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MS getting rid of SAMBA?

BenRussoUSA writes "In this ZDNet story . Brian Behlendorf of Apache, Jeremy Allison of SAMBA, Miguel de Icaza of Ximian and now MONO and Eric Allman of Sendmail are all quoted in a story regarding a nasty rumor. Microsoft may be planning to include a Microsoft patented technology at a crucial interoperability point in .NET and maybe the next version of CIFS. Could this spell the end of SAMBA?"

475 comments

  1. Re:Very likely, but... by jmauro · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I doubt they care about anyone else's problems with intergration. Anything that can force people to use NT. They're solely in it for the money, not for more altruistic reasons. If your running Netware they'll probably not help, just send you a bunch of brocshures on the total cost of ownership and some such non-sense. They won't ignore, just keep telling you the perfectly good Netware or Unix server is broken. They're not going to be happy until everyone is dependant on their OS, and then they can raise the prices at will. It's really like crack. The first few are free, and then you can afford the 3rd and 4th, but by the 5th time its so expensive you've got to turn to stealing. When you think Microsoft, think crack dealer.

  2. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The BSA will orchestrate a raid that will force you to upgrade to Windows 2000 and Windows XP.

    Whassa matta you?

  3. Re:If there's a patent... by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

    Doctrine of Equivalents

  4. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by Samrobb · · Score: 1

    Obviously, they're going to license McAfee's ASP business model patent. That way, they're not the ones preventing "innovation" - it's McAfee, who won't care one whit about the negative puiblicity, because MS will keep shoveling money at them to maintain an exclusibve license agreement.

    --
    "Great men are not always wise: neither do the aged understand judgement." Job 32:9
  5. Hmm by Have+Blue · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Among the unexpected features Mac OS X 10.1 will include: A built-in SMB client. I wonder what effect that had on MS's decision.

    1. Re:Hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Smoking your mum's drugs again?

    2. Re:Hmm by pnatural · · Score: 1

      FUD.

      you won't need "certain software/drivers/protocols that are controlled by only MS". you'll need to use the SOAP protocol, which is quite open.

    3. Re:Hmm by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 2

      From talking to Apple goons last month, they fully expected MS to allow other platforms to connect to XP and .NET.

    4. Re:Hmm by Ixohoxi · · Score: 1

      Wow, what an intellectual mind at work! Strangely enough, when I read your "comments" I had a mental image of a sheep saying "baaaah baaaah".

      --
      What's a second? An hour? A day?
      It has much more to do with
      the Earth's rotation than with cesium.
    5. Re:Hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Smoking your dad's penis again?

    6. Re:Hmm by Trepalium · · Score: 1

      Uh huh. I'm sure Microsoft will document ALL of Microsoft .NET, just like they documented all of the Win32 API, and all of the Win16 API, and all of the MS-DOS Int21h calls... They don't need to add much to make non-MS platforms worthless with .NET, in fact, their Hailstorm technology may end up being enough. Or maybe they'll encapsulate something in the same file format that .ASF file use, since according to MS lawyers, they have the format patented. Use your imagination a bit, it wouldn't be hard to sabotage everyone else, the only question is will they do it, and do they think they'll manage to get away with it?

      --
      I used up all my sick days, so I'm calling in dead.
    7. Re:Hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can't quite get to it right now, it's shoved deep into your mum's ass.

    8. Re:Hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since the ratio of Macs to PCs is *FUCK ALL*... probably none.

      Go think of some other dumb-ass paranoia driven conspiracy.

    9. Re:Hmm by Alan · · Score: 2

      Sure, other platforms, but those other platforms may have to be running certain software/drivers/protocols that are controlled by only MS. This means that your connection could be through an MS designed and implemented protocol, without Open Source, without peer review, and without the ability to know just how insecure or secure those drivers and protocols are.

      Even worse, combine this information with the story a few days ago that linked to the cringly about the rumor of MS designing their own TCP/IP (TCP/MS), well, here is a perfect opportunity to start.

  6. One inaccuracy to point out by Loundry · · Score: 1

    They're solely in it for the money, not for more altruistic reasons.

    No, they're not in it for the money. They're in it for the power. Microsoft already has more money than God. Remember, gobs of money is just a front-end to power. If you can skip the money part and just go for the power, then why not do that? (Just ask Microsoft, they should know!)

    --
    I don't make the rules. I just make fun of them.
  7. of course by programic · · Score: 1

    I think that most people could see something like this coming from a mile away. And I don't think it will be the last thing either.

    It makes sense for Microsoft to encourage the use of Microsoft technology and discourage all others. Samba and whatever else be damned in the process.

    It sucks.

    --
    -- yawn. --
  8. Re:I would be very surprised to see this happen. by Patrick · · Score: 1
    Microsoft has major customers including banks and other data farms which use Samba across their worldwide networks.

    If Microsoft makes NT6 incompatible with Samba, these customers get to choose to stop using NT or stop using Samba. Microsoft is probably safe in betting that they'll stop using Samba -- which means more, not fewer, licenses sold. Microsoft's history is one of gratuitous incompatibilities and product lock-ins. With Media Player, they've added patent intimidation to their arsenal. Using patents to lock Samba out of NT6 networks would be nothing unexpected.

    We must remember though that the whole world is not kept under US law

    Samba would lose its U.S. developers, its U.S. distribution channels (everyone from RedHat to SGI), and its air of legitimacy among U.S. businesses. The same "major customers" that use large networks with both NT and Samba will be very wary of using any software that violates patents and cannot be written or supported within U.S. borders. Microsoft could make Samba as much of a battleground as DeCSS has been.

  9. Re:Which will be used only defensively. by banshee2000 · · Score: 1

    Great example, but I wouldn't be able to vote either because my grandmother didn't have the right to vote and she was white. My mother gained the right to vote as she was born in 1915, but my grandmother died two years before women gained the right to vote in 1919.

  10. Re:turn it around then... by skroz · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but there are ways around a lack of seteuid and related calls that can be implemented without too much difficulty. It'd be pretty much worthless, though. The lack of real file locking capabilities pretty much ruins the show, though. That's a problem for a lot of things under cygwin. I finally got Eterm to compile and run, for example, but it's almost not worth having.

    --
    -- Minds are like parachutes... they work best when open.
  11. And MSIE will break on Apache.... by coyote-san · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think it's possible that the time when MS could "lock up" SMB/CIFS via patents may have passed. Samba is used by too many "mainstream" IT sites to provide Unix/Windows integration - sites that have already spent huge sums of money trying to port their business critical applications to Windows and failed.

    If they actually tried to do this, the effect would be akin to the results if they tried to change MSIE to break on Apache servers (to create pressure to switch to IIS). Even before Code Red, very few sites would switch from Apache to IIS. Making the browser break on Apache would break so many sites that it would not force servers to switch to IIS, it would force users to switch from MSIE.

    Likewise, if some future version of Windows breaks Samba, IT managers would simply insist on the old versions of Windows until they found a workaround, e.g., third-party SMB drivers for the "improved" Windows on new systems. Or they would investigate whether it's cheaper, and less risky, to convert every single workstation to Linux than to try, again, to port their key application to run on Windows. Combined with the other major headaches MS is trying to force down IT's staff (e.g., some early reports that the "new and improved" licenses sometimes go *poof* without warning, but it can take days to arrange a replacement. If that happens at the wrong moment, a company could lose a contract or a court case, costing millions of dollars. Are you willing to bet your company - and your personal savings - that Windows will never barf on you?) and this could be the straw that finally breaks the camel's back.

    If I had to guess what's happening, MS is floating a trial balloon. They won't pay attention to us, but if InfoWorld starts reporting on the rumors and has some Fortune 500 IT managers saying they'll seriously evaluate alternatives if Samba is locked out of a latter-day CIFS, we'll never hear of this idea again.

    --
    For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong. -- H L Mencken
    1. Re:And MSIE will break on Apache.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > IT managers would simply insist on the old >versions of Windows until they found a >workaround> Absolutely. This is why there are still so many systems out there running NT4...

    2. Re:And MSIE will break on Apache.... by An+Ominous+Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Despite the "pro-Microsoft" (or at least "only-familiar-with-Microsoft" or "nobody-every-got-fired-for-buying-MS") management crowd at a lot of companies, I agree that in the (fairly near) future Linux will have a strong presence in the corporate Desktop and a stronger presence in the corporate Server markets.


      Right now, Linux probably is not ready for Desktop use even in companies. The fact that companies, unlike home users, have dedicated staff to administer machines means the corporate Linux desktop will be ready before the general desktop market, but I don't think it's quite there regardless.


      However, Windows is developed by a corporation. Corporations must look out for their own interest above any other concern. This means that the customer will NEVER be #1, no matter how many marketspeak ad compaigns are waged. Linux, however, is developed by community spirit. Although originally targeted towards the developer community it has gained enough appeal that many are working seriously on making it an excellent system for a general community.


      This kind of thinking makes it a much more attractive platform for companies -- how much more reliable is a system where the developers are working for you rather than for themselves?


      As Linux matures I have no doubt that IT managers will finally be weened off the MS-mentality and adopt a platform that won't try to screw them over to maximize the platform's parent's profits.

    3. Re:And MSIE will break on Apache.... by igaborf · · Score: 1
      ...change MSIE to break on Apache servers

      It already does -- on Fridays.

    4. Re:And MSIE will break on Apache.... by hearingaid · · Score: 2

      jesus, people.

      Despite the "pro-Microsoft" (or at least "only-familiar-with-Microsoft" or "nobody-every-got-fired-for-buying-MS") management crowd at a lot of companies, I agree that in the (fairly near) future Linux will have a strong presence in the corporate Desktop and a stronger presence in the corporate Server markets.

      like all servers are either NT or Linux.

      there's a little company I want to tell you about. they were founded 19 years ago. their head office is in Palo Alto, which I'm beginning to think none of you have ever heard of.

      they've had some success in penetrating the corporate server market. the numbers I hear are in the 60-70% range.

      linux and NT are dwarfed by them.

      their servers run Samba and Apache.

      this is the threat to Microsoft. machines like this. the megacorps have tons and tons of money sunk into their sun/ibm/etc. servers. they're not giving it up easily.

      --

      my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

    5. Re:And MSIE will break on Apache.... by JCCyC · · Score: 2
      If I had to guess what's happening, MS is floating a trial balloon. They won't pay attention to us, but if InfoWorld starts reporting on the rumors and has some Fortune 500 IT managers saying they'll seriously evaluate alternatives if Samba is locked out of a latter-day CIFS, we'll never hear of this idea again.

      Or, if the aforementioned Fortune 500 IT managers are completely spineless and say, "ooooh, they are going to kill Samba! I knew I should't have let those commie flower-power pinko tree-huggin' geeks install Linux on our servers. I'll do exactly as that nice and sweet MS sales rep said and upgrade everything to XP!", they'll go full blast with the idea.

      Heck, some PHB's are so PH they probably are ordering the switch right now as somebody showed them the article.

    6. Re:And MSIE will break on Apache.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree, M$ would never take a real pop at samba. Hey but what do I know? Squat thats wot squat!

  12. Re:move to development non US by Khalid · · Score: 4, Informative

    Alas the US not only give the tone in technology but in legal matters too. For instance EU is seeking to implement a software patent law and a DMCA like law too. Lobbies are pushing this very hard in Bruxelle so this not only a US problem, Japan is doing the same thing, and soon because of WTO everybody else will follow.

    This is how harmfull laws are passed without the will of citizens who are eitheir too ignorant to act or too weak to have their voices heard. No wonder you have more and more activism in Worlds Summit like it happened in Genova (Italy).

  13. Anyone know .NET protocols yet? by SEWilco · · Score: 1
    Well, a search on the US PTO web site for "password AND change AND AN/Microsoft" comes up with only 49 hits.

    Someone who knows the .NET protocols will have to figure out if one of these applies. The obvious one "5,719,941 Method for changing passwords on a remote computer" might not happen to be the method used by .NET.

  14. Re:BS. Try looking up meaning of nondiscriminatory by Phork · · Score: 1

    Unless you come to the USA, then they will arrest you. Just look what happened to Dmitry Skylarov.

    --
    -- free as in swatantryam - not soujanyam.
  15. Anyone who thinks .NET is open architecture... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Needs to have their collective heads examined. Want Proof?

  16. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    If they're holding a patent, it should be public knowledge. So what's the patent number? Why all the "I think there might be..."? Until we find out, let's drop this whole thing down the FUD bucket.

    I think you hit the nail on the head. Until there's confirmation of a actual patent, I assume that "high Microsoft official" was probably yanking Allison's (and indirectly, slashdot's) chain.

    Everybody has to remember, FUD is Microsoft SOP.

  17. Don't upgrade by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't see what the fuss is about. Just don't upgrade to the new M$ OS. Duh.

  18. Re:ftp (scp)? by ioexcptn · · Score: 1

    I think you guys are missing my point. I am not talking about reverse engineering. Why are we always chasing them? If you provide a BETTER means by which people can share files, people will adopt it. And, noting that open source has some of the brightest minds out there, I dont see developing something like that being a problem. All system calls are documented in the MSDN. That is all you would need to create something of the sort. I am not talking about reverse engineering VFAT, NTFS, whatever. I am talking about sharing files / printers....that is all.

    --

    Intelligence is like four wheel drive, having it just means you'll get stuck in more remote places.
  19. Re:No 3rd Party? by hearingaid · · Score: 2
    every single Microsoft OS ever
    hmm... methinks you overstate :)

    I'll give ya every version of Windows, though.

    --

    my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

  20. OS/2 and Windows by dmelomed · · Score: 1

    Remember how IBM tried to keep the API between OS/2 and Windows compatible, and MS simply added more incompatibilities to the API? Same game plan here. Microsoft was probably shocked to find SAMBA to be quite a quality product. Why would I pay for NT server license to set-up a file server, if I can just use anything else that runs Samba?

  21. We(and possibly they) are overlooking one bigpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If they change the entrenched MS Fileshare protocol, it breaks compatibility with 9x/nt/2k How many businesses are going to be interested in upgrading their servers just to find out that they have to upgrade their workstations to XP/02 for anything to work right again. Microsoft may very well be killing Xp's salability before they launch it if they do this. No one wants to HAVE to upgrade all of their workstations. Especially the businesses that are running P1/P2/K6 workstations that CAN'T run 2k or XP acceptably and will want to stick with 98 or NT4. Than there are the companies that have Novell servers which this will break. And the companies that have Sun servers, which this will break. Let them do something this stupid, and watch XP sell like windows ME did :-).

  22. What about our own samba protocol variant by spectro · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The Samba team should work on their own "variant" of samba and develop drivers to all systems including MS. I mean, instead of reverse-engineering the PDC protocol, develop your own Open Source implementation of it including a client for MS OS's.

    --
    HTML is obsolete. It's time for a new, simpler and richer markup language.
  23. If sadness overwhelms you, do something... by tryfan · · Score: 1

    I guess you're an American? In that case, write to your Congressman - this should show everyone what monopoly is all about...

  24. And, the winning patent is? by Conspire · · Score: 1

    What Patent is it? Well click on this link here to see the 11,000 some odd patents that at least refer to M$ patents or this here to check out the over 1,700 patents assigned to M$. Then, take your best guess, a free beer for anyone who guesses correctly on the first guess!

    My guess: This nice little patent on electronic transactions, the key to M$ Passport strategy. After all, we all know that is what they want, which is a piece of everybody's cake. This is what many Fortune 500 financial service (banks, insurance, finance, investement banks) have been worrying that M$ would do for years. Passport is the key, you will be borg.

    Or maybe one of these if you just look for transactions in the patent Abstract field.

    Anybody have a better idea?




    --
    Real men don't need signitures!!!
  25. Re:sick of this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Call me whatever you want, but that IS capitalism.In a capitalist system, the goal is to make more money. If a company can do that by making a better product, they might do so, but it is often far more efficient to market more or to be a bully. Calling Microsoft's practices "anti-competitive" is inaccurate as well. I think they are very competitive. Isn't that what competitive MEANS? Trying to be the best and WIN?
    Just in case it wasn't clear, i do NOT approve of Microsoft's business practices.

  26. Is this really a problem? by Advocadus+Diaboli · · Score: 1
    From my point of view its nice that I can support Windows clients by offering SMB services on a Linux box.

    If this will come to an end its not a great loss, its more an accelerator for the people to head towards a Unix-like desktop instead of a Microsoft desktop.

    And if its not Samba then it will be NFS or whatever. After migrating away from a Windows platform nobody will miss the SMB services.

    Well, maybe I miss it a bit since Samba is the only reliable server I know. Windows Servers tend to be suddenly "unavailable" if the ammount of data transfered grows... :-)

  27. But will MS really break backwards compatibility? by Styx · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Usually MS is bending over backwards wrt. enabling you to run old programs etc. Would they really cut all 95/98/NT/ME clients off?
    When NT started using encrypted password, there was a registry tweak, which enabled Samba to function.
    A real danger seems like it would be MS starting to enforce their patents. It even looks like .au would let them patent software
    Not A Good thing, since much of the Samba development takes place in Australia.

    --
    /Styx
  28. SMB isn't very good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's probably important to keep in mind SMB isn't very good and everyone should be happy Microsoft is killing it.

    I mean, SMB has been around a long time now.. It's not Microsoft's fault that Samba just became stable. That's the problem with copying others, they always get to make the first move.

    CIFS is mostly untested (does a CIFS server even exist yet?) but I think anything would be better than SMB.

    1. Re:SMB isn't very good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      does a CIFS server even exist yet?

      Yes, it's called SAMBA, dumbass.

  29. Re:Superscary. by (void*) · · Score: 2

    Please. Patents have nothing to do with copyright. YANAL.

  30. Re:Very likely, but... by chrysrobyn · · Score: 1

    The difference is that the first few hits of crack are acknowledged as free and the dealer doesn't threaten to sue for copyright violation.

