled in the OS is nothing but a commodity for us. Can you imagine still having to run the bloated Netscape 6 or Mozilla? Windows and IE run better on old hardware than anything else. And that's a proven fact. Which leads us to that same old question: will open source software ever be as fast as proprietary but user-concerned software? I seriously doubt so.

    So I say, listen to wise people like Steve Ballmer. Give your MS bashing a break.

    --

    --
    I have no sig at all.
    1. Re:It's the truth by Kazymyr · · Score: 1

      Windows and IE run better on old hardware than anything else. And that's a proven fact.

      Proven? By who? What were the exact conditions? Compared to what?

      Hint: W98 + IE5 on a P200 with 64M RAM: dog slow. Same machine in W2K: takes 10 minutes to boot. Same machine in Linux: recent snapshot of slackware-current, complete with Xwindow 4.0.2 and KDE2: really snappy. Same subjective speed and usability as a 400MHz Windows machine.

      --
      I hadn't known there were so many idiots in the world until I started using the Internet -Stanislaw Lem
    2. Re:It's the truth by Kazymyr · · Score: 1

      The machine running Slackware serves its purpose plentifully: running statistics/data analysis apps, drawing nice graphs, printing them, and some occasional web browsing. The same machine running Windows is about as useful as a kidney stone. QED.

      --
      I hadn't known there were so many idiots in the world until I started using the Internet -Stanislaw Lem
    3. Re:It's the truth by phaze3000 · · Score: 2

      If you think Internet Explorer's the best then you should really try Konqueror. It's faster at rendering than MSIE, and more feature compliant. It also doesn't add new 'features' which are specific to it.
      Of course, Netscape were doing this little trick right from the start, so if you want to point fingers for HTML incompatibility problems Netscape is where I'd lay them.
      How quickly people forget though..

      --

      --
      Blaming GW Bush for the Iraq war is like blaming Ronald McDonald for the poor quality of food.
    4. Re:It's the truth by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      > I am "limited" (giggle) to true cross-platform browsers like Netscape, Opera, and yes, Internet Explorer.

      You might've meant that as a joke, but IE is indeed cross platform.

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
    5. Re:It's the truth by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      About netscape being the best, did you compare the memory foot print of the two browsers? The amount of crashes per unit-of-time? Standard compliance?

      On all of the above, IE is the clear winner.

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
  230. Taking a "public standard" private is easy by hqm · · Score: 1

    I think one thing that people haven't quite realized yet is how very very easy it is for a company like Microsoft to take a "public" standard, such as Kerberos, DNS, NFS, SMTP, or whatever, and make it incompatible. It takes just one little change to the protocol, in the guise of "innovation" to make it incompatible.

    This is one of their real sources of leverage. They can claim they are "innovating", while
    magically making a proprietary product which is a parasite off of existing standards. In other words, today's Internet protocols are sort of like "GPL" code, implicitly, because you need to
    make your code obey their "license", in order to interoperate. When someone takes a protocol private, they can get a free ride from the existing implementations, i.e.., their code seems to interoperate, but the user becomes dependent on some new feature, and is suddenly locked in to the proprietary product.

    I think that the public, who has not had intimate experience with building and using network protocols and APIs, has little idea of how easy it is to "pollute" an existing standard. Indeed, many protocols, such as SMTP, are subject to "accidental" pollution, where implementors with good intentions still try to stick in a new "feature" into their code.

    In the past Microsoft has, and does, make slightly incompatible versions of such basic protocols as SMTP. I have personally experienced plenty of failures as my own legally formatted SMTP messages are chewed up and spit out garbled by Microsoft mail handling products (just "bugs" in their MIME handling, or "embrace and extend"?).

    Anyway, I think this is another silent front in Microsoft's war on humanity, and people should realize that the real damage is happening without loud obnoxious announcements by Microsoft management.

  231. govment funding by laslo2 · · Score: 1

    from the article:

    The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody.

    um, isn't the idea of open source and/or free software, that it is available to everybody? damn, how suits miss the point.

    -laslo
    http://www.laslocomm.net

    --
    Karma only matters to me now and zen.
  232. Re:Not so fast by Dwonis · · Score: 2

    Don't call Microsoft "Microsloth". It just makes you look biased and unreliable. (Yes, I hate Microsoft too, but if you want people to agree with you, you have to look respectable.)
    ------

  233. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by underwhelm · · Score: 2

    I wasn't talking about not responding, but about taking the high road. There is no reason that when taunted, you have to respond in kind--it is playing into the bully's hands.

    Play a different game. Change the rules. React unexpectedly and they will spend more time meta-analyzing the motivations behind the response and less time pursuing the game plan. The last thing you want to do when put in a defensive position by an opponant is respond defensively. Take the offense and make them react.

    --

    I don't need large brains to have a good time.

  234. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by underwhelm · · Score: 2

    Playing the "I'm not going to dignify that with a response" game will NEVER get you a win in the court of public opinion,

    Microsoft had exactly that response the first time the Free Software Gang got together to respond to the FUD. "That was [so and so's] goal, to encourage debate." and that was their only direct response. Then they rang the bell and started round two.

    Rather than responding defensively to Microsoft's offensive PR moves, the people who hold Free Software dear should find an offensive move of their own, and set Mcrosoft on the defensive. As it is, it's challenge-response PR, and the challenger looks like the winner because they look like they're in control, the responders lose because they're defensive.

    The PR battle is fought as much on the direct as the meta playing fields. If Microsoft wanted to suddenly lash out at car manufacturers in a similar, irrational way, they would still sound like winners because they're on the offensive.

    --

    I don't need large brains to have a good time.

  235. Real Life imitates the Internet by underwhelm · · Score: 4

    Haven't we learned not to feed trolls? I hope that the Free Software luminaries give this guy the response he deserves this time: none at all.

    By stooping to his level, we're playing their game. It is obvious to me, at least, that when you play Microsoft's game, they win. Instead, the good team should be pondering a way to force Microsoft to play a different PR game--probably one that starts off with "we don't think his ideas merit a response. He is clearly another empty mind pursuing another of Microsoft's intense PR campaigns that sound newsworthy but don't move forward the debate over intellectual property in this country one iota. We'll let our software do the talking."

    --

    I don't need large brains to have a good time.

    1. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by iceT · · Score: 2

      Sorry, but it's nieve to think that keeping silent will stop this 'FUD' attack from Microsoft.

      FUD works because people don't want to think or make their own decisions. If someone 'important enough' says it, then it must be true...

      I hope they counter with intelligent, thoughtful arguments that will make people at least DOUBT Ballmer and begin thinking for themselves.

      --
      -- You can't idiot-proof anything, because they're always coming out with better idiots.
    2. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by god_of_the_machine · · Score: 1

      MS: Linux will fork.

      Linux: Win95, Win98, WinNT, Win2000, WinXP...


      You cannot call the upgrades of a system forks, because they clearly are not. Most software written for Win95 will run on all of those systems, just as most software (open source or not) vendors do.

      As one other posted has already replied, the NT series (NT 3.1 - 2000) could be considered a fork of the API, in some senses. But with WinXP they are closing the "fork-ness" by finally stopping the Win9X fork.

      Forking is a problem mostly unique to open source, as Microsoft has claimed. However forking can be positive in some senses too, we all know that.

      -rt-

      --

      -rt-
      ** Evil Canadians are taking over the world. Learn about the conspiracy
    3. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by chris@stderr.org · · Score: 1

      Although it is true that multiple versions of Windows exist, the incompatibilities between them are minute compared to all the Linux versions. Even within the tiny domain of RH as many (if not more) version of 'Linux' exist than released versions of Windows

      Because Windows is distributed by only one entity certain guarantees can be made (APIs/browsers/utilities). This makes the development of complex projects easier. In fact, it makes it possible. As a software developer I cant afford to risk my livelihood on the whim of the gnome/KDE folks. If they deside to alter the APIs I'm screwed. With Windows I can develop my software and feel reasonably confident that my code will work for years (I have many programs I use in 2k that I once used in 95). I've never had a graphical Linux program live more than a few years without major GUI rewrite.

      In my opinion the dynamic nature of Linux is a double-edged sword. On one hand Linux is exciting. Daily new patches get released, new apps get created, and its plain fun to read about. However, quality software is difficult (if not impossible) to develop under these constraints.

      In many ways I view Linux as beta software. It's not bad... in fact, its good. But there is never a version that is stamped as completed. And because of this if I want my code to work I must independently develop all components myself or statically link (which isn't that bad but it goes against my views of how quality software is developed).

      So how can Linux shed its excessive baggage? Well.... When Redhat IPO'd I was very excited. I imagined productivity apps making the requirement of "RH6.1 or better"... but even that doesn't work because they don't have control over the developers. RH is a big gorilla, but they cant be expected to steer the community. Maybe if someone made a guarantee that they would only release yearly. RH2000 for example. This version would be set in stone and no major (API/application) changes could be made for a year. It would be considered the 'consumer' or 'released' version. Then in 2001 RH2001 would be release to reflect the year's development. That way an application developer would have something to rely on for the year.



      Just my 2 cents
      -CG

    4. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Point taken, however when the troll has the power of MS behind it, we must speak up. If we don't the public, courts, and corps. will take it as truth.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by DerFeuervogel · · Score: 2
      Although it is true that multiple versions of Windows exist, the incompatibilities between them are minute compared to all the Linux versions.

      What are you smoking?

      Here try this:
      On Win95 try putting NULL in the last argument to CreateThread()
      On NT this works just fine.

      On CE Try calling: LoadMenu(), or better yet fopen();
      Works fine on NT.
      Dealing with the incomparabilities between Windows version pays my salary :0).

    6. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      Here's a different scenario:

      McDonalds is putting poison in their hamburgers. Burger King knows that what McDonalds is doing could be harmful to the public at large, but instead of drawing attention to the problem they say "We don't think McDonalds burgers merit discussion. We'll let our own burgers do the talking."

      When someone does something which could hurt the public, whether it's spreading FUD about Linux or poisoning fast food, those who know the truth have a responsibility to come forward and point out what is wrong. Every time a Microsoft exec tells a lie about the GPL's terms, RMS has an obligation to point out exactly why the MS statement is untrue. Playing the "I'm not going to dignify that with a response" game will NEVER get you a win in the court of public opinion, which is the venue that Open Source desperately NEEDS a victory.

    7. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by Haglund · · Score: 1
      "MS: Linux will fork.

      Linux: Win95, Win98, WinNT, Win2000, WinXP...


      Win 95 and 98 are basically the same thing, as NT and 2K are the same thing. Fork? Yeah, Win16 and Win32.
    8. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by bay43270 · · Score: 1

      How much Karma do we need before we can mod the entire article down as a troll?

    9. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      That is the opposite, actually, it's Win9x that is the fork, not NT.

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
    10. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by gd23ka · · Score: 1

      You have my unreserved sympathy.. This must be the most senseless and boring job there is. I hope you're making at least twice as much as I am :-)

    11. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by gd23ka · · Score: 1

      Yes. They're all sooo incompatible aren't they? That's why Unix never took off and it's still only a nondescript specialized operating system telephone companies use to operate their analog phone networks. Face it, NT is not a reliable platform. It's an incredibly expensive low reliablity file and print server at best and not something to run mission critcal apps on. I asked the people running the NT boxes in our department and they said they need to reboot their boxes wednesday and sunday or else all weird kind of stuff happens.

    12. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet by $hotgun · · Score: 5
      The answer to bad speech is lots of good speech.

      MS was able to dis OS/2 with a smear campaign which IBM chose to ignore. MS is trying to do the same to Linux. We will not ignore them. Every time they lie or mislead, we will cry to truth loudly from every roof top.

      MS: The GPL is bad for business.

      Linux: Tell them who's business it is bad for!!

      MS: The GPL is a cancer that will eat up your IP.

      Linux: Only if you distribute a derivative. You are free to take and use a GPL program for your own purposes!!

      MS: Linux is not a stable, supported solution for corporate infrastructure.

      Linux: Tell that to IBM, Burlington Mills, The Home Depot and others who are using it as a stable, supported solution for corporate infrastructure!!

      MS: Linux will fork.

      Linux: Win95, Win98, WinNT, Win2000, WinXP...

      MS: Linux will require retraining staff.

      Linux: Win95, Win98, WinNT, Win2000, WinXP...

      Anytime we let them get away with a misleading statement or outright lie, we suffer and our society suffers. If they tell the truth, so be it. But do not let lies stand unchallenged.

      That said, our best response is to point out the hypocrisy of thier statements. That is something that resonates. Linux

  236. Re:Interesting philosophy... by cobar · · Score: 1

    You're exactly right. Microsoft seems to believe that the Linux community has some obligation to make the source code available to them for easy integration.

    This is simply irrational. Linux is a competitor to Microsoft, as they have stated countless times. Does Microsoft complain that IBM doesn't make the source of (current) versions of OS/2 avaible or Apple the proprietary bits. No, because they are twisting the facts.

    The GPL acts as a sort of protective measure, keeping undesired competition out. If you want to use GPL code, you have to open your code base. This specifically protects intellectual property because Microsoft (and others) can't grab it wholesale and use it in their products without making their source available. Doing so would put them on even footing with the open source competition, in that the open source/free software community would also have access to their I.P. and be able to incorporate Microsoft code.

    Imagine if SGI had made XFS available under a different license, ala the BSD or X11 license. Sun, HP, and IBM would be able to port the source code to their version of unix and as a result, have a better offering. But the GPL adds an additional barrier to entry, they would have to do something they have no desire to do, make their code base entirely open and free. So, they will not use the XFS code and SGI's I.P. is being used in the way they want it - that is, they will ahve access to the source of any product using XFS. That is precisely what they want, because they want to be the guys selling you hardware that uses XFS.

    They are in business here and open source makes sense for business reasons, not some altruist desire.

  237. Re:Interesting philosophy... by cobar · · Score: 1

    Yes, I think I confused what I thought the parent was saying with Microsoft's stance. My bad, my post was a bit OT.

    I agree with Ballmer saying that government funded work should be public domain.

    I still think my comments are quite relevant to the issue though. Microsoft has been claiming that the GPL destroys IP, I was trying to refute that (and perhaps it belongs in a different thread).

  238. Re:Interesting philosophy... by powderhound · · Score: 1
    ...that corporations have some type of right to modify someone else's software and then sell the results
    This seems to me as the biggest point missed by most people. Did not Microsoft use a more lax license to essentially hijack Mosaic and call it IE? As the GPL becomes more prominent, it prevents companies like Microsoft from profiting from the hard work of others.

    Just my 2 cents...

    --

    Microsoft, taking the Language out of HTML and the Expert out of JPEG
  239. Damn by fizban · · Score: 1
    Anyone notice how many fucking times this dude uses the words innovate, innovative, innovation and every other fucking derivative of innovat- in his sentences. They must have sent a god damn memo to every employee reminding them to "please use the word innovate in each and every response to questions regarding Microsoft, its products and its business practices. I would laugh at this bullshit, except for the fact that the public is going to fall for it head over heels and start automatically envisioning Bill Gates' face when they hear the word innovate. Next thing you know, it's gonna be in the god damn verbal section of the SATs!

    ...are a lot of innovative users in the Chicago area, which is exciting.

    We literally have dozens of partners doing very innovative work with customers here.

    There has been no legal ruling put into effect. We have and continue to innovate within the spirit and letter of the law.

    The inclusion of Internet Explorer with Windows has been absolutely great ... for innovation in the software industry.

    It will force us to be innovative.

    This really isn't anything new of course. They've been associating this word with Microsoft for a while now, but it still irks me that it's so fucking transparent. These guys are absolute leaches, sucking the soul of America dry with their marketing and PR shit. God, I love this country! Build your products and build them well, but don't act like fucking Moses about them, dictating how, where, when, and why people should them and shit like that.

    --

    --

    +1 Insightful, -1 Troll. What can I say, I'm an Insightful Troll.

  240. Re:Why Linux Will Continue to Fail by bubbha · · Score: 1

    Filling out property sheets is not programming. Get a real job. Who woke this guy up anyway?

    --
    I want to be alone with the sandwich
  241. Linux Reply by vbrtrmn · · Score: 2

    I'm rubber, your're glue, whatever you say bounces off of me and stick to you.

    --
    microsoft, it's what's for dinner

    bq--3b7y4vyll6xi5x2rnrj7q.com

    --
    it's a sig, wtf?
  242. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  243. Re:GPL vs LGPL by CmdrPinkTaco · · Score: 1

    I personally have trouble with the cancerous analogy that Ballmer uses. Viral is more accurate, but still somwhat lacking in my eyes. To me the GPL is more reflective of a gene or a meme if you will. It truly is infectious, but only if you let it infect you. It is a selectable infection. Nobody makes you use the GPL, you choose to use the GPL and pass on its traits, much like genes. Most people aren't FORCED into passing on their genes, it is typically a situation where there is a meeting between two people and they decide (not necessarily consciously) to pass their genes on through a child.

    Meme theory is very similar. People talk, discuss ideas/beliefs/thoughts and pass them on. The ideas that people share with you tend to infect you if you agree with them or they are potent enough to penetrate any kind of preconceived idea that you may have.

    To me this is a more accurate description of how the GPL works. Cancer is something that happens and you don't plan on it. Virii are able to penetrate you if you want them to or not. The GPL is more genetic if you are going to use a biological analogy.
    --------
    "Counting in octal is just like counting in decimal--if you don't use your thumbs."

    --
    Please give your mod points to others, Im at the cap. They will appreciate it more
  244. Re:Damn... by CyberLife · · Score: 1
    In reality, without the incentive of making money, most of the software innovations that exist today would have never been born.

    If by "software innovations" you mean today's software products, then you are correct. But true software innovations, as in discoveries of new and different techniques, happened 30-40 years ago at universities -- places where people go to learn and work, not because they're getting paid, but because they want to.

    Given a choice of implementations, would you choose the one written by somebody who has a passion for the subject and gladly did it for free, or the one made by the individual sitting in an uncomfortable cubicle with poor lighting and whose only motivation was that they were getting paid? Me personally, I choose the former.

    History has shown, and others here have pointed out, that people who work simply because they want to typically make better products, because they put more effort and spirit into it.

    - Milo Hyson

  245. Re:Um, hello, Lockheed? by Cuthalion · · Score: 2

    The fact is, all code used in government should be GPL'd by the freedom of information act. I, for one, feel that the software that processes the info that is kept on me should be available for my perusal.

    No, the point is that all code written by the government should enter into the public domain. It should not be GPL'd, BSDL'd, or anything else. Those all require retension of copyright, and government produced documents should be owned by us all (public domain).

    If the government extends an existing product, however, that doesn't suddenly mean that that government is allowed to violate that product's license - if it's commercial software, they must pay like everyone else. If it's GPL'd software, they must GPL their changes like everybody else. If it's BSDL'd software, they can do whatever they wish with their changes - my recommendation would be submitting them to the maintainer of the project, in accordance with the spirit of Open Source software development, but they don't need to.

    --
    Trees can't go dancing
    So do them a big favor
    Pretend dancing stinks!
  246. Intellectual Property Is a Cancer. GPL s the Cure by Louis+Savain · · Score: 3

    In my opinion, the real cancer is intellectual property. It's a cancer to society because it forces people to compete against one another for selfish motives as opposed to bringing them together. It forces us to constantly reinvent the wheel, so as to get around someone else's IP. It's an immense waste and duplication of effort.

    In my opinion, the only property worthy of the name is tangible property. If you can't lock it up or build a fence around it, it does not belong to you. Once you release something like music, ideas, software, novels, etc..., you cannot prevent people from copying it and using it for their own benefit. An example is Brazil where patented aids drugs are copied to save lives. Tens of millions of copies of Windows are being used free around the world. There is not a damn thing MS can do about it.

    The wonderful promise of GPL is not that it's a cancer for IP owners, it is the cure for the cancer that is intellectual property. Software and other ideas should be a way to increase the value of tangible property.

    The wealth of the earth is the earth and what it contains. The only way to ensure that people get a fair share is to make sure that everybody is guaranteed possesion of a piece of the earth, an estate if you please. Then it should be up to us to increase the value of our piece as we see fit, either through cooperation with others or not. This would bring freedom and eliminate exploitation. Any other system is slavery.

  247. Re:Interesting philosophy... by miguelitof · · Score: 3
    While I am usually not one to reply to a message that appears to be a troll, I do need to point out something. Your entire argument is that if a company cannot make money on a product, then that product is useless.

    No, really, you actually did say this. To quote you:


    a company isn't going to make money off open-sourced code. it loses all the money it spent paying developers and testers. therefore viral open-source code is useless


    But many things are quite useful, even though no one can make money off of them. This part of your argument is false. Open source code is quite useful to a large number of people. It just isn't useful to Microsoft, or other companies that would like to use the hard work of open source programmers for the companies' good.

    I also found the last part of your argument interesting:


    therefore viral open-source code is useless and does nothing to improve software in most professionally developed applications.


    Is one of the stated goals of open source software to improve professionally developed applications? Should that be the goal of open source projects?

    I think what we have here, and what your argument points out, is two differences in philosophy. Apparently, you believe that the purpose of software development is to make money. A lot of people share your view. But a lot of people don't.

    --
    --- Biffster.org
    "Bite my shiny metal ass."
  248. Interesting philosophy... by miguelitof · · Score: 5

    ...that corporations have some type of right to modify someone else's software and then sell the results. I still don't understand the argument. "Well, I want to be able to use your code, but then sell what I've created." Why not just start from scratch?

    --
    --- Biffster.org
    "Bite my shiny metal ass."
    1. Re:Interesting philosophy... by Zimm · · Score: 1
      You're exactly right. Microsoft seems to believe that the Linux community has some obligation to make the source code available to them for easy integration.

      In the reverse, many believe that all source code should be available to the end user for easy integration. It's called the "Free software Movement".

      This is simply irrational. Linux is a competitor to Microsoft, as they have stated countless times. Does Microsoft complain that IBM doesn't make the source of (current) versions of OS/2 avaible or Apple the proprietary bits. No, because they are twisting the facts.

      Perhaps both groups are being irrational(microsoft, and the free software movement).

    2. Re:Interesting philosophy... by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 2
      Microsoft likes to appropriate other peoples' code, use it as their own and call this "innovation". Often, the way that they will do this is go to a company, and offer them a 'deal with the devil' that seems almost impossible to pass up, but then turns out to be a pig in a poke with some wierd escape clause that Microsoft had always intended to exploit. This was the case for MS-Dos 1.0 and (according to other postings) is similar to what they did with MSIE/Mosaic (offer a % of sales (it's gonna be massive!), and then give it away for free -- as a loss leader).

      The GPL doesn't allow this. The price is simple -- derivitavve software remains open. Companies that aren't willing to pay the price are free to (attempt to) negotiate a different price. They can also attempt to void the GPL, but that would require a PR war first.

      Hmm....

      Now I'm not saying that Microsoft is necessarily out to have the GPL voided (but I wouldn't be the only one to make the suggestion). I'm saying that it's worthwhile for us to be aware of the possibility. Among other things, we should make it very clear that stealing somebody else's code is not innovation.
      --

      --
      Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
    3. Re:Interesting philosophy... by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 2

      My guess is that Mosaic was done as a graduate project of some sort. If so, they would not have lost the rights to use their code. Even if it wasn't there are various conditions under which they would have retained legal (if not moral) right to use the code that they wrote.
      --

      --
      Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
    4. Re:Interesting philosophy... by Doomdark · · Score: 1

      Did I say free and/or freely available anywhere? I'm well aware of problems of getting, say, IBM to send you free copies of their source code back before sliced bread was invented.

      --
      I like paying taxes. With them I buy civilization -- Oliver Wendell Holmes
    5. Re:Interesting philosophy... by Doomdark · · Score: 2
      You might be surprised to know exactly how completely "open source" programs used to be in 70s and before. Microsoft has indeed managed to promote "closed source" a lot since then... Having access to source a competitor does not make.

      And once again, it'd be nice if you knew the difference between free and free.

      Oh and yes, I'm working for a company that does produce quite a bit of open source stuff, along with fair amount of proprietary stuff. They can nicely co-exist, which may be useful symbiosis for many corporations.

      Finally, keep in mind that all big software/hardware companies these days try to sell "solutions" instead of programs, applications or whatever. Meaning that they consider the whole to have bigger profit margins than pieces; and thus even if pieces are free in every sense, it doesn't really matter. That's why IBM is so strongly spearheading open source, for example.

      --
      I like paying taxes. With them I buy civilization -- Oliver Wendell Holmes
    6. Re:Interesting philosophy... by MrBogus · · Score: 1

      Unlike Netscape who just stole Mosaic outright.

      --

      When I hear the word 'innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    7. Re:Interesting philosophy... by malibucreek · · Score: 1

      Wait a minute.

      If IE is now part of Windows (and an integral part, at that, as Ballmer said and MS argued in court), couldn't there be a claim based on a percentage of profits from the sale of Windows?

      --

      Why is it called COMMON sense when so few people have it?

    8. Re:Interesting philosophy... by FrankieBoy · · Score: 1

      How about "Well I want to build a car but rather than using 4 wheels that someone else invented, I think I'll start from scratch." One of the ideas behind the Open Source movement is that one can build on others work and by doing this the end product as a whole is better. What is the impetus for making the changes if not profit? Ballmer is a boob. He is quickly becoming the Dan Quale of the IT industry. Does he really believe what he sayes or is he being brainwashed by his marketing department? They "help customers understand when they are crossing the line". Gee...thanks Microsoft! You're swell :)

  249. Open Source is All-American by Farce+Pest · · Score: 1

    Isn't "cancer" just another word for "growth"? And isn't growth what America's all about?

    --
    This message has been scanned for memes and dangerous content by MindScanner, and is believed to be unclean.
  250. have to include this beaut.... by ksuhr · · Score: 1

    Not really any need to comment on this article, he does it all himself:

    "...The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody..."

  251. Re:From the interview by lizrd · · Score: 2
    Why is it that government funded GPL code is inaccessable to the Apache foundation and OpenBSD??

    Because these two projects don't use the GPL to release their work. The Apache foundation uses the ASL which discourages forking in ways that wouldn't quite jive with adding in GPL code and OpenBSD uses the BSDLicense which allows code to be incorporated into non-free programs in ways that don't work with the GPL (though the FSF terms it as a compatable license these days). Basically, the differences aren't all that big of a deal unless you like picking fights with RMS. The little obscure differences between these different licenses are avaliable here if you actually had any interest in learning about these issues.

    ________________________

    --
    I don't want free as in beer. I just want free beer.
  252. Quick question... by Noryungi · · Score: 3


    What is the Chicago Sun Times Web site running?

    Here is the answer:

    HTTP/1.1 200 OK
    Server: Netscape-Enterprise/3.6
    Date: Fri, 01 Jun 2001 17:05:09 GMT
    Content-type: text/html
    Connection: close

    Seems like Mr Ballmer & M$ still have a little work to do... =)

    --
    The right to offend is far more important than the right not to be offended. (Rowan Atkinson)
  253. Embrace your cancerhood .... by taniwha · · Score: 2

    It's time for a geek march on Redmond - bald headed 'cancer survivors' picketting the gates of The M$ campus - proclaiming their personhood in the face of the suffering inflicted by the evile emperor

  254. I can see what he means, but... by jmccay · · Score: 1

    I also don't think it is a bad thing. Linux can go to any platform someone has an itch to place it on. We've seen linux on a watch, the Play Station, and TiVo is rumored to use it. Linux can go almost anywhere because the source code is open and everyone if free to port it, change it, or modify it how ever they want. In this way, Linux can and does grow like a cancer cell, and I bet Microsoft is scarted because they can't match that grow. In that same light, other industries have not been so willing to attach themselves to Microsoft's Operating systems as they have Linux (and oter open *nix OSes).
    I think Mr. Ballmer may have just opened is mouth and swallowed his foot.

    --
    At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
  255. Clarification by goodviking · · Score: 2
    "The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody."

    You have to understand this quote from a "Captain of Industry" perspective. The relationship between the government and industry in terms of new technology has traditionally been that the government serves as a "free" R&D shop for industry. New technologies developed by the government make it into the public domain by being licensed/given to industry to then sell to the public (see the National Technology Transfer Center's site). What Ballmer is saying is that if the government releases new technology under some sort of open-licensing scheme, then anyone can use this technology, and any future enhancements will have to remain in the public domain. So from his perspective, this quote makes sense. If the government releases work under and open-licensing model, then the work of government scientists will not be available to people who wish to exclusively license the rights to someone else's research and then profit from selling this other person's work to the world.

    All in all it's a funny system. You the taxpayer pay government scientists to do research and develop technology X. The government then licenses technology X to company Y. Company Y then packages technology X as product Z. Company Y then sells you and the government product Z (the product you already paid to the government to develop).

  256. Hello, Microsoft?!?!?! by technos · · Score: 2

    I know at least the guys in Microsoft's Legal department read /., so I'm going to give this a shot.

    Why are you letting him spout off like this? He looks like an idiot, and makes the rest of Microsoft look the same.

    How is this good for your stock price? Let alone when he gets going about Sun again, and Scott has to call in the sharks again. How is increasing your expenditure because of Ballmer good for the shareholders?

