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New Mexico Drops out of Microsoft Case

Hiawatha writes: "Looks like Microsoft has peeled off one of the states." The article is kinda interesting, it talks about how New Mexico's attorney general is all on Microsoft's side now against the remaining states. It's amazing that after years of abusing its power, Microsoft is just gonna walk over this. *sigh*.

6 of 271 comments (clear)

  1. Microsoft is wrong by Ian+Bicking · · Score: 5
    You seem to think that Microsoft is being threatened with punishment because it is a monopoly. This is what MS has wanted you to believe. Microsoft is being threatened because they harmed consumers. I couldn't give a damn about Netscape -- they were just a bunch of wannabe monopolists anyway. This isn't about protecting them. It's about the harm done to consumers.

    This is not based speculation from their actions. It is based on direct evidence of MS executives' intentions.

    Did it help you, the consumer, when Microsoft used it's discriminatory pricing to punish vendors who marketed competing products? Did it save you from the confusing situation where multiple products competed for your affection?

    I must admit, the whole IE bundling thing is dumb. I think MS was actually making the right decision to include a browser with the OS. But there are other issues that have nothing to do with MS's "freedom to innovate". There's nothing innovative about using your monopoly to stifle competition. That's what this lawsuit is about.

    Punishing MS for business tactics that harm consumers and the free market system is not contrary to OSS, America, or anything else other than unbridled capitalism. The US did unbridled capitalism for a while, and it didn't work well. That's why anti-trust laws exist.

  2. Are the /. editors reading the same article I am? by devphil · · Score: 5
    it talks about how New Mexico's attorney general is all on Microsoft's side now against the remaining states.

    Um, lemme see. The single quote from the AG contains, "I am no longer persuaded a breakup remains appropriate or will ultimately be ordered by the courts. It is obvious Microsoft will continue to resist attempts to require this remedy." That doesn't come screaming out of the page at me as "being all on Microsoft's side."

    That sounds more like, "they're not going to give up, and they have more money than all 19 states in the suit put together, so we would run out of money first. Let's go do something constructive instead."

    Ah, but it's Slashdot. If you're not ranting against the evils of Microsoft, you're all on their side.

    (Go ahead, smack me for wanting some journalistic integrity. I've got karma to blow.)

    --
    You cannot apply a technological solution to a sociological problem. (Edwards' Law)
  3. Great Summary by zpengo · · Score: 5
    "To my mind this matter is now ripe for speedy resolution," New Mexico Attorney General Patricia Madrid said in a statement. "I am no longer persuaded a breakup remains appropriate or will ultimately be ordered by the courts. It is obvious Microsoft will continue to resist attempts to require this remedy. It is time to settle this case and move forward."

    I think that is a great summary of where this case is going, not just on a state level but also on a national level.

    The courts will not order a break-up, and Microsoft knows it. They've cleaned up their image enough to get away with what they've done in the past. If anyone wants to get in a slap on the wrist before it's too late, this would be the time to give it to them.

    --


    Got Rhinos?
  4. Re:CmdrTaco is Wrong by gilroy · · Score: 5
    Vlockquoth the poster:
    Punishing MS because you don't like their products or their business tactics or their authentication practices or .NET or just plain because Word crashed on you in the middle of a term paper is wrong [emphasis added]
    Unless their business practices are illegal. The argument against Microsoft is that they have leveraged the legitimate power they accrued through the decision of consumers (although I don't believe that that choice was entirely free... I had to pay for Windows on my machine whether I wanted it or not) into areas quite unrelated to it.

    Did most people choose Internet Explorer because it was technically superior or because Microsoft made it integral to the OS and made the OS unstable for other browsers? (BTW, don't tell me about how much more wonderful IE is. Let's talk about its relative merit at the time they began bundling it. I used NS and IE at that time and they were comparable. I actually preferred NS. Lately Netscape/AOL has really dropped the ball, but that isn't strictly relevant.)

    The drive behind the antitrust case is exactly that consumers were denied the ability to make choices based on merit. Just because Soviet candidates always received 100% of the vote doesn't mean people actually wanted them in office...

  5. Despite Cmdr Taco's *sigh*... by h.+simpson · · Score: 5
    Though the New Mexican [or is that New Mexico's, anyway] Attorney General is settling the case, she did leave the door open for more litigation from other states. New Mexico will also take in the benefits of any court decisions that the rest of the still pursuing states get.

    And to those who say that Microsoft is crumbling; it's image is ruined. Bull. That's not even close to true. Their stock is making an amazing come back after losing nearly two thirds of their stock value. Sales are better than ever; the advertising over their .NET and XP software is everywhere and they haven't even started their campaigns yet. Crumbling ususally isn't associated with a soaring profit line and stock price...

    Not saying that this is good [lest I get the hurt of the -1 mod] but I'm just saying that as the lame Backstreet boys say Microsoft "is stronger than yesterday...."

    -H. Simpson.
    (I really think I just ruined my post by using a quote from a pop boy band)

  6. In return for dropping the charges... by mojumbo · · Score: 5

    ...microsoft probably agreed to ignore all license violations in the NM govenment offices.