  31. Uh, Okaayyyy.... by 9sPhere · · Score: 1

    will thus HAVE TO support SMB for compatibility reasons Oh, yeah, sure. Go on living in a box. M$ will not be offering any support (software or otherwise for win98 and below as of a few short months from now. I'd post a link, but dont know where I found it at on the M$ site. I beleive it was hidden away back in the licence info. Bill Gates wants you to use his latest little money maker. He couldn't give a rats ass about some sorry pos 386 running 3.1 (for example) because thats a) not where the money is, and b)thats not where the emerging technology is. Resistance is futile...

    --
    It is pitch dark. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
  32. Re:A solution for the DOJ by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

    Hey, that would work, wouldn't it....

    And they couldn't use the freedom to innovate ploy to squirm their way out of it....

    Good Idea(tm)

    Jaysyn

    --
    There is a war going on for your mind.
  33. Re:I would be very surprised to see this happen. by twitter · · Score: 2
    I don't. MS is out of its head.

    Replace the word, SAMBA, with java in the above comment. Do you know any "major customers" that have any investment in java?

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  34. Samba 2.2.1a by TrollMaster5000 · · Score: 1

    I use samba every day for NT4 & 5. What kind of complaint could I write to Ms?

  35. Or... by TrollMaster5000 · · Score: 1

    ...What if the SAMBA project team had the patent?
    M$ would be helpless? Probably so. We've seen some of M$'s patents fail before.

  36. Re:US kinda like MS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course, quote from http://www.rupa.com/pipermail/jokes/1999-July/0002 81.html

    Top ten reasons USA is the real world Microsoft:

    10. Arrogant. Believe they run the world. Is there anyone else?
    9. People have a love/hate relationship to it. They love themselves.
    8. Does not follow existing standards, or receive outside impulses.
    Thus reinvents the wheel a lot. Square shape.
    7. Younger, yet still struggles with outdated legacies from its
    inception (Constitution/DOS).
    6. Ruled by lawyers and corporate values. Individual freedom limited
    through intellectual property laws - though you are told otherwise.
    5. Uses strong-arm tactics/bullying when dealing with "partners".
    4. Creates lots of self-congratulating hype through good marketing.
    3. Focuses entirely on money. Quality is less important.
    2. Speak only the native language, unless specially equipped.
    1. An evasive, self-contradicting leader named Bill.

    Top ten reasons Europe is the real world UNIX:

    10. Claim to be more literate and intellectual than the brute savages above.
    9. Not one single entity, but a mixture of different systems.
    Each system claims to be the perfect one, and to represent all.
    Gets insulted when you confuse them.
    8. A great past, then almost destroyed each other in internal wars.
    Recently re-united with common interests, and reclaimed lost ground.
    7. Interoperability based on formalized standards.
    6. No huge Hollywood titles - small is beautiful.
    5. Believe you can express yourself better in writing.
    4. Not all titles are available for smaller languages/systems.
    Sometimes you still have to use English/Windows, to great dismay.
    3. Research is more conceptual and academic, less business-driven.
    Home of the greatest inventors and philosophers.
    2. Everything is so fscking expensive. Unless it's free.
    1. Snotty, stuffy, cocky, elitist.

  37. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  38. Re:Would it be illegal to use in the US by hearingaid · · Score: 2

    patents control use. yes, it would be illegal to use the infringing product without a patent license.

    however, patents aren't a matter of criminal law, unlike copyright. you can't be arrested for infringing a patent. you can only be sued. most likely, the patentholder would get an injunction against you using the patented process. theoretically, the holder could also get damages. they'd only bother with that if you were a big organization that they could suck a lot of money out of.

    violating the injunction could land you in jail, for contempt of court. however, you still wouldn't get a criminal record and would normally be let out when the judge decided you were going to comply with the injunction. on the other hand, there's no limit to contempt of court: the judge can keep you there forever. so it's generally a good idea to obey injunctions. :)

    --

    my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

  39. Sadness overwhelms me... by OverDrive33 · · Score: 1

    Its too bad, I use SAMBA on a daily basis at work, and I've slowly been convincing managment about the benifits of Linux to Windows. So far we have 4 out of 56 boxes running Corel Linux!!
    But I can see if SAMBA gets busted up, a lot of people in the same situation as mine will run into a lot more problems convincing people to run the new and mysterious 'Linux' (fav. quote from work: "Is that new? I've never even heard of a 'Linux' computer?").
    This means more $$$$ for Microsoft. I mean this in the most serious way, but DONT THEY HAVE ENOUGH?

  40. Re:MS Office Replacement by ahde · · Score: 1

    PDF is owned (patented?) by Adobe.

  41. Re:Isn't this what 'tridge' wanted? by Jeremy+Allison+-+Sam · · Score: 2

    Actually it was me that said "SMB sucks", although tridge has mentioned similar statements :-).

    But I understand. People over here think we're both Australian for some reason :-). Tridge and I have speculated that we're both part of some wierd gestalt entity in people's minds :-).

    Jeremy Allison,
    Samba Team.

  42. Re:BS. Try looking up meaning of nondiscriminatory by greenrd · · Score: 1
    People seem to keep forgetting, there is a world outside the US. Over here in Europe, we have quite a few open source coders, but much fewer software patents. And if they haven't got a patent valid in our jurisdiction, Microsoft can't touch us... (IANAL).

  43. Win2k and LDAP? by ChadAmberg · · Score: 1

    Trying to remember from my Win2k class waaay back when it was beta whatever.
    I seem to think that when a Win2k system talks to another Win2k system for file access, it uses LDAP rather than CIFS or SMB. Supposedly its a lot faster method.
    Now, I'm not sure if I was smoking something real good that day, or if its true. But would this be a better way to access files than SMB?

    An interesting quote I found on the net... Microsoft has renamed its SMB protocol implementation "CIFS" (Common Internet File System) in a marketing effort to make it an "open" protocol.

    1. Re:Win2k and LDAP? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LDAP is used to make Active Directory requests, of course its not the RFC LDAP, it's MS-LDAP.

    2. Re:Win2k and LDAP? by dmelomed · · Score: 1

      Whatever you were smoking, was definitely frying your brain. LDAP is a directory access protocol, NOT a file sharing protocol. A better way to share storage is something akin to GFS from Sistina Software.

  44. Re:Case in point of the DMCA stifling competition by Ernest · · Score: 1

    But if you do, you get arrested if you ever entre the US.

    --
    Ernest J.W. ter Kuile
  45. Re:turn it around then... by CorwinOfAmber · · Score: 1
    Why? As others have said, SMB is not a good filesystem.

    A much better solution, IMHO, would be to port a Free NFS client/server to windows.

    --
    My future's determined by Thieves, thugs, and vermin -- The Offspring
  46. Re:duh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, you just noticed that? Look at gnome and Miguel's bloated DCOM-wannabe crap...

  47. Re:Next you'll say MS is getting rid of TCP/IP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    How does regualr 95/98/ME download the addon when everything is converted over to the new TCP/IP?

    Um, the ISP provides it to its subscribers?

  48. [OT] Re:This begs the question by jvmatthe · · Score: 1
    From your source: "it's better avoided altogether".

    So if he wants an "intelligent" discussion, perhaps he would have been better served to choose his language carefully.

    1. Re:[OT] Re:This begs the question by manyoso · · Score: 1

      So, when you originally are challenging the reader to think of something "intelligent" before replying, we are to presume that you put your full intelligence into the question?

      He fucked up. However, you also fucked up which makes you a fucking hypocrite. Cluge wins. You lose.

    2. Re:[OT] Re:This begs the question by jvmatthe · · Score: 1

      While perhaps not your style (mine tends to be a bit too verbose, with what some term "awkward" structure), the sentence as written does not violate any rules of English. Please show me, if you find otherwise.

  49. Re:They just don't get it.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, the inclusion of TCP/IP in Windows 95 (and Windows for Workgroups before that) had more to do with talking to Windows NT fileservers than it had to do with the Internet.

    It just turned out that it was useful for ISP connections instead of the MSN crap.

  50. Re:sick of this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I know this is going to be labeled "Flamebait" by the moderators, but I don't really care. What are you people talking about? This post is hardly "insightful" as it has no basis on reality!

    First of all, since when does the subtraction of functionality (in this case SAMBA compatibility) comprise the stamping out of competition? If anything, you Microsoft haters should love this sort of thing, because this is the type of move that will cause sysadmins to migrate AWAY from the Microsoft platform.

    Don't worry, by decreasing its operating system's functionality, Microsoft is going to put itself out of business more effectively than any legislator.

    As for the asinine comparison of Windows to perscription drugs, do I really have to remind you MS haters, of all people, that you are NOT dependant upon Microsoft? If you don't like Microsoft, DON'T USE THEIR SOFTWARE!

    This has been a long time coming.

  51. Re:move to development non US by hearingaid · · Score: 2

    doesn't matter, at least in the case of patents. dmca is another issue.

    patents require registration in the country where they're applied.

    that means that if M$ holds a valid U.S. patent, they can forbid you from using the process in the U.S.

    you can avoid this patent by moving to a country where the patent has not been registered. That's how Zimmerman got around the RSA patents.

    even if that country later on recognizes software patents, it can't register them retroactively. that's a universal precept of patent law.

    'course, if people use your infringing product in a country where the patent is valid, they're facing potential liability themselves. that's why PGP was illegal to import into the U.S. for a long time.

    --

    my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

  52. Re:Why not an open source solution? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MS can make a few changes and so long as they are willing to break compatibility with there own software shuch as win 3.x and say the no longer support it they can get rid of a server side implementation (sp?) like samba. If we(the linux, unix, and general OSS community) wrote a client side program to talk to *nix et al. then they could probably break it with every subsiquent (sp?) service pack they release and they dont have to break their older clients. That would allow them to eliminate network clients they don't like in a much smaller time span making a constant game of catup required to stay compatable. On the upside it would likely be easy to fix(make work again) the Open client because maintaing comptablity with there old stuff would limit what they can do.

  53. Great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Next thing you know, they'll get rid of the Bossanova. Bastards.

  54. I saw this on National Geographic by Chundra · · Score: 5, Funny

    It won't be the end of Samba, because her mother, Simba, and father, Mjimba (the king of the jungle I might add) will protect her. In fact, I suspect that Mjimba would disembowel any Microsoft weenie who tried to lay a hand his favorite daughter, leaving the carcass to the hyenas.

    1. Re:I saw this on National Geographic by chowdmouse · · Score: 1
      ...disembowel any Microsoft weenie who tried to lay a hand his favorite daughter, leaving the carcass to the hyenas.

      Insert "computer" for "daughter" and I think we have us a DOJ ruling...

  55. Possible, yes by wiredog · · Score: 2

    Legal, no. Between UCITA and DMCA reverse engineering the new format will be illegal. Besides, it's patented. You don't really think MS will license the patent royalty free to open source/free software developers do you?

    1. Re:Possible, yes by mpe · · Score: 2

      Legal, no. Between UCITA and DMCA reverse engineering the new format will be illegal. Besides, it's patented.

      Except that this only applies to the US. Maybe sometime soon software licences will contain "Not for export to the USA" terms...

    2. Re:Possible, yes by Jeremy+Allison+-+Sam · · Score: 2

      You don't really think Microsoft exposes all the needed API's to write a redirector without getting WNT/W2K source code access, do you ?

      There's not even a"redirector writers kit" you can buy ! Microsoft doesn't *want* people to be able to write replacement redirectors. If you could do that, you might reduce dependencies on Windows Domain/ADS servers - why, you might even plug in your own authentication client, removing the need for a PDC/ADS server ! That would never do, now would it. Where would the monopoly go then ?

      That's why almost no one writes decent replacement redirectors for Microsoft clients except Microsoft.

      Why do you think all the PC/NFS products don't work very well ? Why do you think anyone who has to support Windows clients in a serious way (for a NAS product etc.) has to implement SMB ? It isn't because it's a beautiful or elegent protocol :-) :-).

      Jeremy Allison,
      Samba Team.

    3. Re:Possible, yes by scott1853 · · Score: 1

      You don't need to reverse engineer anything. Write your own service that sits on top of the file system and simulates the standard file sharing protocol on a different port. Who says you need to connect to MS's NEW file sharing layer.

    4. Re:Possible, yes by Edgewize · · Score: 2

      No no, the other way around! He means that if Microsoft breaks SAMBA compatability, why doesn't someone just write a new SMB protocol client for Windows? It should be possible, after all...

  56. Simple solutions: by thejake316 · · Score: 1

    Samba team should 'embrace and extend' existing netbios to be more unix-type filesystem savvy, including file modes, ownership, md5 and plaintext passwords and MIME type and submit rfs calling it smbng or some such and forcing M$ to follow an existing standard or break it. If M$ breaks it provide gpl'ed free client to Win users or jury-rigging to make "web folders" work with samba.

    The real solution as I see it is gnutella protocol (short-term) and JXTA or something like it (longer-term). I find private gnutella servers on my network are a nice way to keep files I care about accessible without browsing through a hierarchy of stuff. I can search my network for 'radio' and get back every file with radio in the name in seconds and search and sort in a gnutella client quicker than I can browse all my home machines and the silly directory structures that have evolved on them. Because gnutella is basically http with a few modifications, any http-savvy application (many if not most that I use) can read the file as it comes down the wire. There are problems with the approach (versioning, modifying files, getting entire directories, access control, broadcasting/announcing nodes, redundancy, basically there's no meta-information framework) but with a few modifications to the gnutella protocol there are amazing applications for home and enterprise users.

    --
    AC's cheerfully ignored
  57. Re:[OT] Re:Gee thanks. by cluge · · Score: 2
    Ok I'll bite, after all you are comparing me to the President of the United States. Not a comment to be taken lightly.

    Ever heard of Walt Whiteman? His grammer was awful. His language was considered sub-par and many an enlightened person considered his work rubbish. Those enlightened people are long forgotten, but Mr. Whiteman's work lives on. In fact I recall a previous US president gives a copy of "Leaves of Grass" to his girlfriends. (I'm no Walt Whiteman, nor am I implying such. I'm pointing out that content and ideas relayed are what's important, especially in such an informal place as /.)

    So, when you originally are challenging the reader to think of something "intelligent" before replying, we are to presume that you put your full intelligence into the question?

    Shouldn't you have said "when you originally challenged the reader...."? Isn't this sentence considered an overly verbose sentence (or whatever your English teacher calls these things)?

    Aren't posts about grammer instead of the topic stupid, idiodic and pointless?

    Pay attention now sparky; I'm going to rephrase the question, and let us see if you can follow.

    For those that missed out
    The question I asked was "Should the open source community try and copy or imitate the .NET initiative?"

    What I was hoping for was some sort of semi-thought out response along the lines of "Yes, the open source community needs to or should develop a .NET because X Y Z" or "No the open source community shouldn't because of P D Q".

    Thank You

    --
    "Science is about ego as much as it is about discovery and truth " - I said it, so sue me.
  58. Re:Pure Speculation by Tet · · Score: 2
    Considering that to really wipe out samba, microsoft would have to destroy interoperability with previous windows versions...

    And you think they'll balk at that why exactly? Not only will they not have a problem with it, they seem to be actively doing so as an incentive to get people to upgrade. Witness the number of times they've changed file formats in Word for no apparent reason. And how they refuse to backport useful bits to previous versions of Windows (USB support being a good example).

    --
    "The invisible and the non-existent look very much alike." -- Delos B. McKown
  59. Re:Next you'll say MS is getting rid of TCP/IP by 11223 · · Score: 2

    How the hell do you downloaded it if your router just stopped speaking TCP/IP? You can't replace TCP/IP anymore with something else *instantly*, because there's no other way than TCP/IP to get the replacement to people effectively.

  60. Re:turn it around then... by lowe0 · · Score: 1

    I wish, I wish, I wish I still had those 4 mod points I didn't use.

    This is a fan-fucking-tastic idea.

  61. They can take my SAMBA by Hilary+Rosen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    when they pry it from my /etc/init.d/cold/dead/fingers

    Really, what can they do? ECMA rules say they have to licence is "non prejudiciously", and usually that means a percentage of revenues, not a flat fee. So if Jeremy Allison has to send them 20% of whatever he charges for SAMBA, they'll have to accept that.

    --
    Yes, the nick is flamebait
    1. Re:They can take my SAMBA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So if Jeremy Allison has to send them 20% of whatever he charges for SAMBA, they'll have to accept that.

      20% of free, is ... free!

    2. Re:They can take my SAMBA by The_Flames · · Score: 1

      Microsoft would never do a trick like that! Like they developed IE from scratch didn't they! :) They didn't license Mosaic with a deal to give 45% of all profits made from it, and then give it away for free. Ooops I forgot that this is Microsoft I'm talking about. ;) -----

      --

      --
      The computer told me to press any key to continue,I pressed the one looking like this (|) !!OH SH*T!!
    3. Re:They can take my SAMBA by AME · · Score: 3, Informative
      So if Jeremy Allison has to send them 20% of whatever he charges for SAMBA, they'll have to accept that.

      Ironic side note:
      This, I recall, is exactly what MS did to Spyglass. When Spyglass sued MS for not paying agreed-to royalties on Internet Explorer, MS responded that the royalties on a product that they sold for $0 was $0. One more company screwed by MS.

      --
      "I have a good idea why it's hard to verify programs. They're usually wrong." --Manuel Blum, FOCS 94
    4. Re:They can take my SAMBA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      more rosen info here

  62. Re:They just don't get it.... by barneyfoo · · Score: 2

    Or better - the techies should become the bosses. Internet execs are notoriously stupid. They shouldn't last too much longer.

  63. Re:Stop Complaining !!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you hate MS that much then fine, but come up with some new ideas, rather than just ripping off what has already been done, otherwise you are no better than MS !

    How can we develop something better when MS maintains its recently judged illegal monopoly? In order to gain a foot hold, we have to be compatible with MS products. That's why it's so frustrating when they move the goal posts, as you put it.

  64. Re:The article does *NOT* say that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I make it a point not to pay too much attention to the opinions of people who cannot even spell "license" nor distinguish the difference between a license and a patent.

    I mean, really, how much credit do you expect us to give you in the discussion if you can't even determine what we're talking about?