    --
    .sig: Now legally binding!
    1. Re:Hello, Microsoft?!?!?! by dasheiff · · Score: 1

      Yes, but most people don't read /. so such blantant lies are usually gotten away with, and most people eat them up and take them as truth.

  257. Cancer Metaphor by rkent · · Score: 3
    Hm. "Cancer" is really just the word for a syndrome in which a patch of mutant cells gets bigger and bigger and more bloated until it chokes off an otherwise healthy system.

    Replace "cells" with "code" and this metaphor seems much more applicable to Windows than Linux. Especially considering that no one's quite sure HOW cancer works on the inside, just that it keeps getting bigger and badder.

    ---

    1. Re:Cancer Metaphor by Trepalium · · Score: 2

      Actually, it fits Microsoft's "Embrace and Extend" moto better than anything else. It mutates an otherwise healthy protocol until it chokes off the original healthy protocol.

      --
      I used up all my sick days, so I'm calling in dead.
  258. Re:From the interview by jhoffoss · · Score: 1

    CS Graduate work isn't necessarily government-funded though. Often, if it is government funded research, the code is released publicly though, is it not? (IANACSGSDR (Comp.Sci.Grad.Student Doing Research)) If the research is funded by the University, I'm fairly sure the University gets the copyright on the work, or a portion of the profits, if any. Maybe not...Is this something that every University has set up? Anyone with experience/knowledge in this area?
    ---

    --
    Linux: The world's best text-adventure game.
  259. Re:From the interview by Devil's+Avocado · · Score: 1

    """
    If tax dollars are funding a project, then the results of that development should be available to everyone and not just people who use one particular license.
    """

    This is silly. The government funds whole shitloads of private software development and you don't see anybody asking those companies to share their code. Nobody tells them that they have to release their code under this or that license. Plus, according to MS' own philosophy, the government is paying for the finished software, not the source code.

    This is just MS FUD, plain and simple. It's a move to attack the open-source movement in the only way they can -- by making GPL software development illegal under the goverment's payroll. First it'll be companies that receive govt. funds that aren't allowed to release under the GPL. Then it'll be researchers in Universities who recieve government grants (as most *all* of them do). Got a federal student loan? Sorry, no GPL for you.

    If they can pull it off it will have a catastrophic chilling effect, cutting off many major sources of quality free software, and leaving those that survive vulnerable to MS' "embrace".

    When you accept the "simple, self-evident truths" (e.g. taxpayer support -> no restrictions on source code) that corporations feed you, you make the mistake of assuming that the law operates in a "simple, self-evident" way. You foolishly ignore the fact that those selfsame corporations are more than happy to claim that an issue is subtle and complex when it is to their benefit to do so.

    The law acts as a vehicle for injustice just as often as justice. Which it is only depends on who's in the driver's seat.

    -DA

  260. His real beef... by selectspec · · Score: 2

    His beef is with keeping the government out of software development and I find myself cringing that I actually agree with him. I suspect that some of our motivations are different however.

    Open Source is a wonderful endeavor and it has provided a "utility" value to society. I view open source projects to be similar to the common domain. Anybody can publish the contents of the English Dictionary, and heck the dictionary is pretty damn useful!

    However, I am a capitalist, and I believe that entranapuners are heroes too. Open Source (on its own) will never threaten the capital markets. Open Source (on its own) will not discourage proprietary investment in software technologies. Clearly there are those within the open source community who would dispense with proprietary research and development in software. While I sympathize with this perspective, I must honestly disagree. I believe our capital system ultimately will drive Open Source to further successes, and by using Open Source to dissuade the capital system will be self destructive.

    Encouraging open source development with tax incentives and direct research grants from the Government would be a terrible mistake.

    With direct grants, the government would be the arbitrator of funding. This is socialism. We don't want the government picking our software for us for the same reason we don't want the government choosing our luncheon meats.

    Tax incentives provide a blind, softer level of government involvement. While the government should support scientific research, I believe a line (albeit gray) should be drawn between research and software development. If the government actively displays a bias for open source development they are implicitly discouraging closed source development.

    I vehemently disagree with discouraging closed source development of software. I believe in intellectual property rights and I believe in the capital markets. I believe that open source fits extremely well in the capital market model. I strongly disagree with Balmer that the GPL is some kind of cancer that prevents companies from developing proprietary software for GPL platforms. That is simply not true. Plenty of proprietary software runs on Linux.

    Linux, the GPL and other open source forms have performed extremely well over the past few years (and scared the shit out of people like Balmer!) Let's not upset the balance, and leave the government out of software.

    --

    Someone you trust is one of us.

  261. not just that... by Ender+Ryan · · Score: 1

    Sure, you may have the docs from MSDN so you really don't need to be able to see how everything works, but if something isn't working quite right, then you are SOL. You won't be able to help yourself because you can't see how it works, and you're not going to get help from MS unless you have billions in the bank.

    --
    Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken - Tyler Durden
  262. not the point by Ender+Ryan · · Score: 2

    That's not the point. The point is that MS has multiple platforms with many incompatibilities.

    That is all...

    --
    Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken - Tyler Durden
    1. Re:not the point by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      You mean, like MSDN, msdn.microsoft.com

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
  263. Idea for a Poster by chad_r · · Score: 1

    This would be perfect for a Modern Humorist poster:

    When you download GPL software, you're downloading CANCER!!

  264. Re:From the interview by SPorter · · Score: 1
    Anyways, the government can license their code under the GPL and also put it in the public domain (or some other license).

    The exception to that is when the code is tied to other GPL'ed code. But there it works the same way w/ closed code. MS won't just give the gov't access to source and allow them to share improvements w/ the public. Neither will GPL.

  265. LGPL by emufreak · · Score: 2

    The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source.

    I thought that wasn't a requirement under the LGPL.

  266. If you are right .... by Jens · · Score: 2
    ... about comparing Ghandi to Linus, he will be shot. By Alan Cox.

    Probably after a debate about some unimportant VM kernel programming detail, or whether to incorporate a different boot logo into the kernel, or something.

    Only that won't hinder the movement. Please don't start another discussion about "what if Linus's plane crashes". There are at least 100 people who could and would take his place if he should become "unavailable" one way or another (which I certainly don't hope).

    That's the advantage of believing in an idea, not (primarily) a person.

  267. Rogaine 5000 by Teratogen · · Score: 1

    What Ballmer needs is Rogaine 5000

    --
    --- even the safest course is fraught with peril
  268. Famous Chicago Tech? by NetFusion · · Score: 1

    "More seriously, in Chicago we do seem to have an inferiority complex about our place in the tech world. Rankings frequently put us toward the bottom among major cities in terms of our tech presence."

    Only one off the top of my head was Bungie and they were assimilated by the Borg and whisked to Seattle.

  269. Linux warning label by Ukab+the+Great · · Score: 2

    Microsoft CEO's Warning: studies indicate that this product may cause increased security, greater stability, and may contribute to competition. System Administrators who wish to remain insane are suggested to avoid using this product.

  270. Ja Wohl! by graniteMonkey · · Score: 1

    Sieg Heil, mighty leader! We will shout for truth from all the rooftops!

    --

    This is a manual virus. Copy it to your sig and help me spread!
  271. Re:Wrong. by mr · · Score: 1

    little was done with the Boundless web player.

    A violation is a violation, be it a one woman shop or Microsoft, or someone inbetween.

    It has *MORE* to do with the lack of conviction in the GPL most coders have. The like talking about how the GPL 'protects', but are unwilling to invoke that protection.

    If they believe in the GPL, they'd assign the code rights to the FSF.

    --
    If it was said on slashdot, it MUST be true!
  272. Re:Wrong. by mr · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I agree with you in principle

    Yet, the 'principle' is exactly what the typical GPL proponent talks about.

    Call RMS what you might, but he seems consistant on his principle.

    And props to Avery, as he's willing to enforce what he believes is right.

    --
    If it was said on slashdot, it MUST be true!
  273. Re:people who argue on the 'side' of linux by mr · · Score: 1

    Ask Joe Barr. He mail him and ask if he sent that.

    (who is Joe Barr? A 'leading' Linux advocate. Paid to shill for Linux on the now dead Linux World)

    --
    If it was said on slashdot, it MUST be true!
  274. people who argue on the 'side' of linux by mr · · Score: 2

    Should look like this instead?

    From: Joe Barr [joe@pjprimer.com]
    Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 1999 8:02 AM
    To: sales@mindcraft.com
    Subject: Industry Scum

    Hey, Mindcraft

    I am writing an article about asslicking whores in the industry.

    You know the sort, they bend over for folks like Bill Gates by
    producing totally false "benchmarks" based on liess, mistests,
    biased hardware and software, and scores of other unethical,
    deceiptful, dishonest, duplicitous means.

    Like your reviews of NT vs Novell and Linux. Classic cases of
    professional prostitution.

    Cock sucking the geeks in Redmond.

    The question for you maggots, whores, whatever you prefer to be
    called, is: how much does it cost to buy one of your benchmarks?

    tHANKS,

    Joe Barr The Dweebspeak Primer

    --
    If it was said on slashdot, it MUST be true!
  275. Wrong. by mr · · Score: 2

    What the GPL DOES do is prevent a closed source company from taking your code, using it for their own purpose, then not allowing YOU to benefit from what they added to your code.

    Wrong. A company CAN take the code and do whatever the hell they want to it.

    Now, someone has to catch the company with the GPLed code. THEN someone who owns the copyrite on the code has to be willing to bring the issue in front of a judge, and have the judge inforce the contract.

    Given how little was done to the Boundless web player (virginconnect's box) when it was in violation, most of the people who write GPL code don't have the guts or balls to do what they have to do to make the GPL work as you have proposed.

    --
    If it was said on slashdot, it MUST be true!
    1. Re:Wrong. by lumpenprole · · Score: 1

      I think that has a lot more to do with how little was done with the Boundless web player. Why sue a dead horse?

      Now, if someone could prove there was GPL'd code in IE......

      --
      Disclaimer: MINAA (Mummy! I'm Not An Animal!)
    2. Re:Wrong. by lumpenprole · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I agree with you in principle, I'm just saying, why bother suing someone for a product they're going to stop making anyway? Hard to get a judges sympathy with that.

      And as for being unwilling to invoke the protection of the GPL, I doubt anyone would invoke it unless they actually felt like there was a need to be protected. Laws don't exist in a vaccum, and new ideas need strong cases to be tested, or else they will end up setting the exact opposite precedent that they meant to.

      Look, are you going to take a huge chunk of your time and energy and sue a small division of a huge company that probably will disappear before your brief is filed? Why would you? It would be counter-productive to you and to the software you've been working on. And if a judge dismissed it due to a real lack of evidence stemming from the fact that you can't get any paperwork out of a company that has turned into steam, then that's a real blow to the GPL. However, suing the living crap out of someone who's been eating other people's code and making millions is a pretty good incentive.

      --
      Disclaimer: MINAA (Mummy! I'm Not An Animal!)
  276. The Matrix anyone? by steelhawk · · Score: 1

    Is it just me or does this sound a bit like:

    "...you are a cancer of this planet and we are the curer."


    --

    --
    Ner lbh sebz gur HFN? Gura lbh'ir whfg ivbyngrq gur QZPN!
  277. MS sure seems frightened by Dirtside · · Score: 2

    We all know Gandhi's old line: "First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win." Now it seems that MS has gotten to the point where they are just playing hard dirty: calling Linux a "cancer" based on incorrect assumptions about the workings of the GPL (although we all know full well that MS, and Ballmer, know that neither Linux nor the GPL do any such thing as Ballmer describes -- it is pure FUD, they know it, we know they know, they know we know they know, etc.).

    MS &c. MUST know that anyone like "us" (open source advocates) will know that Ballmer is full of crap. So presumably this article is intended for people who don't know any better: perhaps MS's 500 corporate customers in the tri-state area, some of whom might have been thinking about alternatives to MS... "Hey, Bob, did you hear? Linux gives you cancer!"

    But my point is that I don't think MS would be resorting to obviously desperate tactics like this if they weren't in stage 3: fighting. The problem is that there are only two ways that Microsoft can "defeat" Linux in any real sense:

    1) Destroy all copies of Linux
    2) Make Linux (or the GPL) illegal

    #1 is obviously unfeasible. Therefore I can only conclude that MS will, eventually, attempt #2: try to buy laws that make Open/Free Software illegal in some way.

    Determining implications of the Orwellian future implied above is left as an exercise to the reader.

    --
    "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
  278. Hey... it IS a cancer! by soboroff · · Score: 1
    With every 'apt-get update; apt-get upgrade' it just gets bigger and bigger.

    Thank heavens 'rm' is there for necessary radiation therapy, but I still have these 'dpkg --purge' situations.

  279. Re:does they have anything good? by aclute · · Score: 1

    Explain to me how XP is a rip-off of Linux. I just don't see it.

  280. Re:From the interview by Zimm · · Score: 1
    What, is Magic Fairy Ballmer suppose to tap public domain code with his Magic Wand XP and make it go *poof*?

    Didn't the DOJ take that away from him?

    Sure, any company can take the public domain code and use it in a closed source product. And any developer who wants to can fork the code and use the derivative in a GPL'd product, too, and the bright warm glow that is Free Software will shine on that fork, and keep it safe happily ever after. *grin*

    I think that many people, mostly non programmers, and people who just plain don't understand what public domain is make this mistake. They think that a closed source programmer can take the code, and make a change, put their copyright on it and do a copyright -r (recursive copyright). Everyone wakes up and can't find the source, because someone closed all the source. I don't know if you have ever noticed, but it is nearly impossible to convince some people that the above scenario can't happen. Oh well.

  281. Innovation by gUmbi · · Score: 1

    Ballmer used the word 'innovate' no less than 6 times in the article. How about 'innovating' your vocabulary? The MS Word 2000 thesaurus lists the following alternatives to the word 'innovation': novelty, modernism, modernization, improvement, advance and originality.

  282. GPL - Code, but not algorithms by DrCode · · Score: 1
    It really bothers me when someone talks about the GPL this way, as it assumes that the only value in a piece of software is the code itself, rather than the ideas that the code implements.

    If I, say, wanted to produce my own commercial, completely closed-source text editor, there's nothing in the GPL that prevents me from studying the Emacs code, 'stealing' its data structures and algorithms, and recoding them.

    1. Re:GPL - Code, but not algorithms by DrCode · · Score: 2
      IANAL, but I've read a bit about copyrights. They do not protect ideas, but only the expression of ideas. In other words, I'm perfectly free to write my own story about a 'dinosaur park', and M. Crichton can't sue me. But if I use a passage from his book in a story about colonizing mars, he could.

      It's strange, but I've been writing software for over a couple decades, and I've yet to hear of anyone or any company getting in trouble by mistakenly using bits of GPL'd code. Unless you blatenly paste in tracts of code including text messages, how would anyone be able to tell?

    2. Re:GPL - Code, but not algorithms by malfunct · · Score: 1
      That has yet to be determined. In the strictest sense of the licence the algorithms are protected because using the same method as the code you read is deriving your source from the licenced source. The FSF is arrogant enough to follow through on thoughts like this.

      Where I work we are strictly forbidden to look at any open source lest we inadvertantly pollute the code we write with bits and pieces that could land us in legal trouble. The GPL is a cancer in that once a piece of software goes GPL it and any of its decendants are forever open source. It grows and grows and if you get hit by it your life may be changed.

      I often have my argument "refuted" by people saying "if you don't derive from the source code you aren't bound by the licence" but it is unclear what the definition of derivation is. The GPL relies on copyright so it would seem that it only applies to the exact text of the parent program, yet noone would argue that if you took a GPL work and changed all the variable names you would still be bound by the GPL. Also I doubt anyone would argue that if you took GPL'd code and changed all the structure in the code but kept the same results that you would be bound by the GPL. In this same vein I doubt it could be argued that if you copy the same IDEA that a GPL'd product used after having studied that GPL'd code that you would not be bound to the GPL as a derivative work.

      That is what the FSF and other supporters of the GPL want. They want the world to run by thier rules and they wrote a license that has a very real chance of succeeding in forcing that. Hoorray for them! Just remember when you are a programmer flipping burgers at McDonalds or answering phones to tell people where the power switch is just why you can't earn money at the career you are trained for. Software should be free and I guess you should work for free too.

      --

      "You can now flame me, I am full of love,"

    3. Re:GPL - Code, but not algorithms by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      No, he can't.
      A passage from a book fall under fair use laws.

      If you copied considerable parts (full chapters), *then* he would've a point.

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
    4. Re:GPL - Code, but not algorithms by deaddrunk · · Score: 1
      Software should be free and I guess you should work for free too.

      Just like a browser should be free and those who work on it should do it for free too? Contrary to what the software industry would have you believe, most development happens in IT departments, not software companies.

      --
      Does a Christian soccer team even need a goalkeeper?
  283. So, if Linux is Cancer, by ChodaBoy · · Score: 3

    I guess that makes Windows HIV. After all, it leaves your PC vulnerable to infection

    ChodaBoy

    --
    ChodaBoy
    - The preceding statement is the product of a deranged mind and the sole property of the voices in my head.
  284. Re:Well, the CEO is supposed to say things like th by 4of12 · · Score: 2


    Microsoft sells products, and feels their bottom line is being threatened.

    Big time.

    They've enjoyed the fruits of a monopoly market dominance for so long that what has built up is this: an incredibly large disparity between what they charge customers and what the true value-added really is.

    How many corporate IT departments have shelled out exhorbitant site license fees for Office year after year after year and for what kind of really useful improvements since Word 6?

    The existing market is not stable. Buyers would jump at an exit door, if only they could find one that isn't blocked by MS proprietary lock-ins. If your workplace is like mine, all your personnel are trained to use and to produce .doc, .xls and .ppt files. There is not another option. The pressure builds.

    If I were as scared as Ballmer is about damming up millions of users with my locks, I'd make outrageous troll statements, too. I'd even eat a worm! Even if Ballmer's statements are patently ridiculous, he can create enough confusion to buy time. That time is valuable, probably worth millions of dollars per day in revenue gained or lost. Not to mention the added satisfaction of effectively slashdotting slashdot as righteous indignant programmers fume and vent on each other.

    On a different note, aside from all this political posturing to the general media, who are generally clueless, I've always been amused by MS' spin towards the developer demographics in those glossy magazine ads. Recall that developer mindshare is an important ingredient to MS long term success and, having shafted many of the older "partners" (by making them offers they can't refuse) they have to recruit new members.

    You know the ads I'm talking about, the ones that intimate that, as a Visual <argv> Developer, you are the He-Man Goto Guru Code Jock that everyone respects in your company, that gets paid well, that groupies swoon for, ....

    There ain't no substitute for the power and control of Source Code. Well do both MS and Richard Stallman know that. They fear a GPL that dictates the public shall own the Source evermore. And that public Source base has been growing ominously large of late.

    --
    "Provided by the management for your protection."
  285. Re:Damn... by Trebuchet · · Score: 1

    Its latin. Word order doesnt matter.

    Malcolm solves his problems with a chainsaw,

    --

    Malcolm solves his problems with a chainsaw,
    And he never has the same problem twice.
  286. URL Title by Nopaca · · Score: 1
    Hmmm... the story is at

    http://www.suntimes.com/output/tech/cst-fin-micro0 1.html

    Is that file name meant to be French, "c'est-fin-Microsoft"?

  287. Re:welcome to slashdot by Sc00ter · · Score: 2
    How do you figure that "we're kicking CEs ass all over the embedded space"?


    --

  288. relations.. by T.Hobbes · · Score: 2

    Linux:Cancer as Windows:Germ Warfare

    Linus has,in fact,grown,and explosively-JonKatz

  289. MS are twisting the meaning of the GPL! by Korgan · · Score: 1

    The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source.

    Unbelievable. Either I'm misinterpretting what Mr Ballmer is saying here, or he really has no idea at all about the GPL.

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't the GPL state that dirivatives of Open Source software covered by the GPL must also be made available as Open Source and fall under the bounds of the GPL?

    I read what he's saying as being "If I use MySQL on MS Windows, I must also make MS Windows Open Source" (for lack of a better example).

    Microsoft annoy me. I cannot stand their arrogance or their dirty play... But it just goes to show that MS don't really understand Open Source at all. They can't even interpret the GPL as its intended, they have to twist the meaning of that to suit them too.

  290. Note To Moderators: by RickHunter · · Score: 1

    A post is not (+1, Insightful) if it makes a statement like "Chances are, it's a quote taken out of context or a wholesale fabrication by a reporter." when the article in question is an exact transcript of an interview. Or "Microsoft didn't get where it is today by putting its collective foot in its mouth like that" after some of Microsoft's stupider recent PR blunders. (Like, oh say, Allchin, Mundie, former Ballmer statements, Halloween documents...)

    In fact, Microsoft has quite a history of putting its "collective foot in its mouth" and then somehow pursuading the media to forget it ever said or did anything wrong.

    Modration predictions for this post: moderated down for criticizing moderators, moderated down for critizing Microsoft and "quoting the Slashdot party line". (Which is defined as anything but: Microsoft is god! Microsoft is god!)


    -RickHunter
  291. argh... by SmasKenS · · Score: 1

    im not even gonna comment on this (or did i just do it anyway) ...

    --
    -- - e.m.p.t.y - --
  292. if linux is a cancer, then windows is HIV. by keithmoore · · Score: 1

    the good news is, windows is curable.
    we just need a massive windows-awareness
    education campaign.

  293. Re:Damn... by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 1

    Try replying in context. Why should the government fund GPL'ed code?

  294. Re:From the interview by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 2
    "The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds GPL'd work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody."

    If the intent is to have all government funded work be available to anybody, then I could accept the premise -- This would, of course mean that the government should NOT fund any closed source either. If this means that they should be dumping all of their MS-Windows software out the, uhhm, window. and go to BSD, then don't wait for me to cry.

    The GPL is designed to ensure that future versions of a piece of software are available to the public, not just current versions. The L-GPL does this as well, while being somewhat less viral. The BSD and some other 'open source' licenses do not.

    Microsoft's real meaning of 'available to the public', really means 'able to be absconded and made unavailable to the public. Microsoft's approach it this is actually brings into the open what has been whispered about them many times in the past -- Microsoft's most common method of 'innovation' is to appropriate somebody else's code, call it their own, and work from that base. GPL code is available to Microsoft. It's just not available for Microsoft to steal.
    ---
    For me, the idea of paying taxes for government-funded work that I end up being forced to pay to just use is far more galling than paying taxes for government-funded work that I'm not allowed to appropriate because it's got a GPL protecting it's public nature.
    --

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
  295. Ballmer is partly right by basketb · · Score: 1

    Yea, Steve There is a cancer, but the cancer on our society is the greed that personifies Microsoft and it's corporate leaders.

  296. Microsoft -- the spiritual leaders by HL · · Score: 1
    Our goal is to try to educate people
    Who the hell do Microsoft think they are?
  297. Re:Iocaine powder by sgage · · Score: 1
    "The really funny thing is, Ballmer looks EXACTLY like Vizzini. "

    Actually, I've always thought he looked just like Uncle Fester.

  298. In all fairness. by Oztun · · Score: 1

    From Microsofts perspective Linux is a cancer on their bottom line. I just can't believe they want the rest of us to sympathize.

  299. One part I like by rograndom · · Score: 5

    It's hard to find a computer that doesn't run a Microsoft product, particularly in Chicago. Microsoft's Chicago-based Midwest district office, which covers Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin...

    Then, a little later the interviewer uses this statement in a question:

    in Chicago we do seem to have an inferiority complex about our place in the tech world. Rankings frequently put us toward the bottom among major cities in terms of our tech presence.

    draw your own conclusions. :-)


    --
    andy j.
  300. Re:Damn... by Rakarra · · Score: 1
    So here is a question... What licenses should gvernment funded software development written under?

    Public domain.

  301. Re:From the interview by Fesh · · Score: 2
    Allright... I'm calling bullshit on that moderator. The above is not a frigging troll. He's got it exactly right. Just because Ballmer's a slimebag and using the phrase "Open Source" instead of "GPL'ed" does not mean that the GPL is probably not a good license to release Government-funded work under. Who cares if some corp uses public-domain code to make money? It's still available to everyone else who paid for it with tax money! That's what public-domain means!

    Taco, the moderator pool needs more chlorine.


    --Fesh

    --
    --Fesh
    Kill -9 'em all, let root@localhost sort 'em out.
  302. Re:From the interview by Fesh · · Score: 2
    Not even you?

    If the code's in the public domain, what's to stop you from grabbing the tarball, making a couple of changes, and building a multi-million dollar business? What's stopping you from doing it even if a corporation already did the same thing? Surely they can't yell "copyright violation!!!" and have it stick... Public domain means you have the same access that the corp does. If you've got the right to it, so do they.


    --Fesh

    --
    --Fesh
    Kill -9 'em all, let root@localhost sort 'em out.
  303. Re:Linux is Like Cancer? by MrTaz65 · · Score: 1

    OK, now I'm getting real confused.

    According to the majority of the slashdot community, if I download metallica's latest single I am not "stealing" anything because everyone still has their copy. The how would MS or any other company be able to "steal" GPL'd code. It is still out there for everyone to use.

    Please, at least be consistent.

    (Posted from work, on my Solaris box)

  304. Microsoft by chongo · · Score: 1
    I went to microsoft's web site and used their 'contact us' feedback form to send them the following letter:
    Dear Steve Ballmer,

    In recent interview with the Sun-Times you state:

    > Open source is not available to commercial companies. The way the license
    > is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the
    > rest of your software open source.

    I do not know if this is an accurate quote, but it is consistent with statements you have made in the past.

    Re: Open source is not available to commercial companies.

    Why do you persist in repeating statements that are clearly not true? You do know that MANY commercial companies are using open source. So clearly open source is available to them.

    Re: ... if you use any open-source software, you have to make rest of your software open source.

    You also know that many commercial companies make use of open source products and yet they do not forced to release rest of your software. Had IBM been forced to release all of its code? Has Netscape? Has Sun? Has ... You know the answer is NO.

    Why are you persist on making blatantly false and defamatory statements about open source?

    When I hit SUBMIT, this was Microsoft's reply:

    Feedback.asp - setData() - Error: Update failed: Code: 500, Desc: SetDataError - Cannot insert
    the value NULL into column 'FeedbackLogID', table 'CURD.dbo.FeedbackLog'; column does not allow nulls. INSERT fails.
    --
    chongo (was here) /\oo/\
    1. Re:Microsoft by towatatalko · · Score: 1

      I tried to resend your comments to M$, it worked, or so it seems. I hope you don't mind I did that.

      --

      IP was invented for the sake of lawsuits.
  305. Re:From the interview by IronClad · · Score: 1
    If tax dollars are funding a project, then the results of that development should be available to everyone and not just people who use one particular license.

    One problem is ther are 2 ways to "use" code. Ballmer takes advantage of the confusion between the liberal terms granted to end users and the more constrictive terms placed on future developers by only a few licenses. Aunti Gert reading the Sun-Times now believes that she cannot run open-source programs along side of Quicken.

    I agree that government-funded code should be able to be used by all. Just as government funded roads and parks should be free for everyone's use.

    However, when individuals or companies decide to improve a park, the improvements should remain part of the park. Road improvements on freeways should preclude folks from constructing toll booths.

    That's why GPL can become a tool for building common software infrastructure that never gets coopted by private concerns. In my opionion, it only makes sense for OS and other enabling technologies. When used there, it can actually promote more IP, since the developers who use the enabling platform do not have to worry about future hidden costs from a change in licensing, as many Windows users are about to experience.

    It's hard to find areas where the US government actually looks out for end-consumer interests anymore. And spoiled business interests scream like this whenever they don't get the considation for which they paid and lobbied. News-flash: the government is *not* obliged to benefit company profits with everything it does.

  306. Um, hello, Lockheed? by lumpenprole · · Score: 1

    Try to come up with some examples of companies that got rich off of projects funded by the government. Now, does your head feel like exploding? Yeah, that's a lot, eh?

    The fact is, all code used in government should be GPL'd by the freedom of information act. I, for one, feel that the software that processes the info that is kept on me should be available for my perusal.

    Okay, that's not gonna happen, but still.

    --
    Disclaimer: MINAA (Mummy! I'm Not An Animal!)
  307. Re:What the GPL does and doesn't do by Von+Rex · · Score: 2

    I don't buy it. The "freedom" of software under BSD licenses has nothing to do with software being free of charge. Rather, it's the freedom to do whatever you want with the code and not have to worry about being blindsided by lawyers or license nazis.

    This freedom represents a very tangible benefit to anyone who is a software contractor and as such is definitely worth paying money for. How much would you pay for a word processor equivalent to Word that gave you the right to freely modify it for any of your clients and never have to forward an additional cent to its writer or have to worry about producing licenses for yourself or your customers?

    I don't know about you, but I don't think twice about laying down a wad of cash for such software since it's giving me two very real benefits. One, I can make money from offering customized versions to those who don't have the skills to customize it themselves. Two, I can sleep at night and never worry about my business being destroyed by software lawyers. That's freedom, in my opinion, not a license which says you can do anything with a given piece of software except actually make money with it.

  308. ABout govt and GPL by dbrower · · Score: 2
    Yeah, we all hate M$, and yeah, the innovate stuff is horsepucky; but the complaint about government sponsoring GPL stuff is not totally without merit. We should recall that the BSD stuff from whence all the commercial UNIX in the world has taken advantage of was sponsored, and released on the BSD terms, which do not present "Ballmer Cancer" problems for industry. The idea that sponsored work is properly released under GPL instead of BSD style license is a legitamate policy question. I would not be surprised for there to be a move toward some rules mandating use of BSD-like license for all funded/sponsored work. This wouldn't be unlike the "don't talk about abortion if you get US governement funds" sort of restrictions. I'd bet that is one of the things M$ is angling towards in this PR push.

    GPL -is- an invasive biotech weapon, on purpose; that's the point. It's fair for the government to consciously decide whether to play that game rather than letting it be a willy-nilly decision by individual projects.

    -dB

    --
    "It if was easy to do, we'd find someone cheaper than you to do it."
  309. Re:Well, the CEO is supposed to say things like th by mikeage · · Score: 1
    Let's take a look around at the other big companies. Oracle has an egomaniac for a CEO. Apple, yeah, ditto for their CEO (or whaver Jobs' title is these days), whom it's apparently not safe to be with in an elevator.

    Whew. Good thing this isn't _our_ company... I mean, everyone knows Linus is perfectly normal, RMS is no longer hyperactive or anally retentive and, and.. ok, I don't know about any other of our leaders ;).

    The companies that have the biggest following of loyalist fans also have these sort of banana-republic dictator personalities running the company. In order to gain new territory, you sometimes have to rally the troops (employees) and your allies (investors) by making bold, outrageous statements. Usually it's limited to something like, "we're going to make a lot of money this year," or "our new product is The Next Big Thing."

    I've never met a Microsoft user who was passionate about the company. Every single one I know says the same thing, "We use it over because it's {Faster|OutOfBeta|HasMoreSoftware|HasMoreHardwareS upport}. Is this true? Sometimes yes, sometimes no. I personally love linux, but from a realistic standpoint, there are a lot of things it can't do as well as windows (and not just crash ;)). For example, my company just bought a couple of new Dell Inspirons 8000's, with NVIDIA's GeForce2 Go chip... well... it's a known bug that X crashes whenever you exit. Period. That's life. Windows runs stably.

    --
    -- Is "Sig" copyrighted by www.sig.com?
  310. OT: Re:From the interview by stixman · · Score: 1

    Sig file removed due to pedants who don't have any sense of fun criticizing its factual validity

    I would venture to guess that those "pedants" who have criticized the factual validity of your sig file were probably only doing so in good fun, or most of them anyway. Who's the real party pooper here?


    --
    -
  311. Re:From the interview by Patoski · · Score: 1

    If a developer takes public domain code and uses it as a foundation of or a component of their own work then I don't understand how you can expect to have a claim to free access to the work they did. Any value that a developer is able to add to or extract from a piece of public domain code should be theirs to license as they see fit.

    Of course that's why it's public domain... The author doesn't care what you do with their work.

    He who does the work (or funds the work) should have the freedom to set the license. The GPL eliminates this freedom by requiring GPL on both derivative works and work which incorporate even small portions of GPL'd code into their codebase.

    I am always surprised when people eagerly use others hard work but when asked to return the favor and share they snap back "Mine!" You speak of only your freedom and what you would like to do but your view leaves little consideration for others. The GPL is meant for people who like to share their work so everyone can benefit. When someone says to me, "Here's some code that I wrote. You're welcome to use it. I hope you find it useful." My first impulse is to reciprocate and share back since the person was so kind and saved me a lot of work. The GPL is basically forcing you to be considerate. Is that really so bad? If someone is nice enough to share something with you is it so unreasonable to ask that you share back? If you can't share back (for whatever reason) why not just politely decline and develop your own solution instead of talking about how the GPL invades your 'freedom.'

    Although it's a tired cliche I can't resist using it on you..

    Never look a gift horse in the mouth...

    --
    G. Washington on Government "it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master."
  312. Re:From the interview by ahzz · · Score: 1

    The distaste has nothing to do with it. I think that his distaste for corporations has clouded YOUR judgement. Let me explain.

    If I make a product, whose only purpose in life is to change a text only application to gui, then I sell that as my own in it's entirety, Have I really done any work or value other than a different medium for the original functionality? Nope. Can I then have the moral right to sell it and keep it as my own works? Nope.

    The truth is never at the two ends of an argument. It is usualy somewhere near the middle.

    well, MS wants all software to be closed source. GPL wants all software to be open. What is so bad about requiring a company to give away the GPLd segement of code that they used, and keeping THIER segment closed? Nothing. They are then selling JUST the guified controlls to the text based program. :)

    I think that his distaste of corporations has made you place him in the far reaching edge of the "linux zealots camp" in your mind. Seeing this it's easier to attack him for radical views than it is to counter his arguments.

    Think about this people. In this instance I can see why the BSD camp has gone berserk over the GPL. Personaly I think the BSD is too loose, the GPL is too restrictive in claiming all your subsequent work that is linked to your program. If a company could take your GPLd product, be required to mention it in credits/license/click-wrap/whatever, including any and all references to the location of the original source, then the BSD people would have no problems. The software would be 100% truly free. It would be simplified down to something that a corporation can use.

    Now i'm sure someone else has thought of this before. Who, I don't know. But i'm kind of curious about this. Is there a license out there with this kind of focus. once licensed, it remains bound to being code with software, but new code wrapped around it can be released in the clear.

    How about this middle ground guys?

    --
    What? me have a sig? don't be ridiculous.
  313. Re:From the interview by susano_otter · · Score: 2

    Government code should be public domain, not placed under a restrictive license like the GPL.

    That's funny. I thought the main point of the GPL was to ensure that the code - in this case the Government code that you refer to above - would continue to be in the public domain, in perpetuity. By being less restrictive, the BSD license allows Government code to be taken out of the public domain. It sounds like you are saying "government code should be freely available to begin with, then it should be co-opted by the private sector and made proprietary". What the GPL generally says is "GPL code should be freely availble always, even when it is being used by the private sector". Do you see the difference here?

    --

    Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

  314. Cancer? K00l! by snookerdoodle · · Score: 1

    Hey, I wuz looking into switching my firewalls to Open BSD (and their silly filter thing that's easier to understand than ipfwadm/chains/tables)... But praise gets no higher than this! I'm stickin' with Linux/iptables. And, if Jeff Bezos calls it a disease, I'll switch my NT servers to Linux/Samba...

  315. Re:From the interview by Digital+Anvil · · Score: 1

    This might be a dumb question, but you have to ask them in order to learn.

    Why is it that government funded GPL code is inaccessable to the Apache foundation and OpenBSD??

    --
    Is the pain worth it, just to see defeat in the eyes of your enemy?
  316. Re:From the interview by JohnA · · Score: 1

    Once again, it is imperative that the following be mentioned:

    All government produced information not deemed classified is public domain.

    Ballmer once again has his facts mixed up. If a government agency gives their developers freedom to develop on their own, then they can do whatever they like. But the government itself cannot copyright something.

  317. Re:This just in: Microsoft Cures Cancer! by kill+-9+$$ · · Score: 1
    Yeah but in that analogy, MS cures cancer, but its a treatment that causes you to have a massive coronary at some unpredictable time later.

    (sorry couldn't resist. I'm really trying to curb this MS bashing thing, its just a hard habit to kick)

    --

    -- A computer without COBOL and Fortran is like a piece of chocolate cake without ketchup and mustard
  318. Slow news day? by icqqm · · Score: 2

    You're telling me that a Microsoft executive doesn't like open source software, particularly linux? My God, what is the world coming to? I mean, come on, did Ballmer really say anything surprising here? We'll never convince the Microsofties that they should abandon themselves, we should convince the world to abandon the Microsofties. If Ballmer chooses not to listen to RMS etc. and their explanations of the GNU GPL, so be it.

  319. If Linux is a Cancer... by MBCook · · Score: 1

    If linux is a cancer I think that it's time we infect a certain Redmond WA. based company! I've been useing linux for a year or two now, and all I can say is that if linux is a cancer, then riddle my computer with it.

    --
    Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
  320. Thanks for your "insightful" comments by joto · · Score: 2
    But the GPL claims that it is all about freedom, when in reality it tries to be as much of a virus as possible.

    Yes, it encourages others to benefit from the freedom it provides. There is no difference between theory and practice.

    Making money off of hard work isn't nearly as evil as most GPL supporters try to make it sound.

    I've yet to find a GPL supporter claiming there's anything wrong with earning money. I'll bet 99.999999% of all GPL supporters would really like to earn more money themselves, whether it'd be from their GPL'd product, or otherwise. In particular, RMS and the FSF has never said anything negative about getting your income from software development.

    Feel free to think that MS tries to "embrace and extend" open-source technology. The reality of the situation is that Microsoft did nothing of the sort; they merely took advantage of open-ended parts of the Kerberos architecture so it could fit in with the Microsoft authentication/security model better.

    Whatever. I am no expert on the Microsoft security model, and don't particulary care. But I would like to ask one simple question? Does MS Kerberos work ok within a standard Kerberos environment? No? What do you think the reason is? Incompetence? Embrace-and-extend? Internal security model? Only a rabid MS-supporter would choose the last one. It could of course be true, but that would also imply grave incompetence, and when it comes to integrating technologies Microsoft is usually very competent, so I think embrace-and-extend is much more probable.

  321. Virus by joto · · Score: 2
    Well, only according to the columnist, and it was the open source movement, not Linux which got labeled as cancer.

    Besides, what's so bad about being called "cancer". Most of us are already proud of using two well-known "viruses". Unix is known as one of the most succesful computer viruses ever, taking over virtually all micro's and mini's in the 70's and 80's, and now, with Linux, also a large percentage of PC's in the 90's and onward. And the GPL is also a very effective virus which has infected the brainfunctions of millions of programmers worldwide.

    If Steve Ballmer chooses to call the open source movement "cancer", you should all be proud, dammit!

  322. Re:moderators on crack by bitchazz · · Score: 1

    You are welcome!

  323. MS is opening there source? by geekoid · · Score: 1

    The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody. Open source is not available to commercial companies.
    Does this mean if a Government agency is using a MS product, we should be able to get the source? Seems like it to me.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  324. Re:Real Life Isn't About Who's Right and Who's Wro by DerFeuervogel · · Score: 1
    Oh, so now MS is on a level below all Linux advocates? Please explain to me how
    differences in opinion (in business models and what makes business work) between MS
    and all free software supporters makes one person right and the other one wrong.

    OK Plumber Boy. :0) One word - GREED. Enough is enough. Take your marbles and go home Bill.

    Linux advocates might be a little over zealous and rabid at times. But that overwhelming stink of GREED
    that emanates form Redmond is killing this industry.

  325. Re:Damn... by DerFeuervogel · · Score: 1
    The fallacy of the GPL is that it claims to be something that it is not. ...
    It claims to make freedom its central goal, when in reality it exists to encourage the socialist ideals of its creator.

    Belief is a funny thing. You can't be right or wrong much of the time.
    If most of us believe that GPL is a usefull tool that prevents our work from being coopted by corporate greed
    then we do. If you choose to believe that this is somehow socialist you can. How does this make GPL true or
    untrue. It can't. GPL is not a conjecture, its just a contract that you can either choose to accept or not. It is neiter True or False.
    If you want to use it then you have to pay the price. If the price is too steep, don't use it.

  326. I agree with ya, steve by martinde · · Score: 2

    Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody. Open source is not available to commercial companies.

    So, which is closer to "work that is available to everybody"?
    1) Windows and MS software
    2) Linux and Free Software

    MS certainly can choose to use GPLed software in every product they make - they've got that right. Can I start shipping Windows with my new apps too? Thanks for letting me know, Steve, I'll start today!

    1. Re:I agree with ya, steve by ganiman · · Score: 1

      It makes you think. I'd like to take a look at MS code and see how much of it was taken from something open source. I find it hard to believe that MS coders would not ever look at open source code and perhaps get an idea... ahem.. steal an idea.

      --
      geek n performer who performs morbid or disgusting acts, as biting off the head of a live chicken
  327. Re:From the interview by Copid · · Score: 1

    Something everybody seems to be missing in this conversation is that the government is not funding Linux R&D for the sake of Linux. The government (and basically everybody else who is pouring a fortune into Linux) is funding it because it's the right starting point to create tools that they need. Releasing the code under GPL is simply a byproduct of using GPL code in the first place.

    --
    An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  328. GPL vs LGPL by a!b!c! · · Score: 2

    I have read the GPL described as a cancer months ago, and I have to agree. It really is designed to take over projects, and spread throughout the internet. The GPL is designed to destroy the concept of intellectual property. If you use a piece of GPL code, it takes over, and now your whole project is GPL'd and open to the public. Its a very good idea, but its designed to force itself onto others.

    I release open source code under the LGPL (library or lesser, it was changed) which allows people to use my source code in a program, provided that they provide access to source of just my part of it. This enables me to provide open source libraries which can be used in commercial products, but mainly because I don't want to force people to have to relase their code under GPL. They may still GPL their code, but I think they should be able to decide.

    1. Re:GPL vs LGPL by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      Because it doesn't spread to the rest of the project?

      If I license some code from company A, that doesn't mean that suddenly *all* my code must be licensed from company A.

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
  329. Re:From the interview by Radical+Rad · · Score: 1
    >>I want publicly funded software to remain publicly available and free to all. I don't want Microsoft or any other corporate entity to swallow it and never let it see the light of day again.

    >Please explain how using code makes it unavailable.

    Let me. Lets imagine that the government has partly paid for the development of a digital music player. Now imagine a hypothetical consortium of rich established music publishing companies called Microsteal who take the Public Domain code and add an encryption algorithm with a cute name of, say, CSSteal. So now they have code 99.999% funded by the taxpayer but the taxpayer cannot even use it without paying again for the ever so slightly changed player and for the encryupted music files and in higher prices to the OS maker who pays Microsteal to allow them to compile the code on their platform.

    And if someone felt free enough to examine the ever so slightly changed code and discovered that it was actually 99.999% public domain, he would be arrested, fined and imprisoned for breaking a new law called the DMCA even though he and his ancestors had the right to do that until the DMCA was lobbied through Congress only very recently.

  330. Re:From the interview by Anonymous+Covard · · Score: 1
    "Public domain" makes it available only to the first generation of people that touch it. It allows corporations to turn it into "Proprietary Software", which in effect means that the from that point on, the software is no longer "freely available to all".

    I want publicly funded software to remain publicly available and free to all. I don't want Microsoft or any other corporate entity to swallow it and never let it see the light of day again.

    Who modded this up? It's inane.

    What, is Magic Fairy Ballmer suppose to tap public domain code with his Magic Wand XP and make it go *poof*?

    Sure, any company can take the public domain code and use it in a closed source product. And any developer who wants to can fork the code and use the derivative in a GPL'd product, too, and the bright warm glow that is Free Software will shine on that fork, and keep it safe happily ever after. *grin*

    Kids these days. No sense of proportion...

    --
    Information wants to be free -- but informants want to be paid.
  331. Adding additional features is a good thing by fetta · · Score: 1
    We are trying to provide more functionality at the same or better prices every day.

    You can take Microsoft to task for a lot of things, but I have to agree that its silly to try to restrict them from adding features to their operating system.

    Think about it - do you really want to have to purchase and install as separate items:
    • a GUI
    • a disk defragmenter
    • a browser
    • an email client
    • a text editor
    • etc.
    Well, okay, some of the folks that hang out here probably do want to install those things separately, but for most people they want the most functional system they can get with the minimum amount of setup.

    Barring any kind of intellectual property issue (remember Stacker?), give me more features that I can use!

    The way to beat Microsoft is by doing it better.
    --
    ** The opinions expressed here are my own, and do not reflect those of my employers - past, present, or future**
    1. Re:Adding additional features is a good thing by hammock · · Score: 1

      Recall, Windows NT 4.0 did not come with any kind of a defragmenter. You could download Disk Keeper Lite, which constantly reminded you to buy the full version, Disk Keeper.

      Not having to buy a defragmenter is VERY new to the NT world.

  332. I know what M$ is up to by lonesome+phreak · · Score: 1

    By looking at the comments, I see that M$ feels that not immediatly loosing their anit-trust case is a large win, and in fact they are now going to use the government on their side.

    I see M$ trying to get the government to pass various laws to limit where open-source software can be used, because it's paid for "with tax dollars". They will try and force Linux out of the academic system through legistlature, in trying to make everything "even".

    --
    Maybe we DID take the blue pill. You wouldn't remember anyway.
  333. Re:Damn Naive Perception by reallocate · · Score: 1
    Hello....the GPL doesn't force anyone to do anything until and unless someone takes an alleged offender to court and makes it stick.

    I don't have a clue about what MS may or may not be doing with other peoples' code -- and neither, I'm sure, do most, if not all, of these ranting Slashdot posters.

    Consider the target of Ballmer's statements. It isn't the Slashdot crowd. MS is trying to convince the corporate crowd that open source threatens them. Frankly, if I was responsible for the bottom line of a corporation, I'd be wary about anything new and different with no perceived pay off, including open source.

    If I though Linux could meet my requirements and was cheaper that Windows, then I'd take a serious look. That's where Linux and open source really threatens MS: in the marketplace. Not in some mystic world where licensing schemes mean something.

    --
    -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
  334. Enough already! by startled · · Score: 2

    On /., someone says shit like this, and it goes down to -1 Flamebait (sometimes after going up to +5 insightful). But when someone from MS says it AGAIN (MS has been calling GPL evil for some time now, no?), it gets /. front page.

    Why? What's the point of posting this? Sure, he's wrong, we all know that-- so we can post the same old pro-Open Source and/or GPL stuff we've been posting for years. Great, we all agree, and MS is still evil. This isn't news!

    If you insist on posting this, could you at least make a category called "pointless, trivial crap that no one cares about" so we can all filter it out?

  335. Cancer by josu · · Score: 1

    That's something I've never liked about the GPL. Personally I prefer the No Problem Bugroff license.

  336. Re:Damn... by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 1
    Hell--Dos wasn't even their own creation.

    Check out the Jargon File.

    --
    WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
  337. Easy Installer by Jebediah21 · · Score: 1

    I think it is true a Linux install is just as easy as a windows install. Perhaps the most difficult part of a Linux install is the partitioning. Winders doesn't do that. To make a Linux install easier we should just have it start with the normal stuff: location, keyboard, mouse. Then have the full screen flash and beep and everything and have a dialog box that says:
    "All data on this computer will be deleted before installing Linux! Continue?" with a Yes or No box. Of course this dialog would only run if the installer detects a fat partition ;)

    --

    Everytime you look at porn a devil gets their horns.
  338. Re:A pox on both your houses... by xp · · Score: 1

    Go Pack Go!

  339. drinking games by kel-tor · · Score: 1

    Gawd'amn it. The word for the day was innovative. I read the article, and now I am so frickin' dunk. err droonk, err whatever

    --

    ---

  340. Get Mulder and Scully! by Picass0 · · Score: 2

    The Cancer Eating OS?

    So does this mean if you cut off Linus' head he can grow back a new one?

  341. Would /. have posted this w/o the Linux ref? by ellem · · Score: 1

    --I think not.

    --Yet MS (through SB) is saying some insane things:

    --Only able to install their software twice (what about the 8 times a year I have to reload Win9X?)
    --Upgrade or else
    --"We offer customers what they want" (who asked for a personal firewall?)

    --Clearly the kids in Redmond are losing it. And clearly they read things into fairly clear documents.

    --The next few months should be quite weird in the MS world.

    ---

    --
    This .sig is fake but accurate.
  342. From the interview by cjpez · · Score: 4
    "The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody."
    Ur?
    1. Re:From the interview by grue23 · · Score: 1

      Why the heck did this get modded as troll? It is one of the best comments anyone made. The GPL *is* a restrictive license because it forces any extensions of GPLed code to be also GPLed. I wish my moderator hat was on right now to correct the points on this one.

    2. Re:From the interview by sensate_mass · · Score: 1
      Someone writes a nice program, then makes it available to you, along with the source, and all people do is bitch about the restrictions of the GPL. Get over it! Don't want restrictions? Then WRITE IT YOURSELF. Get off the box, people. That goes especially for you, Ballmer.

      --
      --- Submission is feudal.
    3. Re:From the interview by sensate_mass · · Score: 1
      If the government funded the development, then that person DID write it themselves, and should be able to do whatever they like with it.

      Not sure I follow you: if the government funds it, then it's the government that gets to decide how it's released. Just like working for a 'real' company. The coder's been paid for it already, and his/her having lost something in exchange isn't exactly unheard-of.

      --
      --- Submission is feudal.
    4. Re:From the interview by krappie · · Score: 1
      I dont understand, if GPL'd code isn't owned by the public, who is it owned by? It is software thats free for everyone to use and contribute to. Apache can also use GPL'd software for their development and compiling of apache. Now its a very different case if they want to take segments of code, or modify linux and redistribute it under a different license. It make perfect sense to protect against this, and it still leaves it in the public's domain.

      Would you like microsoft to modify government funded projects and redistribute their own version thats only compatible with their version, and get credit for it, and make money from it, and leave the government funded version obsolete? GPL'd code IS available for the public to use, contribute to, and learn from, and it makes sure it stays that way!

    5. Re:From the interview by Jetifi · · Score: 4

      The parent of this was moderated as a troll, and while his opinion is probably not the same as the majority here, it does require a better response than "troll", even if it was a troll. So:

      If you accept the incorrect usage of "open source" to mean "GPL'd code" then this statement makes perfect sense.

      I presume that what Ballmer meant to say was "The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds GPL'd work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody."

      This is an understandable viewpoint. GPL'd code is not accessable to everybody. It is only accessable to developers who are willing to release their code under the GPL license which excludes large portions of the community. Government-funded GPL code is inaccessable to the Apache Foundation, it's inaccessable to the OpenBSD developers, and it's inaccessable to any commercial developers who are working on closed-source products.

      There is one major example or government funding GPL'ed code: NSA Secure Linux. And this is probably what MS is scared of. They can make a sales pitch about how MS is secure, but any PHB can point and say 'this is done by the guys at the NSA! We can trust them, right?'*

      To which MS has no answer. My opinion: the US government, and for that matter any other .gov, should want to work on GPLed/OSS projects because they want control over their own infrastructure, something that is denied to them if they run closed-source, restricted source, and licensed binaries on their own computers.

      A government might also want to work on GPLes/OSS software because it is a public service. The work they have the capability to do could do more to estabilish ubiquitous computing for the masses than Microsoft has ever done. By removing one of the elements of the so-called "digital divide", i.e. price (both in licensing costs and the cost of hard-ware required to run Microsoft software), the government does more for it's citizenry.

      *Ignoring the NSA-paranoia - don't forget there are two sides to the NSA, the code-making and code-breaking depts

    6. Re:From the interview by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1
      If you're thinking from a programmatic angle--"I want to run GNUCash to balance my checkbook"--then the software is accessible to anyone that wants to use GNUCash on a standalone basis. [Barring weird system calls, etc.] But you're right--in a developer's standpoint, it is inaccessible for those who don't choose to develop under the GPL.



      Well, in that case, GNUCash still seems to have less restrictions on it than your average closed-source product. The only way you'll get the opportunity to develop new code based on MS Money, for example, is if you get hired by Microsoft to write a new version of MS Money for them.

      Ballmer is using arguments which are applicable to developers and using them to breed FUD in the user base, which is irresponsible. He needs to be called out on his statements.

    7. Re:From the interview by ckedge · · Score: 1

      Think about this people. In this instance I can see why the BSD camp has gone berserk over the GPL. Personaly I think the BSD is too loose, the GPL is too restrictive in claiming all your subsequent work that is linked to your program.

      How about this middle ground guys?

      I had a thought along these lines earlier today. But my thoughts immediately became bogged down in *how* one would decide what proportion of "code retribution" or "attribution" is desired in all the different shades of grey circumstances. I just don't think there is a method of codifying that in a license that is at all reasonable to interpret clearly, that would satisfy even a fraction of everyone.

      For example, your specific suggestion of what you think would be a middle ground (immedately after the part that I quoted) is AFAIK totally unacceptable, for numerous reasons.

      Hell, at the company I work for we can't even get our lawyers to tell us that our interpretation and use of GPL code is ok. (They don't have any case law to back up any interpretation, so they hedge their bets and refuse to say anything definitive!! So we're left hanging on the end of a stick. Supposedly we've got the best IT lawyers in our country!)

      And when it comes right down to it, there are lots of people who use the GPL specifically because it IS quite exclusive, and IS intended to compete directly with proprietary-code enterprises. (Just take a look at the GNU explanation as to when you should and shouldn't use the LGPL vs GPL.

      Personally I think the GPL is quite acceptable for use in publicly funded probjects, and so is the BSD license. I'm not a fanatic. Hell, I'm even ok with the public-institution retaining 100% copyright and charging money, because as a public institution they ARE us.

    8. Re:From the interview by ichimunki · · Score: 1

      What I'm curious about is, can I take a piece of public domain code, add to it, and GPL the resulting work?

      Either way, I'd agree that the government-funded work should be public domain-- no matter how much Microsoft innovates on top of that, we've always got the PD portion. I also believe the government should be working on making sure it is not Microsoft-dependent-- especially by refusing to use now-proprietary "innovated" public domain software. Of course, if I'm lucky, there are twelve other Americans who agree with me, and four of them are willing to vote about it.

      --
      I do not have a signature
    9. Re:From the interview by Raistlin99 · · Score: 1

      Where is my mod points when I need them As far as his statement goes I think he is right. Any code funded by the US govt. should be under public domain meaning anyone can use for their purposes regardless. This is brought up by a fellow poster farther down. This comment is probably the most well thought out I have seen today, and he gets a troll. Oh yeah I forgot dis the GPL and blammo your hit hard on slashdot. Oh well if you want to mark something as a troll come and get me.

      --
      I/O, I/O, its off to disk I go, with a read and a write, and a bit and a byte, I/O, I/O, I/O, I/O
    10. Re:From the interview by Linux_ho · · Score: 1
      GPL'd code is not accessable to everybody. It is only accessable to developers who are willing to release their code under the GPL license which excludes large portions of the community. Government-funded GPL code is inaccessable to the Apache Foundation, it's inaccessable to the OpenBSD developers, and it's inaccessable to any commercial developers who are working on closed-source products.
      What do you mean by inaccessable? There's nothing preventing any of these people from looking at GPL'd code, changing it if they want to use it differently, etc... Now, if they want to *copy* GPL'd code into their own products, the GPL places some restrictions on how they license those products. But, if they want total control over how they license their products, they'll just have to write the whole thing themselves. Big deal!

      I don't see any problem with the government funding GPL'd software. I think it would be a waste of public resources to develop some product with no licensing restrictions. Some juggernaut such as Microsoft could easily come along, embrace and extend it, releasing only binaries until the original becomes obsolete & nobody's using it, and then put more restrictive licensing on it, limiting the public's rights.

      If public money is spent developing GPL'd software, that investment is protected and will continue to benefit society indefinitely.
      --
      include $sig;
      1;
    11. Re:From the interview by TOTKChief · · Score: 2

      I wrote:

      If you're thinking from a programmatic angle--"I want to run GNUCash to balance my checkbook"--then the software is accessible to anyone that wants to use GNUCash on a standalone basis. [Barring weird system calls, etc.] But you're right--in a developer's standpoint, it is inaccessible for those who don't choose to develop under the GPL.

      And you responded:

      Well, in that case, GNUCash still seems to have less restrictions on it than your average closed-source product. The only way you'll get the opportunity to develop new code based on MS Money, for example, is if you get hired by Microsoft to write a new version of MS Money for them.

      And that matters how? Okay, it matters to developers. But guess what--developers either want to jump for the big bucks [-snort-] and develop products like Money along, or they want to build their own versions.

      The developer's argument is for another time. The big problem is that, unfortunately, the free|open community is full of a lot of coders and not a lot of users. By that, I mean that yes, there are a lot of coders who use a lot of products, but for the most part those who develop code inside the community highly outnumber those who don't [which includes me at this time].

      Is this a problem? Yes, and no.

      It's not a problem for the community internally--like any community of ideas, the marginal cost of adding another is small to nonexistent, but the marginal benefit of adding another is potentially very high, in that new people often see problems in new ways, even if they don't know how to fix them.

      Where the problem lies for the community is that there aren't a lot of users who can say, "Hey, man, I use this GPL/BSD'd stuff, and man, it's great! Bugs get fixed faster! You can get the bugs for free! There's no pirating! No guilt! Just use it--that's what it's there for, man!"

      On the other hand, the closed-source community has a large pile of users [sadly including me today, but that's because my job is an M$FT outfit] who can say, "Hey, [insert program] does what I want it to do reasonably well, isn't hideously expensive, and won't crash my computer."

      The mass of people are going to be users and not coders. Why? Even with good education, people are inherently lazy and will want to seek the least resistive path. [Burn me a Win2K Pro CD? SURE!] They aren't going to worry about things like licenses and such. They want things to work. They tend not to think that IP is a bad thing, and so demonizing from a company they may no like but do conduct business with on a regular basis will hit home for them. It's that simple.