  65. Re:Very likely, but... by Phroggy · · Score: 1

    SAMBA is not only linux centric. Many other OSes use samba for windows integration (even there is novell netware 4.x version).

    Yep, I compiled Samba on Mac OS X with no problems. Runs just fine. :-)

    --
    $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
    $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  66. Re:That's an utter crock of shit! by 9sPhere · · Score: 0
    not even elevator controllers running DOS3 Get real. If M$ wanted the market, they'd go for it. Right now the money is in desktop pc's and short-term renewable licenses (ours are good for 2 years).

    That "upgrade or get screwed" shit only applies to the desktop user Realy? Did NT start at 4.0? Why did they roll out 2000 Server edition? Whats your MSCE certification; NT or 2K? Can you even get an NT cert anymore?? Everything is eventually replaced. M$ just wants to make sure you upgrade and pay your fair share when M$ thinks its time.

    The business world is a different beast entirely. Um, no its not. How many of your users have a workstation? I have a modest 300 workstations running '98.

    And you'll never see the lates MS stuff in any mission critical systems. Such systems are still running DOS because it's known to be stable or has all bugs fully known and coded to be avoidedYou're at least partly correct, our file and print servers are NT, but our mission critical financial databases are Unix. As far as DOS goes, its stable, but even cash register manufacturers are begining to move away from it.

    --
    It is pitch dark. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
  67. Re:someone please by Phroggy · · Score: 1

    SMB is the protocol used by "Client for Microsoft Networks" and "File and Printer Sharing for Microsoft Networks" under Windows. Samba is an open-source SMB-compatible client/server. I don't know what CIFS is, and I'm too lazy to check. As for working around whatever Microsoft does, I'm a little confused myself - I have feeling people are making a huge deal about something that won't even be a problem. Not to defend Microsoft, but I am not seeing the issue here.

    --
    $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
    $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  68. Re:turn it around then... by anshil · · Score: 1

    But ummm what for? So I can access windows servers from windows clients?

    --

    --
    Karma 50, and all I got was this lousy T-Shirt.
  69. Re:Backward compatible? by ahde · · Score: 1

    int initSMBCompatChk() { if (!sigcmp( sigupdate( hs_connect( "microsoft.Net", gethash(CPU_ID, OS_KEY, getpassportkey(LOCAL), gethwchecksum(), ip_addr, time()), SIG_UPDATE_REQUEST) == gethsig(CURRENT_MACHINE_USER)) { exit(-31337); } else if (OS_TYPE == "DRDOS") { exit(-1); } else { char * tmp[1]= (char*) malloc(srand(SMALL_MEMLEAK)); return(SIG_OK) } //**TODO: Convert to Hungarian notation & free tmp

  70. Re:Next you'll say MS is getting rid of TCP/IP by anshil · · Score: 1

    Well -actually- microsoft was long time against TCP/IP (in the late 80ies, early 90ies), the first SMB nets weren't TCP/IP at all, but used a direct layer they called "Netbios". Then they were -actually- against the internet at all. Remember back? They used to favorize the "Microsoft Net". Controlled central by, guess who? :o) TCP/IP was a unix idea, and favorized by unix systems, you see today who won this fight on the long run? However microsoft writes it's own history, theres not written: "we have fatally lost this fight, so now we're using TCP/IP and the internet."

    --

    --
    Karma 50, and all I got was this lousy T-Shirt.
  71. Microsoft Mole by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Considering all of De Icaza's efforts in the past to convert Penquins to Microsoft technology, his latest attempt with MONO just convinces me that De Icaza is a Microsoft mole, and MONO is a Honey Pot to trap thoughtless Penquins.

  72. Re:I would be very surprised to see this happen. by Fly · · Score: 1

    I guess the answer for which you're looking here is a really big "yes?" Duh, lots of companies use Java, just not the outdated and unsupported Microsoft Java tools. end of line

    --
    end of line
  73. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by flacco · · Score: 1
    anybody have a few Village People mp3's?

    No, but I feel compelled to admit that I once saw the Village People at the Village Gate in NYC, got backstage, and walked away with a bunch of autographs, along with an invite to a party with the band in Provincetown RI following their show there.

    And I didn't even have to handle anyone's privy member.

    --
    pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
  74. Re:That's Intellectual Property for you... by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

    that is not what the patent system was created for, it was created for the lone inventor to get some cash for the large aomount of time and work he put in to give a technology to the world. it was not visioned as a way for a multi-hunderd-billion corperation, who spends 1/100000 of their budeget on creating an algerithem, to sqweese the blood out of the compatition to maintain a monopoly.

    M$ is acting as arogent as ever, and that will be their down fall. if they piss this judge off, I dobt that the appeals court will give them another chance.

    --



    I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
  75. Re:D.A.R.E -- Drugs Are Really Excellent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They should've saved some for Steve Ballmer. He needs to chill...

  76. I found the password / .NET patent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    A quick search on the United States patent database for all patents from 1996 to the present with the word "password" in the abstract and the assignee having the word "microsoft" reveals 11 patents. It appears that this one : 5,719,941 Swift , et al. February 17, 1998 "Method for changing passwords on a remote computer" is indeed the patent in question. The abstract is : Abstract A method for changing an account password stored at a physically remote location is provided. After initiating a password change sequence, a user submits both an old and a new password to its client machine. Thereafter, the client computes two message values to be transmitted to the server. The first message is computed by encrypting at least the new password using a one-way hash of the old password as an encryption key. The second message is computed by encrypting the one-way hash of the old password using a one-way hash of the new clear text password as the encryption key. The server receives both messages and computes a first decrypted value by decrypting the first message using the one-way hash of the old password, previously stored at the server, as the decryption key. The server computes a second decrypted value by decrypting the second message using a one-way hash of the first decrypted value as the decryption key. The server compares the decrypted one-way hashed value, transmitted in encrypted form in the second message, to the pre-stored hashed old password. If the two values are equal, then the server replaces the old password by the new password. (look for yourself at www.uspto.gov if you don't believe me)

    1. Re:I found the password / .NET patent! by JerkyBoy · · Score: 1

      Good work.

      --


      Always do right. This will gratify some people and astonish the rest. -- Mark Twain
    2. Re:I found the password / .NET patent! by Edgewize · · Score: 1

      Time to go digging for prior art. Shouldn't be hard, this is such an obvious method of 'encryption' that someone must have used it at least once before.

    3. Re:I found the password / .NET patent! by ebh · · Score: 1

      OK, now I'm worried. :)

    4. Re:I found the password / .NET patent! by mikewhittaker · · Score: 1

      So? - how else do you propose changing passwords on a remote computer ?!
      Next you'll be suggesting that we store one-way-hashed password values in a file and use them to authenticate login passwords...
      ;-)

  77. Another occasion to remind Europeans to sign... by loopkin · · Score: 1

    ... the petition against software patents here.

    so, for those (hopefully rare) /. readers that haven't done it yet : sign ! sign ! sign !

  78. [OT] Re:Gee thanks. by jvmatthe · · Score: 1
    Ah. I see. So, when you originally are challenging the reader to think of something "intelligent" before replying, we are to presume that you put your full intelligence into the question?

    I did understand what you wrote. Millions of people understand what George W. Bush says when he fouls up the language in his speeches and comments to the press. And just as those millions of people place less value on Bush's words because he lacks a good command of his language, so people will place less value in your words when you do the same.

    1. Re:[OT] Re:Gee thanks. by cluge · · Score: 2
      You have finally removed all reasons for paying any attention to your posts, except for their unintended humorous value.

      The humor is intentional I assure you. Glad you enjoy it as much as I.

      --
      "Science is about ego as much as it is about discovery and truth " - I said it, so sue me.
    2. Re:[OT] Re:Gee thanks. by jvmatthe · · Score: 1
      Surely you didn't mean the author of this.

      You have finally removed all reasons for paying any attention to your posts, except for their unintended humorous value.

  79. Re:Next you'll say MS is getting rid of TCP/IP by fyonn · · Score: 1

    THe way I see it, if the GPL is ruled unenforcable that would make it highly likely that most of the other software licences would be unenforcable as well. it would be a huge precedent and might make life (in a computer software sense) very interesting for a while

    dave

  80. Hypocrite. by supabeast! · · Score: 2

    "I'll pass judgement after I see it."

    CmdrTaco on 08:36 PM August 6th, 2001
    Guess that only applies to Star Wars, but not to anything really important. Good thing he isn't a REAL journalist.

  81. Re:Very likely, but... by spudnic · · Score: 1

    So they license the technology to people like Sun, Novell, and anyone else who wants to pay for it.

    The combination of a patent, use restrictions, and licensing fee would put it out of reach for any Free/free programs. Even if it could be clean-room reverse engineered, they could make it a moving target even more than it is now.

    --
    load "linux",8,1
  82. Duuh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I kinda think he knew that :-)

  83. Re:No 3rd Party? by Jason+Earl · · Score: 2

    Having a Samba file system driver means that all of a sudden you have to update every last one of your client machines. Not only that, but you probably have to watch out for Microsoft breaking your driver with a Windows Update. Microsoft isn't particularly likely to break their driver, on the other hand, so you are safe as long as your file servers mimic a Windows server.

    SMB is a horrific kludge of a filesystem, and the Samba developers will all happily acknowledge that. If you want to install file system drivers you would probably be better off using some other network file system. The beauty of SMB, however, is that every single Microsoft OS ever has a built in client. Leveraging that built in client saves adminstrators time and money.

  84. Re:Yawn. Why not a GPL'd NFS driver for windows. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've worked in places that use Microsoft networking for 7 years now, and never once have I seen anyone use a 9x machine for serving files. In fact, it's often prohibited by policy files. So who cares?

  85. Re:Patents + Microsoft = Slashdot MegaThread by AlgUSF · · Score: 1

    You are wrong on all of your points,

    Yes microsoft wants to make .NET proprietary, because they want everyone to submit, and go strictly with Microsoft products. Look at what they tried to do with Java?

    On your last point, I think that stealing money from the hard working people of this country and blowing much of it on failing social programs, and giving the rest of it away to the fuck-ups (who spent their days smoking crack and procreating while I was in college) of the world is the biggest crackpot idea. eh? (A family earning $80,000/year is taxed 28%/yr (this is only federal income tax))

    --


    I want my rights back. I was actually using them when our government stole them after 9/11.
  86. The future of free software is assured by this by twitter · · Score: 2
    The worst is the best. It's contrary to popular FUD about needing comercial interests for comitments and software stability. Instead, it shows that some companies inflict massive intentional waste on all of us. An intollerable slavery is preferable to a tollerable one.

    The worst: MS uses some crummy patent and gets DMCA import restrictions on all future SAMBA so that it could not be legaly used by any US company or any other DMCA slave state companies.

    Enough BS like this from MS will make people think if Word documents are worth the price paid.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  87. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by AUSketch · · Score: 1

    This doesn't just put a clamp on Linux users. At my job, we use Samba on AIX machines to provide users access to certain translation tables. With Microsoft's new forced upgrade scheme, what's a business that doesn't want to pay extra to downgrade supposed to do in this situation?

  88. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by sommere · · Score: 1
    This, exactly, is the problem. Microsoft lots and lots of patents. The way the standards process works, Microsoft doesn't have to disclose what technologies in .NET are patented. So, until a patent lawyer goes through the standards proposal, and all of Microsoft's patents, we can't be sure that Microsoft isn't just trying to waste Miguel's time working on Mono just to be shot down with licencening charges for something in .NET which turns out to be pattented.

    if you read the article you would know that the particular patent which raised the question relates to password changeing....

  89. Backward compability by Zo0ok · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Leaving SMB would mean W95/98/ME and even NT4.0/5.0 would not be able to share files with the newer MS OSes. As long as these old Microsoft OS can communicate with the next MS OS, so will Samba. I doubt MS would break file sharing between NT4.0/5.0 and future OSes.

    They threw out NTLM, in came Kerberos
    They threw out WINS, in came DDNS

    I wouldn't worry too much yet...

    1. Re:Backward compability by csbruce · · Score: 2

      What better way to crank the upgrade treadmill? (Or to prevent shops from considering an upgrade.)

  90. Re:Very likely, but... by Mandi+Walls · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Microsoft can and will ignore whomever and whatever they want to, as they have been doing for years.

    How long did it take them to pay attention to their own customers and get rid of clippy? Four years? How long did it take them to write an SMTP server that allows for conditional relaying like everyone else instead of all open or all closed relaying? Oh wait; they haven't done that yet.

    This is closer to an admittance by Microsoft that other systems exist, and they are unwelcome interlopers in an M$-centric network. Leaving the old LAN Manager authentication in, using the same file sharing technology for years, M$ basically didn't see the need to change anything because, after all, no one was using anything but M$ products, right?

    So with a step like this, M$ is saying "We know you're not using our products everywhere, so we're going to try to come up with another way to make you pay for our lousy tech".

    So now we need a robust file sharing system that works like SMB/NFS/etc from a web browser - cross platform joyousness for the client, apache on whateveryouwant for the server....

    --mandi

  91. Re:The end of SAMBA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or you can get rid of RAP and the other crap you listen too. You'd be surprised what country songs you listen too that is performed by a non-country artist!

  92. Re:move to development non US by tchuladdiass · · Score: 1

    The problem is, instead of Microsoft going after the developers, they will simply go after any business user that uses the software. Just because something is legal where it's made, doesn't mean it is legal to import and use it here...

  93. Monopoly Remedy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    This is exactly the sort of thing the remedy sought by the Justice Department should address. MS should be required to open up all APIs and document formats.

  94. Re:Double Edged Sword? by Hemos+Love+Troll · · Score: 2, Insightful

    See, there's the problem... "a few other tech's". "few" and "tech's" being the key words. Microsoft knows that only the technically-oriented people are going to care at all, most of those probably won't be able to switch from Windows, and the ones that do will eventually find themselves having to switch back because they can't interoperate with something they need to. Don't just look at this one thing that Microsoft does, keep in mind that they're going to keep doing things like this. Sure, today it's just Samba you can't use without paying royalties, but sooner or later more things will be embraced and extended, and the people who could afford to switch today won't be able to stay away forever. And those that have to switch back make terrific case studies of how Linux and any other alternate technology is inadequate, don't they?

    --

    No, I didn't read the goddamned article.
  95. Re:Me Lose Monopoly? Uh-oh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You do know that there are already CIFS clients for unix right?

  96. That just horrible. by Odinson · · Score: 2
    Open-source critics of Microsoft said the company would have the opportunity to strangle an open-source project by demanding a licensing fee and royalty payments each time an open-source version of its patent was implemented.

    Ben Franklin and Thomas Jefferson just turned over in their graves.

    Monopolies (even when they are introduced by the government) always hurt the market. Just look at Wall St. We should look at different rewards for patents than monopolies.

  97. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by TheMidget · · Score: 5, Informative

    AFAIK, you can't patent software in Australia, where Samba is developped. So, even if there were such a (US) patent, it would not stop Samba. Well, there might be a small period where Samba would not work while they are busy catching up (i.e. implementing the new algorithm), but the next version all would be back to normal.

  98. Effect = little or none by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Samba is a backwards compatible protocol. There are already like 6 versions of the protocol which are all parts of the protocol if you look at Samba source. Adding one more (even if it isn't fully supported) isn't going to kill samba!

  99. Re:move to development non US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem is that you are still living somewhere that is covered by these laws. Unless you plan to move to wherever you find to host your project, they'll still bust you.

  100. Re:Me Lose Monopoly? Uh-oh! by Judg3 · · Score: 2

    Actually wasn't MS's TCP/IP stack not true to the full open standard set? From what I heard and seen around the net this they arent fully compliant with the standards until XP is released. And dont forget the Kerberos tickets in Win2k.. How they took a standard protocol, played with it, tack on "Microsoft" to the front of it and now they have "Microsoft Kerberos". Sure, you can authenticate to a *NIX box, but the *NIX box cant authenticate to your Win2k box.

    --
    Looking for hardware (Currently need: Large Etch-a-Sketch) Have one? See my journal!
  101. Re:But Of course by mosch · · Score: 2
    Besides, they can't make too radical changes, because people will still be connecting WinNT, Win2K to their WinXP network (if nothing else).

    Unless they, oh... released a driver for NT and 2K.

  102. Re:Very likely, but... by burner · · Score: 1

    You mean like WebDAV? Done. MS is even compatible in IE5.5 (Web Folders). Mac has davfs, and gnome-vfs has webdav support, too.

    --
    MRSH-Recording device, corned beef sandwich with kraut, seafaring bird, and the foamy top of a beverage.
  103. Re:Me Lose Monopoly? Uh-oh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    MSN(TM)-Internet(TM), part of the Microsoft(R) Network(TM)!

    Visit the MSiNternet*(TM) at http(R)://internet.msn.com(TM)

    (Please note, the Internet(TM) is only accessable via MSN(TM) and it's innvoative TCP/IP(R))

  104. and you're surpised because??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you can't blame a snake for being a snake... it's in its nature. What you can do IS blame Miguel and Ximian for buying into the party line and lending credibility to MS. --iamnotayam

  105. From MSDN.com by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    There is also significant industry support for the CIFS protocol. Industry leaders AT&T, Data General, Digital Equipment, Intel, Intergraph, Network Appliance, and SCO are working actively with Microsoft in support of the CIFS initiative. CIFS is already widely supported in commercial software products such as AT&T Advanced Server for Unix, Digital's PATHWORKS, HP Advanced Server 9000, IBM Warp Connect, IBM LAN Server, and Novell Enterprise Toolkit, among others. In addition, CIFS is the featured file and print-sharing protocol of Samba, a popular freeware network file system available for Linux and many Unix platforms, OS/2, and VMS

    Sounds like slashdot is spreading FUD again to me. Microsoft's "closed" new protocol is already supported in Samba

    CIFS: A Common Internet File System

  106. Pure Speculation by CommanderTaco · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The WHOLE article is based on this one little snippet of "information":
    He [Allison] said as they discussed the Server Message Block's password changing scheme, the Microsoft representative, whom he declined to identify, commented: "You know, we have a patent on this, don't you?"
    That's it. No hard info on whether microsoft is planning to enforce this patent, or if it's not something that can be worked around. Note that all the people quoted just spout vague generalities like "well, microsoft could screw us over thusly if they wanted to..."