      You also wrote:

      Ballmer is using arguments which are applicable to developers and using them to breed FUD in the user base, which is irresponsible. He needs to be called out on his statements.

      Irresponsible for whom? He's speaking for his corporation. It's not irresponsible for them. I would accept the argument that it's irresponsible for the general population at hand, though, and that's probably what you're getting at with the about comment. However, like all Microsofties, Ballmer speaks for the Collective, as well he should. He does need to be corrected, and this is the community's job.

    12. Re:From the interview by TOTKChief · · Score: 4
      If you accept the incorrect usage of "open source" to mean "GPL'd code" then this statement makes perfect sense.

      Yeah, here I think he's using the "dominance" of the GPL to stand for all open/free licensing. It's clever: remember, most folks can only stand two things in opposition. Why do you think there are just two major US political parties, eh? We like to think in terms of two exclusive choices, so Microsoft is taking the most extreme example to their cause--the GPL--and making it the standard-bearer. From their viewpoint, it's startingly good spin.

      I presume that what Ballmer meant to say was "The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds GPL'd work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody."
      This is an understandable viewpoint. GPL'd code is not accessable to everybody. It is only accessable to developers who are willing to release their code under the GPL license which excludes large portions of the community. Government-funded GPL code is inaccessable to the Apache Foundation, it's inaccessable to the OpenBSD developers, and it's inaccessable to any commercial developers who are working on closed-source products.

      Wait now...that depends on how you term accessibility. If you're thinking from a programmatic angle--"I want to run GNUCash to balance my checkbook"--then the software is accessible to anyone that wants to use GNUCash on a standalone basis. [Barring weird system calls, etc.] But you're right--in a developer's standpoint, it is inaccessible for those who don't choose to develop under the GPL.

      The difference here in my mind is this: most folks aren't developers and won't care about the licensing. [Look at how people break M$FT licenses now.] Those who are--and they'll be the loudest--will yell. Most of the rest of us [I'm more user than coder] won't much care.

      If tax dollars are funding a project, then the results of that development should be available to everyone and not just people who use one particular license. This is the rationale behind the laws which prevent the government from enjoying a copyright on the data it produces.

      On a standalone basis, it is: you can enjoy the benefits of whatever the code does no matter what license you use. Now, of course, if you want to build upon that code, that's where it gets hairy.

      I'm close to this on a personal level, as a friend of mine does work for the Army, some of which is patentable. He, not the government, would own the patent. It's interesting how it works.

      Government code should be public domain, not placed under a restrictive license like the GPL.

      This is a legitimate argument; my only concern is that M$FT will use the GPL/BSD argument [again, I couch in terms of two exclusive choices] to muddy the waters--"people on the inside of the 'Open Source' movement even say the GPL is bad!" I don't want to not have the discussion; I'd rather have it after M$FT loses some market share.

    13. Re:From the interview by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I agree that the guy's not a troll, but I still disagree with his opinion.
      The idea of government-funded work being in the public domain sounds nice, but software isn't like other intellectual property. It can be "embraced and extended". I don't believe that publicly-funded work should be allowed to be taken over by private interests, have proprietary extensions added, and then used against the public that funded it.
      GPL software is free for everyone to use, but the condition is that it has to remain free. GPLed taxpayer-funded work ensures that that work stays in the public domain.
      Maybe that's a pain to people who'd prefer a different license, but as long as Microsoft is able to use open-source developers' work against them and against the community, this restriction should stay in place.

    14. Re:From the interview by tjb · · Score: 1

      GPL'ed code is owned by the author who released it under the GPL.

      GPL says "You can do as you wish with this code, except..."

      If you (as the public) truly owned the code, you could do as you wish with it, no exceptions.

      Tim

    15. Re:From the interview by ashtonb · · Score: 1

      Public domain is, and always remains public domain and "freely available to all". There's no way to remove something from the public domain.

      Sure there is. Public domain software effectively removes itself when people stop using it. (ie: better alternative).

    16. Re:From the interview by AnotherBlackHat · · Score: 1
      If tax dollars are funding a project, then the results of that development should be available to everyone and not just people who use one particular license. This is the rationale behind the laws which prevent the government from enjoying a copyright on the data it produces. Government code should be public domain, not placed under a restrictive license like the GPL.
      <DEVILS ADVOCATE>
      If US tax dollars fund something, why should the Ausies get it for free?
      Besides, governments have funded a lot of research that ended up being classified, patened, copywritten, or released with far more restrictive licences than GPL. Allowing the government to GPL what it pays for is a much better alternative to forcing them to licence in a particular way, even if that way is public-domain.
      </DEVILS ADVOCATE>

    17. Re:From the interview by Handulschteim · · Score: 1
      No, what he means to say is open source without the caps because he wants to stigmatize all open source/free software in the public awareness.

      You are absolutely right about the GPL vs Open Source. But MS is using marketing strategies which focus on emotions instead of facts. So he will employ such tactics as stereotypes and stigmas to confuse the public.

      Blow enough small holes in a ship and it will sink. Maybe even without the crew knowing until it is too late.

      Frankly, I don't understand why they can't use GPL software. All they have to do is release their source code. I don't see any attempt to really work with the developers here. Just to use and abuse them.

    18. Re:From the interview by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      Let's say that the goverment fund a web server research, and they come up with the greatest & best web server code ever.

      Now, if they release it to the public domain, Apache can incoporate parts of it into their own web server.

      And *BSD could include it as part of their distribution.

      Anyone can write plugins that extend this server capabilities.

      However, if they release it under the GPL, none of the above is possible.

      See what is the problem here? The goverment paid for it, meaning that it came from the taxpayer money.
      And the goverment is blocking you from using code the you paid for, basically.

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
    19. Re:From the interview by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      No, you can't.
      I can't use it in non-GPL code, and that is a problem.
      You seem to think that non-GPL == propeity, but that isn't so.
      Apache can't use GPL code, neither can the *BSDs.

      *Now* do you begin to see the problem?

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
    20. Re:From the interview by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      No, what the pubic domain means is that *everybody* can use it, however they want, whatever they paid their taxes or not.

      There *isn't* a free-er code than this.

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
    21. Re:From the interview by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      You seem to be worry about properity, but what about no-GPL OSS?
      Releasing code under the GPL means that you can't use it in non-GPL code, that include BSD, Apache, X11, as well as a host of other stuff.

      You see what is the problem here?

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
    22. Re:From the interview by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      No, they can't.
      Only if they are willing to release their software under the GPL.

      OpenBSD can't use GPL code, because you can't do what you want with it, and that is against Theo's belief.
      Apache can't use GPL code, because that would require GPLing the whole thing.

      Assuming he was talking about GPL code, than Ballmer is correct in this statement.

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
    23. Re:From the interview by gi-tux · · Score: 1

      If I'm paying for it, I expect to be able to use it.
      Use it all you want. The GPL allows you to use it. You can make money off it even, but you can't restrict my use of it either. The idea being that we all paid for it and can all share it equally. But in the case of GPL'ed code, you also pay the interest on the borrowed code, which is that you have to give away the source to your changes. Yes it means that you can't let a group of government paid programmers develop a really neat application, you make some minor changes to it and sell it as your own application, nor can you take a little piece of it and paste it into your big application to sell as closed source, but you can still use it, if you are willing to pay the interest by giving your software freedom also.

      --
      I have no sig, does anyone have one to spare?
    24. Re:From the interview by koreth · · Score: 2
      "Public domain" makes it available only to the first generation of people that touch it. It allows corporations to turn it into "Proprietary Software", which in effect means that the from that point on, the software is no longer "freely available to all".

      Not true. If I take a piece of public-domain software and modify it, I can claim the modified version as my own and refuse to make it available to everyone. My modifications have no effect whatsoever on the status of the original public-domain release of the software. Someone else is free to come along and make other modifications and release their version under GPL or whatever other license they please.

      Think about the concept of public domain as applied to music or literature if you don't believe me. If what you're saying were true, I could turn "Hamlet" into a copyrighted work and sue everyone who publishes or performs the original. Obviously that's not the way things work for "Hamlet," and it's not the way things work for software either.

    25. Re:From the interview by CKW · · Score: 3

      "Public domain" makes it available only to the first generation of people that touch it. It allows corporations to turn it into "Proprietary Software", which in effect means that the from that point on, the software is no longer "freely available to all".

      I want publicly funded software to remain publicly available and free to all. I don't want Microsoft or any other corporate entity to swallow it and never let it see the light of day again.

      I place the continuing free availability of the code that the Government funds to be a higher priority than to giving corporations a free ride.

      I directly contest Balkmer's and Microsoft's viewpoint on what is "free" and "available to all". My *all* does not include corporations. Corporations are not "the people", nor do they represent "the public". They are constructs, by some of the people, for some people. They do not represent the public interest. They are merely useful in certain circumstances to provide services for the people.

      I do not believe that we, the people, our government, should be obliged to give anything for free to corporations.

      Suck it up Microsoft.

    26. Re:From the interview by JulzR · · Score: 1

      In a perfect world govt produced stuff should probably be under something like a BSD licence- but due to corps 'death by proprietary' extensions principle, it would be unwise- if the research is to stay in the public domain. Also, the way the American patent system appears to be, all you'd need to do is some minor tweaks, patent them and et voila- you stop everyone from using the (meant to be) free research. Just look at the patent firms that are living off this- buying patents that they didn't develop, and then trying to sue anyone who makes something similar. If it's GPL'd it may be harder to make money from, but it gives all those who paid for it a fair shot- rather than a big coorp getting lots of free R&D.

    27. Re:From the interview by ryanwright · · Score: 1

      Who cares if some corp uses public-domain code to make money?

      I do. When taxpayer money is used to fund a project, nobody should be able to take the source code from that project, modify it, and make millions. Period.

      --
      -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
    28. Re:From the interview by ryanwright · · Score: 1

      Not even you?

      No, not even me. That's what "nobody" means. Nobody, not even me, should be allowed to profit off of something that the rest of the taxpayers in this country paid for. It's one thing to create and sell a commercial product that works in conjunction with the GPL'd product. It's quite another to integrate GPL code *into* a product, then sell it as my own. The taxpayers invested the money in that code! If anyone should get a return on that investment, it should be the taxpayers!

      Now, if 20% of a product had government-written GPL code in it, I would be all for allowing the author to profit off of that product, as long as 20% of the money was given back to the taxpayers who funded the development of that code, and as long as that 20% portion of the source code was included with the software. That way the author is only making money off of his own hard work and the GPL'd code contained within is 100% available to everyone who purchases the software.

      --
      -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
    29. Re:From the interview by mrm677 · · Score: 1

      In that case, I would like access to take the B-2 bomber for a test ride! My taxes paid for it...

  343. The Man by CakerX · · Score: 1

    Bill Gates wants to control the computer world, suddenly anything that competes with his ideas is un-american, and canceresque. Windows sucks, Linux is a free alternative, the works much better. Bill Gate$ cannot stand he lost, and to a company who's price cannot be beat. Bill, stop being such a cry baby, and admit, you LOST, LOOSER, FUCKING LOOOOSER. Instead of sending Vice Presidents acting like IRC script kiddiez and badmouthing the competion, have them improve your product, start writing programs designed to run better, not cost more!!!!

  344. Ballmer drank the free coffee by sdprenzl · · Score: 4

    When I worked at MS ('94-'95) I was told in a bathroom in a whisper not to drink the free house coffee. Otherwise I'd wind up like Steve Ballmer: a babbling, brain damaged moron! Nasty stuff!!

    --
    --- WWSD? What Would Strider Do?
  345. Re:Damn... by pvcf · · Score: 2

    Yeah, Microsoft has so many resources, and because they're not interested in a profit they don't care how much money it would take to develop something that complex from scratch.

    Hell, I'll bet they even rolled their own browser. Hmmm... Let's see...

    Start Internet Explorer (even the most latest version).
    Click on "Help|About"

    Oh my!!! What's this??? Based on NCSA Mosaic???
    Now why do you think they would need to base IE on Mosaic hmm?

    Your argument is just plain crap. M$ will ALWAYS look for the cheapest way to do things. They are a company concerned with bottom lines. So, if that means ripping off some code to make the profit margin better, then they'll do it.

    This isn't to say Microsoft doesn't have competent programmers or that IE hasn't advanced a LOOONG way since Mosaic. But, look in the mirror to find the FUD bud!

    --
    F U NE X N M? Son: "Dad... How do you spell 'hourly'?" Dad: "0 * * * *"
  346. GPL = MS Shared Source by gamorck · · Score: 1

    I love how you guys so blindly defend the GPL license. If the source was TRULY open - then people could do with it as they pleased without having to adhere to the terms of some FSF License Agreement.

    If you think Microsofts Shared Source Initative is bad then you cannot possibly think GPL is any better. They are both one in the same - heres why:

    1: Both licenses seek to restrict how the source code is used.

    2: Both licenses were created in order to serve their own purposes and not that of the community (MS wants money - FSF wants more "free" software)

    Both licenses are a farse. Its that simple. If you are really going to distribute your source - distribute it. End of Story. All of my open projects are distributed without any license because I feel that in order for it to be truly free and useful work - it must come without any catches.

    Yes Shared Source does make Microsoft look hypocritical - but the GPL makes the Linux community look just as foolish. The GPL only serves one purpose: To produce FREE SOFTWARE. Shared Source only exists to serve one purpose: To make MONEY.

    Gam
    Flame At Will

    --
    I love idealists not because I am one, but because they make life bearable for pragmatists such as myself.
  347. Elmer FUD by connorbd · · Score: 3

    (smack) Ballmer is deliberately blurring the lines, just like Craig Mundie did. He knows this; he's trying to convince the rest of the world that there is no difference.

    I have to say, though. I find it a bit hard to believe anyone could be taking tactics like this seriously -- MS is starting to sound like a bunch of whiners. If he was talking about another company like this on the record, I strongly suspect Microsoft's stock would be in trouble.

    /Brian

  348. Move along, there's nothing to see here... by Spoing · · Score: 3
    Morbid fascination with the bizzare. That's what these articles are, nothing more. It's a waste of time to pay much attention to what the talking heads at Microsoft say.

    If I'm interested at all, it's in what they do, not what they say.

    --
    A firewall can not protect you from yourself. Turn off what you do not need. Do not use the firewall to do your work.
    1. Re:Move along, there's nothing to see here... by $hotgun · · Score: 1
      You may not care, but venture capitalist and the PHBs sure do. He wasn't talking to us anyway. We're just the guys who implement the solutions that the PHBs buy from the guy they're golfing with. We're just the guys who need some investment capital to run a company for a year so that we can deliver the Next Big Thing. Ballmer doesn't give a shit about us, 'cause we don't have any money.

      He's lying to the PHBs and the rest of the business community, and we'll be the ones to suffer for it if we don't tell them the lie in Ballmer's story (which, as technologist, is also part of our jobs).

  349. Re:This word by Grasshopper · · Score: 1

    You know, school is a good example. Take colleges for instance. There are public universities and private. Does the existance of public universities hurt the general public (those seeking to learn)? Of course not; it forces the private universities to actually offer better education so that people will pay more money. Now, what if software worked like this? Would the consumers be hurt, or would companies like Microsoft? Well, even Microsoft would admit that it would hurt them. Obviously, they wouldn't think such a thing if they actually believed their product was better. Fact is, they don't.

    --
    Source code is a lot like a parachute; it needs to be open in order to function properly.
  350. Ever heard of Xenix? by DABANSHEE · · Score: 1

    [i]" MS if completely free to reverse-engineer and release their own *NIX variant if they so wish."[/i] You never know that may already have happened.

  351. Gez I've been spending too long on the forums by DABANSHEE · · Score: 1

    I've got UBB code on the brain.

  352. Gov'ts copyright stuff all the time. by DABANSHEE · · Score: 1

    Look at all the govt owned telcos arround the world, most have developped their own software that's copyrighted. Even the New South Wales govt owned power company has copyrighted software they've developed for their power stations. & all the public profits by it, because for every dollar in profit that Govt owned corporations make, that's one less dollar that needs to be found through taxes. Actually the State Rail Authority of New South Wales has made quite a bit of money licensing out its control software. Which partially helps cover the cost of a publically funded state wide public transport system.

  353. Re:Iocaine powder by vsync64 · · Score: 1
    ITYM "Iñigo".

    --

    --
    TO BUY A NEW CAR WOULD MAKE YOU SEXUALLY ATTRACTIVE.
  354. Balmer was close by green+pizza · · Score: 1

    Linux isn't cancer. Linux is hemroids.

  355. Re:Linux is a cancer of teenage elitism by green+pizza · · Score: 2

    Nice... the typical slashdot kiddie repsonse. Guess what, kid, you're not going to be able to moderate down the real world after mommy and daddy kick you out of the house when ya hit 18. Grow up and act like you have some cojones.

  356. Steve Ballmer's personal notes: by WillRobinson · · Score: 1

    Following FUD provided by MicroScone's

    A: Yeah. It's good competition. It will force us to be innovative. It will force us to justify the prices and value that we deliver.

    Note: Remember to raise prices when we get back to the office, I cant believe they are eating out of our hands.

    And that's only healthy. The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody. Open source is not available to commercial companies. The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source. If the government wants to put something in the public domain, it should. Linux is not in the public domain. Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches. That's the way that the license works.

    Note: Their scared shitless now, no way they will allow Linux in their offices. Is this is the best FUD we could come up with? Remember to have a meeting with bill when we get back. We got to come up with better lines than this. Its getting old.


  357. Rethinking my position... by TTop · · Score: 1

    Personally, I've never been a big fan of cancer -- but this really makes me reconsider.

  358. Damn... by jayhawk88 · · Score: 1

    Time was, it was actually fun to flame Microsoft for inane, stupid comments, policies, and products. Lately, though, they've just been making it too easy.

    I mean, come on: my dog could flame that piece. Where's the challenge?

    1. Re:Damn... by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      IE is based on Mosaic because it was the fastest way to get a browser on the market back in 1995. IE today doesn't have a shred of Mosaic code in it anymore.

      Of course, at least MS admits they stole their code from Mosaic, Netscape never did.

    2. Re:Damn... by mikethegeek · · Score: 5

      "The challenge is that he's right. There's nothing "free" about the GPL if you're a developer that doesn't have the same views as RMS and the rest of the free software movement.
      I'd love to see someone on slashdot actually prove his statement wrong."

      Why? Do you believe that Microsoft, et all, have some RIGHT to code that they had no part in writing? And have no obligation to allow the original authors the same right to MS code?

      The GPL does NOTHING to prevent Microsoft or any other closed-source company from developing anything they want. For that matter, MS if completely free to reverse-engineer and release their own *NIX variant if they so wish.

      It's MICROSOFT here who is playing the role of a whiner wanting more and more "handouts", not the GPL backers.

      What the GPL DOES do is prevent a closed source company from taking your code, using it for their own purpose, then not allowing YOU to benefit from what they added to your code. It says "here, use what you want, the only catch is you have to give the next guy the same freedom YOU had".

      Microsoft fears the GPL because it prevents them from taking code, and extending it in proprietary ways so as to break compatibility, then deny even the original author access to these changes. Had Keberos been GPL instead of BSD, MS coudld never have pulled their "embrace and extend" rape of what was a universal open standard when they used it in `Doze 2000.

      True, the BSD license gives you absolute freedom to do with the code as you wish, in any way you wish. In and ideal world, the BSD license would be the best one. However, the GPL is more pragmatic and practical, it FORCES people to behave in an ethical manner, whereas the BSD license relies on morals and ethics of each and every user.

      Microsoft fears the GPL because they cannot use GPL code without being assimilated by it. The GPL is merely a sling that is the weapon that allows David to defeat Goliath.

      --
      === The price of freedom is eternal vigilance
    3. Re:Damn... by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      I believe that the US consitition says that the goverment can't hold copy-right, so everything it does/fund must be public domain.

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
    4. Re:Damn... by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      But in the first case, there is no pretense of it being free.

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
    5. Re:Damn... by gi-tux · · Score: 2

      While I agree with what you say for the most part (especially about MS making non-standard implementations of standards), Mr. Ballmer makes an interesting point about the US Government paying to have GPL'ed code written. Is it valid for the US Government to spend taxpayer money on GPL'ed code. I would suspect that it is a good use of taxpayer money as the code is returned to everyone. As someone else stated anyone can learn from it, and the lessons learned can be applied to anything (open or closed source).

      --
      I have no sig, does anyone have one to spare?
    6. Re:Damn... by an+ominous+cow+ward · · Score: 2

      It's a bit late to add a comment here and hope anyone will read it, but I have to.

      ... without the incentive of making money, most of the software innovations that exist today would have never been born.

      That 's garbage. It's clear by now that there are a plethora of individuals interested in writing software for the sake of coding, or to create a tool that will get work done more quickly, or for recognition, or any of a number of reasons besides lining their pockets.

      I thought the source for Windows began as someone's pet project. If you look around you'll find that most of the real innovations in software development have been the result of University researchers and hobbyists. People looking to get rich too often develop shoddy products which don't work the way they are supposed to, and cater to the masses at the expense of creativity and true innovation.

      Software development is no different than any other field, the people who enjoy it the most are also likely to be the best at it, and those people would probably be willing to do it for free. I'd rather go to a doctor that had chosen the medical profession because they were interested in it and liked treating people than because they wanted to get rich.

      If anything, the cancer on our society is one which has apparantly infected Mr, Ballmer and yourself, of greed and materialism, believing that money is more important than all else.

    7. Re:Damn... by metachimp · · Score: 1

      The government chooses to fund and develop using GPL and other open source tools and apps because it's cheaper, and they are usually bound by law to go with the cheapest solution to get the job done.
      I'm glad to hear that the government is funding open source development, it means that they're being practical and frugal for a change.
      I'd be upset if I found out that the government was being taken for a ride by Microsoft, just like most American corporations.
      It's just too bad that they're not extending this same level of practicality to other realms of government projects, namely the Faith-Based Missile Defense system.

      --
      The system has failed you, don't fail yourself. --Billy Bragg
  359. Re:This word by Mr_Person · · Score: 1

    He may not know what it means, but he used it six times in the interview, which is quite a bit considering he only had nine answers!
    --

  360. blah by ganiman · · Score: 1

    He called Bill Gates talented. That made me laugh. And he got mad that the government funds open source. I think he just got mad because MS was in court with the US government, AND they give money to open source. At least he was smart enough to not say anything too negative about Linux itself. Billy boy must have taught him to not underestimate your enemy.

    --
    geek n performer who performs morbid or disgusting acts, as biting off the head of a live chicken
  361. Linux inventor Linus Torvalds says... by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 2

    In an interview with the Chicago Sun-Times, Linux inventor Linus Torvalds says that Microsoft and closed source software companies are "good competition" because it will "force Linux to be innovative," but calls Microsoft "a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches." He also says that the inclusion of IE in windows has been "not great ... for innovation in the software industry" (especially for Netscape) and that MS's new copy protections are just "bumps in the road" to "help customers understand when they are crossing the line . . . so they can't do the wrong thing." And he says a few more amusing things, also.

    --

    -WolfWithoutAClause

    "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
  362. Wow, this must be some kind of world record by electricmonk · · Score: 1
    Two huge trolls posted on the front page consecutively? Either someone with a sense of humor hacked Slashdot, or the authors have been smoking crack.

    --

    --
    Friends don't let friends use multiple inheritance.
  363. Ballmer is right by dubious_1 · · Score: 1

    Now, before you go and flame me, here is where he is right. He is saying (although in a very inflamatory way) that research conducted under government funding should be released into the public domain, and not be placed under someting like the GPL. I agree with this. Although I appreciate and agree with the concept of free (as in speach) software, By placing code developed with government funding into the public domain, individuals and corporations alike are free to use this in a manner most beneficial to themselves. I Free software developer can use that code as the basis of a free software project, and a commercial software developer can take the exact same code and base a commercial package on it. Since the funding for this code came from tax payers, and corporations as well as individuals pay taxes, then to prevent a corporation from benefitting in the same way that an individual may is unfair. Both parties have paid for that code to be developed, and ownership belongs to all tax paying citizens. The only party with the right to release code under a specific license is the owner.

  364. It's official.... by plastickiwi · · Score: 2
    Spreading the "Linux destroys intellectual property" argument is now official Microsoft policy. First Mundie, now Ballmer, each reading from the same script.

    If anyone had doubts that MS is taking Linux seriously, let him now reconsider.

    Bill Gates is intensely aware of the media attention MS commands, and he uses it with great care. He knows that anything an MS spokesman talks about publicly will get a lot of attention very fast; accordingly, he doesn't dignify anything that doesn't threaten him with criticism. It's when he's worried about competition, or maneuvering to take possession of a market niche, that we see the response typified by Ballmer and Mundie's recent outings: careful, meticulous repetition of catchy buzz phrases developed by MS marketing and public relations personnel.

    Even this /. story, and my response to it, serves Big Bill's purpose. He's got the community buzzing, and what the media (and end users, and management) hears is "Linux...cancer...destroys intellectual property...."

    I suppose the Linux community should feel honored to be elevated to the exalted status of Oracle, Apple, Stak Electronics and all the other entities MS has found worrisome enough to target with custom FUD.

    --
    -- He's fantastic, made of plastic....
    1. Re:It's official.... by Harka+Steinhart · · Score: 1

      Actually the new mame seems to be Linux=Virus, which is probably very effective given the current concern over viruses. Not-so-technical people (i.e. the one's who open Fw:Fw:Fw:attachment.jpg.vbs) will sooner or later fall for this and associate Linux with danger. In fact, now that this theme has been given some time to sink into people's (sub)consciousness, I fully expect an actual "Linux" virus (for Windows) to appear shortly, which will complete the meme.

      As to the overall situation, it needs to be said, that Linux and therefore it's users should not be anti-anything, but pro-GoodThing. People are drawn to Linux not because MS as a company is necessarely an issue for them in any way, but by the positive image, that Linux provides in terms of *world-wide cooperation* *freedom to share and contribute* and *empowering the users by giving them choices* do do, whatever it may be in the best fashion.

      Microsoft is a non-issue, because any true GNU/Open-Source-supporter will adamently defend the users right to choose their computing environment, whether that be a Microsoft OS, Linux, xBSD, MacOS, Plan 9 or anything else. It's the users decision and nobody should interfere with that or assume the "right" to know what's better for them. That includes OEM's...as long as a certain OS is mandatorily pre-installed no such freedom exists. The default should be a blank computer with various Operating System choices, that the user can make at time of purchase. *That* should be advocated, a pro-freedom stand!
      Once that happens, rhetoric such as Mr. Ballmer's or conversely GNU/rabids will be relegated back to what it has always been: useless and divisive speech, that does nothing to further humanity's search for better computing environments, which can serve us as a whole in the best way.

  365. Journalist Integrity by SnapShot · · Score: 2

    Here's a test... Do a search on the Chicago Sun-Times newspaper for "GPL". Number of results: 0.

    The sad thing is, the journalists have no idea what the difference between Open Source and Free Software, no idea that GPL is only one aspect of "open source", and they are certainly in no position to inform their reader about the difference.

    The moron that interviewed Balmer obviously had no idea what open source -- no caps -- is, just that the words had been used negatively by Microsoft flacks. So, he asks a fluffy question for his fluff-piece interview and Balmer gets a chance to spread some FUD to the uninformed masses.

    --
    Waltz, nymph, for quick jigs vex Bud.
  366. Microsoft says something anti-linux, film at 11 by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 2
    Hmm, what will happen:

    • Microsoft perceives Linux (Apple, Novell, Sun) as a threat spreads lies and half-truths about it.
    • Users of said technology get up in arms.
    • If users have a forum they will vent their frustrations
    • Forum will normally be like minded persons, so nothing will actually be accomplished.
    • Forum will contain n-million like minded posts pointing out specific Microsoft F.U.D. points.
    • Forum will get so heavy that most folks won't bother reading after first two posts, or browse at +3.
    • Tempers will be raised. Flames wares will be waged.
    • Microsoft will continue to do as it pleases, mostly because people don't really care as long as they can open and print Word documents, their CD-RWs have drivers, and most games run on some Win32 platform.

    Other than gnashing your teeth, and giving slashdot a lot of hits, what does this accomplish? What are people going to do? There are discussions that educate, that add info. The posts I've read all talk about how balmer is wrong. Of course he is (hell MS ftp is from BSD sources, hows that work into him saying open source means no commercial distribution) but unless you actually change something, it's just venting.

  367. Of XP and what it means by yoshi_mon · · Score: 1

    During many product upgrades there are obvious benefits for the end user. More features, faster execution, and (hopefully) less bugs. The user is then allowed to choose weather to stay with an older revision of software or pay for the upgrade. Granted, it is within the software manufactures pervue to decide when support for a particular product, but most companies are limited as to how quickly they can end that support based on number of clients still using older software.

    Microsoft's tactic is quite different. As a monopolistic company that can force consumers and businesses alike to upgrade they need not worry about providing any true innovation in their products. Other than expanding their bloatware, thus aiding their partners in selling newer computers, and creating new and more revenue intensive licensing agreements Microsoft has not really innovated much lately. (.NET not withstanding.)

    Having used Word and Excel since they were released for 3.1, I can say with some authority that since Office 97 there has been precious little reasons to upgrade. Everything you really needed to work with was there and worked relatively well. Office 2000 added a few more components and clipart, but really, is that innovation?

    Office XP, from what I have seen/read, has a few new features but really nothing that wonderful. The workhorses of Office, Word, Excel, and Access, have already been polished to a high glow. All that Microsoft is doing now is rubbing down to the primer to show it's true color. A new license that extorts money from users on a regular basis regardless of any new upgrades to their product.

    The computer world has moved into a new phase. Except for hardcore gamers who constantly require more power for games, today's average $1000-$2000 PC has more than enough power to run everything a user might need. That reality, along with Linux and all that it represents, has Microsoft quite scared. Their revenue model is in for some serious trouble and they are hoping that their new line of XP software, and it's new "innovative" form of licensing will save the day. I truly hope and believe that they will be proven wrong.

    --

    Really, I know what I'm doing...Ohhhh, look at the shiny buttons!
    1. Re:Of XP and what it means by jpellino · · Score: 1
      Apple releases X in record time, MS announces XP.

      Apple releases iTunes, MS burps up another proprietary WMP rehash.

      Apple releases iMovie, MS wonders "Movies? Making movies? Hunh. Naaah, Prolly not important."

      Linux eats MS' lunch on the server side of things, they attack it as a cancer.

      Athlon 4 debuts, MS gets a trio of masked clowns to publically acknowledge the P4's existence (note the lack of performance claims in the ads)..

      This is the sort of thing Negroponte warned about a few years ago...

      --
      "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
  368. 80/20 Rule by daveisoverlord · · Score: 1
    An analysis we've done, 80 percent of our customers are going to see the same or lesser prices, and 20 percent are going to see very small to somewhat larger increases.

    How much you wanna bet that they made sure that was the 20% that brings in 80% of the revenues?

    --
    The perception of reality is more important than reality itself.
  369. Re:Well, the CEO is supposed to say things like th by MrBogus · · Score: 3

    Actually, IBM is either the or one of the worlds largest software companies. They may sell hardware on paper, but maintenance software and server software are a huge revenue stream for them. (For example, if you want a text editor on the AS/400, it's extra $$!)

    So, Linux is a caculated risk for IBM. If Linux cannibalizes AIX or OS/400 sales, it's not good and they'll drop Linux like a hot rock. However, IBM feels that certain Linux hardware bundles (x86 servers and S/390 clusters) can help them steal market from Sun in particular.

    --

    When I hear the word 'innovation', I reach for my pistol.
  370. Re:Honorable fights only work when... by MrBogus · · Score: 3

    That doesn't matter in the long run because we aren't fighting in the right places.

    So why was Microsoft fighting in the right places when they grassrooted the OS/2 people in the forums many moons ago? My answer is that they weren't, but the subsequent reaction certainly didn't help OS/2, both market-wise and product-wise (because it created an ideological group of advocates surrounding a product that was sorta lame. OS/2 always had more abusers than users.)

    Now, shock trooping developers against IBM certainly wasn't hard. Microsoft happily spams developers with free copies of everything, while if you wanted anything out of IBM in the old days, you had to have your account number ready, your FRU number ready, and a pliers to ready to pull some teeth with. It was all such a fantasic clusterfuck on IBM's part that it's almost hard to give MS any credit at all.

    But that's not to say that MS doesn't partake in some very nasty tactics. Work at a large MS site, and somewhere you'll find a guy who Microsoft pays to sit there and whisper anything from standard marketing crap to outright lies in people's ears. Show up at any MS conference or anywhere supposedly full of 'freindlies' and you'll here the same kind of stuff.

    The key thing to realize here is that MS is playing right out of the Slashdot playbook. How do you attack a product that's free? Attack it ideologically. Where do you get ideological arguments? Slashdot has the same argument over "Free Software" every day. Just twist and release as marketing, and Boom! The impotant little flamebots on Slashdot suddenly sound like the OS/2 Windows-hating loony fringe from so many years ago. People listen to the flamebots and it becomes a self-reinforcing trenchwar loop where the product never changes direction towards broader acceptance.

    --

    When I hear the word 'innovation', I reach for my pistol.
  371. Idea for the government to do to Steve Ballmer by Maddog_Delphi97 · · Score: 1

    Put an electronic dog collar around Steve Ballmar's neck.. and if he does something wrong, ZAP THE SONUVABITCH!! "Just a reminder that you're doing something wrong..."

  372. Re:A pox on both your houses... by Golias · · Score: 1
    NEWS FLASH! Microsoft CEO doesn't want you to use Linux!

    In related news, the movie Perl Harbor is "fantastic", according to director Michael Bay.

    This just in: Most fans of the Los Angeles Lakers say they would like to see the Lakers win the NBA championship, according to a recent poll.

    --

    Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  373. Business 101: don't energize the competition. by xmark · · Score: 2

    So this is why Ballmer's got 50 Large in the bank? Even though I don't have an MBA (or even a subscription to Forbes), I would know better than to give the opposing team a newspaper clipping to tape to the locker-room wall. However, it is true that in an unintended way, Ballmer and his fellow droogs ARE driving software innovation. Ballmer's condescending comments are exactly what keep blood and caffeine coursing through the veins of programmers at two in the morning for the glory of the cause.

  374. So ... by SnapperHead · · Score: 1

    Does that mean that Microsoft is the "Flesh eating" virus ?
    until (succeed) try { again(); }

    --
    until (succeed) try { again(); }
    1. Re:So ... by SnapperHead · · Score: 1
      Yup! Sounds just like M$!


      until (succeed) try { again(); }

      --
      until (succeed) try { again(); }
    2. Re:So ... by tijnbraun · · Score: 1

      You probably mean Staphylococcus aureus, a Gram-positive bacterium (so it's not a virus), which can cause severe skin lesions and wound infections, and sometimes more internal diseases... Don't know if microsoft belongs to this genus.

  375. Re:Is it just me? by SnapperHead · · Score: 1

    Thats a very good point. OS/2 and BeOS shouldn't be on that list. There are what 2 or 3 users of both ?


    until (succeed) try { again(); }
    --
    until (succeed) try { again(); }
  376. Re:Is it just me? by SnapperHead · · Score: 1

    Ok, so maybe 100 (200 at most) OS/2 users. Big deal. There not nearly enough to matter.


    until (succeed) try { again(); }
    --
    until (succeed) try { again(); }
  377. Microsoft's Cancer by pizen · · Score: 1

    I think that Ballmer's interpretation of this "cancer" is actually very accurate...from his point of view. The GPL prevents Microsoft from up and stealing code for their own sick, twisted purposes. If the GPL did not exist Microsoft would assemilate the parts of Linux that makes it a superior operating system into the latest rename of Windows making it a less-crappy OS. XP==2000==NT==98==95==3.1==DOS==IBM...hmm
    ---

  378. Re:welcome to slashdot by JordoCrouse · · Score: 2

    where we bitch and moan all day about every fucking thing MS says instead of getting our shit together to really be able to compete.

    Maybe instead of ACing instead you should show us what you're doing to help the cause.

    Microwindows, QT Eand XFree86 do have their shit together and w're kicking CEs ass all over the embedded space.

    Where are YOU programming today?

    --
    Do you have Linux and a DotPal? Click here now!
  379. Re:Doublespeak! Doublespeak! FUD! by chompz · · Score: 1

    Hold on a second, they can make thier own internal changes, and they can choose to keep thier changes internal and not distribute thier modified GPL'd code. Remember, just because software is GPL'd doesn't mean that if I modify it I need to distribute my changes. That is complete ludricusy, and this is the issue which needs to be emphasised to prevent MS FUK like this from being believed by business execs. They will be happy that thier internal people can tailor the software to suit thier needs.

    --
    Spring is here. Don't believe me, look outside!
  380. Freedom as a cancer by Alien54 · · Score: 2
    Let it said that unlimited freedom with no restrictions and no responsibilies and no consequences is as destructive as unlimited restrictionas. These are two sides of the same coin.

    More and more often little thoughts come into my mind, things like MS is to the Net (not .NET) as Ebola is to a Human. With the rising security issues raised by Gibson of GRC Research, this is starting to become realistic.

    Ms is becoming the thing they say they are not. Because MS has adopted the position a that anyone else's freedom is evil. That is the voice of a fascist.

    Maybe not using the words of a fascist, but certainly, in the heart.

    Check out the Vinny the Vampire comic strip

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
  381. Ballmer admits lack of MS Innovation? by Alien54 · · Score: 2
    Yeah. It's good competition. It will force us to be innovative.

    Isn't this admitting that they had no innovation before?

    sort of a fruedian slip there, accidently admit something that they wish to deny.

    Check out the Vinny the Vampire comic strip

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
  382. Re:More insight to Microsofties think... by hal200 · · Score: 1

    Not to mention that in the interview, Ballmer managed to cram the word 'innovate' in there 6 times!

    Now, just imagine what would happen if Godzilla attacked Redmond...I can just see 20,000 MSFT employees running around, screaming, "INNOVATE!!! INNOVATE!!!" before they were BBQ'ed by the big guy...Make it into a movie...Gozilla vs. Microsoft....I'd PAY to see that! =)

    --

    I just want to take over the world...Why does that automatically make me EVIL?

  383. He's right! by CaptainZapp · · Score: 2
    I'd prefer to differ though.

    Let's call Linux a tumor in the IT world (actually he once again confuses the GPL with Linux, but what the hell; let it stand for the sake of the analogy). Sure as hell it's a rotten bad tumor from the evil empires' perspective.

    Personally I actually believe it's a benevolent tumor. At least, since I use it as my primary OS, my computer pains are more or less gone.

    --
    ich bin der musikant

    mit taschenrechner in der hand

    kraftwerk

  384. You forgot by CaptainZapp · · Score: 2
    MS: Open source is notoriously insecure, because everybody can see the source code

    Linux: Ho!ho!ho!

    --
    ich bin der musikant

    mit taschenrechner in der hand

    kraftwerk

  385. innovative by superdk · · Score: 1

    There are a lot of innovative users in the Chicago area, which is exciting.

    innovative!! it's their generic term for 'microsoft approved'
    these MS marketing guys need a thesauraus(sp?)

    --


    Silly slashdot, sigs are for kids!
  386. One problem with that by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

    Companies do not have an inalienable right to sell products.

    Government should be beholden to the people it represents, not to companies.

  387. Re:Hey your machine is just like mine by Kazymyr · · Score: 1

    Tuning done: installed Linux. No more trouble.

    --
    I hadn't known there were so many idiots in the world until I started using the Internet -Stanislaw Lem
  388. Re:Where are the mods when someone actually... by Kazymyr · · Score: 1

    May I add your sig to my collection?

    --
    I hadn't known there were so many idiots in the world until I started using the Internet -Stanislaw Lem
  389. Re:Huh? by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 2
    He is right companies can't use it. What is the point of a company trying to sell something, which is what most companies do, when they have to, by law, release their additional work to the public for free. There can be no profit in that.

    Companies can use Open-Source models; however, most (not all, remember Red Hat is a company after all) decide not to because they've decided that it's not in their interests to do so.

    Companies like M$ don't take the public's interests into account here. Unless, that is, a concern over the public's interest in paying for software counts.

    Look at it this way: Would the opposite of what Ballmer said be true? If government gave funding to private companies to develop closed-source software, would *that* software be available to all?

    If you're shrewd enough, you could say, "Sure closed source software available to all. You just have to be willing/able to pay for it. And not want access to anything more than just the binaries."

    If you're really shrewd, you'll say that if good software is available for free to everyone, it'll undermine capitalism and disrupt the economy, putting professional programmers out of work. But what's the correct answer to that problem? Are we to expect the government to prop up a software industry that is not able to come up with a viable business model without stomping all over open-source/non-commercial business models? I guess they should continue to subsidize the buggy whip industry, too.

    So then, let's recap, which benefits the people the most?

    • Free/Open Soruce software development being funded by federal money? (An injustice in Ballmer's eyes.) Which eliminates artificial shortages, frees programmers from having to repeatedly re-invent the wheel so that they can develop new innovations, and generally lubricates the economy?
    • Or closed software development being funded by the government, and then in turn sold back to the people who are paying taxes to the government that's funding the development of that software? (The opposite of Ballmer's nightmare.) Because, that way, by some twisted M$-logic, if the software is closed-source, proprietary, and commercial, only then can "everyone" use it and benefit by it (as long as they have paid for a license).

    I think the answer to that is pretty obvious. It'd be downright WRONG for the government to fund ANYTHING BUT open source software. With the possible exception of code that is classified as a military secret for national security reasons.

    If the government is funding some project, then it doesn't have to make a profit in order to continue to improve. Because, duh, profits aren't fueling the development -- the government funding is.

    --
    You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
  390. Re:You missed the point by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 2

    I'm pretty sure I got the point...

    If I pay someone to develop some piece of code for me, and we consider that a work-for-hire, then I shouldn't have to pay for that code again, ever. I *own* that code. If I'm a real swell guy, I don't care if he gives that code away to other people. I'm magnanimous, but not stupid, so I tell the guy, look, you can only give this source code away if you make everyone you give it to promise that they will keep the code free. Now, if the people who take this free software and then try to sell it back to me, I'm going to take offense. If they want to sell me stuff that they developed at their own expense, that's their business. But if they want to use what I paid to develop, then they have to let me in on whatever improvements they add to it. Because, after all, I'm being nice and letting them use my source for free. I expect turnaround to be fair play.

    If I pay taxes, and that tax money goes to pay for the development of some piece of code, then all taxpayers should never have to pay for that code again, ever. If someone develops Open/Free code using federal funds, I (and every other taxpayer) owns the code. It's a lot like all the public school teachers, the police, fire department, army, and whoever else's salary is paid for by my tax dollars.

    In a non-commodity, non-commercial development model, the benefit that the software gives you is not your ability to reap profits from the masses by repackaging and selling that software, but rather your ability to use that software to do something useful.

    Software is designed to do something useful. What useful thing the software is designed to do is subtly, but crucially, different in a closed-source/commercial model as opposed to an open/free model.

    In other words, StarOffice (as an example) is a piece of software designed to allow you to produce word processing documents. By contrast Micro$oft Office is a piece of software designed to earn Microsoft lots of money, but as an afterthought or side-effect of that, it allows people who pay Microsoft for the privilege to use it to create word processing documents. Microsoft says there's no point to making Office if it doesn't make them money. The people who hack for StarOffice say that the point to StarOffice is to increase office productivity, and there is still a point for them to work on this project even if it doesn't earn money.

    If tax dollars are being spent to fund the development of software, that benefit should be freely accessible to all who use it. Or at the very least, all who use it and pay taxes. But extending this benefit to those who don't pay taxes doesn't cost any more than the cost of a download and some blank media.

    Let's see how this analogy grabs you: if I went to one of our National Parks and saw that some company had set up an admission booth just outside the entrance, and was charging people to get in at this particular entrance. Maybe you could still get in to the park through another entrance. And maybe the pay entrance entitled you to special services or additional products that the company offers you. But if all the company is selling is admission to a free park, and nothing more than that, then it's wrong. And it's extra wrong if they try to work out some arrangement whereby people who don't pay to get in at their entrance can't use the free entrances, either.

    Or, maybe it's like this: I landscape my house, then I set up a toll booth on the road in front of my house, which was paved with public money, and then I charge everyone who drives by, to pay for the landscaping because everyone who drives by my house "benefits" from seeing my pretty terraces and flowers and shrubs.

    And while I'm at it, since the neighbor's property values go up too, why the hell shouldn't I charge them a "living near me" fee?

    --
    You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
  391. Doublespeak! Doublespeak! FUD! by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 5
    My favorite quote has got to be:
    The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody.

    Ballmer justifies this belief by saying that "open source software is not available to companies." The hell it isn't! They can look at the source (and even use it!) just like anyone else can! They just can't take GPL'd code and add their own stuff to it without sharing those additions.

    What a bunch of bull.

    --
    You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
  392. I have the right to screw up! by enigmatic+anomaly · · Score: 2

    I really do not appreciate Microsoft making sure I know where the line and making sure I don't cross it. I believe that everyone has the right to make their own mistakes and learn from them. If that mistake is software piracy, and a jail term is what it takes to learn from a mistake then so be it, but I don't appreciate being preemptively spanked.

    If Microsoft becomes humanities moral compass, and then I would be worried about which direction it's pointing.

    As for the cancer comments, that is a little bit of an over simplification of the license as I am sure most of the community is aware. If you develop a piece of software FROM open source code, then yes the license does 'infect' your product, but just because you are developing for the big bad "Linux" doesn't sell your intellectual soul to the devil (and he works in Redmond.)


    Geoffrey Cameron Peart
    McMaster Software Engineering

    --
    Geoffrey Cameron Peart
    McMaster Software Engineering
    Monkies? I like Monkies
  393. What I told my Mom by ckedge · · Score: 2

    A week ago I got another letter from my Mom, just like I do every month. She knows I'm a software developer, and so she keeps her eyes out for interesting software type news. Eventually, months to years after something happens and makes it to the main-stream and gets in the Saskatchewan daily newspapers, she hears about it.

    So you can imagine my suprise to have her ask me in that latest letter: "What problem does Microsoft have with 'free' software?".

    Microsoft has done such a public job of attacking Free software that even my Mom has heard about it already, even though she's never heard of "Free Software" nor did she know what 'Free' software Microsoft was talking about.

    Now let's be clear. The Gates foundation bought a $2000 computer and loaded it with '$3000' of free software and gave it to my small home-town's library early this year, so now my Mom can see my homepage and browse the web.

    And yet, all I had to do was say "Microsoft is just doing what big monopolistic money-grubbing corporations are always trying to do: screw us."

    She immediately understood.

  394. Re:So, gentlemen... by ASIO · · Score: 1

    GATES: We Come In Peace. BALLMER: Shoot to Kill!

    --
    On the other hand, you have fingers :)
  395. Cured! by affenmann · · Score: 3

    Since when has cancer been better than the original ???
    Maybe we should tell our doctors to leave the cancer and cut away the rest instead :-)

  396. I made no such comparison by Mtgman · · Score: 1

    Any such interpretation of my post is the product of your own imagination.

    Steven

    --
    -- I have marked myself unwilling to moderate-- I don't have other accounts to artificially inflate the karma of
  397. Re:Honorable fights only work when... by Mtgman · · Score: 1

    Your point was good, and it was quite funny.

    Here's the crux though, we're not fighting in the same arena. We bash Microsoft on Slashdot, or in the newsgroups, or on the net. That doesn't matter in the long run because we aren't fighting in the right places. We don't have lobbies. We don't have salespeople to wine and dine tech managers who decide what software gets used. Right now, even though we do a ton of whining and bitching, we're still not making ourselves heard above the background noise to the people that Microsoft is whispering in the ears of. We don't have the ears of lawmakers, judges, or management. So all our Microsoft bashing, even if we manage to mature as a community and stop the mindless and juvenile "M$ is 3v1l!" junk, comes to naught because Microsoft is at the adult table playing to the powerful audiences, and we're stuck at the children's table that is Slashdot and it's ilk.

    Steven

    --
    -- I have marked myself unwilling to moderate-- I don't have other accounts to artificially inflate the karma of
  398. Honorable fights only work when... by Mtgman · · Score: 5
    Both parties are honorable. I remember reading a story not long ago in Brill's Content(even though it's an old story) about Microsoft's PR group and the tricks they pulled on IBM when they were their "main threat" because of OS/2. Here is a little excerpt.

    The evangelists were charged with proselytizing as many independent software developers as possible to write for Windows, not OS/2. IBM had a corporate policy at the time that barred any IBM employee from disparaging a competitor's product. Microsoft had no such restriction and exploited the situation masterfully. "We took maximum advantage of it," says Rick Segal, who led a 15-member evangelical team. As his group lobbied the developers and the forums, IBM had no idea of the strategic importance of these groups, he says, and the behemoth was vulnerable to the evangelists' attacks. "The issue that mattered most to me was how to make sure OS/2 never got a foothold to take over our operating system, our franchise."


    Today it's the judges, technology managers, and legislators that Microsoft is focusing on. Linux geeks don't "get it" when it comes to legal, or managerial matters. This is a war, make no mistake about it. Microsoft, even if they're smart enough to not out and out say "Linux is a cancer" they most certainly think it and will attempt to persuade others to think that as well. When one person fights and the other just stands there taking punches, well, the person taking punches may be more "honorable" but that doesn't mean they'll win. Like it or not, Ghandi died without accomplishing his goals(even though he did win India's independence from Britan, his real goal was religious tolerance between Hindus and Muslims).

    Now, weather or not we should stoop to that level in our own retaliations is another issue. But we can't afford to give Microsoft the benefit of the doubt in everything they do. They have proven, time and again, that they will use any methods they feel will be effective. Up until now they have been very effective, let's not forget that.

    Steven
    --
    -- I have marked myself unwilling to moderate-- I don't have other accounts to artificially inflate the karma of
    1. Re:Honorable fights only work when... by hoggoth · · Score: 1
      I'm wondering weather [SIC] or not you proofread your writing... :-)

      --
      - For the complete works of Shakespeare: cat /dev/random (may take some time)
  399. Help me, please! by mkcmkc · · Score: 1
    We are trying to help customers understand when they are crossing the line by putting some bumps in the road so they can't do the wrong thing.

    We're from Microsoft and we're here to help you! nyuk nyuk nyuk

    (At least he didn't say "open sauce"...)

    --Mike

    --
    "Not an actor, but he plays one on TV."
  400. News flash... by i0lanthe · · Score: 1

    Microsoft bio-labs isolate the [license] virus that causes [software] cancer!

    --
    "The Crystal Wind is the Storm, and the Storm is Data, and the Data is Life"
  401. Huh? by Raistlin99 · · Score: 1

    He is right companies can't use it. What is the point of a company trying to sell something, which is what most companies do, when they have to, by law, release their additional work to the public for free. There can be no profit in that. So if Microsoft wants to keep making money, which I'm sure it does, so GPL'd code is out of the question. As for other open source, they do use it look at the ftp clients, based on bsd licensed software

    --
    I/O, I/O, its off to disk I go, with a read and a write, and a bit and a byte, I/O, I/O, I/O, I/O
    1. Re:Huh? by Raistlin99 · · Score: 1

      You read it differently than I meant it. Yes they "can" use GPL'd code but their not going to because they have to give away the source to the program that used the code. Nowhere did I intend to say that if they used GPL'd code would their entire codebase be GPL'd

      --
      I/O, I/O, its off to disk I go, with a read and a write, and a bit and a byte, I/O, I/O, I/O, I/O
    2. Re:Huh? by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      Companies that *make* software won't like open source. Companies that *use* software won't care whether their software is open-source or not (except for the fact that they don't have to pay Microsoft's ridiculous license fees).

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    3. Re:Huh? by Professor+J+Frink · · Score: 1
      Why should including some GPLed code suddenly mean that a company's entire codebase then becomes GPLed too and they have to give all their sources away for free? Where does it say that in the GPL?

      Using GPLed code to enhance an existing product seems perfectly fine to me. Your core product is still the same, old, propreitary and thus saleable stuff, you can then give away as much GPL extras as you like, it doesn't stop people from paying for the package.

      Not every situation boils down to "Right, let's take this code, fiddle it a bit and sell that as our one and only product."

      AOL can take as much Mozilla source as they want, it doesn't stop them making a profit, in fact, it might improve them as they can spend far fewer manhours on developing client software when they can take mozilla and sling some addons on top. Which too can be GPLed. Bundling this free and Free software may not bring direct profits but doesn't stop them making it on other items which have been made more attractive by the inclusion of GPLed software.

      If you write something, it's up to you how you want to license it. The coders could have kept it proprietary and then nobody would benefit but them. Or you can GPL and everything's kept out in the open. Or you can public domain it where it's a free for all. If you don't like the license used go write your own code.

      --
      "Don't get mad, get a monkey!"
  402. I think I read it differently by Raistlin99 · · Score: 1

    Sure ballmer could have distinguised between the licenses, but I think he was mainly talking about the GPL. When he said if you use open source software, all of your software has to been open source. I read it to mean that if I use some opensourec code in Program Alpha I have to realease all the code to Alpha, which is what I have to do by law. However others on the forum are reading it as though if I use GPL'd code for Alpha, I have to release Beta through Omega as well under the GPL, which is incorrect. I think Ballmer could have reworded or clarified but I hope I'm reading it right or Microsoft needs to bring some people to decipher what the GPL actually says

    --
    I/O, I/O, its off to disk I go, with a read and a write, and a bit and a byte, I/O, I/O, I/O, I/O
  403. Hey your machine is just like mine by Raistlin99 · · Score: 1

    On your machine the W98+IE5 are dog slow. That sucks mine works just fine. Its also works pretty fast as long as I don't open up around 20 IE windows. I think your system might need some tuning if that combination doesn't work to well.

    --
    I/O, I/O, its off to disk I go, with a read and a write, and a bit and a byte, I/O, I/O, I/O, I/O
  404. Same could be said about BSD by Raistlin99 · · Score: 1

    If microsoft can't get ahold of it neither can people who want to release under a BSD style license. It makes you follow a GPL license, something people might not want to do

    --
    I/O, I/O, its off to disk I go, with a read and a write, and a bit and a byte, I/O, I/O, I/O, I/O
  405. You missed the point by Raistlin99 · · Score: 1

    The point was that it shouldn't be licensed at all. Just put it out there in the public domain. Do with it as you please. It could end up in a closed source project, or an GPL project, or even a BSD licensed project. The government shouldn't help any company, there are exceptions, but should just put it out there for everyone to use as they see fit.

    --
    I/O, I/O, its off to disk I go, with a read and a write, and a bit and a byte, I/O, I/O, I/O, I/O
    1. Re:You missed the point by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      > If I pay taxes, and that tax money goes to pay for the development of some piece of code, then all taxpayers should never have to pay for that code again, ever.

      And if it's public domain, that is exactly what will happen.

      A company may take this code, improve/add/extend it, and try to sell it. *You* get to decide if the additions that the company made are worth the money.
      Just like anywhere else.

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
  406. Where are the mods when someone actually... by Raistlin99 · · Score: 1

    says something funny.

    --
    I/O, I/O, its off to disk I go, with a read and a write, and a bit and a byte, I/O, I/O, I/O, I/O
    1. Re:Where are the mods when someone actually... by Raistlin99 · · Score: 1

      yeah once I correct it

      --
      I/O, I/O, its off to disk I go, with a read and a write, and a bit and a byte, I/O, I/O, I/O, I/O
  407. Exactly by Raistlin99 · · Score: 1

    excellent post.

    --
    I/O, I/O, its off to disk I go, with a read and a write, and a bit and a byte, I/O, I/O, I/O, I/O
  408. why doesn't this guy fall down more? by jpellino · · Score: 1
    either from his overbalanced big head or the apparent lack of any cognitive proprioreception of the physical world around him?

    talk about a reality distortion field. this creep makes steve jobs look like a monk.

    this is the borg calling the collective "black".

    --
    "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
  409. Sun-Times forgot a couple of Q's... by jpellino · · Score: 1
    I think their hard-hitting reporter had the World's most outspoken CEO and they forgot

    "What's Microsoft's Favorite Color? and

    "If You Could Be Any Kind Of Tree, What Tree Would You Be?"

    --
    "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
  410. Re:Government funded linux by Phillip2 · · Score: 1
    "The reason that I personally am an academic is that I don't have to put up with very much of that sort of BS. "

    Well likewise. However the amount of bullshit that has entered into the university system within the last 10 years has been extraordinary. Certainly NDA's are routine now, and we get circulars telling us not to give away reagents or software to other scientists without checking it out with the lawyers first.

    Yeah right, like I'm going to tell them.

    Phil

  411. Government funded linux by Phillip2 · · Score: 4
    The interview is interesting, because Ballmer seems to think that all GPL software is generated in the US, which is of course far from the truth. The simple fact is that a lot of GPL software is not produced in the US by US government sponsered research.

    Now given the nature of the GPL people working for the US government have little choice when they work on the GPL software than to write more of it. It seems clear to me that M$ is going to push hard to prevent university staff from using or contributing to the GPL code base. I think that if they succeeded they would essentially cripple large parts of the computer using research sector in the US.

    Of course in the end both US and other research sectors have benefitted from the GPL. It makes collaboration a lot easier, because the GPL is irrevocable. You know that collaborators can not later withdraw data or source code on you. In the days of NDA's this is a welcome relief.

    There is also a fascinating manifesto from one researcher explaining why he choose to release his software under GPL. Well worth reading.

    Phil

  412. Anyone else thinking of Chief Wiggum? by scorbett · · Score: 1
    From a Simpsons episode (quoted from memory):
    Chief Wiggum: "Fat Tony is a cancer on this fair city. He is the cancer and I am the..."

    (blank stare)

    "uh..."

    (leans to whisper to one of his deputies)

    "hey, what cures cancer?"


    --

  413. Re:Iocaine powder by journeyman101 · · Score: 1

    No No.....thats Fessick Vizzini is the little bald guy....Inconceivable!