    Considering that to really wipe out samba, microsoft would have to destroy interoperability with previous windows versions... I think this article is just more zdnet sensationalist journalism.
    1. Re:Pure Speculation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I don't think Microsoft is planning to wipe out Samba and it is sheer paranoia to speculate on that point.

      Then they've already won.

    2. Re:Pure Speculation by Jeremy+Allison+-+Sam · · Score: 5, Informative

      *Very* good point. I didn't say they were planning to enforce it. I didn't really want to talk about it much at all, and wish it hadn't ended up at ZDnet or Slashdot to be honest. I tried to get Charlie to remove this section from the article, but it was one of the only pieces of evidence that he had about patents, and in his judgement that made it important enough to mention.

      It's not "sensationalist jounalism", though. Charlie is trying to make an important point which I will discuss below.

      The reason I spoke about it at all is that my personal feelings are that implementing *NEW* Microsoft-revisioned protocols is a waste of people's time. Once they've become a de-facto standard, like SMB, then we have no choice but to try and implement them, just in the same way that Abiword, StarOffice and KWord have to load Microsoft Word file formats.

      But to start implementing new Microsoft designed protocols and *help* them become ubiquitous is insane. All IMHO of course.

      I don't think Microsoft is planning to wipe out Samba and it is sheer paranoia to speculate on that point.

      Jeremy Allison,
      Samba Team.

  107. Re:Yawn. Why not a GPL'd NFS driver for windows. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stop smiling :-), and don't you dare to wink ;-)

  108. Re:sick of this. by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2

    > Actually, it is the "best interconnectivity" is "Our Internconnectivity"

    Sorry; I should have quoted the original poster's "between MS networking protocols and UNIX". For that particular kind of interconnectivity, "none" is what MS likes best.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  109. Class Action Suit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not sure how practical this is, but I've had an idea rolling around in my mind and I figured this is as good a time as any to throw it out there.

    I feel like there is a developing ground work for some kind of class action lawsuit against Microsoft on behalf of independent software developers and corporations. Microsoft's deliberate abuse of their monopoly costs these people money by eliminating viable choices of alternative platforms.

    The reason this comes to mind is the fact that I can replace a Windows 2000 file server with a Linux file server if I can run Samba. But if they implement changes that make it completely impossible for Samba to work then I have to buy a Win2k server possibly costing thousands or hundreds of thousands of dollars in licensing fees.

    It seems like a lot of people could be hurt by such changes, and conceivably even people who never considered going with Samba are hurt simply because reduced competition will result in increased prices (especially given Microsoft's need to maintain revenue growth).

    It's not necessarily reasonable to expect companies to maintain some sort of interoperability with other people's software, but it is important to remember that this is Microsoft, a monopoly, and thus the rules of their ball game are very different. I'm not sure if this is a practical approach to attacking Microsoft, but figured I'd throw it out there. Shoot it down as you please :)

  110. since we're all on the copy MS crap game... by guest12 · · Score: 1

    ..might as well go the whole hog and clone all of windows (gpl, of course)....

  111. Re:not disclosing patents to standard bodies? by RocketJeff · · Score: 1
    Most parties with patents are not required to disclose them in the standards setting process, van den Beld said.

    Is this true? Consider this article from Fortune about Rambus, in which they were dinged for not disclosing a patent to a standards committee.

    Different standards committees have different rules. The committee that Rambus was on required the disclosure of patents (with a contract, I believe).

    Remember, with the notable exception of ANSI & ISO, most 'standards committees' are industry groups formed for specific purposes and with rules based upon varying goals.

  112. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by MsGeek · · Score: 1
    The BSA will orchestrate a raid that will force you to upgrade to Windows 2000 and Windows XP.

    At the risk of being flamed, W2K still does NetBEUI. It can support not only NT4 but anything from DOS on up.

    There are fancy things which require everything running W2K to be able to do, but as far as basic connectivity W2K supports everything. Even SAMBA, because SAMBA operates like SMB did in NT4.

    I have no idea about XP because I don't even want to touch that mess when it comes out.

    --
    Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
  113. Re:Next you'll say MS is getting rid of TCP/IP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    How the hell do you downloaded it if your router just stopped speaking TCP/IP?

    Um, it'll come free on AOL CDs that get stuffed in your mailbox?

  114. bastards were bound to do it eventually by shokk · · Score: 1

    Bastards were bound to do it eventually.

    What are the chances that some sort of driver could be devised that would let MSWin machines share according to something that Samba would be compatible with and still be able to authenticate against AD or the domain AND still be fast? Knowing MS, that would be listed as a bad driver and excluded from being loaded into the machine.

    Of course, for those of us using NetApps, Snap Appliances, and Maxtor MaxAttach units, the technology is updated with any patches the companies release. If they do this, they're going to alienate a lot of companies that do Samba-like products. But life will find a way around this, too.

    --
    "Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart, he dreams himself your master."
  115. The end of SAMBA is the end of Windows. by EEEthan · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    As a networked OS anyway. There are a lot of offices and homes using SAMBA as the filesharing protocol because it's nearly transparent to the winlusers...I'll never buy OR use an MS os that doesn't have working SAMBA interoperabilty--but then I'll never give MS my credit card # either, so I'm already out of the loop.

    Bad call--bad call. My prediction is that .NET is going to be the end of MS--it will fail when people realize they're paying more--a lot more--for less. People will just keep using win2k, win98 and 95 and ME and local versions of Office rather than paying through the nose for .NET and MS products with broken filesharing

    Of course, I could be wrong, but I know what my family and clients will be doing.

    1. Re:The end of SAMBA is the end of Windows. by Hemos+Love+Troll · · Score: 1

      The problem is that people just don't care. They'll pay more, and they'll complain, and they'll keep paying. Just like Windows crashed, and they complained, and they kept paying. It doesn't matter what Microsoft does to them. When they hear the word "Microsoft", they get that warm, safe, fuzzy feeling. Anything else is new and scary. That's what Microsoft is good at, marketing and business. They're sure not good enough at making software to justify all the money and power they have, but they really are that good at marketing and business.

      --

      No, I didn't read the goddamned article.
    2. Re:The end of SAMBA is the end of Windows. by KingAdrock · · Score: 1

      My prediction is that .NET is going to be the end of MS--it will fail when people realize they're paying more--a lot more--for less.

      Your prediction is wrong. The more I hear and see of .NET, the more brilliant I think it is. As a web application developer, I find many of the features of .NET (support for multiple languages, cross-platform, cross-browser) to be exactly what I am looking for. Microsoft will go on whether you like it or not!

  116. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unfortunately the developers would probably never show up in the US again, for fear of getting Sklyaroved.

  117. Re:sick of this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    True capitalism you dont muscle a customer to buy your product by stamping out the compitition you make a better product. Ms however does not understand this.

    MS understands true captalism a lot better than you do. Pure capitalism is about turning the largest profit. And that means selling the lowest-grade product to the largest group of people. MS understands how to do this perfectly.

    What you have in mind is actually socialism, as a mask on top of capitalism. It's a nice idea, but the people who have the money prefer to hang on to that money, instead of having to share some of their whealth, and since money controls politics, we're screwed.

    But history has shown over and over that there is an uproar from the commons whenever the elite starts to exploit them. But it always comes when it's way too late, and it always destroys more than it should have. Learn your history, it's an interesting guide to what we can expect in the future.

  118. Screw it, let them kill themselves. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is like handing microsoft a loaded shotgun and pointing it to there nutz. Show em where the trigger is and cover up while the nuts splatter on the wall. Microsoft is going to cripple itself with all these removals of things we all use. WTF does microsoft think they are? Do they think they can run the world? If so, cut microsoft into 100 pieces and hide the tape and glue. -LiNKz

  119. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by NumberSyx · · Score: 5, Interesting

    AFAIK, you can't patent software in Australia, where Samba is developped. So, even if there were such a (US) patent, it would not stop Samba.

    Once the Samba Team did the work and built a port of the new protocol, they would never be able to visit the US, or they would be arrested by the Microsoft Division of the FBI.

    --

    "Our products just aren't engineered for security,"
    -Brian Valentine,VP in charge of MS Windows Development

  120. Where is MONO even going by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From what I understand its not even endorsed by the FSF as part of GNU anymore. Will it even be free software if Ximian forms a license with Microsoft. I think this is a bad thing as it will permit Microsoft to demonstrate to the ECMA that they do permit some competition, and at the same time they could threaten the one true free software effort in DotGNU, which already has working code from Portable.NET

    What this may mean is that only a form of phony competion will be permitted to exist much like the idea that Apple actually competes with Microsoft. I see other dangers in it as well. The real answer should be a petition drive to the ECMA chair to reconsider the application for standardization by an illegal monopoly.

  121. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1

    Actually, I think that applies to encryption/decryption utilities (hardware and/or software), not an actual encrypted document itself.

  122. But that doesn't sound as juicy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let Have (Bondi?) Blue work out all of his sensationalized, paranoid conspiracy theories here, they're rather entertaining. And from someone with such a low ID#? Tsk tsk. You see, that is the only reason Apple hasn't taken over the world, it's shifty moves by Microsoft. Nothing else. They're out to kill one of their largest markets of office suites, you know? Who cares that they would lose far more by killing them off than any gain of getting them to buy an MS OS, or lose the only significant competitor in these touchy times with the DoJ! Don't follow logic! Why, MS hasn't become the largest force in computers by THINKING or strategy, it's something else.

  123. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by sqlrob · · Score: 1
    WTF are you talkng about? This doesn't have anything to do with DMCA.

    If they reverse engineer it, they are breaking patent law, not copyright law.

    Of course the way around it may be to place a password encryption server in Europe or other place that doesn't recognize software patents, then hit that server with the encryption request (using a different form of encryption so there's no plaintext)

  124. Re:Yawn. Why not a GPL'd NFS driver for windows. by Jeremy+Allison+-+Sam · · Score: 3, Interesting

    > samba still cannot serve the "user list" to
    > windows 9x machines for USER level sharing.

    Finally fixed in Samba 2.2.1a. I'm sure you'll now upgrade... :-) :-).

    Jeremy Allison,
    Samba Team.

  125. Would it be illegal to use in the US by flatrock · · Score: 2

    I know that Slashdot isn't the best palce to go for an opinion on legal issues, but does anyone have any idea if it would be legal to download and use a product that violates a US patent. I've heard of companies getting injunctions against other companies distributing products that violate their patents. However, if the distributers are outside the US, would it be illegal to use the software itself in the US?

    1. Re:Would it be illegal to use in the US by hearingaid · · Score: 2

      in theory, yes, you do. Foobar can get an injunction forbidding you from using it.

      patent law's a big stick. it's good that the things only last 20 years, instead of however long Disney wants them to. :)

      --

      my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

    2. Re:Would it be illegal to use in the US by Brocktree · · Score: 1
      patents control use. yes, it would be illegal to use the infringing product without a patent license.

      So.... If I buy an ACME Deluxe Pooper Scooper that infringes a patent held by Foobar, Inc., I get in trouble for using it?

      Fear of my neighbors' wrath outweighs fear of Foobar, in this case.

      Brocktree
      Feel free to use this .siq, if you can't think of one on your own.

      --
      Brocktree -- Feel free to use this .sig, if you can't think of one on your own.
    3. Re:Would it be illegal to use in the US by meldroc · · Score: 2

      Yep, it's probably illegal, but how are they going to catch you? Quite frankly, the copyright & patent laws are draconian and absurd. The whole intellectual property system in the U.S. and much of the rest of the world has been irreversably corrupted, so the only way to survive is to violate patents and copyrights. If they take down your web sites, bring them back up on another ISP and make their lawyers play whack-a-mole until their offices are buried in lawsuits and cease-and-desist letters.

      --

      Meldroc, Waster of Electrons
    4. Re:Would it be illegal to use in the US by acb · · Score: 2

      If they'd really want to catch people for using patent-infringing clones of SMB, they could. For example, groups like BSAA run audits of companies to check for unlicensed software; they could extend this to checking for software that violates intellectual property laws in other ways, such as unlicensed implementations of patented technologies. All they'd have to do is add SAMBA to a list of infringing products to check for.

  126. Re:sick of this. by Black+Parrot · · Score: 3, Insightful

    > Samba is the best if not only solution for interconnectivity between MS networking protocols and Unix ... but yet MS intends to cut this off.

    From Micorsoft's perspective, the "best interconnectivity" is "no interconnectivity".

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  127. So what. by Second_Derivative · · Score: 0

    Alright, so Microsoft is trying to strangle out interoperability. And this is new because?.. ;)

    Just my two cents, but personally I think that we're barking up the wrong tree here. Even if this new .NET centerpiece causes serious interoperability problems, one has to take note of Microsoft's other decisions; the fact that its currently shooting itself in the foot with licensing for instance. All good sysadmins (yes and MCSEs too) know that you shouldnt jump on bandwagons, .NET wont be seriously pervasive until years after its launch, so maybe instead of going on about how Microsoft is leveraging its monopoly blah blah blah we ought to look at Linux's strengths. Like terminal services for instance. Microsoft didn't invent that as they might have you believe - get a few old P75's, network them together, put an application server and you have a centrally adminstrateable server with almost zero-maintainance cost. Want to do that with Win2K? sure, after you fork out thousands of $$$ for something that isnt much better, if at all. KDE's fast becoming a serious desktop platform, together these two capabilities could really make a decent corporate solution. And if you think this is a pipe dream it seems to be good enough for a whole city to use. (yes I know they still use Citrix machines, but not as much as the KDE boxen hmm?)

    And that's just one possible application. Linux seems to be doing everything except making coffee these days (hell, even that) and more and more people seem to be using Linux these days in both client and server space, so screw Microsoft. People dont use NFS or Apache because its compatible with MS proprietary stuff. Learn from history too; OS/2 tried to be an advanced platform as well as being Windows compatible. Don't see OS/2 around much these days, do you?

    I'm sure some of you will disagree with me but in my humble opinion the mono effort isnt a great idea. Why not implement an open source .NET? thats what we should have been doing from the start, instead of following behind. That or jump over .NET and do the Next Big Thing, whatever that may be. Or stuff compatibility and instead focus on making a better open UNIX platform, people arent falling over themselves to shell out for MS' latest technology you know. I'm losing my point anyways, so enough karma whoring for one day, but never theless, I suppose this is worth thinking about

  128. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by bwhaley · · Score: 1

    This is potentially a very important problem for linux users. I would say almost all of our networks have to interface with Windows machines somewhere along the line. It is essential that we can share files between them in a simple and uniform way. How many linux boxes exist only for use as a file server? I know that I have two.

    It is so frustrating that nobody (DoJ) puts an end to this. Finally some decent competition comes along and once again Microsoft refuses to be fair and just squashes the competition. Obviously it hasn't come to that yet, and hopefully never will, but who knows what could happen? Then again this could be just a nasty rumour..

    --
    "I either want less corruption, or more chance
    to participate in it." -- Ashleigh Brilliant
  129. The end of SAMBA? by Black+Perl · · Score: 3, Funny

    Getting rid of SAMBA... not a bad idea. While they're at it, they should get rid of COUNTRY and DISCO.

    --
    bp
    1. Re:The end of SAMBA? by 10Ghz · · Score: 1

      Hey! DISCO is not dead!

      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    2. Re:The end of SAMBA? by radja · · Score: 1

      "country roads" by Me First and the Gimme Gimmes?

      *duck*

      //rdj

      --

      No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness.
      --Sheikh Abd-Al-Kadir, 1587
    3. Re:The end of SAMBA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm curious. give me some examples.

  130. Very likely, but... by stikves · · Score: 2, Insightful
    SAMBA is not only linux centric. Many other OSes use samba for windows integration (even there is novell netware 4.x version).

    I doubt microsoft can ignore all these systems. People will not easily dump their workstations for NT...

    1. Re:Very likely, but... by einhverfr · · Score: 2
      SAMBA is not only linux centric. Many other OSes use samba for windows integration (even there is novell netware 4.x version).

      Yeah, but most people are using Windows and NT on their workstations. This is actually to SAMBA's advantage as is the recent anti-trust actions. Microsoft has been held to have market power in desktop OS software, so their ability to enforce their patents has been weakened (intellectual propertly law does not grant one immunity from anti-trust law).

      I would not worry about it for now.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    2. Re:Very likely, but... by ackthpt · · Score: 1

      We used Samba between NT and HPUX. Of course, HP has had a bad habit of getting into bed with M$ before, wouldn't surprise me if they're already smoking the cigarettes on this deal.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    3. Re:Very likely, but... by Hemos+Love+Troll · · Score: 1
      Indeed they won't easily dump their workstations for NT. It'd take something big, like, say, Samba not working any more. Some big reason like that...

      If Microsoft can ignore the DOJ, why not a few measly workstations?

      --

      No, I didn't read the goddamned article.
    4. Re:Very likely, but... by mimbleton · · Score: 1

      Well, there is one other thing ... you die like pig.

  131. This begs the question by cluge · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Should the open source community be trying to copy the ".NET inititative" or should they try to come up with something different? Let that question sink in a bit and get back to me when you have intelligent commentary.

    --
    "Science is about ego as much as it is about discovery and truth " - I said it, so sue me.
    1. Re:This begs the question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sad but true, language is molded by idiots.

      Next thing you know, 'lose' will have an extra 'o' and 'powerful' an extra 'l'.

      Trust me tho, use "begs the question" like this and lots of people will look down on you like a moron. If that's what you want, go for it.

    2. Re:This begs the question by Frizzle+Fry · · Score: 1

      I just did look it up and his usage is perfectly correct. He would have been wrong 2350 year ago when Aristotle was writing, but since then usage has changed. That's what language does. It evolves and changes. Deal with it.

      --
      I'd rather be lucky than good.
    3. Re:This begs the question by jvmatthe · · Score: 0, Troll
      I have a hard time providing intelligent commentary for someone that doesn't know how to use "beg the question" correctly.

      Look it up.