  414. My name is Steve Ballmer you killed my software... by journeyman101 · · Score: 1

    My name is Steve Ballmer, you killed my software...prepare to die!

  415. Vaccine not Virus - when will they get it? by abe+ferlman · · Score: 2

    I'll keep posting this until someone more important than me points it out in print somewhere :) The GPL is not a virus, it is more like a vaccine. It prevents the worst abuses of the intellectual property regime, like people being jailed for copying, modifying or misusing microsoft windows or other products. This disease metaphor is obviously a very well thought out public relations strategy on the part of microsoft, but if the free software corner can fight back with a more convincing rhetoric (vaccine not virus), it will backfire miserably on Redmond.

    Bryguy

    --
    microsoftword.mp3 - it doesn't care that they're not words...
  416. Iocaine powder by abe+ferlman · · Score: 5

    Ballmer: Ever hear of Stallman? de Icaza? TORVALDS?

    Dread Pirate Roberts: yes.

    Ballmer: Morons.

    Bryguy
    "I've been slowly building up an immunity to proprietary software for the past 5 years"

    --
    microsoftword.mp3 - it doesn't care that they're not words...
    1. Re:Iocaine powder by Xlr8r · · Score: 1

      Did I hear Hitler???
      Ballm... Hitler?
      Anybody see connections here besides me?

      --
      blah blah blah, I'm right, and all evidence proving I'm wrong is insufficient and false.
  417. Government Aid by Lechter · · Score: 1

    It's interesting that Balmer feels that the government shouldn't support Open Source development "because it isn't available to commercial companies."

    I would argue that the government should specifically support open source because it's available to everybody, as long as they don't make a profit on it. After all it's the government's business to help its tax payers, not individual corporations. Besides since most government agencies are standardized on Windows platforms, Microsoft is already getting more "government support" money than the open source community ever has.

    --
    credo quia absurdum
  418. Cancer, huh? by bitva · · Score: 1
    Well if Linux is a "cancer", does that mean I'm a cancer cell?

    I'd rather be considered life threatening than a sheep.

    --

    I am currently not obliged to divulge that information as it might compromise the agents in the field

  419. Microsoft ate my Ballmers! by thunker · · Score: 1

    Should we have expected anything less from Steve Baldmer?

  420. Linux IS GPL'd ... and GPL is not bad. by DanEsparza · · Score: 1
    OK. I have to admit, I was a little concerned at Ballmer's claims at first. I used to be one of Microsoft's bitches. (Yes, yes, I freely admit it). I went through the Linux 12 step program and I have yet to 'fall off the wagon' -- but that's a different story. I did a little research and found that Ballmer (surprise surprise) was flat out wrong. Ballmer makes the statement...

    The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source.

    This isn't true at all. From the GPL (section 2):

    If identifiable sections of that work are not derived from the Program, and can be reasonably considered independent and separate works in themselves, then this License, and its terms, do not apply to those sections when you distribute them as separate works.

    It goes on...

    In addition, mere aggregation of another work not based on the Program with the Program (or with a work based on the Program) on a volume of a storage or distribution medium does not bring the other work under the scope of this License.

    Ballmer is quite frankly getting downright goofy in his willingness to spread FUD to protect the Microsoft empire.

    I've got to wonder if Ballmer didn't just wish he came up with the idea of a flexible, stable OS first, so he could sell it instead. (Doh!)

  421. Re:More insight to Microsofties think... by TOTKChief · · Score: 1

    Gracias. =)

  422. Re:Federally funded software development by TOTKChief · · Score: 2

    Well, he doesn't develop software for them. He develops hardware solutions for certain problems. [All I'm saying. I know he has a clearance.] But he already holds a patent from when he worked for NASA/MSFC. He can license it to whomever he wants if NASA doesn't make it a part of some project on which they need its use.

  423. More insight to Microsofties think... by TOTKChief · · Score: 4

    It's really interesting to watch how Microsoft higher-ups use words. It's almost as much as watching politicians of any stripe, but specifically American politicians in the two major parties, snipe at each other with shadings of words.

    Examplia gratis:

    The inclusion of Internet Explorer with Windows has been absolutely great ... for innovation in the software industry.

    Note: The ellipsis used is directly from the original article; I'm curious to know what was left out!

    If I could completely ignore the ellipsis--though I can't--you'd get to thinking that "innovation in the software industry" == "whatever improves M$FT's bottom line". The comments about competition are similar--they like competition that they can beat the snot out of, not that pushes a better product.

    The use of the cancer thing is interesting...M$FT is shifting its attack from the license to the OS, while noting that the OS is licensed in a matter that makes it "a cancer". It's a carefully crafted use of hyperbole, and it'll hit home.

    But I think it'll end up being a boomerang strike. I continue to expect back-end systems to merge to modern *nix systems, including Linux and the *BSD's. I think that's good from an overall push-the-ends-of-the-free/open-movements, and probably good for business in the long run, too.

  424. Slashdot Trolls Again by graveyhead · · Score: 2

    Hundreds of Slashdot readers were dissolusioned today when Slashdot posted it's 1000th troll, entitled "Ballmer Calls Linux 'A Cancer'". The more gullable breed of Slashbot fed the troll by posting the same old rhetoric: "MS sucks, Linux rools dude". More sensible users flocked like lemmings to kuro5hin where an intelligent discussion or five is taking place right now.

    Man I'm getting cynical. I need to spend less time here.



    Well, your fingers weave quick minarets; Speak in secret alphabets;
    --
    std::disclaimer<std::legalese> sig=new std::disclaimer; sig->dump(); delete sig;
  425. My response to microsoft by sfraggle · · Score: 1

    Score: -1, Flamebait

    --
    were you expecting to see a sig here? perhaps you'd rather see the inside of an ambulance!
  426. "great for Netscape"? by sdo1 · · Score: 2
    The inclusion of Internet Explorer with Windows has been absolutely great ... for innovation in the software industry. Whether it was great for Netscape is a different question.


    I'll bet he wished he could suck that last sentence back in as soon as he said it.


    -S

    --
    --- What parts of "shall make no law", "shall not be infringed", and "shall not be violated" don't you understand?
  427. How about a letter to the Chicago Sun-Times? by sdo1 · · Score: 5

    While we're all here preaching to the choir and bitching about what Mr. Ballmer said, how about instead directing some of that energy towards CORRECTING him? I'm sure the Sun-Times would be happy to print a rebuttal. Failure for us to do anything except talk to eachother about it means that Microsoft has won this battle and that those who are not in-the-know will take the statements made in the interview as facts.

    http://www.suntimes.com/geninfo/feedback.html and
    http://www.suntimes.com/geninfo/email.html have contact info. I couldn't find the contact info for the interviewer or info on snail-mail (always the BEST way to make your comments), but perhaps someone with access to the physical paper rather than the website can post those.

    -S

    --
    --- What parts of "shall make no law", "shall not be infringed", and "shall not be violated" don't you understand?
  428. What the GPL does and doesn't do by brlewis · · Score: 3

    Although I agree with mikethegeek's general sentiments, there are several points that need correction:

    1. You need to directly address the question about use of the word "free." It's worth pointing out that "free speech" is used to describe rights that are not completely unrestricted, e.g. slander, libel, yelling "fire" in a crowded theatre. The phrase "free market" is used to describe markets that aren't 100% unrestricted.
    2. The GPL does not prevent a closed-source company in general from using your code for their own purpose, or even changing it without sharing their changes from you. They are only required to give the source to those to whom they give binaries. GPLed code can't effectively be made part of a closed-source software distribution, but it can be used for other purposes.
    3. It was looseness in the Kerberos spec, not any particular code, that enabled MSFT to "embrace and extend" the protocol.
    4. The BSD license does not give you absolute freedom to do with the code what you wish. You are not allowed to remove the copyright notice, for example. An extremist definition of "free" does not fit the BSD license any more than it fits the GPL. However, "free" as English speakers generally use it fits both licenses.
    5. The GPL does not force licensees to act in a generally ethical manner. It merely prevents them from restricting certain freedoms of downstream licensees. There are plenty of other ways to be unethical.
  429. Re:This word by singe_69 · · Score: 1

    Okay, to quote a Bill Murray classic "Well I have been pushed..........." Everyone is entitled to their opinion as well as being entitled to being mindless drones. Now everyone here might think that i am talking about the redmond crew, but I am talking to the mindless "Linus Nazis" that like to post things like "M$ stole from Apple" "M$ stole DOS" and etc. Basically it comes to this, Having been doing computers for 25 years now I have seen a lot of shit come and go. Having seen what the computer world was like BEFORE Bill Gates showed up on the scene I believe that we all owe him a big debt of gratitude for pushing the market towards affordable stand alone computers. Some people will say "Oh bullshit" well let me tell you kids, i remember the days when SunOS cost you 15K in addition to the sparc station to run it on. If things would have continued without windows making computers acessable to "Idiots" then the demand for computers would not have driven the market towards the "faster/cheaper" end and we'd still be paying 10k for a green screen terminal and buying mainframe access time by the hour (like the old days) A lot of people that have failed as businessmen would like to blame anyone but themselves for the failure. In the computer industry Microsoft's position of dominance makes them the obvious target. But if you really look at their failures you'll see reasons other than MS, poor marketing (Apple) a couple of shit releases (Netscape), too much elitism (Sun) and etc. So next time you bitch about Intel, think about the fact that they run Windows, Unix, Beos, OS2, Dos and probably a bunch of things that I haven't seen. Next time you bitch about MS, just remember that both computers, and the software to run them were prohibitavely expensive before Bill decided to start driving the market. And next time you correct the word "Innovation" pull your head out and realize that innovation can mean just about anything that changes a way of doing things. I am a professional network engineer, my work causes me to regularly use; HPux, SunOS/Solaris, Irix, AIX, Linux, FreeBSD, MacOS 7,8,9,X , Windows 9x, NT4, win2k, winmill, Whistler (or XP), and Netware 3,4,5. ALL of these os's have both good points and bad points, none are infallable and I am happy with using any of them, but if I had to choose I would say that Netware 5 is the best server and Win98 is the best client. So to end my rant I just have to say that those who scream "Open Source" should also try to practice "Open Mind" a little more often. If Microsoft is truly abusing the market, then the market will eventually deal with them, meanwhile support who and what you like by PAYING for their products, because at the end of the day, if you can't make ends meet by developing free innovative software, you're gonna go where the money is. S.

    --
    "Laws are like sausages, it is best not to see them being made" Otto Von Bismarck
  430. Huh? by update() · · Score: 2
    Huh? I don't know about the rest of the article but nothing in the excerpt you quoted mentions anything about "tricks", anything I'd consider less than "honorable" or even anything particularly nasty.

    Disparaging a competing product? Boy, it's a good thing we never get any of that around here. (If you can even describe the product used by 80% of Slashdot readers as "competing.") Honestly, I've read far too many "The KDE developers are CRIMINALS! They should be in JAIL!!" comments around here to get too excited about a little noise from Microsoft.

    Unsettling MOTD at my ISP.

  431. Re:Microsoft is cancerous. the GPL is just virus-l by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 2

    Wrong.

    According to RMS, linking through any means is still making a derivitive work. He hasn't specifically made statements that i'm aware of about CORBA, but he's basically implied that this includes CORBA objects as well.

  432. Hey, they must really be scared now! by ackthpt · · Score: 2
    All this attention to Linux, GPL and OpenSource must have Bill really thumping his fist against the desk. Rally the troops, circle the wagons, pull up the draw-bridge!

    Probably what scares them the most is realizing the free ride of stealing other's ideas and calling them "Innovation" is over. Activists in the Open Source and GPL camps will be all over them ever single time they try to sell something without giving due recognition to those who actually created the work in the first place.

    When was the last time anyone mentioned VisiCorp? I wonder if M$ pays any licensing fees for that or if they .. uh hum .. feel that sort of innovation no longer requires recognition of the inventor.

    --
    All your .sig are belong to us!

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:Hey, they must really be scared now! by ackthpt · · Score: 2
      on't Steve and Bill remember that the open exchange of ideas is what built them? Well maybe they do...

      Actually, I'm positive they do, and that's why they want to crush anything like that, as it presents them with ethical and moral problems (I'm making billions off stolen ideas, if someone .. er .. bundles that stuff for free and gives it away .. ah .. not the same as innovating, you see, well, hell my kids could starve!)

      --
      All your .sig are belong to us!

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  433. Did I read this correctly? by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

    Microsoft's Chicago-based Midwest district office, which covers Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin, is the tech giant's biggest moneymaker in the country, with more than 500 customers generating $500 million in revenue annually for Microsoft.

    500 customers? Biggest moneymaker? That's 1 million in revenue per customer! Talking about expensive software!

    1. Re:Did I read this correctly? by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

      1M per customer isn't very much.
      Consider how much a system solution can cost (check TPC.org for details).

      Beside, 5000 Windows licenses are 1M.

      --

      --
      Two witches watched two watches.
      Which witch watched which watch?
  434. Where's It All Happening by devnullkac · · Score: 1
    Ballmer: ... Other than Silicon Valley, I think it's hard to point to any one place and say, "That's where it's all happening."

    I would suppose that the reason you can't point to a place other than Silicon Valley where it's all happening is because Silicon Valley is where it's all happening!

    --
    What do you mean they cut the power? How can they cut the power, man? They're animals!
    1. Re:Where's It All Happening by Dave+Rickey · · Score: 1
      Err, in a word: No.

      Silly Valley is quickly becoming an intellectually inbred creative vacuum, with about as much of a grip on reality as Hollywood. Hollywood gets away with it because in the end glitz and unreality is what they're selling. At the end of the day, either your techy toy does something useful, or it doesn't.

      Cost of living and associated salary pressures *alone* can eat your startup alive there. And it's an Internet/Overnight Delivery age, there's just not much to be gained from being there. However, it may take a while for the vulture capitalists to realize they are pouring half their investment down a rathole by putting it into an SV company. Once they do, unload your real estate there quick.

      --Dave Rickey

    2. Re:Where's It All Happening by Computer! · · Score: 1
      Nope.

      Things are happening worldwide, not just the valley. Wake up!:
      • New York
      • Chicago
      • Dallas
      • Bombay, India
      • Scotland
      Etc, etc. The Valley just crashed the hardest, and started it all, but the cat's out of the bag, circa 1995.

      --
      If you fall off a building, go real limp, because maybe you'll look like a dummy and people will be like hey, free dummy
  435. Well... by Auckerman · · Score: 2
    "Open source is not available to commercial companies. The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source...."

    Tell that to Apple, Mr. Balmer.

    This is nothing more than RMS flamebait and he knows it. Not only that, there are so many things that is just utter bullshit. Does he really think people wanted to use a web browser to look at thier Hard Disk? (I doubt it) The main problem of IE and Windows integration is that there will eventually be only ONE provider of Internet APIs (known to the world as .NET) and possibily one provider of internet "services". No competition. No motivation for improvement. Nothing. In a perfect work, companies like Sony, HP, and IBM would be able to choose what kind of internet services they provide to their customers. They would complete, which would benifit the consumer. Now we are limited to three views of Internet Services: .NET, Apple's iTools, and AOL. Though I'm a big fan of iTools, its market share is relativly low, which leaves AOL vs. .NET. Not much of a choice.

    Now that I ranted and got side tracked, I come back to the whole flamebait issue. This is a brilliant idea and works in politics all the time. One side of a debate says something calmly and off the hand that is abusurd to anyone who knows what they are talking about, but to the uneducated masses seems plausible. They then wait for the other side to respond quickly and pointedly and then claim they are being "attacked" or call the response "unreasonable". If people aren't paying attention, and trust me they won't be, they will accept it. We already know whats going to happen, RMS is going to issue a press release or say something in public, because no matter what he can't let anyone mix up Open Source, GPL, and intellectual property. We all know how much tact RMS has.

    Brilliant, Mr. Ballmer, just brilliant.

    --

    Burn Hollywood Burn
  436. no, no! by gagganator · · Score: 1

    oss /should/ respond! it gets non-m$ names and viewpoints in the papers. balmer is not too bright for giving his competition this opportunity

    --
    the animal doesnt even have opposable thumbs, focker!
  437. Re:This word by branteaton · · Score: 1

    Cancer hits indiscriminately. Live (use Linux) long enough, you may get it (be impacted negatively by GPL). Go whoring (use M$), and you never know what you'll catch, or whether it's something you can ever shake off.

    --
    this .sig intentionally inane.
  438. Startling revelation. by 3-State+Bit · · Score: 1

    [Ballmer] calls Linux "a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches."

    As usual, The Simpsons prophesied this long ago:

    Chief Wiggum: Fat Tony is a cancer on this fair city. He is the cancer and I am the...uh...what cures cancer?

    What's the significance? Does this mean Tux is an underground mafioso? Is Ballmer really a bumbling (and vain) enforcer of the old-world politics? Will Government eventually "triumph" in the face of Good Innovation (TM) [most horrible!], in a Fahrenheit 451 way, just as we will inevitably find a cure for cancer? Draw your own conclusions.
    Mod only after you've thought about it.
    Peace.



    PS.
    Note: Neither tea-leaves, the Qur'an, nor The Simpsons have been conclusively shown to predict the future in any prescient way, although frequently "predictions" are discovered after the fact in all three.
    All time Simpson's quote: (From an episode):
    Homer: These candidates make me want to vomit in terror!
    And:
    ___: It makes no difference which one of us you vote for. Either way, your planet is doomed... DOOMED!
    Brockman: [brightly] Well, a refreshingly frank response there, from Senator ___.
    ~

  439. Quick... by jvl001 · · Score: 1

    How much for MS chemotherapy? I have a whole lab full of cancerous computers!

    --
    /. is to journalism as graffiti is to a bathroom wall
  440. Re:Microsoft is cancerous. the GPL is just virus-l by hillct · · Score: 2

    Huh? What are you (previous poster) saying? Under that logic ig I were to write a plugin for Photoshop, and release it under the GPL, then I would cause Adobe to suddeny be in violation of the GPL (through no action of their own)? I think you mis-understood my earlier suggestion, because the interpretation of the GPL presented by the previous poster makes absoluitly no sense.

    --

    --Got Lists? | Top 95 Star Wars Line
  441. Microsoft is cancerous. the GPL is just virus-like by hillct · · Score: 3

    Steve Ballmer doesn't know his epidemiology. In fact, Microsoft is a cancer. Any program which includes Microsoft componants suddenly starts growing out of control until it becomes bloated and unusable.

    In all fairness however, I can see how he might make the mistake of thinking the the GPL is Visus-like (not cancer-like however) in that it does attach itself to the IP it touches, but with properly written code, you can include functionality based on GPL'd source, as a plugin to your main application. This preserves the treditional IP state of your product, if you're so short sighted as to choose not to GPL your entire product.

    --CTH

    --

    --Got Lists? | Top 95 Star Wars Line
  442. Interesting Post by virg_mattes · · Score: 2

    I'd mod you up if I had points to use. I agree that the FSF isn't exactly the group I want fighting Redmond, since they too are rather extreme in their views. Both groups seem to forget the middle ground.

    Virg

  443. Government and public domain by xenocide2 · · Score: 1

    I'm no lawyer, but when I look at the legal code, and I see "the Federal Government cannot hold copyrights" I think that means no copyrights, and the way copyleft works is to establish copyright first, then copyleft it. Since the government cannot hold copyrights, that means it cannot copyleft anything either.

    --
    I Browse at +4 Flamebait

    Open Source Sysadmin

  444. MS and free software fighting the same battle? by Xibby · · Score: 3

    Something just hit me with all this talk of IP...MS and free software are fighting the same IP battle it two totally different ways. Stick with me here for a second...

    Say I create a nifty library. Something everybody needs. Something everybody wants. But I worked very hard on it, and I want compensation for my hard work. The compensation I'm asking for: the source to any software using my library must be made available in the same fashion my source code is available. If that's asking too much, write your own library. You don't have to compinsate me until you finish the project.

    Now say Microsoft creates a nifty librars. Something everybody wants. Something everybody needs. But some of their staff worked very hard on it, and the company wants compensations. So they wrap it into developer kits, MFC's, etc. Now that they've been compinsated, you can start work on your project.

    Linux isn't the cancer. No no, it's the users who don't really understand what Linux, the GPL, FSF, monoplies, profits, IP, etc. are.

    --
    I'm going to go back in my box and will think within the limits of my box: MS Sucks Linux Good I read too much Slashdot.
    1. Re:MS and free software fighting the same battle? by the+bluebrain · · Score: 2

      Good point.
      One direction MS wants to go (obviously), is integrating software into machines, processes, what-have-you, but in a completely opaque manner.
      Imagine a car, where it's impossible for you, the owner, to legally take it apart, find out how it works, or modify it in any way. Or an aeroplane - built by MSAircrafts, serviced (exclusively) by MSAircrafts, fuel supplied (exclusively) by MSAircrafts, and so on.
      Now for mechanical devices, this is really inconceivable - but for computers? Digital Video Recorders? WMF-players? Your stereo?

      The philosophical issue is the following: One side regards software, in the abstract, to be a tool, to be used in any business or private process - from running a bank's back-office to watching a film (a.k.a. "movie"). The focus is getting the job done, the payment for writing GPL SW is better tools, made by other GPL SW developers.
      The other side regards software as a packaged product to be sold, as-is, no-you-don't-need-to-understand-how-it-works-thank -you, potentially pretty much without regard as to whether it gets the job done the way the consumer wants. (I, for one, don't want my video in a form in which it can't be media-shifted - which doesn't actually mean that I'm going to steal it, BTW).

      The point of the last post, as I understand it, is that GPL software development actually would work on a large scale in a business environment, that innovation would happen in software even if *all* of it were GPL'ed, and that there would still be payed jobs for programmers, because it would still make sense for people to pay programmers, even if the result were open source / free / GPL'd.

      But then, I'm preaching to the choir here, aren't I?

      --
      yes, we have no bananas
  445. Not so fast by jockm · · Score: 2

    Microsoft did a buyout from Spyglass back in 96/96 for about $20Mil. That's hardly nothing...

    --

    What do you know I wrote a novel
  446. Re:If Linux is a Cancer by dvNull · · Score: 1

    Herpes just sounds a whole lot more dirty ;)


    Just a reminder to all :

  447. Re:If Linux is a Cancer by dvNull · · Score: 3

    No it isnt ..

    If Linux is cancer then Microsoft is Herpes ..


    Just a reminder to all :

  448. libel? by room101 · · Score: 1

    I understand what MS is doing and why, but what I don't get is how is why/how they are getting away with it.

    What he says about Linux/GPL is totaly untrue. My company uses gcc, gdb, etc., but does that mean that our code has to be free software? nope.

    It seems to me that if said what he said about some other company, they would get sued for libel. And I think the other company would come out pretty well, as it wouldn't be too hard to show damages.

    Maybe they are getting away with it (so far) because there isn't one company to sue them? I guess any company who's business is based on Linux and/or GPL software could sue? (RedHat, etc.)

    --
    room101 -- how much can you stand before they break you?
    (they always break you eventually)
  449. Media may pick this up by mike449 · · Score: 2

    "Linux spreads like cancer, killing proprietary software" sounds catchy. The same way they say on CNN "people download music from Napster" or "DeCSS allows to make illegal copies of DVD's". It is not true, but after being repeated million times, it becomes the "public opinion".

  450. Re:Microsoft is cancerous. the GPL is just virus-l by einhverfr · · Score: 2
    I just wish Linux would move to a BSD-like license to shut up cocksuckers like Ballmer.

    I know I am responding to a troll, but I think that there is an interesting point to be made here. I don't think Linux would be where it is now if it was not originally released under the BSD license-- it would have been stolen into oblivion.

    The current time, though, is a different story-- BSD license does not doom one to failure in the OSS market, it just makes it harder to succeed. Once critical mass is reached, this is all academic (see Apache). How many proprietary Apache's have tried to compete with the OSS versions? Note that none fo them were successful.

    I don't think that it would be the death of Linux to move away from the GPL, as long as it remained open source. But I don't think it would be here today if it was not for the GPL.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  451. But Linux is a cancer - on MSFT profits by WillSeattle · · Score: 2

    While Balmer is using FUD in his carefully chosen phrasing that implies, but does not state, that Linux is a cancer in terms of the GPL enforcement, he has reason to do so.

    The main problem right now is the entire business world isn't buying MSFT spin on why they should buy Office XP. Most are being forced to "upgrade" to Office 2000 and Windows 2000, or lose product support, but the move to Office XP and Windows XP locks them into a never-ending product "upgrade" cycle dictated by MSFT.

    So Balmer is faced with a product launch that's already fizzled. You could tell, just by talking to people in line at the Seattle International Film Fest who had helped with tech and promo at the product launch in NYC - the business public isn't buying it.

    Why? Because they don't need to. Part of this is that we've shot them down on why you need Windows XP for servers, when a Linux box will do the job at half the price, and more reliably, with better TPC for your database or file ops.

    [caveat - I own both MSFT and RHAT shares]

    Their server growth is dead; the xBox is doomed to be a third runner in a tech world where first place wins the big bucks, second place wins some bucks, and anything lower than that loses its shirt. All they have is the PC franchise, and people just aren't buying the latest and greatest.

    And why aren't we buying new PCs? Because what we have works, and we care more about other things. The market has matured and Intel can't even sell its P4 chips at the upper end, cause the consumer doesn't care. Nor does business.

    --
    --- Will in Seattle - What are you doing to fight the War?
  452. We must gather the market and...yawn by smittyoneeach · · Score: 2
    Q: The new software also allows a user to install it only twice. You have recently cracked down on corporate piracy and large-scale pirating operations. Are home users next?

    A: Intellectual property should be protected. ... Our goal is to try to educate people on what it means to protect intellectual property and pay for it properly. We are trying to help customers understand when they are crossing the line by putting some bumps in the road so they can't do the wrong thing.

    Ballmer, I don't know who you are trying to impress with this train of thought. As a purchaser of every version of your OS from 3.0 to 98, and Office suite from 4.3 on, I am truly offended.

    Your products are simply maintenance intensive. Non-trivial use of them requires occasional rebuilds from bare metal, as the poorly documented file structure and applications overwhelm even the power user. Some of the Gnomes of Redmond might survive within the two installation limit, but I'm uncertain I could.

    Wasn't Frank Zappa prescient in the Joe's Garage libretto:

    Various ways were sought

    To bind us all together

    But alas

    Sameness was unenforceable

    It was about this time

    That someone

    Came up with the idea of

    Total Criminalization

    Based on the principle that

    If we were All crooks

    We could at last be uniform

    To some degree

    In the eyes of

    The Law

    Suggestion: blow MS right off. Just say NO!

    --
    Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
  453. Real Life Isn't About Who's Right and Who's Wrong by DerKlempner · · Score: 1

    By stooping to his level, we're playing their game.

    Oh, so now MS is on a level below all Linux advocates? Please explain to me how differences in opinion (in business models and what makes business work) between MS and all free software supporters makes one person right and the other one wrong.

    As far back as I can remember, Microsoft has never publically stated that Linux is purely evil; nor that the people who support it spread FUD about other OSes; nor that Linux users were mindless sheep following a set standard; nor that Linux is an unstable OS.

    My point is that while MS may offer goods or services that you as a person or you as a user base may not like, want, or use, they have yet to come public saying that you are wrong for those beliefs. However, even this very forum (the general users; not everyone is an MS-basher) is guilty of continual public beratement of MS because their beliefs and business models don't match the ideals of the free software (and Linux) beliefs and business models.

    --
    UNIX: Find it, fsck it, forget it.
  454. Re:Real Life Isn't About Who's Right and Who's Wro by DerKlempner · · Score: 1

    Did you read the article? Hell, did you even read the friggin title of the page?

    Yes, I did. And I STILL don't see where Microsoft used the word "evil" to descibe Linux or any other form of free software. All I see is a difference of opinion between Microsoft's PR people and the general opinion of the people on this forum.

    --
    UNIX: Find it, fsck it, forget it.
  455. Re:Real Life Isn't About Who's Right and Who's Wro by DerKlempner · · Score: 1

    How can you compare them?

    The same way that it's stated: Ballmer has a job within Microsoft to relay the business models and plans for the company to try to increase use of their product (and thereby, their sales as well); free softare advocates (i.e. the general readership of this forum) have to take it upon themselves to do the same basic job Ballmer is doing (without pay!) to help increase use of whatever free software the are promoting.

    I suspect that if you examine all of the press releases from well known Linux distributions like Red Hat or Debian, you wouldn't find Microsoft-bashing, just as you won't find Linux-bashing in standard Microsoft fare. However, if you were to read forums populated by zealous Windows users, you might very well find "beratement" of Linux.

    I couldn't agree with you more. But I wasn't comparing Microsoft or Ballmer to Redhat, Debian, etc. I was trying to portray the fact that Microsoft gets bashed more in this forum than I've ever seen or heard of Microsoft speaking negatively of free software or of Linux, all because most free software supporters do not share the same opinions (not facts) of business models that Microsoft has adopted.

    I wonder what is wrong with criticizing something that doesn't "match the ideals of free software beliefs and business models"?