    4. Re:This begs the question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Should the open source community be trying to copy the ".NET inititative" or should they try to come up with something different? Let that question sink in a bit and get back to me when you have intelligent commentary. This is informative? Hasn't this "intelligent" question been asked, oh, a dozen times by karma whores?

    5. Re:This begs the question by crucini · · Score: 2
      The page you cite does not support your conclusion:
      It is gaining ground, and one or two recent dictionaries claim that it is now acceptable - the New Oxford Dictionary of English, for example, says it is "widely accepted in modern standard English". I wouldn't go so far myself.

      Gaining ground != perfectly correct.
  132. Re:someone please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You will no longer be able to choose the type of server you want to run, if you want Windows XP compatibility.

    It suddenly dawned on me. Microsoft is secretly hinting at what they're aiming their guns at in the names of their products.

    .NET --> conquering all internet services
    XP --> destroying cross platform

  133. Re:Lock-in by FyRE666 · · Score: 0

    Maybe it's time for Apple to lower their hardware prices and try to steal some sales. OS-X (which kind of sucks at the moment - still) can use either NFS or samba to swap files with a linux server just fine. There's plenty of desktop software out there for it, and the hardware is nice (if overpriced).

    I doubt they will while Jobs is still holding the reins, but here's hoping... BTW, I've already vowed never to buy another MS OS (only run Win2k on one machine now for a couple of non-MS apps, all my other machines run Redhat 6x/7x), and have already convinced family members (those who aren't "techies") to go with Apple instead of PC. I'm going over to Apple+linux when I next upgrade.

    Of course, I still have to use the only Windows machine at work most of the time, <sigh> (everything else in Sun/Linux/Apple)

  134. Foolish moderation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...okay, who the hell mismoderated this? Not +1, Insightful. +1, Funny would be better.

  135. Re:They just don't get it.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If MS are really going to try and conquer the internet the way we think they are then I foresee two possible futures.

    Either MS wins all, and we will have to use Windows whenever we want to get work done.

    Or, there will be a fragmented market, with one section using windows, and the other one using everything except windows (most likely).

    Don't forget that it has always been MS's strategy to make moving towards Windows easy, and away from it hard. Which is why they have all these UNIX services type tools, which allow you to run your stuff on Windows, no matter what you used to run on.

  136. Re:I would be very surprised to see this happen. by csbruce · · Score: 5, Funny

    Microsoft might be a major behometh and may attempt to stifle Project Mono but I doubt it would be throught the form of changing CIFS (the new version of SMB for those who don't know).

    They should have called it "CIFLS", pronounced "syphilis". Perhaps the 'L' can be implied. "First I got Mono, but then I realized that I also got CIFLS in the same transaction."

  137. Doesn't matter: TCP/MS by vs · · Score: 1

    Hm, yesterday we were told that we wouldn't be able to use Unix to talk toWindows because of "TCP/MS"-extensions, anyways...

    Sheeesh.

  138. Good riddance by The_Weevil · · Score: 1

    Maybe getting rid of this irritating, spamming, networking system is a step in the right direction. MicroSoft Networking is certainly NOT the pinnacle of good design or implementation. Hopefully their own system will be much better.

    --
    ghaa.
  139. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by Royster · · Score: 3, Informative

    Then you open your organization to patent infringement liabilities. Do you want to be the guy who's name comes up when the CIO asks "Who cost me $X in patent licensing fees from 'free software'?"

    So now instead of you being able to thumb your nose at the BSA because you use Open Source, they'll be gunning for your Samba installation.

    --
    I have discovered a truly marvelous sig, unfortunately the sig limit is too small to contain i
  140. Re:Me Lose Monopoly? Uh-oh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yes

  141. Re:move to development non US by Philip+Sargent · · Score: 1
    Patent Law - Hold on, it's not as bad as it sounds. The only people inconvenienced will be users and developers in the US and countries with identical patent laws re software (a decreasing minority of computer users, but still significant of course). Such patents are currently illegal in the UK and many other countries so the software can be developed and used freely.

    "Europe" won't be doing anything in a hurry: the responsibility lies with the EPO which has its own legislative and executive bodies, not the EU, even though it is some people in the EU Commission which are giving us some concern. Patents are governed by international treaties, and remember it takes decades to change treaties. The WTO's agenda is set years in advance and software patents are very low on the priority list. For the current proposals see the report "Does the TRIPS Agreement require all member's rules on protection of intellectual property to be identical?" for an explanation.

    The UK response to a recent initiative to re-look at software patents was firmly negative, and there is a Europe-wide campaigning body to ensure that it doesn't happen "by accident".

  142. Re:I would be very surprised to see this happen. by radish · · Score: 1

    First off - Billy does listen to the big corps. They pay him, unlike the government. If they stop buying his stuff, he is *gone*. He doesn't care about the government because they don't represent a revenue stream.

    Secondly, our users don't ever install JVM's. As someone pointed out, our most important Java is server side. But we do have client side Java (mainly Swing, some other bits and pieces) - the JVM is installed and maintained by our tech support groups, not the users.

    --

    ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

  143. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by UberLame · · Score: 1

    First, samba is a specific package. What you want is a CIFS (used to be SMB) driver.

    There used to be third party products, but my understanding is that samba killed them all. And being 3rd party wouldn't help anyway, unless you manage to get into the Microsoft Shared Source program.

    --
    I'm a loser baby, so why don't you kill me.
  144. Re:Double Edged Sword? by malkavian · · Score: 2

    Actually, that depends on install base of all products on the market.
    If M$ make more and more incompatible, then they'll end up making them not work with all the stuff that's out there (I know people, home users, who're still happy using DOS or Win 3.x because they simply don't need more).
    At the moment, all this 'old' install base works quite happily, so they carry on adding to the figures that MS is compliant with.
    Now, should MS break legacy compliancy, they'll irritate a lot of people who now can't communicate with the legacy MS installations, who need to look elsewhere (as they often loathe buying a whole new PC just so they can view the latest MS word files).
    The whole point of MS keeping market share is to make things just compliant enough that old MS tech works, while making nudges that the new software is worth the cost of an upgrade.
    Breaking the compliancy will remove a lot of legacy systems which will likely move to open source solutions/other compliant commercial systems, eroding MS Market share.
    Rather than that hitting MS badly, they'll just improve legacy support in patches, making sure that all the open source stuff works with the latest MS.
    Legacy is the whole reason we have the x86 architecture around still today.. And it'll be the reason that things still carry on working (to an extent) with MS into the future.

    Malk

  145. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by Jacque · · Score: 1

    Further erosion of our rights. If reverse engineering software had been illegal in the early 60's we'd all still be using over-priced IBM PCs. Lawmakers have no clue what they have done to the future of technology.

  146. If there's a patent... by winchester · · Score: 1

    ...you should be able to find it in some online patent database. Once you have access to the patent, it shouldn't be too hard to implement microsoft's idea different enough so that it is both interoperable and doesn't infringe the patent.

    1. Re:If there's a patent... by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      you forgot that you have to shell out a million bucks for legal fees and experts to explain the judge and jury that your implementation does not infringe on the microsoft patent. Good luck.

      Once you start playing the patent game, you sure need to have deep pockets.

    2. Re:If there's a patent... by Prior+Restraint · · Score: 2

      Maybe not. In Festo Corp. v. Shoketsu Kinzoku Kogyo Kabushiki Co., the Federal Court of Appeals curtailed the strength of the Doctrine of Equivalents (it's currently on appeal to the Supreme Court). IANAL, and I'm not about to wade through the text of the decision, so I can't say anything intelligent about the kind of limits they imposed, but I thought you might be interested.

  147. Next you'll say MS is getting rid of TCP/IP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Next MS will get rid of TCP/IP and replace it with some new proprietart patented protocol. Real TCP/IP will only be made available as a gateway network device on NT Server. i.e., your ISP must purchase the expen$ive converter. While you puny windows peons must use the MS protocol, which will no doubt made downloadable as an addon for 95/98/ME/etc.

    1. Re:Next you'll say MS is getting rid of TCP/IP by d00fus · · Score: 1

      It's a M$ plan to force an upgrade. They've been known to do it.

      :)

    2. Re:Next you'll say MS is getting rid of TCP/IP by ravrazor · · Score: 2
      It's sad, but true: The only defense commercial software companies have against the GPL (which they see as a threat to their entire business model) is to get a patent on some aspect of the product. This is true not only for large companies such as Microsoft, but also for smaller ones that are not predatory monopolists. Microsoft is smart to use patents as a defense against the GPL, because (at least until and unless the GPL is ruled unenforceable) it is the only sure defense.

      and since you think you were joking about MS replacing TCP/IP, read someone else's thoughts on the subject: http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20010802. html

    3. Re:Next you'll say MS is getting rid of TCP/IP by mashy · · Score: 1

      seriously, though, ms could foist an update like that as a 'critical update' and people would download it.

      Judging by the number of Code-Red-infected boxes still attacking me, I doubt it.

    4. Re:Next you'll say MS is getting rid of TCP/IP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is only one way to bring down MS, and its not making Linux work with MS-systems or making Linux a Superior OS, people are familiar and comfortable with Windows, and this is what maintians there monopoly. Linux is a hobby OS. You have to target MS where it hurts, and thats their developers/coders. Without them MS and there shit OS's cease to exist. Somehow, someway, we have to stop developers from getting jobs at Microsoft and working for the company. That is the only way.. no developers, no code, no company!

    5. Re:Next you'll say MS is getting rid of TCP/IP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      an obnoxious mislabeled windows update option? :)

      seriously, though, ms could foist an update like that as a 'critical update' and people would download it.

    6. Re:Next you'll say MS is getting rid of TCP/IP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IPv6 will be deployed completely before "MS-TCP/IP" gets anywhere. In other words, when hell freezes over.

    7. Re:Next you'll say MS is getting rid of TCP/IP by 11223 · · Score: 4, Funny
      How does regualr 95/98/ME download the addon when everything is converted over to the new TCP/IP?

      Huh, didn't think of that one, right?

    8. Re:Next you'll say MS is getting rid of TCP/IP by PerfectWorld · · Score: 1

      Well for one: routers and end systems can all support multiple protocols. M$ makes a critical update that contains the new protocol now, while everyone is still talking TCP/IP. You download and install the update which installs, and enables, the new protocols. Voila, it is there, ready to go when M$ takes over the net with its new protocols. M$ writes the update so that the new protocols don't actually show up in the list of protocols in settings.

      --

      Ancient Budo Master once told me: "All your bruises are belong to us."

    9. Re:Next you'll say MS is getting rid of TCP/IP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Next time, how about you come up with your own comment, instead of just cutting/pasting from Brett Glass's drivel in the ZDnet Talkback?

  148. Re:They just don't get it.... you don't either by Saurentine · · Score: 1
    In my company, for example, all of the tech guys use UNIX and all of the admin and sales use Windows. We have to interact with each other. If MS aren't going to allow it through their tools, it just means companies like mine will have to migrate to non-MS solutions for even the Windows machines. I just feel that MS are shooting themselves in the foot by taking this sort of approach.

    Who do you think will have to change? The executives who make the decisions and run the company, or the workers under them?

    In >99% of the companies, the executive decision is the one that gets acted on. And stupid or not, in most cases, the executives will what they like best, which is what they're familiar with, which is Microsoft products. Admin and sales aren't going to change for you. If MS & Unix become incompatible by MS actions, in most cases the execs will just order that the admin and production networks become separate because they don't want to look like weenies trying to relearn a system when they really don't even know Windows very well yet.

    We've got to find a MUCH better answer than "the techs like it better".

  149. Hello Microsoft, goodby interoperability by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Somebody should whack our PHBs and government types in the head and inform them that open standards and interoperabilty are good things -- you could make an argument for them being in the best interests of society at large.

    Maybe the next time the gov't drags them into court, they need to force them to accept and support open, documented, un-M$-ified standards for key technologies. Like file formats, network protocols, etc, etc.


    For the life of me, I can't understand why any (non-secret) government agencies use any black-box software. Why don't librarians, historians and like people raise the alarm? Why is this even a geek issue?!!

  150. This is the last straw. by FrankieBoy · · Score: 1

    OK it's time to make a major structional change in my IT department. We've been using Win2K and NT4 long enough. I'm going to start converting my Win2K servers to BSD and my clients to Linux. I've just downloaded the free version for Solaris 8 on Intel. Has anyone deployed this?

  151. Re:That's Intellectual Property for you... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2

    > Saving us all from better products at little or no cost for bloatware...

    Of course. What the heck are patents good for, if you can't use them to cut off the competition's air supply?

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  152. A solution for the DOJ by subsolar2 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I just had a thought, rather than breaking up Microsoft or charging them some slap on the wrist fine. The DOJ should require MS to provide free licence to all devopers any patented technology that Microsoft develops as part of their OS or applications.

    This whould allow Microsoft to "innovate" as much as they want but allow competition by allowing others to freely clone their products & technologies.

    Of course MS would complain "Waaah they are taking away our property and giving it to others!". They would be right in a way, but it's not like they they took away Bill's wonderful home or something.

    1. Re:A solution for the DOJ by NotoriousQ · · Score: 1

      An interesting side effect is that some one could write a fully compatible OS, that is non-Microsoft. Perhaps on a linux based-kernel. Something like Wine, but more complete and correct.

      I think I am about to write to the government and sugggest it to them.

      --
      badness 10000
    2. Re:A solution for the DOJ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't that exactly what they did when they split up Ma' Bell ? FORCE them to license their lines (property) to competitors for a reasonable price to allow competition ? Because this is in relation to IP as opposed to RP (real property) wouldn't a reasonable price be 0 ?

  153. Shows why the patent law is broken by SirSlud · · Score: 2

    I know its been said to death, but really, royalties for patent owners for software should be limited to 1 year. Maybe 2. We all know software is pretty much obsolete after around 5 - 10 years. (ie, I'll take a guess that .Net will be around for maybe 10 years, if it's a commercial success.)

    So the licencing wouldn't be prohibitive if you knew you only had to pay it for a limited time within the lifetime of the technology. Copyrights are supposed to help the inventor, but open up the forum to royalty-free competition while the invention is still viable and useful. This would foster more participants in the arena of competing technologies, and thus, more innovation. And we wouldn't be wondering if Microsoft ringing the death knell for SAMBA.

    All of which is not withstanding the scary idea that developing a technology for 'changing passwords' should not entitle you to more royalty payments than a developer, of a technology which only wants to /talk/ to your software, can afford.

    Frightening.

    US Patent Office: Selling monopoly rights to common sense for over 25 years. (Yes, I own the tee-shirt.)

    --
    "Old man yells at systemd"
  154. Re:Possible, yes... by lifeless · · Score: 1

    +You don't really think Microsoft exposes all the
    +needed API's to write a redirector without
    +getting WNT/W2K source code access, do you ?

    Certainly not. I've done a chunk of research into being able to build an IFS driver for NFS and/or a IFS driver for UMSDOS for cygwin. The Windows 2000 DDK is in the thousands of US dollars range - out of my league as a for-interest hacker. Cygwin itself can pretend to offer filesystems, but that doesn't let the general windows case do much.

    + There's not even a"redirector writers kit" you
    + can buy ! Microsoft doesn't *want* people to be
    +able to write replacement redirectors. If you
    +could do that, you might reduce dependencies on
    +Windows Domain/ADS servers - why, you might even
    +plug in your own authentication client, removing
    +the need for a PDC/ADS server ! That would never
    +do, now would it. Where would the monopoly go
    +then ?

    I strongly suggest you get in contact with Corinna Vinschen of Red Hat. She's written a sub-authenticator for NT for use with cygwin - to allow "su" without a password to work on NT. Thats a big step in the right direction. I don't know how much practical help that is to building a SAM-like replacement, but if Novell can do it, then for sure we can.

    + Why do you think all the PC/NFS products don't
    +work very well ? Why do you think anyone who has
    +to support Windows clients in a serious way (for
    +a NAS product etc.) has to implement SMB ? It
    +isn't because it's a beautiful or elegent
    +protocol :-) :-).

    I thought it was selection of the fittest :-/.

    Seriously though, speaking from experience, an old version of the smbval library (smblib.c has version 1.0 :}) builds and runs just fine under cygwin on windows. IO've successfully used it while we developed squid's NTLM integration (and thanks again to the SAMBA team ! ).

    Rob

  155. I don't think so. by semaj · · Score: 1

    I doubt that MS are going to ditch support with all of the previous versions of Windows just to get rid of SAMBA, somehow.

    They might add some funky new .net only features, but I bet SMB will be around for a long time to come.

    --
    Meep meep
  156. Re:someone please by Edgewize · · Score: 5, Informative
    SMB = Server Message Block, also known as the Windows file-sharing protocol. When you double-click on Network Neighborhood, you are sending SMB queries.

    CIFS = Common Internet File System, also known as a slightly updated version of SMB, also known as the Windows file-sharing protocol. There is nothing really Common or Internet about it. (Did Microsoft give it this name?)

    SAMBA = the SAMBA project, a free implementation of an SMB file server for non-Microsoft systems. SAMBA also includes directory services and other Windows NT Server features, so you could theoretically replace a WinNT box with an old Pentium running Linux.

    By adding proprietary and patented encryption into the next version of the SMB protocol, SAMBA will no longer be able to emulate a Windows NT file server. At best, Microsoft clients would warn the user that they are not using a 'secure' connection, scaring management and IT support into buying a new Microsoft server. At worst, it could mean that Windosw XP cannot connect to SAMBA servers at all, forcing people to switch to Microsoft servers.

    This is another effort by Microsoft to lock you into using their products. You will no longer be able to choose the type of server you want to run, if you want Windows XP compatibility.

    There are two possible hopes:
    1) Microsoft doesn't make this encryption a requirement to connect
    2) Someone writes a SMB-compliant network driver for Windows XP

  157. Re:They just don't get it.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You realize that your situation is very rare, don't you? In almost all companies, buying decisions are made by admin and sales, and not by the tech guys. That's the reason why there are so many Windows servers, after all. Last time I checked, the admin (me) was a tech-guy. This is common isn't it?

  158. THIS JUST IN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Here is exclusive footage of Steve Ballmer this morning after Slashdot posted this story.

    Thank you.

  159. But where does one draw the line? by GroundBounce · · Score: 2

    It is a valid point that supporting a protocol too early might actually help the protocol gain acceptance.

    But where do you draw the line on when to start? How ubiquitous is ubiquitous enough? Is it a good idea to have a project underway so that that you have a bit of a jump start if the protocol does start taking off? Or is it better to wait until the protocol is extremely ubiquitous, and then your Linux servers are at a disadvantage for two or three years until the projects reach maturity?

    These are all difficult questions, and the answers may depend on timing. When Samba was started, Linux was still a small player in the server market, and in fact Samba was one of the things that spurred Linux in to popularity. Now that many users and businesses depend on Linux servers, it will probably mean that there will be higher expectations that protocols be supported sooner.

    Is it a waste of time to start such a project before a protocol becmoes ubiquitous? I suppose it depend on the ultimate outcome. It is a risk, and life is full of risks. The downside is that some people will have wasted their time (and maybe some money) if the protocol flops. But the upside could be the success of Linux in another server market if the protocol proves to be popular.

    Ovbiously there's no easy answer, and I agree that implementing *all* MS standards willy-nilly is probably unproductive, and that implementing MS standards before they become ubiquitous involves some risk. Not all risk taking is bad, however, and if the potential upside is large, I'm not sure I would call it insane.

  160. FUCK THIS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    JEEESH,
    when will you guys realize that Microsoft doesn't give a fuck what you do.
    they don't want you any where near them.
    MS is going to try to find a way to kill anything we do.
    It's a fact, MS wants to control market share.
    The only way to take them down is not just the fact that we be compatable with them,
    but we TAKE THEM DOWN.
    When i saw this, i mean we need to write worms, email virus's that take MS SOFTWARE DOWN.

    Till it becomes anarchy on the online world.

    and so far, nobody is doing this.
    and until this happens, MS is just going to parade away.
    pff.
    corporate whores.

    1. Re:FUCK THIS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dumbass

  161. Clients are good for lock-in, Servers bad. by Speare · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Microsoft must be overjoyed that Mac OS X.1 and Linux and Unix all have popular SMB clients. Woo hoo! Desktops of all kinds are locking in the value of having a nice Microsoft-controlled backoffice.

    It's the servers of SMB which are the thorn in Microsoft's side. A decent Samba server runs on Linux just fine, which robs Microsoft of all that wonderful lock-in. A Microsoft backoffice solution can be replaced with a drop-in equivalent, and not one desktop user even notices the difference (except there's fewer i.t. emails out to the organization about downtime).

    Every time a fully functional drop-in replacement is possible, Microsoft will attempt to change the game to break that possibility. Desktops are hard to replace fully, because every single user has to make a very personal commitment (either by paycheck or choice) to learn all the little differences. Servers are easy to replace without much hardship, and Microsoft knows this. Hence, .net and kerberos tweaks and other closed or extended standards.

    --
    [ .sig file not found ]
    1. Re:Clients are good for lock-in, Servers bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It's the servers of SMB which are the thorn in Microsoft's side. A decent Samba server runs on Linux just fine, which robs Microsoft of all that wonderful lock-in.

      They're targeting the interoperability of Windows and other OS's. If it weren't for the fact that a company can roll out Linux gradually without disrupting their entire operation, a lot of them wouldn't be doing it.

  162. Re:Case in point of the DMCA stifling competition by ahde · · Score: 1

    or in any county that has extradition treaties with the US. Or that does business with the MPAA.

  163. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doesn't help if MS networks stops using SMB which was the point he was making. It's cool that OS X can use Samba now but the future is where we are looking.

  164. I would be very surprised to see this happen. by davidu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I would be /very/ surprised to see Microsoft implement a new feature into CIFS which when reverse-engineered by SAMBA (legal under DMCA for interoperability issues) would require them to pay a patent license.

    The reason this would be hard to stomach is that Microsoft has major customers including banks and other data farms which use Samba across their worldwide networks. Microsoft might be a major behometh and may attempt to stifle Project Mono but I doubt it would be throught the form of changing CIFS (the new version of SMB for those who don't know).

    Microsoft is a bully and we will always have things to overcome however they still answer to some people, namely their major customers and when they bark orders, Microsoft listens.

    Plus, the story doesn't really even talk about Microsoft changing CIFS, it talks about possible patents in .NET which is entirely possible. We must remember though that the whole world is not kept under US law (though more and more of it has our laws thanks to our friends at WIPO...) Either way, Samba has a pretty stable future despite the minor roadblocks Microsoft throws up.

    -davidu

    --

    # Hack the planet, it's important.
    1. Re:I would be very surprised to see this happen. by twitter · · Score: 1
      Would we care if they did anything to stop other JVM's running on Windows? You betcha. Our CTO would hop in a plane up to Redmond pronto and have a word with Billy Boy, as has happened in the past.

      Is your CTO worried that many users will not bother to download another JVM? They might be scared to download software from the scary internet from something that might not be a "trusted source". He might ask old Billy if he intends to allow vendors to install useful JVMs, and if he intends to break them in the near future. No he won't and yes he does, oh my!

      Don't bother to buy plane tickets. Billy just told the Federal Government to blow, I doubt he will tell your CTO anything less.

      --

      Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    2. Re:I would be very surprised to see this happen. by RedHat+Rocky · · Score: 1

      Microsoft would do this precisely because their major customers depend on SAMBA.

      What better way to force them to switch and get them on board the new licensing plan?

      --
      Anything is possible given time and money.
    3. Re:I would be very surprised to see this happen. by interiot · · Score: 2

      I second that. I work for one of the larger companies, and we have a mixture of NT and Solaris boxes for the development staff. We started using Samba because... well, the NT sysadmins were understaffed, but also because it's easier to maintain because the server setup is more homogenous.

    4. Re:I would be very surprised to see this happen. by sydb · · Score: 1

      Java is not just used for client-side web programming.

      I'd imagine these corporates of which we speak are using it for server processes, to retain platform independence should the platform require changing.

      They don't care that users will not bother to download another JVM after giving up on Microsofts. That is an issue, a different one.

      --
      Yours Sincerely, Michael.
    5. Re:I would be very surprised to see this happen. by moonboy · · Score: 2



      Based on the above information, I guess this means they'll have to rename SAMBA.

      My nomination for a new name: CIFiliS

      --

      Co-founder and designer at Music Nearby: http://musicnearby.com
    6. Re:I would be very surprised to see this happen. by radish · · Score: 1


      Of course, most major's that I am aware of use Java, we (anonymous top5 investment bank) use it quite heavily. Do we care that MS have pulled the plug on their JVM? Not really, it sucks. Would we care if they did anything to stop other JVM's running on Windows? You betcha. Our CTO would hop in a plane up to Redmond pronto and have a word with Billy Boy, as has happened in the past.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    7. Re:I would be very surprised to see this happen. by Fly · · Score: 1
      I do not think they care. Java support in MSIE only affects applets and has no effect on applications, for which most sane people would use Sun's or IBM's Java 2 JVMs.

      end of line

      --
      end of line
    8. Re:I would be very surprised to see this happen. by twitter · · Score: 1
      I guess the answer for which you're looking here is a really big "yes?" Duh, lots of companies use Java, just not the outdated and unsupported Microsoft Java tools.

      \n Ahh, thank you Mr. Fly. Now, do you think those companies are happy with the MS decision to drop Java support from MSIE rather than include sofware from Sun, much as they include Adobe fonts?

      --

      Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    9. Re:I would be very surprised to see this happen. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They couldn't give a shit -- Anything that only runs on the MS JVM is either considered legacy or it's something the VB boys have to worry about. People have long gone to Sun Java 2.

      Also
      1) The MS JVM will still be available
      2) Nobody's stumbling to provide an XP deployment - odds are their 2000 deployment is barely completed
      3) Java runs primarly on middleware anyway.

    10. Re:I would be very surprised to see this happen. by twitter · · Score: 1

      but platform independence and interoperability are what MS is trying to kill here. SAMBA talked to their computers better than their own junk. MS wants it and java dead. They don't care how much it will cost, and that's why no one should use MS.

      --

      Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    11. Re:I would be very surprised to see this happen. by stevenprentice · · Score: 1

      Just another MSTD.

  165. Re:Me Lose Monopoly? Uh-oh! by jmccay · · Score: 1

    >What next, Microsoft(R) TCP/IP(R)?

    Nah, they are having too much fun ripping that off from BSD. Just run strings.

    --
    At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
  166. someone please by Lord+Omlette · · Score: 1

    Explain CIFS, Samba, SMB, and how these things relate to each other and why Microsoft blocking them would be a bad thing and why you couldn't work around if they did and what would this affect people who don't bother to upgrade from their current NT/2k boxes to XP?

    Thanks in advance

    --
    [o]_O
    1. Re:someone please by fallen1 · · Score: 1

      There is a third possibilty - that the PAL (public at large) wakes the fuck up and realizes that we all need to extend and embrace Microsoft alternatives before it is too late and we get "locked-in" to a system that will do nothing but suck money.

      --

      Dream as if you'll live forever.
      Live as if you'll die tomorrow.
      ~Anonymous~

    2. Re:someone please by Lord+Omlette · · Score: 1

      interesting, thanks ^^v

      --
      [o]_O
  167. Re:turn it around then... by Jeremy+Allison+-+Sam · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It won't work. Samba requires working seteuid() calls, and full POSIX locking functionality, which is not possible to emulate in a Win32 program (although probably possible in a native NT API program, via hidden calls - you know, the ones Microsoft claim don't exist :-).

    That's why Microsoft's "Services for UNIX" product must have a kernel component - Win32 locking is unbearably primitive compared to POSIX locking. We can emulate Win32 locking semantics on top of POSIX, but it's not possible to do this the other way around.

    Regards,

    Jeremy Allison,
    Samba Team.

  168. That's an utter crock of shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Billy Boy wants total world control. He's not going to give up any segment of the market, not even elevator controllers running DOS3. Because he knows that won't or can't upgrade and will migrate to other non-MS solutions if he doesn't maintain some support for such markets. That "upgrade or get screwed" shit only applies to the desktop user. The business world is a different beast entirely. And you'll never see the lates MS stuff in any mission critical systems. Such systems are still running DOS because it's known to be stable or has all bugs fully known and coded to be avoided. What is known RIGHT NOW about all existing instabilities in Whistler? Fucking nothing.

    1. Re:That's an utter crock of shit! by Jacque · · Score: 2, Informative

      That's funny. We get absolutely no support from MS for our older operating systems. We pay a lot of money to them for support too. The business market is the one they most want to force to upgrade.

    2. Re:That's an utter crock of shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      That's funny. We get absolutely no support from MS for our older operating systems. We pay a lot of money to them for support too.

      Are they desktop systems? Or embedded devices?

    3. Re:That's an utter crock of shit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're smoking some strong shit, man. Microsoft has said they will completely stop supporting Windows NT4 by October of this year. Look around on their site if you don't believe me. IF NT4 is GOING, DOS HAS NO CHANCE IN HELL.

  169. The article does *NOT* say that... by sheldon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The article talks about patents, and how if Microsoft were to integrate some form of patented technology into their authentication system it may require Samba to license it.

    It's just a general discussion about patents and how they might impact an Open Source project. They use Samba as an example, but are primarily referring to .Net and Mono.

    Hey Mr. Taco... Read the article next time before posting a comment about it.

    1. Re:The article does *NOT* say that... by sheldon · · Score: 1

      Heh.

      Could you repeat the questions again, only this time in english?

      Thanks,
      Steve
      /. troll extraordinaire

    2. Re:The article does *NOT* say that... by twitter · · Score: 2
      The article talks about patents, and how if Microsoft were to integrate some form of patented technology into their authentication system it may require Samba to license it.

      So do you consider the SAMBA folks being under a MS liscence trivial, Sheldon, my favorite troll? As if that liscence would not be under MS terms and whims. We all know how reasonable MS is with its liscencing, don't we?

      --

      Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  170. They gotta be crazy!!!!!!! by loconet · · Score: 0
    Microsoft has to be crazy to get rid of Samba! you just dont do it ... then again people like Ballmer are running the company.

    And you know what .I think they are crazy!

    Top 11 things I think of when watching that video:
    1. Kids, crystal meth is a dangerous substance....
    2. Hello, Schwab? Yes, please liquidate my position in Microsoft immediately, look at that goof!..and on top of that they're thinking of dropping SAMBA???.
    3. Did he just say "GIVE IT UP FOR ME!!!!!"????
    4. I hope he doesn't blue screen.
    5. Why is King Kong Bundy speaking at Microsoft?
    6. Rosie O'Donnell has a brother?
    7. Friends don't let friends PowerPoint drunk.
    8. I've got 3 words for you "WHAT... THE.... FUCK???? YES!!!"
    9. I really should start drinking coffee again.
    10. Move Ballmer heart monitor to DefCon 5.
    11. Gloria Estefan has put on a lot of weight.
    --
    [alk]
  171. Re:turn it around then... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SMB isn't used as a filesystem anyway
    most situations it's used in is where it's more used like a transparent ftp'ing solution than as an NFS-clone app

  172. Re:Me Lose Monopoly? Uh-oh! by nick-less · · Score: 1
    What next, Microsoft(R) TCP/IP(R)?
    Microsoft World (TM) ? ;-)
  173. Apple now supports SAMBA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is sort of funny that as soon as Apple starts supporting Samba in OSX, Microsoft might can it... HA...

  174. Re:ftp (scp)? by ioexcptn · · Score: 1

    Yes, you will, but many, many people do that. I am not sure what your argument is. M$, as well most, if not all, OS vendors give you API's/source to deal with. They cannot exclude you from developing on their platforms anymore than they do for anyone else. Again, I am not sure what your point is. Security product vendors hook into the network stack/filesystem (yes, even on windows) all the time. Maybe i am missing something...?

    --

    Intelligence is like four wheel drive, having it just means you'll get stuck in more remote places.
  175. Re:sick of this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Understandably people are often confused by the term "perfect competition". They are misled into thinking that the "perfect" means "ideal". Definately not so. Perfect competition, correctly noted by catbutt, is highly prevalent in commodity markets. Is being in a commodity market necessarily a good thing? Computer companies would certainly say no, because a commodity market is high-volume, low-profit.

    I certainly wouldn't be motivated to enter an industry where the market is flooded and there is no room to turn a profit.

  176. Do you mean Mars? by loki4eng · · Score: 1

    Which is not actually samba, but another filesharing project. That's the only novell integration/open source project I've seen. PS- It works ok, for some stuff, but I wouldn't want to run all my users off of MARS.

    --
    It's nota my planet, monkey-boy - Dr Lizardo.
  177. US kinda like MS? by flatrock · · Score: 2

    I wonder if people in other countries look at the US kind of like they look at Microsoft. We have a unreasonable licensing agreements (laws like the DCMA). We stick our noses into everything. We tie different packages together (you want monetary of military aid, then you better pass these copyright and drug laws). The only organization that might be more like MS is the UN.

    1. Re:US kinda like MS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I wonder if people in other countries look at the US kind of like they look at Microsoft.
      In a word, yes.
  178. Re:move to development non US by hearingaid · · Score: 2

    wow, too many x-files episodes buddy.

    you can't be arrested for violating patent law. not even in the United States. it's purely civil. you can only be sued by the patentholders. so what's happening to Dmitry can't happen when you're talking patents.

    --

    my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

  179. Re:They REALLY do want to end backward compatibili by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They are naiively thinking that all their current customers will indeed go running off the cliff like lemmings and buy the new stuff all over again. They're dreaming.

    No, they're gambling. They're betting that the lawmaker will support them when they expire all the old licenses. So companies will have to upgrade to the most recent Windows version, or they will be committing a crime.

  180. Ok, know this may sound rhetorical but... by ioexcptn · · Score: 1

    What about creating a BETTER platform for file sharing? Why do we always have to follow M$? Why cant we create a ubiquitous file sharing mechanism??? One that is totally independent of M$ that users can download and use just as they would use something like winzip, their browser of choice, etc.? As a developer from both sides of the OS war, I see some real potential from a business perspective for something of the sort. Yeah, yeah, i know...someone is gonna flame me with NFS, or something along those lines, but I am talking about something easy and ubiquitous across all OS's. Anyone else? If any developers read this and are at least somewhat serious, why not respond, and maybe we can get a sourceforge site...peace

    --

    Intelligence is like four wheel drive, having it just means you'll get stuck in more remote places.
  181. Re:They just don't get it.... by Pinball+Wizard · · Score: 2
    the Internet has been so successfull

    Umm...successful at what? Certainly no one is making the gobs of money MS is used to.

    Really what economic reason can be given for them to change their behavior? Because if there is a valid one, and not just "Microsoft should play nice because its the right thing to do", they will change their tune in a heartbeat.

    Lets also not forget, Samba was always about working around Microsoft networking - coding around their API's. They are all public, so there is no reason they can't do so again. Patent or no patent, it is legal to perform reverse engineering to ensure compatibility.

    --

    No, Thursday's out. How about never - is never good for you?

  182. Re:MS Office Replacement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You don't use it for a word processor, merely an output format. Your word processor is LaTeX or Lout scripts and vi or emacs ;-)

    At least that's how a real man does it.

  183. Re:They just don't get it.... by jschrod · · Score: 1
    You realize that your situation is very rare, don't you? In almost all companies, buying decisions are made by admin and sales, and not by the tech guys. That's the reason why there are so many Windows servers, after all.
    Last time I checked, the admin (me) was a tech-guy. This is common isn't it?

    Do you use Windows, then, as the only one of the tech-guys? From the context, it seemed that the original poster meant "admin" as in "administrative staff" as in "executives", not as in "sysadmin".

    --

    Joachim

    People don't write Manifestos any more -- what's going on in this world? [Frank Zappa]

  184. Re:move to development non US by 1010011010 · · Score: 2

    Actually, U.S. law applies only in U.S. territory, even in Dmitry's case. The thing he was arrested for he did on U.S. soil.