    Oh, there's nothing wrong with it. I was just replying to the original post where the author stated that "by stooping to his level, we're playing their game." There is no game, just differences of opinion. Ballmer's opinion is first backed by a boss and a paycheck, and then probably backed by a bit of personal belief. Most people on this forum probably have an opinion first backed by personal belief and then possibly a boss and a paycheck.

    --
    UNIX: Find it, fsck it, forget it.
  456. Re:Real Life Isn't About Who's Right and Who's Wro by DerKlempner · · Score: 1

    One word - GREED. Enough is enough. Take your marbles and go home Bill.

    Why? Isn't it the goal of every business to make money? Isn't it also a goal to make the public more aware of why you think your products or services is better than what's out there already, all in the hopes that the public will then purchase your goods or services?

    Linux advocates might be a little over zealous and rabid at times. But that overwhelming stink of GREED that emanates form Redmond is killing this industry.

    OK, so what you're telling me is that being "rabid" or "overzealous" is fine if you don't make money off of it, but being "rabid" or "overzealous" (yes I know that you weren't using those words in this fashion) to make money causes greed? And not only simple greed, but greed that is "killing this industry?" Once again, you prove my point: difference of opinion doesn't make one person right and the other person wrong; it creates a difference of opinion.

    --
    UNIX: Find it, fsck it, forget it.
  457. Burn your Microsoft software! by clone22 · · Score: 1

    It's time to organize public burnings of Microsoft software! But first, buy puts.

    --
    Ask me about my vow of silence!
  458. Disgustingly Typical of Slashdot by Plum · · Score: 1
    Ballmer Calls Linux "A Cancer".

    Well, no shit! What else would he say? "Umm, Linux is really great, and we hope to work with it more". For fuck's sake, this is stupid.

    The title of this story reads like a goddamn tattletale: "Mommy, Steve Ballmer called Linux a Cancer!". Slashdot used to be a place, and still is, on occasion, where one could visit and dig into some really interesting stuff. Over the past few years, Slashdot has taken a serious dive, picking and jawing at some of the most useless, "Linux-Ego" driven material anyone ever wasted time over. This story is a prime example. This is the best thing you can post, some m$ft jackhole spouting epitaphs about an initiative you already know he hates! Christ (or whoever is on the job for you) help us if this the shape of things to come.

  459. BSD code in NT by imipak · · Score: 2

    andrew@INEGO /cygdrive/c/WINNT
    $ grep -ir "regent" *
    grep: Profiles/Administrator: Permission denied
    grep: system32/config/AppEvent.Evt: Permission denied
    grep: system32/config/SecEvent.Evt: Permission denied
    grep: system32/config/SysEvent.Evt: Permission denied
    Binary file system32/FINGER.EXE matches
    Binary file system32/FTP.EXE matches
    Binary file system32/NSLOOKUP.EXE matches
    Binary file system32/RCP.EXE matches
    Binary file system32/RSH.EXE matches

    Sure enough, it's:

    Copyright (c) 1983 The Regents of the University of California.
    All rights reserved.

    Great, so NT is open source! Can I start burning it onto CD and selling them, then? Steve Ballmer says I can...
    --
    "I'm not downloaded, I'm just loaded and down"

  460. Ballborg by marcolin · · Score: 1

    The Billborg icon is a classic, but I think
    it's time we had a Ballborg. He looks pretty
    goofy already. Any Photoshop studs out there?

  461. My computer had cancer but it's in remission now by Demerara · · Score: 1

    I uninstalled Office97. No, wait, there it is again. shucks. More surgery, chemo, radio. When will my computer be free of Office97? But seriously, shame on Ballmer. He and his MS heavies are so transparently trying to do down the open source movement. . 1

    --
    Backward%20compatibility%20is%20over-rated
  462. Re:If Linux is a Cancer by mikethegeek · · Score: 2

    "If Linux is cancer then Microsoft is Herpes"

    Actually, if we're talking diseases here, Microsoft is AIDS. Why? Once you contract AIDS there is nothing for it but expensive treatements (upgrades), while it inevitably destroys your immune system (erodes security) until you (your data) eventually die.

    --
    === The price of freedom is eternal vigilance
  463. Re:What if I **LEASE** you my modified GPL code? by mikethegeek · · Score: 2

    " What if my business hasn't "given" the binaries to our client but merely LEASES equipment and software to them? We still own it, so it's never truly left our possession. On what basis must we give out source code? Do we have to give it out at all?"

    I don't think that would fly under the GPL. My understanding isn't perfect, but I'd think letting the code leave your hands at ALL constitutes distribution. The GPL supersedes any "EULA" you may craft with your "software leasee", as your only right to modify and distribute the code at ALL comes from the GPL.

    --
    === The price of freedom is eternal vigilance
  464. My business plan by cyberformer · · Score: 1

    Ashamed to admit it, but I once bought a copy of Windows. By Ballmer's philosophy, I have the right to modify it (say, by replacing the startup screen with my own message instead of those irritating clouds), make as many copies as I like and sell them for profit.

    1. Re:My business plan by Ape8888 · · Score: 1

      No, you LICENSED a copy, big difference.

  465. Government funding by eXtro · · Score: 1
    Q: Do you view Linux and the open-source movement as a threat to Microsoft? A: Yeah. It's good competition. It will force us to be innovative. It will force us to justify the prices and value that we deliver. And that's only healthy. The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody. Open source is not available to commercial companies. The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source. If the government wants to put something in the public domain, it should. Linux is not in the public domain. Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches. That's the way that the license works
    1. Re:Government funding by eXtro · · Score: 1
      Sorry about that, I hit submit instead of preview.

      Government funds closed-source work too, Balmer doesn't seem to have a problem with that however. Yet in the case of closed source work only the copywrite holder has any access to it, unless they agree on a fee.

      This is really an exact parallel with the Open Source movement. Nobody has access to it unless they agree to the fee. The fee in this case isn't monetary, its an agreement to abide by the licensing terms. All companies have access to open source software. The cost of making use of it may be deemed too high by some companies, i.e., they can't agree to the licensing terms.

      Contrast this to Microsoft however, only companies with very deep pockets have access to the software. There is a financial step function which must be overcome in order to get the Windows source code. On TOP of that there are licensing restrictions as well.

    2. Re:Government funding by Temsi · · Score: 1

      What he doesn't seem to realize (or maybe he does, but doesn't want to talk about), is that the GPL doesn't force you to do anything. If you want to use code that is licensed under GPL, that's great, just stick to the license. If you don't want to use the code, don't use it. It's really up to you.
      Also, he seems to have drastically misunderstood the license, since he states: "The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source."
      Of course, anyone who knows anything about the GPL, knows this is total BS. It just means that if you use GPL code for 'a particular piece of software' you must release the code to 'that particular piece of software'. It doesn't mean you have to release the source code to the rest of your products.
      Also, he doesn't specify 'USE', although I suspect he's talking in development terms, his comment might be misunderstood as "You can't run closed source and open source on the same computer.", which may be exactly the misunderstanding he wants to generate.
      What a big portion of his target audience doesn't realize is that there is plenty of proprietary and closed source software available for Linux. Just look at Corel WordPerfect or Corel Draw, or Unreal and Quake or all those games and applications available, which are not open source in any way shape or form.
      So, technically, there's nothing stopping M$ from releasing Office or IE for Linux, except they realize that wouldn't make them enough money (it would in fact ease the move from Windoze to Linux for businesses), the main reason being that they don't own any part of Linux (they own a big share of Apple, which is the only reason Office and IE are available for Macs).
      His over simplifications may be a misunderstanding, or it may simply be SPIN, to try to invoke sympathy from those NOT in the know. Which of course are his primary market targets anyway. How else can you explain that amazingly annoying animated paperclip?

      --
      -- This sig for rent.
  466. The Agent Smith by fzorrilla · · Score: 1

    Steve Ballmer sounds like the Agent Smith In The Matrix.

    "Human beings are disease, you are the Cancer on this planet and we, we are The cure"

    And you know the end of the movie.

    Francis Zorrilla Dominican Republic

  467. Re:This word by projecto2501 · · Score: 1

    How to make Linux a real cancer. Create a CD which boots the Xbox to Linux. This CD should contain a nice GUI and some office productivity apps (spreadsheet, email, ect.). Distribute the CD for free.

  468. We can't win by Protohiro · · Score: 1

    I am depressed. I don't think we can beat Microsoft, I really don't. Ask any non-technical person what they think of Microsoft and they weill just say what Microsoft says, that all MS is guilty of is making better software. We all know that's true, but we have no money and the media could care less what we think.

    Hell, Microsoft has their own news network if they need it. All Microsoft wants to do is kill Linux on the server. And all they need to do is say that its bad and Joe Blow CEO will feel uneasy enough to choose NT instead. And honestly, 99% of those servers will work fine with NT. It will cost more, but the CEOs don't know that and besides, if they think Linux can hurt their company...

    Arrgg. We just can't beat these guys. Sad, sad, sad. The worst thing is that the "good guys" don't have the stomach to fight as dirty as Microsoft, ie, lie (rightly so). So we will be destroyed, or at least marginalized. Unless the goverment starts enforcing the anti-trust laws again (hahahahahah) we're screwed. As is the beef industry...and publishing....and entertainment.......


    ---

    --


    ---
    "Against stupidity the very god themselves contend in vain" -Johann Schiller
  469. Re:MS has to bully the enemy because .. by Protohiro · · Score: 1

    I hate to do this, but this arguement...well its just like the Microsoft arguement, ie, irrelevent. Linux should really be compared only to Windows 2000 Pro, not Windows 95. Of course, this is just the sort of lie of omission that Microsoft likes to use, so maybe we ought to just play their game and say the same thing.


    ---

    --


    ---
    "Against stupidity the very god themselves contend in vain" -Johann Schiller
  470. If Linux is a cancer... by Topgun1 · · Score: 1

    ...then I suppose it's a good thing we haven't found a cure for cancer yet!

  471. Public Domain by Husaria · · Score: 1

    "If the government wants to put something in the public domain, it should. Linux is not in the public domain. Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches. That's the way that the license works."

    Linus can do whatever he pleases with Linux. Ballmer is just jealous because there's a better OS than WinBlowz out there. Granted, Mozilla needs work and it doesnt have all the games you want to play on it, but it is a good OS, stable fast. I've had Mandrake since March and have had one crash, while WinMe crashed on me just this morning!
    I love how he's kissing Gates' ass in the article.
    But Linux being a cancer? What about MS being a cancer to competition?

    1. Re:Public Domain by gsmraxe · · Score: 1

      If the govt provided funding for private enterprises, microsoft would be taking money anytime it was handed out. But because they cannot steal linux code and use it for their own purpose, they'll complain. If the govt was smart, they would fun OSS and USE it rather than wasting our tax money purchasing expensive licences from microsoft. telnet://metaledge.dynodns.net Metal Edge BBS!

  472. So, gentlemen... by Scoria · · Score: 2

    (We fade in on GATES and BALLMER, GATES only a shadow to us in a long robe (much like CATS), and BALLMER smoking a cigarette. They are in a dark room, surrounded by rack mount servers.)

    GATES: So gentlemen, all is going perfectly to plan...
    BALLMER: Yes, master. We have even trolled Slashdot.
    GATES: Excellent! ::pinky to mouth:: Does Windows XP have the .. required .. amount of bugs? How about that innovative thing you call a .. software .. firewall .. ? Mmm, I like how that sounds. It will look good on TV. "Windows XP has integrated sec..."
    GEEK1: NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!
    (GATES spots a RedHat 6.2 CD in GEEK1's hands.)
    GATES: CANCER!
    (Two guards fire at the RH CD together. We see it shatter into a thousand pieces.)
    GATES: Resistance is futile, young one. Mwhahahaha...
    BALLMER: Can you imagine a Beowulf cluster of trolls?
    GATES: I am one, drone.

    --
    Do you like German cars?
  473. Public domain vs. free software by gentlewizard · · Score: 1
    I thought the most important quote of the piece was:
    "If the government wants to put something in the public domain, it should. Linux is not in the public domain."

    Ballmer is right to make the distinction between "free" software in the RMS sense, and public domain software which is free for anyone to use in any way, including embedding in a commercial product. While Free Software attempts to protect its creators by requiring that it only be used in other Free Software, public domain works are those whose intellectual property claims have expired and whose use is therefore unregulated.

    Perhaps Free Software licenses should contain a time expiration like a patent or copyright, after which time they would become public domain works.

  474. Re:Real Life imitates the Internet (during a DoS) by BlackListed · · Score: 1

    Why does our community respond with good wisdom and well spoken responses when our Intellectual Freedom is at risk (e.g. GPL violations, patents, file sharing restrictions), but so poorly when those shared Ideals are stomped on with FUD from Microsoft Corporate? Isn't this MS Corporate rhetoric the equivalent of a DoS attack on the public via the media? Or is this something more nefarious, like a diversionary attack on the Free Software community to keep us from realizing how simple it is even today to do with Free Software what Microsoft hopes to accomplish with .NET in 3 years?

    Though I agree wholeheartedly we should not reply directly to Balmer's troll (read: MS Corporate Strategy), I believe it is our right to use the publicity to issue an unexpected response. That is, send a reply to all the major publications with the subject title "Linux luminaries respond to Balmer's Cancer attack", then never mention Balmer or Microsoft anywhere in the text. Just use it to explain two or three of the top reasons someone might choose the GPL or another Free Software license, or use it to announce the "Best of" break-throughs in recent software releases that *anyone* and *everyone* has the freedom to use and modify. Do this consistently and soon even the public will realize MS Corporate is sinking and desperately grasping for someone to drag to the bottom with them.

    I remember several years ago (1995) when I first got into Linux at college, the Linux crowd was dominated by people who wrote with deep insight, strong resolve and a few basic common goals. Though the community has now expanded greatly in numbers, can we not create our own "Declaration of Independence from Corporate FUD"? If this is really a "community", why can't we choose a wise and well spoken group of representatives to respond and take advantage of the publicity this type of media attention gaurantees the Linux community? And, when real points *ARE* made, then their job is not to defend why those aren't true, but to place them on the great, publically available *Things to do to improve Linux and Free Software*.

    Because this is the Internet and we have the freedom to do so, we could even post such responses prior to their release, in an effort to accomplish something many of our current politicians fail miserably: staying connected to all those represented, not just those on their doorstep. Slashdot discussions may be one help the "luminaries" could use to stay connected to the community by providing them with direct feedback from those they represent, and possibly direct (well, electronic) interaction.

    Hmmm... the idea of a virtual State has merit. "No paper ballots here" could be our State Moto.

  475. This is scary stuff... by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

    I can see people a couple of years before "1984" (the book) buying into things like "protection of intellectual property", "educating the consumer", "simplyfing licenses by force". He talks as if we, the consumers, are but mere babes in the woods, and need our hands held to push the ON button. Soon, we can expect smart client monitors (ala the Paperclip) whenever we have to plug into Hailstorm/Passport/whatever just to check up on the news or send an email.

    Slowly the noose is tightening....

    --
    Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
  476. msripv6.exe by crusher-1 · · Score: 1

    =hypocracy. Gee, isn't that an open source development (ipv6)? Yes, M$ is allowed to us it. But they have to release any part to the GPL'ed code that they have modified in order for the rest of the "community" to see it. If they "bundle" or tie it to a "proprietary" software program they have the right to keep that part of it to them selves. Any company has the right to keep their proprietary software protected, but they must release any modified "GPL" software they tinker with - M$ is no exception. I don't have a problem with M$ regarding use of GPL software (and I'm no fan of M$). However, this recent discovery is proof of M$' hypocracy! To slam and spread vicious FUD about the "evils" of Open Source while all the while researching open source developments is sleazy. This is nothing new and should come as no shock. People need to be reminded of this and this should be used to illustrate that M$ relies on open source in many ways. Can you say Kerobos(excuse my spelling) protocal? The guys at MIT and Berkeley sure can, especially after the release of W2K and the M$ "proprietary version of this open standard, which was used to corner clients into upgrades of W2K. Gates, Ballmer, and company are very worried about the open source movement. Why? Because they haven't figured out a way to effectively "embrace and extend" the M$ control over it. But this doesn't stop them from attempting to hijack any relevent or useful developments that will come out of the Open Source community.
    Cheers. :)

  477. This is funny too... by cavemanf16 · · Score: 2
    Balmer replying to a question in the article: We are trying to simplify our licensing practices in many ways. We are clearly providing some incentive to upgrade more regularly. Your better customers get a better price. An analysis we've done, 80 percent of our customers are going to see the same or lesser prices, and 20 percent are going to see very small to somewhat larger increases.

    And I'll bet that 20% is the big business customer's (where all the money is really made by M$), and they'll be forking out 80% of the profits M$ makes on .NET. So average Joe will say, wow!, look at what great savings this is WinXP/OfficeXP is while the business customer's are forced to waste even more money on software. That's not innovative, that's extortionist.

  478. Let's make sure ... by towatatalko · · Score: 1

    The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody. Open source is not available to commercial companies." -- not available? GPL code is available to everybody who abides by GPL rules, including any commercial company. But ofcourse commercial M$ feels excluded from GPL game, because they want to play software game by M$ profit rules. Poor boys, after several years of GPL developement and massive movement towards GPL among developers, including heavyweights such as IBM, M$ is realiyzing they're missing a lot of fun. Now they want to be included. But "included" means giving up their corporate ego very much glued to profit. Bottom line? $M wants to have a lot of profit but also a lot of fun, because profit without fun is like a pit filled with gold - you can buy a lot of things with that gold but feel imprisoned. Can M$ buy a lot of fun with a lot of gold? It seems a lot of fun is not for sale so they can't buy it an they know it, therefore they'd rather destroy it than let others have it. Let's make sure that won't happen.

    --

    IP was invented for the sake of lawsuits.
  479. READ Microsoft's email response... by towatatalko · · Score: 1

    Here's the response by Microsoft to the email "Microsoft" attempted by "chongo" and resent by "towatatalko" (for the opriginal email-text see below). I guess this could invite few more comments or though there's hardly anything new in the M$'s view here, but one thing is clear: they know the issue is generating more and more interest and they have to define their position just in case the next escalation it comes around. Microsoft Shared Source May 2001 The past several months have seen a growing number of people talking about source code - the code that underlies every computer software program. Over the past 25 years, few people outside of the development community talked about source code and even fewer had access. Today, that is changing as more and more software products offer some access to source code under certain conditions. Many of our customers and partners have asked us about our source code philosophy and how it compares to other models in the industry today, specifically the Open Source Software (OSS) model used for such software as the Linux operating system. Microsoft views source code and source code licensing as just one component of an umbrella framework that is the Commercial Software Model. Five key elements make up this model: 1.Community: A strong support community of developers. 2.Standards: Promote collaboration and interoperability while supporting innovation and healthy competition. 3.Business model: Promote the growth of a profitable business. 4.Investment: Level of research and development investment drives resources for future innovation. 5.Licensing model: Provides product and source access without jeopardizing the intellectual property rights of those who create or use the software. Shared Source Discussions Craig Mundie Discusses Shared Source on CNET The Commercial Software Model and Sustainable Innovation. (May 17, opinion) Shared Source Philosophy Overvie Microsoft affirms commitment to shared source in this overview. Microsoft Shared Source Frequently Asked Questions This FAQ addresses common questions and concerns about our Shared Source Philosophy. The Commercial Software Model Craig Mundie, Senior Vice President of Advanced Strategies, outlines Microsoft's position on source code sharing at the New York University Stern School of Business. (May 3, 2001, text remarks) Tradeoffs in Software Development Philosophies View the full speech from May 3, 2001 at NYU. Speech delivered by Craig Mundie, Microsoft Senior Vice President at the New York University Stern School of Business. (May 2001, video)

    --

    IP was invented for the sake of lawsuits.
  480. If Linux is a Cancer by blair1q · · Score: 2

    Then Microsoft is Biological Warfare.

    --Blair

  481. Such a nice father figure. by Martigan80 · · Score: 1
    This Steve and Bill combo, they are the true fathers of the technologicaly imaipred. Not only do they want us to use what they deem "worthy." They are going to help us stay out of trouble by trying to copyright software in a more "safe " way, but they will make sure we use the right programs by making us register them for approval. What is quite funny is that they said DVD's could not by decrypted...O.k.

    Links, zwei, trei .........

    --
    This SIG pulled due to lack of funding. (This damn war is costing too much!)
  482. This quote really got to me... by DennyK · · Score: 1

    Ballmer: "The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody. Open source is not available to commercial companies. The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source. If the government wants to put something in the public domain, it should. Linux is not in the public domain. Linux is a cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches. That's the way that the license works."

    There is just so much wrong with that handful of sentences that I don't know where to start. Let's see...

    - "...if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source..." No, no, NO! If you use any open-source software released *under the GPL*, you must make your software open-source. Open Source != GPL Software. I don't know if Ballmer is incredibly obtuse or if he's just doing the usual M$ FUD dance (I'd guess the latter), but I'm really getting tired of hearing him and the rest of the Micro$oft spokesgerbils acting like all open source software is GPL'd.

    - "Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody. Open source is not available to commercial companies." Wrong again. Open source software is available to everyone...even GPL software like Linux. There's no rule or law that says commercial companies can't use it in their products. Yes, they have to comply with the license the open-source software was released under, and if that was the GPL, then they will have to release the source code of their product, but that is not preventing them from using the code if they really want to.

    Ballmer is really whining about the fact that Microsoft can't swipe government-funded GPL code and then "innovatively" incorporate it into their own proprietary Rent-an-Application suite, which they then re-"sell" for the low, low price of only $599 per year. Boo hoo hoo. Sorry, Ballmer, but I don't think that the intent behind the open release of government-funded projects was to let corporations take that code developed with the taxpayers' money and sell it back to them with an obscene markup. I know the sight of all those free, open GPL projects out there that you can't steal, buy out, sue to death, or exploit for your own profit is probably giving you ulcers, but I guess you'll just have to "innovate" something else on your own instead. ;)

    DennyK

  483. Ballmer is the ultimate Troll by tdye · · Score: 1

    Talk about a badass... Linux + cancer = 800+ comments!

    All you trolls should be taking lessons from Ballmer.

  484. Linux is a cancer by modernz · · Score: 5

    Linux is a cancer that is eating away at M$ profit margins.

  485. MS Strategy - Look at it Widely and Carefully by phyjcowl · · Score: 2

    MS execs try to create a general attitude about Free Software, Open Source, and/or Linux that is negative. This is obvious because of things like Ballmer's comments and other recent MS exec's comments.

    The interesting thing is not what that attitude means right now, but rather, what it will enable in the future. This is like a chess game. Here is what I mean. If you read this article from Jakob Nielsen (http://www.useit.com/alertbox/20000625_hailstorm. html) in the last paragraph, you will see that a very "intelligent" Microsoft strategy is being birthed. Where the .Net platform locks Internet-based services into Microsoft technology and logic. Hence, PAYing customers will have to use/continue using Microsoft products to get these services.

    This duplicates Microsoft's current usefulness to any company developing for a software platform. If a little company makes their product/service available through Microsoft's technologies the little company instantly has access to the largest pool of potential customers. That probably makes sense if you want to make a lot of money.

    The thing is, how does Microsoft get such a huge base of people using and implementing (critical mass?) its payment (and other) services first? That is the challenge for Microsoft. They *need* to get businesses and the public feeling generally negative toward free and open source types of philosophies. Hence the inappropriate "cancer" and "intellectual property" notions MS execs spout. With that kind of feeling in the business environment, MS gains an important advantage in convincing everyone to deploy MS technology. Thus, MS locks businesses, organizations, governements, individuals, etc. into a new era of MS monopoly through the Internet and in the form of MS-based payment systems/intellectual property bottleneckers, etc.

  486. Re:NSA Linux violates this by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

    > Incorrect. The GPL is also license-compatible with a number of less-restrictive licenses, and I would think that public-domain would also be included.

    Incorrect, what you call license compatible means that you can turn code under one license to GPL code.

    This is not what *I* call compatible.
    Compatible will be using GPL code in my code, releasing the changes to the *GPL code* under the GPL, and doing WTF I want with *my* code.

    GPL is not compatible with anything.
    Because it places several limitation, and one of them is that you may not add more limitation to the GPL.

    --

    --
    Two witches watched two watches.
    Which witch watched which watch?
  487. Re:Install XP by October? by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

    Actually, MS has a standard n-2 support policy.
    This mean that (currently), NT 3.51 is still on the support list, (And Win95 isn't ;-D )

    --

    --
    Two witches watched two watches.
    Which witch watched which watch?
  488. I crossed the line. by AX.25 · · Score: 1

    June 1, 2003

    Hi /.ers,

    That line good old Steve spoke about 2 years ago, well I crossed it so I writing this to you from jail. How was I suppose to know that when I bought Office XP it was only for 2 years. Jeez, I paid almost $300 for a single user version. But, when I decided that Microsoft was really a place I wanted to work and I sent them my resume (in Word format of course) what did I get? A knock at the door and handcuffs. So don't cross that line you could be next kids.

    Sincerely,

    T. Pengiun

    --
    What is pirate software? Software for inventory of stolen treasure?
  489. Re: I am laughing, but I am still worried... by first+axiom · · Score: 1

    This is just the kind of modding up that discredits the /. system... Ohh well, life goes on.

  490. Long live to innovative Joe the User! by romanski · · Score: 1

    There are a lot of innovative users in the Chicago...

  491. Re:This word by eggboard · · Score: 1
    Odd. I used that line in this article I wrote.

    --
    Freelance tech journalist for the Economist, MIT Technology Review, Macworld, and others
  492. Linux is Like Cancer? by robbyjo · · Score: 1

    Well, Linux is about freedom of knowledge. It's the liberty. As a nature of humans on earth, not borg, we must defend it to the very last drip of our blood. Thus, we don't want others to steal it and seize it for their own. We know that M$ always use this dirty strategy is used by Microsoft as a part of its plot in world domination. GNU/Linux/OSS are immune to this so-called "embrace-and-extend" thing. No wonder this Balmer guy (or any M$ cohort) tries dissing Linux in every event.

    P.S.: Linux does help in solving cancer. And how 'bout Microsoft? Read here muhahaha...

    --

    --
    Error 500: Internal sig error
  493. Ralph Nader says: by Globulatrix · · Score: 2
    This is regarding Ballmer's statement that the Government is giving money to Linux, and not them, and that such is not fair. I hope it is not breach of copyright to type out from Nader's book, but I really don't think he'd mind:
    It's Time To End Corporate Welfare As We Know It
    Originally appearred in Earch Island Journal, Fall 1996
    Taken from The Ralph Nader Reader, and not reprinted with permission of any sort.

    The issue of concentration of power and the growing conflict between the civil society and the corporate society is not a conflict that you read about or see on television. So unfortunately, most of us grow up corporate, we don't grow up civic.

    If I utter the following words, what images come to mind: crime, violence, welfare and addictors? What comes to mind is street crime; people lining up to get their welfare checks; violence in the streets; and drug dealers - the addictors.

    And yet, by any yardstick, there is far more crime, and far more violence, and far more welfare disbursement (and there are far more addictors) in the corporate world than in the impoverished street arena. The federal government's corporate welfare programs number over 120. They are so varied and embedded that we actually grow up thinking that the government interferes with the free enterprise system, rather than subsidizing it.

    It's hard to find a major industry today whose principal investments were not first made by the government - in aerospace, telecommunications, biotechnology and agribusiness. Government research and development money funds the drug and pharmaceutical industry. Government research and development funds are given freely to corporations, but they don't announce it in the ads the next day.

    Corporate welfare has never been viewed as debilitating. Nobody talks about imposing workfare requirements on corporate welfare recipients or putting them on a program of "two years and you're out." Nobody talks about aid to dependent corporations. It's all talked about in terms of "incentives."

    At the local community level, in cities that can't even refurbish their crumbling schools - where children are without enough desks or books - local governments are anteing up three, four, five hundred million dollars to lure very profitable baseball, football and basketball sports moguls who don't want to share the profits. Corporate sports are being subsidized by cities.

    Corporations have perfected socializing their losses while they capitalize on their profits. There was the savings-and-loan debacle - and you'll be paying for that until the year 2020. In terms of principal and interest, it was a half-trillion-dollar bailout of 1,000 savings-and-loans banks. Their executives looted, speculated and defrauded people of their savings - and then turned to Washington for a bailout.

    Foreign and domestic corporations can go on our land out West. If they discover gold, they can buy the acreage over the gold for no more than $5 an acre. That's been the going rate since the Mining Act of 1872 was enacted. That is taking inflation fighting too far.

    There's a new drug called Taxol to fight ovarian cancer. That drug was produced by a grant of $31 million of taxpayer money through the National Institutes of Health, right though the clinical testing process. The formula was then given away to the Bristol-Meyers Squibb company. No royalties were paid to the taxpayer. There was no restraint on the price. Charges now run $10,000 to $15,000 per patient for a series of treatments. If the patients can't pay, they go on Medicaid, and the taxpayer pays at the other end of the cycle, too.

    Yet what is the big issue in this country and in Washington when the word "welfare" is spoken? It is the $300 monthly check given a welfare mother, most of which is spent immediately in the consumer economy. But federal corporate welfare is far bigger in dollars. At the federal, state and local levels there is no comparison between the corporate welfare and poverty welfare programs.