    Just like Americans can be and are arrested in foreign countries for breaking the laws of those countries.

    The DMCA is stupid, there's no two ways about it. But don't get excited about U.S. law being applied to Russians in their homeland, because it's not.

    --
    Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
  185. what a boon to the other 85% of the world! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "US bans export of stupidity, world rejoices!"

  186. Re:Which will be used only defensively. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IANAL but nondiscriminatory does not mean free, it simply means that everyone must be offered the same terms. Microsoft is still able to charge whatever it wants as long as there are no special deals. In Microsofts case this would mean that they couldn't attempt to punish some companies/products while favoring others.

  187. KARMA WHORE! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why don't they realise that they only reason the Internet has been so successfull is because it works by using a set of standard protocols that anyone can adopt and use.

  188. More Power to Microsoft by nontrivial · · Score: 1

    The more they screw with people the deeper a hole they dig for themselves. I applaud Miguel for the Mono project. Even if the project crashes and burns, ESPECIALLY if it is due to Microsoft being as nasty as usual, then that is just more ammunition in court. I say give them as much rope as they want to hang themselves with.

    I find the irony here delicious. By being such a pompous ass, Microsoft has given rise to a tailor made competitor. If they start to play fair, they will lose. If they continue to break the law they will lose. It is only a matter of time.

    --
    http://james.nontrivial.org
  189. Re:Double Edged Sword? by Hemos+Love+Troll · · Score: 1
    I think you give the average person too much credit as far as computer literacy/competency. In my experience, it doesn't generally occur to normal people to blame Microsoft for their problems. They're more inclined to ask what they need to change in order to make everything work than to start complaining about how bad Microsoft is and either A) move away from Microsoft products or B) stick to their guns and keep what they have rather than being able to do what they want to do. Remember, normal people don't care as much what OS they're running as the average slashdotter (even the stupid ones). They don't generally even know what an OS is. They don't really want to know those things, either. They don't want to know why they can't do what they want to do, they just want it made so that they can do it. If the latest Microsoft product is what they need, that's what they want.

    And like I said, consider that Microsoft is going to keep doing stuff like this. Like you said, they'll release patches for legacy stuff. Legacy Microsoft stuff. They have such a huge market share, they don't have to care about anybody else. Besides, what do they care if they piss off Novell's customers? Those pissed off customers will have to buy Microsoft products, and whether a customer is happy or not, they're still a customer.

    --

    No, I didn't read the goddamned article.
  190. Re:They just don't get it.... by Skapare · · Score: 2

    Yes indeed, the buying decisions usually are made by admin and even some by sales. That's why things do fuck up so much. Just a couple weeks ago I was helping some guy try to work around a major buying mistake (to the tune of half a million dollars) the accounting people made by buying a bunch of computers with the wrong specifications. That's why techies need to break out of their shells (figuratively) and start cluing the bosses in on what actually works to save the company money.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  191. You dont need to reverse engineer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the protocol is patented then surely it's publicly available for scrutinization.

    Besides, this is a plain and simple example of why software, file format and protocol patents are evil.

  192. shhh! by twitter · · Score: 1
    I'm waiting for Mr. Fly to get the right answer, go away AC. You know they care that all sorts of users are going to get a pop up from their browser that directs them to get the MS JVM from the MS inter^H^H^H^H Network. As that poor user is forced to sit through an incredibly long download (oh, I wonder why) they will think java just sucks. Soon MS will break any JVM as they did defragment and backup tools. This will cause the whole industry great harm as they have to figure a way around this latest intentional waste.

    Mr fly will soon see that, so be quiet and let him think.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  193. How do you get AOL without an Internet connection? by Brazzo · · Score: 1
    This one's too easy.

    Press CDs. Put them everywhere. CompUSA, Circuit City, Target, Wal-Mart...

    If AOL can do it, why can't someone like Microsoft? Issuing a patch CD is feasible, especially if it means tightening your grip on the Internet.

    Why haven't they done it before? Cost vs. return. If you issue free update CDs every (month|quarter|year) then you're removing a major reason behind upgrading - the inconvenience of downloading service packs and hotfixes. That'd cut into their revenue stream. Converting everyone to MS/TCP? Financially, it'd have a huge positive effect on Microsoft's bottom line.

    Lastly, go read Cringely's article, where the idea came about last week.

    The Death of TCP/IP

  194. Retaliate by hellfire_23 · · Score: 1

    So dose this mean that the GNU group should edit it's license so that it says when ever a microsoft computer uses a Sendmail services or BIND services or apache Service or any onther *nix Service that we get to charge them a licence fee to interface with it. I wonder how many microsoft users would jump ship If the internet was taken back my *nix. 25 cents for each DNS lookup. Kick ass! Is so this could fund the FSF for a very long time.

  195. We're talking embedded systems. They don't upgrade by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We're talking versions of MSDOS 5.0 running from 1 1MB flashrom on a V20 CPU. There's just no fucking way Win2K can exist in such an environment. Or kiosk type systems running Windows for Workgroups. The whole point of staying with these OSes is their SMALL FOOTPRINT. And as "upgrading" creates a larger footprint, I'd call that more of a "downgrade", wouldn't you?

  196. Re:We're talking embedded systems. They don't upgr by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    Well, they better get busy upgrading to a P3/4 real soon now, hadn't they?

    Sure, "upgrading" creates a larger footprint, but do you honestly think MS cares? If you want to use MS software, you need to play by MS's rules.

  197. Now I get it ... by shaunak · · Score: 0, Troll

    Rumours for Nerds: Stuffed in Tatters.

    --
    -Shaunak.
  198. Quid pro quo? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    It seems its becoming time for virus writers to start taking matters into their own hands. Instead of just invecting a machine and spreading itself, perhaps the next M$TD will start corrupting files with the message "Your data lost thanks to M$'s incompentence."

    Have that happen enough, and not even M$'s marketing department will be able to blow enough smoke to counteract mass migration.

    Can't wait!

  199. Superscary. by dave-fu · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So if they're patenting this, does this mean that people either pay or risk the Wrath of Redmond for violating the DMCA by not paying?
    Wow. Who'd have guessed that it'd be game, set, match already?

    --
    Easy does it!
    This comment has been submitted already, 276865 hours , 59 minutes ago. No need to try again.
    1. Re:Superscary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "YANAL. "

      snif, that's the nicest thing someone's ever said to me!

  200. So? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Then a client for Windos is written. Voila!

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  201. D.A.R.E -- Drugs Are Really Excellent by austad · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Allison said he inadvertently learned of a patent from "a high Microsoft official"

    I don't know what MS has been smoking lately, but they've obviously smoked it all.

    --
    Need Free Juniper/NetScreen Support? JuniperForum
    1. Re:D.A.R.E -- Drugs Are Really Excellent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why dosen't some one else patent it before him? it.s worth a try

    2. Re:D.A.R.E -- Drugs Are Really Excellent by praksys · · Score: 1

      FUD. What's new?

  202. Re:move to development non US by Yo_mama · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As you know, the internet runs on connections. The crypt is a wonderful idea other than the fact that any country that hosts it will be put under enourmous pressure by other nations to kill it or bring themselves to the same standards as other nations. Even an oil rig in the middle of international waters needs a feed out, and what's it going to do when the land line is cut by the country whose traffic it passes through? At this point your best bet would be to park a rig off of China; they have enough clout and obstinance to give WIPO/UN/US the finger for years to come.

    --
    Never understimate the power of human stupidity -Lazarus Long
  203. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by ebh · · Score: 1
    I did read the article[1], and it gave no patent number, stating that M$ "declined to confirm the existence of the patent," which, as you say, they're within their rights to do.

    Without a patent number, regardless of how you'd have to go about finding it out, the article could have said that M$ holds a patent on using ASCII letters to make the word SAMBA and I still wouldn't be worried yet.

    Wary, yes, but not worried.

    [1] And sorry for taking the flamebait, but CHRIST I wish people would stop throwing that fucking accusation around!

  204. Which will be used only defensively. by yerricde · · Score: 4, Informative

    Here's a link to the full text of the patent. But according to the article, "Microsoft does not have to disclose any patents on .Net technologies, unless it is not willing to license them in a nondiscriminatory fashion." And a "nondiscriminatory fashion" toward Ximian Inc would probably involve a royalty-free license. IOW, Microsoft will probably do its usual routine of "We won't sue you over our patents on this technology if you don't sue us over your patents on this technology" in the white paper, as it has done for the FAT specification.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:Which will be used only defensively. by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      IANAL but nondiscriminatory does not mean free, it simply means that everyone must be offered the same terms. Microsoft is still able to charge whatever it wants as long as there are no special deals. In Microsofts case this would mean that they couldn't attempt to punish some companies/products while favoring others.

      Except that Microsoft doesn't play by the rules.

      Jim Crow law: Black people are now legally allowed to vote, as mandated by the federal government. We don't want them to be able to vote. We pass a law saying that in order to legally vote, your grandfather must have been eligible to vote. This new law makes no mention of race, but no black person qualifies, so in effect, it's discriminating against blacks anyway.

      Sorry for my butchered summary of that. Anyway, that's how Microsoft would make a non-discriminatory license.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    2. Re:Which will be used only defensively. by banshee2000 · · Score: 1

      Oops ... you said grandfather sorry I read it wrong at first. Yes it does suck but I wouldn't put nething past our modern so-called *civilized* governments.

      Piss off a politician today ... think!

  205. Does that surprise anyone? by CSC · · Score: 1

    I mean, they always do that, don't they?

    --
    -- Colin
  206. No! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What, Microsoft screwing everyone else to try to ensure that they are the only company allowed to write software? Not Microsoft! Can't be!

  207. Backward compatible? by totallygeek · · Score: 1
    If Microsoft changes the protocol, how backward compatible will it be to WfW, Windows 95/98 and NT ? Also, if Microsoft does make significant changes in SMB, why can't the Samba.org people just develop a Windows client that works with Samba, but not with Windows XP-II or whatever?

    I find it apalling that Microsoft wants this PR battle. I know several banking software RS/6000 machines that run Samba for farming out Windows client installation programs.

    Aside from this, I would like to see a different client all-together that works from Windows to anything else that is encrypted and compressed. Maybe some melding of ssh and nfs?

    1. Re:Backward compatible? by mre5565 · · Score: 1

      > Maybe some melding of ssh and nfs? you can get commercial pc/nfs clients that use crpto for authentication and privacy. hummingbird for example.

  208. Well now there is a surprise. by thebitninja · · Score: 1

    Microsoft really has the best interests of everyone at heart. Never ever ever ever would anyone at Microsoft want to develop proprietory software to stop the free flow of ideas and/or stop the freedom to communicate between all people from all ethinic and financial backgrounds and across any platform. Of course we at microsoft want Windows to do well but we will not leverage our market share to drive others out of business, nor develop new projects to do so. Our business is committed to ethics, sharing and the betterment of mankind and all it's projects. We are not at all interested in market share and profits. We just want to make everyone happy. Our attempts to control the web with initatives such as .NET and certification are only our altruistic efforts to protect the young and the innocent on the world wide web. Microsoft loves you. =)

  209. Does MS control Windows filesharing? by iabervon · · Score: 2

    Considering how many companies are running their windows fileservers on linux (possibly without the management knowing), it's quite possible that MS has already lost control of the filesharing protocol to the point that they can't really extend it now. If they'd stuck something with a patent in originally, they might have a chance, but if the deal is that, in order to talk to standard XP clients (or servers?) you need to use MS stuff, people are likely to just use 3rd party stuff because their existing infrastructure requires the old version.

  210. How well could they do it by jjr · · Score: 2, Funny

    Without keeping backwards compatablity with NT 4.0
    and Windows 2000. Of course they could always supply "patches" for NT 4.0 and W2k that will "allow" them to use the new password protocol. But my favorite solution is to host the project in a country were patents do not matter. Let's say Russia.

  211. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whoops! Remember that taking anything encrypted in North America outside North America is the equivalent of smuggling firearms and munitions.

    You get the cell next to Dmitri.

  212. the future ( where are you? ) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    More people should pay attention; think back to the early days of streetcars, automobiles, the post-industrial revolution days of idyllic hopes, utopia through progress (yes, we know the awfullness of the modernism the resulted from this. . .) But then there was a consolidation, a distilling point where sides somewhat banded together and did whatever it took for profit, and survival. The streetcar was demolished (by the petroleum industry, tires and fuel) to put tires and fuel on and in automobiles. This is but one naueseating example of the destruction of solid, more believable ideas for the sheer sake of profit. There are countless others. Today, look at these practises, microsoft, Norton (who reasonably seems like a nice guy.) There must be a standing toward these things, as simple ideaology will be of little worth outside the acedemics once these current ebbs briefly smooth. Sound like too much? Relax, it'll all be okay. And once you finished your cookie, you'll remember you don't believe in all of this junk anyway.

  213. not disclosing patents to standard bodies? by AdamBa · · Score: 5, Informative
    Most parties with patents are not required to disclose them in the standards setting process, van den Beld said.

    Is this true? Consider this article from Fortune about Rambus, in which they were dinged for not disclosing a patent to a standards committee.

    The article mentions that Sun and Dell got in trouble for similar things, and had to license the patents royalty-free. Dell had a patent on VL-BUS technology, and Sun had one on DRAMs for SparcStations that Kingston complained about. The Dell story (from 1996) is summarized here and this is from the FTC, while the Sun case (from this year) is mentioned here and here.

    - adam

    1. Re:not disclosing patents to standard bodies? by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

      The ECMA probably doesn't require the disclosure of software patents, because that would give the patent validity, and IIRC, many European countries do no allow software patents.

      --
      If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
    2. Re:not disclosing patents to standard bodies? by ethereal · · Score: 1

      According to the article, ECMA has different rules. Not all standards bodies are equally able at setting standards, unfortunately.

      --

      Your right to not believe: Americans United for Separation of Church and

  214. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by Matthias+Wiesmann · · Score: 1

    The way things are hinted in the article, the patent is over some encyphering code. This of course makes things worse. So even if the encoding is stupid, finding prior art can be quite a challenge.

    Also imagine MS lawyers hinting that somme Intellectual Property might be on the SMB server, and that the open-source project not only violates their patent, but was reverse ingeniering on some of their protection schemes, so they invoke the DCMA. It might not be very logical, but MS lawyers managed more bizzare things.

    At the next linux conference, send the FBI guys. Voilà, open-source problem solved.

  215. Re:They just don't get it.... by javilon · · Score: 1

    " Why don't they realise that they only reason the Internet has been so successfull is because it works by using a set of standard protocols that anyone can adopt and use. " Because the have realised that they got rich by locking out competitors.

    --


    When his defense asked, "Which computer has Jon Johansen trespassed upon?" the answer was: "His own."
  216. Re:They just don't get it.... by jimm · · Score: 1

    If MS aren't going to allow it through their tools, it just means companies like mine will have to migrate to non-MS solutions for even the Windows machines.

    Unfortunately, that is not what will happen. The business weenies will cry, "We need Outlook. We need Crystal Reports. We need Solitaire." The suits think they need Microsoft software. They will force the techies to migrate to Windows.

    --
    Transcript show: self sigs atRandom.
  217. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

    ok so an organization opens up to create the nesisary packages for samba for each distro. then admins can just go and DL it from the site. big deal, we are Linux admins, not windows admins :-)

    --



    I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
  218. Re:move to development non US by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 4, Insightful

    US law even apparently applies to Russian soil. Just ask Dmitry Sklyarov. The US gov't believes its law applies worldwide. And Russia isn't screaming blooddy murder about it! (Why not?!)

    No one is safe, unless perhaps they decide to NEVER visit the US ever again. Even that might not be enough, just look at Manuel Noriega. Kidnapped by the US in a miltary raid and imprisoned in a US jail.

    And the US would be very likely to bomb any rig out in international waters. We'd justify its destruction and the killing of its workers by saying we were protecting the US economy from economic terrorism and all our sheep/citizens will bleat their approval. And with it having been in international waters, we wouldn't be in trouble with any other country for violating its sovereignty.

    Not that international law has ever (in practice) ever applied to the US ... just look at how many treaties we violate.

    --
    Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
  219. My bad by wiredog · · Score: 2

    I misread his post. Good catch.

  220. Re:move to development non US by mrfiddlehead · · Score: 1

    Three words: Tactical Nuclear Weapons

    --
    :wq
  221. Re:Terrible Article by Phroggy · · Score: 1

    This is FUD, a pure and perfect example of FUD. ZDnet is getting worse evey year.

    So, it would appear, is Slashdot.

    --
    $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
    $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  222. Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's their technology

    Actually, it's not their technology... before MS did the 'embrace and extend' to it, it was Artisoft's LANtastic.

  223. Fight fire with fire by hrieke · · Score: 2

    Well then, I guess (and strongly recommend) that the Open Source group start up it's own patent bank. This bank of patents would be free to anyone who GPLs their code, but commercial products would be required to pay royalties to the GNU Foundation.
    This is going to be the only way that free software will win.

    --
    III.IIVIVIXIIVIVIIIVVIIIIXVIIIXIIIIIIIIVIIIIVVIIIV IIVIIIIIIVIII...
  224. Re:Backfire by pkesel · · Score: 1

    Samba isn't the only way to link Windows and Unix. NFS works just as well. But you have to buy an NFS client for Windows. How long before Windows has one of those in its offerings?

    --
    - Sig this!
  225. SMB will live. Must stay compatible with 9x/3.x by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Here at the office we still have Windows 98, 95, and yes, even windows 3.11 and dos machines on the network. Somehow I doubt MS will write new protocol drivers for all of these OSes and will thus HAVE TO support SMB for compatibility reasons.

    1. Re:SMB will live. Must stay compatible with 9x/3.x by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      No they don't and won't. By not supporting obsolete versions of Microsoft products they force their customers to upgrade thereby generating revenues. Microsoft absolutely cares not a whit for problems of people running Windows 3.x or DOS

  226. move to development non US by johnjones · · Score: 3, Insightful

    why oh why do people host their projects in the US ?

    why not put it in international waters and work on it from wherever you want ?

    this goes back to cryptonomicon CAVE idea

    more and more things like this are going to happen we should simply wake up and put them out of reach of poloitical ideas and companys

    what are the problems with this approach ?

    reagrds

    john jones

    1. Re:move to development non US by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Um, since when is Samba based in the US?