    We have 179 law schools and probably only fifteen of them (and only recently) offer a single course or seminar on corporate crime. You think that's an accident? Law school curricula are pretty much shaped by the job market, and if the job market has slots in commercial law, bankruptcy law, securities and exchange law, tax law or estate planning law, the law schools will oblige with courses and seminars.

    One professor studying corporate crime believes it costs the country $200 billion a year. And yet you don't see many congressional hearings on corporate crime. You see very few newspapers focusing on corporate crime. Yet 50,000 lives a year are lost to air pollution [julius ads from Harpers Magazine: Amount Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill earned last year as CEO of Alcoa: $56,400,000. Rank of Alcoa among the worst U.S. polluters during O'Neill's tenure, according to the National Wildlife Federation: 1. Food for thought: and Bush's tax reduction helps who?] . . . 100,000 [lives] are lost due to toxics and trauma in the workplace, and 420,000 lives are lost due to tobacco smoking. The corporate addictor has an important role here, since it has been shown in recent months that the tobacco companies try to hook youngsters into a lifetime of smoking from age 10 to 15.

    When you grow up corporate, you don't learn about the reality of corporate welfare. The programs that shovel huge amounts of taxpayer dollars through subsidies, loan guarantees, giveaways and a variety of clever transfers of taxpayer assets get very little attention.

    [end of first section of essay.]

  494. BAH! Steve needs a Bonk by emn-slashdot · · Score: 1

    /bonk

    Open Source != GPL

    Many government sponsered research projects headed by DARPA et all are BSD. That means I can use it and change the liscense to GPL, and you can use it and not release the source code. "awful jackass..."

    DARPA pays companies to do research projects to develop a solution to a problem. I think it should all be GPL so you don't run around profitting solely on all the research that the govt paid for. You think you some how are owed that right? Who-ever you are... please stop selling Steve the rock.

    You don't think the govt has a right to IP? You don't think they should be able to choose how to use it (in this case... it benifits the *MOST* people... perhaps not M$ however).

    Seems like you have a lot of conflicting views.

    ---
    /em bonks Steve Balmer on the head
    Steve Balmer has been slain by his filthy lies.
    ---

    -EvilMonkeyNinja
    a.k.a. Joseph Nicholas Yarbrough
    Security Grunt by Day
    Programmer by Night

    --
    -EvilMonkeyNinja
    Mild Mannered Host by Day
    Wild Hammered Programmer by Night
  495. I can even believe him by OpenSourced · · Score: 1
    An analysis we've done, 80 percent of our customers are going to see the same or lesser prices, and 20 percent are going to see very small to somewhat larger increases.

    Yeah, I bet they are... at first.

    --
    Rome taught me patience and assiduous application to detail. Virtues which temper the boldness of great, general views.
  496. GPL'ed code *is* available to everyone by Cryogenes · · Score: 1

    GPL'ed code is avalable to everyone in the same sense that a public library is available to everyone. For example, MS is as welcome to use emacs as everyone else. So is the Apache foundation.

    Libraries do have rules about what you can with their books. Different libraries have different rules.

    In the same way, the GPL is a set of rules aimed at protecting the value of programs.

    If the government pays a programmer to created a GPL'ed program then that's money well spent - everybody can use the product that has been created for free.

    As a matter of fact, government does fund lots of code that is not free at all. For example, many university professors create programs, in government-paid time, and distribute it in binary-only form. (Here in Germany all professors are paid by government).

  497. Yay! I can't wait for disposable software! by CrazyJim0 · · Score: 1

    Did ya know that gasgrill manufactuers for example use inferior parts over working parts just to bill you on repair? I find Microsoft talking about intellectual property as hysterical as most of their ideas come from just recoding someone else's idea with ten times the manpower.

  498. Is it just me? by loydcc · · Score: 1
    Am I the only person who thinks Microsoft is trying to rile up the open source community to show that there is competetion in the Operating System market.

    "Why no Mr Congressman, Windows is not the only operating system. There's MacOS and Linux and Unix and BeOS and OS/2 Warp. There's plenty of Operating System competetion. We're not a big bad ol' monopoly..."

    1. Re:Is it just me? by loydcc · · Score: 1
      Yes I agree OS/2 and BeOS are orphan systems but the fact is they are out there and show that MSFT doesn't have a total grip on all computers. I know 90% is a controlling interest but MSFT does need to show there is at least a name on their competetion. Otherwise, they really are the monopoly they claim they're not.

      Also as for the list, three of them are some form of *nix.

      And I forgot A/IX and NextStep.

      What was the name of the OS for the Trash80?

  499. Goverment Grants and Licencing. by code-olympus-code · · Score: 2

    I don't see any problem with one of the conditions of goverement grants being that the software must be released under a particular licence. If I want to release code under GPL, LGPL, BSD, Apache, ... that is my choice, but if I am receiving funds, the funder has a right to specify conditions including licencing.

    All work done with federal grant dollars are released under the FFSL (federal free software licence) which is somewhere between the GPL and BSD. You can use the code in your work without your work becoming a derivative work, but any changes in the code itself must be released under the FFSL. Ballmer's biggest b*tch is solved. Now he can use the code, only embrace and extend is not as easy so I am happy.

  500. Dangerous Pattern in the attacks by code-olympus-code · · Score: 2

    The most dangerous pattern in these attacks is that M$ is trying to play the political game. They are making the free software community out to be a bunch of free loaders getting goverment pork! This has the potential to swing public opinion (I don't want my tax dollars going to the those free software commies).

    This, as we all know is completly false. Free software is by and large a way developers give freely to the community (and in fact alot, possibly even a majority of the big user apps are from out of the states). It ammazes me how selfless many of the developers in the FS world are. I am very proud of this. We have done what many groups in history have failed to do.

    However, the average Joe is clueless. If the population at large starts to buy this CR*P then the FS developers in the US could find themselves legislated into oblivion (Extra, Extra: FCC now controls all software releases! - as stupid as it sounds it would not surprise me).

    1. Re:Dangerous Pattern in the attacks by zhrike · · Score: 1

      It is insidious, but how dangerous? What legislation can be passed that would truly curtail the open source movement?

      That's a question, I don't see how anything binding in a real sense could be passed, but I am curious as to the possibilities as seen by others.

      I hear you, believe me, and these stories are infuriating when they're not just amusing. The fact is most average computer users are ignorant of all things not Microsoft.

      That sucks toads...

      The media is a vehicle for the rich, and who is richer than MS?

      Sway public opinion? The media IS public opinion, as unfortunate as that is.

      Noam Chomsky for...uhhh, proletariat..I guess.

  501. Leave us alone by famazza · · Score: 1

    To Microsoft guys tha hate Free-software guys (us):

    Please, as I've asked before, leave us alone. Ok, we don't like windows, and we prefer a better OS, but most of us accept that there are people that want to make money by limitating people freedom.

    Look at us, we are just a bunch of nerds that doesn't have nothing to do but work in a OS that normal users can't use. All you have to do is take care of your dear customers that can't use linux.

    Keep your windows beautiful, and nice, easy to use, and with lots of automatic things. I'll tell you something, most of us hate this automatic stuff, so, let us with our difficult-to-leanr OS, and keep doing your job with your final user.

    You keep trying and trying to "kill" our OS, by saying horrible things about it. If you want to talk about this, we can put both OS side by side, and watch technical details, I bet that any Distro-Co. will be very pleased to do this.

    But if you try to compare your graphical interface, with ours. I bet that noone will show up. Yeah, that's right, we are not as good as you in User Interface.

    Whatever, the point is. LEAVE US ALONE! And stop acting like you do. IMHO linux is technical superior, but you are the market leader, not us. And you deserve it, you have the best interface.


    Don't worry, I'm too sad [to|every]day

    --

    -=-=-=-=
    I know life isn't fair, but why can't it ever be un-fair in MY favor!?
  502. licenses by underpaidISPtech · · Score: 1
    Well, i caught this article at the end of the day, but maybe someone will see it.

    With all the other dirty tricks played by MS, is it not possible that they can simply outright steal GPL'd code, and publish under their own version of an "innovated" Open Source license?.

    Who would be able to stop them from swiping all that yummy stable FREE code? If the laywers get involved, do you think the GPL willstand up in court agains the likes of MS? I think that the day of reckonong is coming for the GPL, and it will be the MS Behemoth that will challenge it.

  503. ballmer is the devil by schmar · · Score: 1

    i know i should let it piss me off but the guy sounds like the bush administration people - just out and out bald face lies and mistruths. it would be so refreshing to have more agressive and informed reporters out there who would throw such softball questions.

  504. Summary : GPL = free, most (if not all) others not by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

    GPL is free, now and forever. I've not seen anybody deny that one yet. GPL is free as in beer, the only thing not allowed is for you to take away my beer and sell it as your own.

    BSD is free, but anyone has the power to make it non-free, is that freedom ? "You are free to take everyone else's freedom !" ? No it isn't. You're free to HAVE a gun, not free to take away other's rights to guns, and you are most defineately not allowed to use that gun to accomplish this.

    Microsoft Shared Source licence, you are free to improve windows on the small condition that you give these improvements to microsoft and relinquish ALL rights to your modificaition. *ahem* WHAT A DEAL, i mean even a greedy bastard like most CEO should realise that there working for free

    GPL -> you work for yourself and the rest of the community
    BSD -> you work "for the community" but everyone is free to take it from the community.
    MIC -> you work for microsoft, more you PAY to work for microsoft, last time I checked, I worked to get paid not the other way around.

    And 1 slightly political statement, in america it is legal to shoot someone, it is legal to take away a persons privacy without his/her consent, it is legal for anyone to buy politicians, laws are bought and paid for in hard cash, some laws are copyrighted, meaning that you cannot read them freely, it is legal for an attorney to blatantly lie in front of the court for money, it is legal to buy experts, DAMN you have a problem, and no it's not just about software, it is a matter of time till the GPL is outlawed, i do hope you are aware of that ... (you know in grade school in history we get stories about regimes that let one buy witnesses, it is one of the distinct properties of a dictatorial regime, and there are presidential dictatorial regimes you know)

  505. Artistic blur by jay42 · · Score: 1
    Just the mandatory GPL vs open-source stuff:

    See how Microsoft tries to mix all the concepts:

    Open source is not available to commercial companies. The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source.

    What ?

    * Open source is not GPL: you can use open source (as Microsoft does with BSD code) without open sourcing your sotfware.

    * Even with the GPL, you dont make "the rest of your software" open source but only derivatives (with the usual no-so-clear line between derivatives and linked s/w). The phrase really reads as: "if we make only one open-sourced software, we will have to give all our softwares for free (windows xxx, office and others)".

    Their strategy (FUD on the whole open-source software) seems to be not only recurrent but more and more disinformative than ever (see Allchin's statements...)

    The worst part is that most people believe them without checking their statements :-(

  506. heh. by laxny · · Score: 1

    Well it just seems that M$ wants more people out there so that they don't look like a monopoly. Soon enough they will just buy them up.

  507. He said it! by glenebob · · Score: 1
    First he says...

    "Intellectual property should be protected. That's the only way that a newspaper or a software company or record company or artist can get a fair return on their work."

    And then he says...

    "The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work. Government funding should be for work that is available to everybody. Open source is not available to commercial companies."

    Nice condradiction, Steve. It would appear that you think Microsoft should be compensated for their work, without having to compensate or even acknowledge the work done by independant developers who wrote a fair amount of the code incorperated into MS software. That isn't what you meant, was it steve?

    Microsoft loves open source software... As long as they get to make money on it.
    --

  508. Cancer is... by glenebob · · Score: 1
    www.dict.org says...
    Cancer \Can"cer\, n.
    3. (Med.) Formerly, any malignant growth, esp. one attended with great pain and ulceration...

    Well hell... that sounds more like Microsoft to me...
    --

  509. so how long... by EvilStein · · Score: 1

    How long will it be before someone turns RMS loose on Ballmer as well? ;)

  510. DAMN FRUSTRATION by RazzleDazzle · · Score: 1

    First off, I recommend anyone and EVERYONE should listen to Richard Stallmans speech he gave on Tuesday. It really opened my eyes and ideas about GPL and GNU and Linux. For one, i feel bad for calling GNU/Linux just Linux. Linux=the kernel, GNU/Linux=complete OS. GNU TOTALLY deserves credit for their work and adding 4 extra characters (GNU/) is not much to ask IMO.

    The GPL obviously does not make a program you write required to be licensed under the GPL. Again, listen to Stallman because he does a good job talking about that. Open source does NOT equal free software!

    All of the MS cronies obviously just want to mux GNU/Linux, GPL, Free Software, and Open Source together as one because that way people will be confused when some say they are not the same or don't even know the difference. Then people argue about this and that while MS is running off to the bank. GNU/Linux lets you write your own proprietary code based off of GPL'ed code. You just can't release it to the public that way. Did you understand that??? You can take GPL'ed code and modify it to your liking and not have to release it to the public!!! Its called FREEDOM!

    Open Source does not necessarily mean free software GODDAMNIT! You can take open source code and modify it and release it w/o the source and thus is not free anymore. VERY common sense to me.

    Has Ballmer ever written or worked with source code or programming? Does MS really innovate? MS has a good marketing team and can buy out competitors (innovatations) like there's no tomorrow!

    --
    ZERO ZERO ONE ZERO ONE ZERO ONE ONE! Just brushing up for my next big invention: Ethernet over Voice (EoV)
  511. Microsoft knows best by Tachys · · Score: 1

    help customers understand when they are crossing the line . . . so they can't do the wrong thing.

    So downloading a song I don't own is copyright infrigement!?!

    Gee.... had no idea

  512. This word by jhill · · Score: 4

    To Microsoft: This word you use...Innovative...I do not think it means what you think it means.

  513. So the government shouldn't buy software from MS? by Wesley+Everest · · Score: 1
    uh... GPL'ed code is completely accessible to everyone. You just can't necessarily do everything you want with it. How is spending tax dollars on Microsoft Software or for contract work any more accessible? The truth is that if the federal government took all the money it currently spends for Microsoft's proprietary, inaccessible software and spent it on developing Linux, the resulting software would be much more accessible to taxpayers.

    And, btw, when the government builds a road, while everyone may be allowed to drive on it, there are still restrictions of use. I don't see what the big deal is.

    As for GPL software being cancer... Did you ever notice that with proprietary software made by for-profit companies, the source code is only made available at a price? Guess what? If you want to use that code in software that you produce, you must pay royalties. Of course, if you want to give away free software, you're out of luck, because you won't get money from sales to cover the royalties. That means you are forced by the closed-source license to release your software as closed-source.

    How come Microsoft calls this closed-source self-propagating license "innovation" while calling the GPL "cancer"? Because their words originate not from logic or a consistent set of ethics and values but rather from the big money bags. Nothing necessarily wrong with not-so-enlightened self-interest, but you really shouldn't take a used-car salesman's word on anything.

  514. uhm by pacman+on+prozac · · Score: 1

    "We have and continue to innovate within the spirit and letter of the law. We continue to do what we have always done, because we think it's 100 percent correct."

    *cough*bullshit*cough*

    at least the 100 percent bit was relevant :)

  515. MS is sounding like Berkeley by darthtuttle · · Score: 1

    Funny, Steve is starting to sound like the BSD folks, except the BSD folks don't put quite the negative spin on things. I guess if he doesn't want the government supporting GNU license software because MS can't use it in their code, then they shouldn't support MS development because we can't use MS's code in ours. I guess the government will have to turn in to a BSD shop :)


    --
    Darthtuttle
    Thought Architect

    --
    Darthtuttle
    Thought Architect
  516. If I would be a General... by Dutchie · · Score: 1
    If I would be a General like Bill Gates or Steve Balmer, I would not directly attack which threatens me most. There are interesting theories on here that suggest why Microsoft is attacking the GPL and what interesting spin that is and that GPL is the lowest common denominator of what they're trying to get at.

    Let's face it, it is not the GPL that threatens Microsoft. It is not FreeBSD. Or XWindows. It is Linux that's threatening them in the core of their business, the OS that gave them the leverage they need to get where they are.

    So if I'd be Gates or Ballmer, I'd start trying to break Linux based companies. Demolish them seceretively. Buy large amounts of stock and dilute their value. Disencourage people from investing money in them by making them swing up and down on a little rope. And meanwhile, give the masses something to chew on like an open and public attack on the GPL.

    Then again, that's just me.

    • Imagination is more important than knowledge.
    --
    • Imagination is more important than knowledge.

      • -- Albert Einstein
  517. A reverse-cancer? by ryanwright · · Score: 2

    If linux is a cancer, it must be some sort of weird "reverse-cancer". I'll be the first to admit to being a linux-newbie, but in the course of setting up my own Linux web server, I've already noticed many of linux's reverse-cancerous attributes:

    :: Linux reverse-eats money from my bank account. Over $3000 is still in there that otherwise might have been spent on 2K disAdvanced server. It frightens me to think that Linux can somehow infect my bank account in this manner.

    :: Linux reverse-spreads to my memory and hard drive like the cancer that it is. All sorts of free memory and drive space are present in the system compared to the *ahem*copy*ahem* of 2K server on the box next to it. I've been meaning to get this looked into by someone with more experience than I, but just haven't had the time. I hope it isn't contagious; I spent good money on 512MB of RAM to power that 2K server and would hate to see it suddenly able to get by on much less.

    :: Linux's reverse-cancer infects Windows, which in turn reverse-infects my mind. Every time I power up my Windows workstation, I have an uncontrollable urge to replace it with Linux.

    After careful analysis and consideration of the facts presented herein, I must come to the upsetting conclusion that this Linux thing is incredibly dangerous. I advise everyone to immediately forward a copy of this fact-sheet to their congressional representatives and demand that Linux be classified as a level 4 pathogen and steps be taken to ensure it's immediate eradication from existence.

    --
    -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
  518. In other news... by Johnny5000 · · Score: 1

    War is peace. Ignorance is strength. Slavery is freedom.

    --
    The libertarian solution to the failures of capitalism is to apply more capitalism til the failures are fixed.
  519. Other ailments by lnx_daemon · · Score: 1

    Interesting though that MS happens to be the same itials of Multiple Sclerosis, a debilitating disease affecting the brain and nervous system.

  520. Now that my goofy response has been posted... by cnelzie · · Score: 1

    Linux and Open Source needs a real spokesperson with face recognition amongst the "normal" populace. We will never be able to debunk these blatant Balmer lies if we do not have a proper spokesperson that can gain the media attention that Microsoft can gain.

    This claim he has been continually making regarding how using any Open Source software infects all your software is blatantly untrue.

    This battle front that Microsoft has created is not one we can fight on Slashdot and expect to win. This is a battle that we must fight in the mainstream media.

    We need to reach "Joe" computer-user through the media. So that when "Joe" computer-user is approached with Linux, he/she won't run for the hills screaming about the dangers of cancer.

    The Open Source community needs to begin talking the intellectual property talk and walking the intellectual property walk in regards to how closed-source programming is a stagnet pond that breeds life taking bacteria. If Microsoft wants to scare "Joe" Computer-user then let's scare "Joe" Computer-User.

    --
    If you ignore the other uses of a tool, does that make the tool less useful, or you less useful?
  521. A cancer to everything it touches?! by cnelzie · · Score: 3

    Oh no, that means my entire computer has become Open Source! Since I dual-boot doesn't that mean that my installed Windows 98 SE has become open source as well?

    I mean I have had Linux "touch" some Windows files... Hmm... Does anyone know how to perform Chemotherapy on a hard drive?

    ------------

    --
    If you ignore the other uses of a tool, does that make the tool less useful, or you less useful?
  522. :) by dnaumov · · Score: 1

    Hello. I am a Linux newbie, I've only been using Linux (RH 7.1) for the past few weeks, but that's not the case. The case is, Microsoft FORCED me to begin studying Linux. Yes, you heard that right. I've never taken Linux seriously in the past, but I do. I am sick of these shitty PR stunts and other BS that Microsoft/RIAA/MPAA are pulling out. Some people I've talked to say that they would like to have something other then Windows, but they're stuck with it since everybody else uses it. Well, I have the guts to shout it out loud: FUCK YOU Microsoft ! I am not going to let Mr. Bill Gates dictate me how to use my computer, what hardware to buy and what software to use as well as what music to listen to (MP3 rippers working in XP ? Hah!). I DO respect uncle Billy for what he has archieved as a person, he put his company to a great height, but that doesn't mean I am OK with that. Hell NO ! I am running dual-boot between Win2000 and Linux right now and I am spending less and less time in Win2000 every day. Every day I spend learning Linux, I learn something new about the way computers work and how software is developed. I am now taking part in the Open Source movement by beta-testing Mozilla and submitting it's bugs. It's a "little thing", but I am kinda proud of that :) As for this article/interview...I find it funny. Linux ? A Cancer on Intellectual Property and Innovation ? ROTFLMAO ! It was MS which admitted to using OpenBSD code in Windows XP and not vise-versa... Oh, wait...Microsoft OS'es are close-sourced right ? So you can't put their network code to some actually good use. If somebody is this cancer of the computer industry, it's Microsoft and the Open Source movement is the cure. "Free Software = BAD, Money = GOOD", gotta love that, eh ?
    "The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work." So the goverment should give their money to the already-rich MS instead of innovative, but poor programmers ?
    Open source is not available to commercial companies. Does that person have ANY clue ? Oh wait, that's FUD !
    The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source. That guy has to check the LGPL license.
    Linux is not in the public domain. Need I say more ? The scary thing is, it seems that the big decision makers seem to be actually believing this complete bullshit. Anyways, my fingers hurt. /me OFF

  523. I am laughing, but I am still worried... by dnaumov · · Score: 3
    Hello. I am a Linux newbie, I've only been using Linux (RH 7.1) for the past few weeks, but that's not the case. The case is, Microsoft FORCED me to begin studying Linux. Yes, you heard that right. I've never taken Linux seriously in the past, but I do. I am sick of these shitty PR stunts and other BS that Microsoft/RIAA/MPAA are pulling out. Some people I've talked to say that they would like to have something other then Windows, but they're stuck with it since everybody else uses it. Well, I have the guts to shout it out loud: FUCK YOU Microsoft ! I am not going to let Mr. Bill Gates dictate me how to use my computer, what hardware to buy and what software to use as well as what music to listen to (MP3 rippers working in XP ? Hah!). I DO respect uncle Billy for what he has archieved as a person, he put his company to a great height, but that doesn't mean I am OK with that. Hell NO ! I am running dual-boot between Win2000 and Linux right now and I am spending less and less time in Win2000 every day. Every day I spend learning Linux, I learn something new about the way computers work and how software is developed. I am now taking part in the Open Source movement by beta-testing Mozilla and submitting it's bugs. It's a "little thing", but I am kinda proud of that :) As for this article/interview...I find it funny. Linux ? A Cancer on Intellectual Property and Innovation ? ROTFLMAO ! It was MS which admitted to using OpenBSD code in Windows XP and not vise-versa... Oh, wait...Microsoft OS'es are close-sourced right ? So you can't put their network code to some actually good use. If somebody is this cancer of the computer industry, it's Microsoft and the Open Source movement is the cure. "Free Software = BAD, Money = GOOD", gotta love that, eh ?
    "The only thing we have a problem with is when the government funds open-source work."
    So the goverment should give their money to the already-rich MS instead of innovative, but poor programmers ?
    Open source is not available to commercial companies.
    Does that person have ANY clue ? Oh wait, that's FUD !
    The way the license is written, if you use any open-source software, you have to make the rest of your software open source.
    That guy has to check the LGPL license.
    Linux is not in the public domain.
    Need I say more ? The scary thing is, it seems that the big decision makers seem to be actually believing this complete bullshit. Anyways, my fingers hurt. /me OFF.
  524. Does this mean that MS will be effected, too? by Achilleas · · Score: 1

    Since cancer affects all the parts of the body (eventually), does this mean that MS will be affected by open source, too? :-)

  525. Cancers spread... by ghack · · Score: 1

    Cancer spreads. Pretty soon M$ will be lying in a coffin.

  526. Install XP by October? by Grim+Trigger · · Score: 1
    Exactly what licencing policy is forcing customers to upgrade to XP by october? The article doesn't really elaborate on that.

    Are they going to hike up the price of an upgrade after that time?

  527. Thanks, your math proves my point by then,+it+was+nigh · · Score: 1

    One guy is getting back 67% of the 59 bucks! HOLLY HORSE SHIT!!! That's not fair!!

    Actually, in your scenario it is fair, since by your own numbers, that one guy paid 74 percent of the tax collected. The actual proposed tax cut plan would be more like that one guy paying in only 70 dollars (33 percent of tax collected) and still getting 40 dollars back (67 percent of the tax cut).

    Kill the guy that thought about the idea of giving an equal tax break based how much a person paid!!!!

    My point all along has been that if you count all of the proposed tax cut (including the estate tax repeal, which apologists consistently ignore), the tax break is not equal, because the rich get back a percentage larger than the percentage they paid.
    --
    #/usr/bin/perl
    require 6.0;

    --
    sed 's/In Soviet Russia/In NSA America/g' < yakov-smirnoff-jokes.txt
  528. Re:Case in point... by then,+it+was+nigh · · Score: 1

    The family trying to live on $20,000 of taxable income per year [...] get an extra $1000.

    But don't forget to factor in the inevitable cuts in government services due to the lost revenue.

    It's true that when you cut taxes, the people who pay the most taxes save the most money. In what way is this bad?

    Let me try an analogy: say we buy something together and split the payment 60-40. Then we get a partial refund, and I try to claim 90 percent of it, arguing that "Of course I should get more back, I paid more in the first place."

    "But not that much more," you'd rightly object. And that's exactly our objection to Bush's tax cut: after everything is factored in (like the estate tax repeal that you skated around), the rich are getting back a bigger slice than they put in.

    Is there any tax cut ever that you would approve of?

    Hmm, how `bout a cut in the payroll tax? Funny how that never seems to get mentioned in tax-cut discussions, even though the large majority of Americans pay more in payroll tax than in income tax.

    Aren't the Democrats supposed to be the party that is the friend to the poor, the party that cares?

    Yes, which is why they, and I, object to the rich trying to shift more and more of the tax burden off their backs and onto the backs of the poor and middle class.

    Oh, one last point: when Reagan got a tax cut passed, the economy revved up enough that tax revenues increased.

    No, they didn't. Inflation-adjusted tax revenues were down for several years after Reagan's 1981 tax cut -- and that in a growing economy, when inflation-adjusted tax revenues would be expected to increase.
    --
    #/usr/bin/perl
    require 6.0;

    --
    sed 's/In Soviet Russia/In NSA America/g' < yakov-smirnoff-jokes.txt
  529. Re:Case in point... by then,+it+was+nigh · · Score: 1

    Noooo, all rich people are evil, they must all suffer!

    ? `Scuse me, where did you get "rich people are evil" out of my article? All I said was that, White House spin to the contrary notwithstanding, their proposed tax cut does disproportionately benefit the rich (yes, even in disproportion to how much tax they're paying).
    --
    #/usr/bin/perl
    require 6.0;

    --
    sed 's/In Soviet Russia/In NSA America/g' < yakov-smirnoff-jokes.txt
  530. Case in point... by then,+it+was+nigh · · Score: 2

    Second, the tax reductions are greater on a percentage basis for the poor.

    This is the big lie that conservatives keep repeating, desperately hoping to convince the poor and middle class that the government isn't screwing them over at the behest of the rich. The petitioner follows the so-called "liberal" media in repeating unchallenged the White House's deceptive numbers, which deliberately omit the effect of the proposed estate tax repeal that disproportionately benefits the rich. When the entire tax proposal is considered, the richest one percent, who pay 20 percent of all federal taxes, will receive at least 36 percent of the tax cuts -- some estimates put it as high as 43 percent.
    --
    #/usr/bin/perl
    require 6.0;

    --
    sed 's/In Soviet Russia/In NSA America/g' < yakov-smirnoff-jokes.txt
  531. Re:Cancer? by Assmasher · · Score: 1

    Great well founded and logical argument you idiot. Get off our side.

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    Loading...
  532. US Govt. GPLs education system by currentdirectory · · Score: 1

    Lets see.. in america high school education is free. All americans who have benifited from education system should work for govt. (or people aka humans/americans) for free. It is similar to software right? If I modify/extend the GPLed software I give it away for free. Since, I am extending my intelligence thru education, all work I do should be given away for free.. Something wrong with GPL?

  533. MS has to bully the enemy because .. by crispenigl · · Score: 2

    I am really not surprised that MS is resorting to bullying CTO's and technical buyers with PR like this because they lose on straight techinical merit.

    For example, my Linux web servers run for many months on end with no problems. My home windows 98 box p3 866 from Dell with 384 Megs of RAM needs to be rebooted every 3 days. Its amazing how often I get this kind of message.

    "System resources are low. Some programs may not run. Windows has a limited number of system resources available. When you have many programs open, or you open a program that uses many system resources, Windows may run more slowly and some programs may not run properly. Quit some programs to free up system resources, or restart your computer. "

    Imagine.. This never happens on my Linux Servers...

    What is worse is that closing programs does not free up system resources.

    Now.. If only the games I played were on linux...