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    2. Re:move to development non US by bartle · · Score: 3, Insightful

      why oh why do people host their projects in the US ? ... what are the problems with this approach ?

      Simply locating the project elsewhere isn't enough; for it to be beyond the reach of the US government, it couldn't be supported by the US at all including its citizens. As a US citizen I can be held accountable for whatever I do regardless of where the project is located. Even if I could work in a project in a foreign country without breaking any laws, I could still be sued by an American company if they didn't like the project I had worked on.

      So you do indeed have a situation where US laws can restrict a lot of software development. These laws may seem unfair but they also prevent Microsoft from moving to the Cayman islands when the US threatens to break them up.

    3. Re:move to development non US by ILO · · Score: 1

      ACTIVISM IN WORLD SUMMIT???? You call it what? The violent devastation of a peaceful city, the sistematic destruction of the property of the citizens of Genova, have no excuse whatsoever. The DMCA (spit) act has got nothing to do with it. The would-be terrorists that RAPED Genova do not even know what the DMCA, or EU software patent law or DECSS are - they are just criminals.

  227. Companies can just license things by wanorris · · Score: 1
    SAMBA is not only linux centric. Many other OSes use samba for windows integration (even there is novell netware 4.x version).

    I doubt microsoft can ignore all these systems. People will not easily dump their workstations for NT...

    Microsoft can let companies that make other OS's license their patents for a nominal fee. They can even propose a standard, nondiscriminatory runtime license that anyone can get for cheap. This still guts SAMBA, because you couldn't put a component with a runtime license inside a GPL'ed program.

    1. Re:Companies can just license things by mimbleton · · Score: 1

      Oh well, people would come up with BSD style licensed client and server and nobody would even notice it is no longer GPL.

  228. That's Intellectual Property for you... by ackthpt · · Score: 2
    Saving us all from better products at little or no cost for bloatware, no recourse, bugs galore and the big happy M$ smiley face which says, "It's what the people want."

    Gates, Ballmer, Mundie and a host of other IT Leeches.

    ® Microsoft Corporation, 2001

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  229. Has Microsoft ever enforced a patent? by NearlyHeadless · · Score: 2

    Has Microsoft ever sued anybody for patent infringement? I think I would have heard about it if they had. They get tons of patents, but they have to for defensive purposes.

    1. Re:Has Microsoft ever enforced a patent? by hearingaid · · Score: 2

      as far as I know, no software patent has ever been tested in an infringement trial. there have been proceedings initiated, but in every case there was a settlement made out of court.

      they're just as much a question-mark as the GPL.

      there have been cases, but all the decisions (and there are three U.S. Supreme Court decisions) were on patent applications. that is, they were ruling on whether the patent could be granted, not on infringement.

      I'd love to see an infringement case. I have real doubts about how easy to enforce many of these patents are. the weird things you have to do to the wording leave quite a few potential defenses open.

      M$ has quite a few of them, but the #1 holder of software patents is IBM. and they've been #1 for a long time.

      --

      my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

  230. Yet more tap dancing........ by fongsaiyuk · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    geez...

    Just more tap-dancing from MS to distract everyone from their little monopoly issues.

    Wouldn't want to focus on that, now would we?

  231. OK, so what patent is it? by ebh · · Score: 5, Informative
    If they're holding a patent, it should be public knowledge. So what's the patent number? Why all the "I think there might be..."? Until we find out, let's drop this whole thing down the FUD bucket.

    (I fully suspect they do have a whole file cabinet full of patents, but I'd like to see them before I start making assumptions about the future of open source.)

    Not only do we not know the specifics of the alleged patent, but we don't know if it's trivial or not. There's no guarantee it won't flunk the prior art or novelty tests.

    1. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by Jeremy+Allison+-+Sam · · Score: 2

      An AC wrote :

      > I assume that "high Microsoft official" was
      > probably yanking Allison's (and indirectly,
      > slashdot's) chain.

      Nope. Definately not. Also it was 2 years ago, not 2 months, but journalism isn't an exact science :-) :-).

      Jeremy Allison,
      Samba Team.

    2. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes that's right ! and therefore, people will avoid the "land of freedom", by fear to be arrested and put in jail there...
      sounds pretty much like Sovietsky Soyouz !!!!

      for the United States of America, hurra !!!!!!

      europeans, remember to sign the petition against software patents.

    3. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by TrollMaster5000 · · Score: 1

      Hopefully that would work... We all know about the Dmitry case... And what our own government did to this poor man.

    4. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by TFloore · · Score: 1

      Okay, so you can develop it in Australia... If it is patent-encumbered, and known to be not properly licensed, it will not ship in any US distribution. The legal exposure is simply too great.

      --
      This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is... Oops. Frank, I've got your sig again! Where's mine?
    5. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by _johnnyc · · Score: 1

      And then when the austrlian samba developer does a talk on Samba at LISA or some such he'll get arrested. More craziness in the Land of the Free.

    6. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who the fuck would wanna visit the US anyway?

    7. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly.

    8. Re:OK, so what patent is it? by Josuah · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I would like to see the President say a disparaging remark about China and then go visit them only to get locked up in a standing-room only cell for 2 years. Maybe then the government will think twice about this Dimitry case.

  232. Backfire by xwred1 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm thinking that this could backfire against Microsoft, at least in the short term.

    I've read that when Microsoft has guys that help customers deploy Microsoft solutions, they use Samba if they need to integrate with a Unix network.

    If Samba didn't exist, Microsoft would have lost the sale to that customer, because they'd have to either go whole-hog with Microsoft, or nothing at all. Chances are, most would stick with nothing unless their Unix boxes were too old.

    Also, alot of non-Microsoft systems out there will be using Samba to server files to the Microsoft workstations. If the version of Windows after XP (Blackcomb?) didn't support SMB, I doubt the IT department would want to roll it out right away.

    Not to mention that Microsoft would be forcefully obsoleting their own user base. Thats not something they are known to do willfully, witness the sufferings of people dealing with Win9x.

    If Microsoft tried to do this, I expect that it would be a slow and gradual process, similar to the phasing out of WINS in favor of DNS with Windows 2000.

  233. Buckaroo Bonzai by dbCooper0 · · Score: 0

    Thank *God* there is someone else out there who is a fan of that wonderful movie! I was especially won over when I saw the Atari 130 XE computer at John Lithgow's toes as he took off in the spiny oyster...

    --
    db
    Cig:
    ôô
    /`
    1. Re:Buckaroo Bonzai by jeepmeister · · Score: 1

      Just goes to show you, no matter where you go...there you are.

      --

      I don't need no estinkin' .sig
      Jeepmeister
  234. Re:turn it around then... by ctucker · · Score: 1

    and port Samba to windows. :)

    Might as well go for broke, and port NFS instead.

    --

    --
    My other computer is your IIS server.
  235. Re:turn it around then... by z84976 · · Score: 1

    SMB is a protocol, not a filesystem. I use equal amounts of SMB and NFS here (mostly Linux, but with a monster game/lotus notes-for-work machine. NFS, for all it's utility, has earned itself a pretty nasty reputation in the world for corrupting stuff under load.

    Not to say the ms solution was GOOD... SMB had some SEVERE design flaws, so much so that the SAMBA team had to go out of their way to program in extra stuff to "emulate" the bugs of SMB. If SMB and SAMBA were to split, wouldn't that free us to use the SAMBA pure version of SMB, without the MS stupidities? Now THAT would be a good protocol...

  236. Re:Me Lose Monopoly? Uh-oh! by ChadAmberg · · Score: 1

    I was under the impression it was going to be TCP/MS? Convince the world that the security problems aren't due to MS, but due to the open source nature of the TCP/IP protocol. Then, come out with the "Solution" being TCP/MS. MS buys Cisco, then converts IOS to only route the new MS protocol. No backwards compatibility. Of course, if you wish to run the old protocol, build your own Internet, MS owns this one!

  237. Getting rid of Samba? Come on. by blouns · · Score: 1

    MS is NOT getting rid of Samba, they're getting rid of SMB support. There is a difference. SMB was developed by MS and IBM about 40 million years ago (now called CIFS - Common Internet File System). After it was ripped off by the creator of Samba, it was introduced into the Linux world. Samba is not the only way to communicate with a Windows box from other operating systems. There are many 3rd party alternatives. Unfortunatly, many of you are too self-absorbed in it to realize that there is ALWAYS another way. Samba was hardly a golden pony--good riddens. Let's have some new technology. I thought you open-source freakies were open to new ideas.

  238. Well I heard another source ... by kimihia · · Score: 1

    On Monday a gentleman on the IBM public relations team talk to the local LUG.

    In his presentation he spoke about how Samba is so widely implemented MS would be silly to break compatibility with it, for fear of the backlash of all the irate customers.

    Maybe he underestimated MS's stupidity, or perhaps he underestimated the power of their marketing team.

    In the past they have slipped various other incompatibilities in that you wouldn't believe, but the lemmings upgraded.

    Aw man, and in other news it rips me to hear that a major government department wanted to move to Linux but had to continue with NT because there weren't enough people with Linux experience available. :-(

  239. Why not an open source solution? by RobertAG · · Score: 4, Interesting

    WHY do we have to use Microsoft's file server software at all? Why not just write a secure, open source NT/2000 service that can share directories? This can be accessed by a secure, open source client that sits on a NT/2000/9x/Linux/UNIX machine. This (sort of) was done with SSH. There are 3rd party solutions for NNTP, SMTP, POP, IMAP, HTTP, etc. Why not file sharing?

    1. Re:Why not an open source solution? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      We have two. Samba, which is open source even if it is based on SMB, and NFS, which frankly, sucks.

      Nothings to stop you from writing an SMB client for WindowsXP that can communicate with a Samba server you know.

    2. Re:Why not an open source solution? by JohnsonWax · · Score: 1

      Actually, there is one. Cribbed from Apple's MacOS X 10.1 page:

      "Using iDisk is easier by default, as well. Under Mac OS X version 10.1, iDisk uses the WebDAV protocol built into the operating system as part of its state-of-the-art Internet capabilities. WebDAV uses the same language as your web browser, which means it only connects to your iDisk when it needs to. No more server disconnect messages from your iDisk for not using it often enough. And because it uses standard web protocols, you'll be able to access your iDisk at school or the office, even from behind a firewall."

    3. Re:Why not an open source solution? by marick · · Score: 4, Informative


      There is a set of extensions to HTTP designed for precisely this kind of file sharing.

      The protocol is called WebDAV.
      WebDAV, a set of extensions to HTTP provide the following additional things that are especially useful for file-sharing: locking, versioning, logging, access-control lists, and searching (yes, with different grammars, too), and it runs over HTTPS along with HTTP.

      Most people don't realize it, but A TON of products((by such luminaries as Adobe, Macromedia, and Microsoft) support WebDAV (which is an extension of HTTP).

      It was mentioned in the Halloween Document as a decommoditizing protocol.

      Furthermore, there are plenty of open-source implementations of webDAV on both the client- and server-side including:
      mod_dav (an apache module that makes it into a DAV-enabled server)

      and
      davfs (a module for linux that makes dav folders seem like normal directories) Check it all out! -Michael p.s. By the way, it runs over HTTPS as well as HTTP, so don't get scared. p.p.s. In the interests of full-disclosure, I work for Xythos Software and we make a robust, scalable WebDAV-enabled server.

    4. Re:Why not an open source solution? by buildboy · · Score: 1

      There is an open-source alternative to SMB: OpenAFS

      From the website:

      What is AFS?
      AFS is a distributed filesystem product, pioneered at Carnegie Mellon University and supported and developed as a product by Transarc Corporation (now IBM Pittsburgh Labs). It offers a client-server architecture for file sharing, providing location independence, scalability and transparent migration capabilities for data.

      What is OpenAFS?
      IBM branched the source of the AFS product, and made a copy of the source available for community development and maintenance. They called the release OpenAFS.

    5. Re:Why not an open source solution? by grimiore · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, Microsoft does run the world...it's a sad fact. Much like OJ denying he didn't do it, it's just as obvious when Microsoft denied not owning a monopoly on the (software) world.

      The problem with creating an open source alternative that is not compatible with the millions of existing computers running Corporatation X's infrastructure (read: microsoft) is that Corporation X can't afford to implement it.

      Corporation X is not willing to fork over the extra time and money to support any compatiblity with Linux clients/software.

      Unless we, as a community, are willing to help them. (which means proving why they should)

  240. They just don't get it.... by abdulwahid · · Score: 4, Informative

    Why don't they realise that they only reason the Internet has been so successfull is because it works by using a set of standard protocols that anyone can adopt and use. The best thing about the Internet is that I can run Linux on all my office machines and still access the Windows based services that others provide. By taking this road MS are in danger of marginalising themselves and not Linux. There simply has to be interoperability between different platforms in the modern business world.

    In my company, for example, all of the tech guys use UNIX and all of the admin and sales use Windows. We have to interact with each other. If MS aren't going to allow it through their tools, it just means companies like mine will have to migrate to non-MS solutions for even the Windows machines. I just feel that MS are shooting themselves in the foot by taking this sort of approach.

    --
    perl -e 'print $i=pack(c5, (41*2), sqrt(7056), (unpack(c,H)-2), oct(115), 10);'
    1. Re:They just don't get it.... by mcfiddish · · Score: 2

      I always think it's funny when people say MS "doesn't get it". They get it. They get it just fine. They are where they are because they get it better than Apple, or IBM, or Sun, or whoever else you care to name.

      What is "it"? "It" is making as much money as possible. Period. "It" is not "empowering people with great software" or whatever their mission statement is. "It" is not interoperability, or allowing you to get your work done efficiently, or anything except for their bottom line.

      If a particular course of action turns out to look bad for them, they will ratchet it back to something that *most* people can live with. They'll probably do this with XP registration to make it less intrusive, and then they'll look like paragons of sensitivity.

      I don't know if it's luck or brilliance on their part that everybody keeps giving them the benefit of the doubt.

    2. Re:They just don't get it.... by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      that or in 18 months they will bring in a nice sparkeling new Dell optiplex workstation with Windows XP alreay for you to work on :)

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    3. Re:They just don't get it.... by mandria · · Score: 1

      I agree with you 100%. But think about it.They control over 90% of home desktops. Do you think they give a rats us about 8% of the people, who by the way, are using open source? About buisiness migrating to linux because they are forced, you still have to think about the buisiness world in general, because once a few major companies start using their incompatibilities, many smaller companies will follow.

    4. Re:They just don't get it.... by abdulwahid · · Score: 1

      If you remember the first release of Windows 95 they struggled to get a decent TCP/IP stack included because they had totally misjudged the massive take-up of the Internet. They were still trying to push their crap MSN alternative. It wasn't until later releases of Windows 95 that they got a TCP/IP stack which was anything near decent.

      They didn't get "it" then and they still don't. I know they are successfull in a financial sense but I don't think that making yourself incompatible with others is the way forward. There comes a time when it back fires. I know may companies that would have to move away from using a SAMBA solution under the UNIX machines and move to deploying some sort of fileserver on the Windows machines if MS take this approach. The result is, they aren't doing themselves any favours. In the networking world, interoperability is everything.

      --
      perl -e 'print $i=pack(c5, (41*2), sqrt(7056), (unpack(c,H)-2), oct(115), 10);'
    5. Re:They just don't get it.... by jschrod · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Why don't they realise that they only reason the Internet has been so successfull is because it works by using a set of standard protocols that anyone can adopt and use.

      They are not dumb, they realize that. But they don't like it either, since it takes away the control over the market they have got used to with their desktop monopoly.

      I still remember very lively a talk by the MS net boss at the 3rd WWW conference, back in 1995. There we (the audience) got told that this whole Internet thing as it has been built up to then is quite nice, but that it is time to stop playing in that children sandbox and to start creating something that's proper for business. They have been working toward that goal eversince.

      In my company, for example, all of the tech guys use UNIX and all of the admin and sales use Windows. We have to interact with each other. If MS aren't going to allow it through their tools, it just means companies like mine will have to migrate to non-MS solutions for even the Windows machines.

      You realize that your situation is very rare, don't you? In almost all companies, buying decisions are made by admin and sales, and not by the tech guys. That's the reason why there are so many Windows servers, after all.

      --

      Joachim

      People don't write Manifestos any more -- what's going on in this world? [Frank Zappa]

  241. Re:turn it around then... by Phroggy · · Score: 1

    Best suggestion I've heard so far. Considering that they've gotten it to run on as many platforms as they have (I got it to run on Mac OS X with no problem), what's one more?

    --
    $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
    $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  242. WebDAV instead of CIFS/SMB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    CIFS/SMB is an aging protocol that really doesn't fit well into the .NET architecture. My guess is that Microsoft will put more emphasis on higher-level, web-like protocols for .NET, suich as WebDAV. There's no percentage is trying to stuff a mangy old cat back in the bag...

  243. Gee thanks. by cluge · · Score: 2
    The purpose of language is to communicate ideas or concepts. Did you understand what I said? Did you think about it? Not everyone at slashdot is a native English speaker (and WHICH version of English are we supposed to learn anyway?) I would think the question that was asked is more important than how I asked it.

    If you understood what I was getting at then why can't you comment? I love your bitchy attitude, PLEASE don't think about what was asked,EVER. Do try and rip the questioner a new one for not dotting his i's and crossing his T's. Thinking about the question is obviously a too great a strain.

    Perhaps next time make an intelligent comment on the question ASKED and then in a PS suggest a different language usage.

    --
    "Science is about ego as much as it is about discovery and truth " - I said it, so sue me.
  244. Big Deal. by Grokko · · Score: 1

    They also said not including Java in Windows 2000 will be the death of it.

    It don't bother mean. We all hafta open,read,write,close sometime.

    Grokko

  245. Microsoft losing customer base by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fine, if Microsoft persists with this path they'll lose the .edu I work at as a customer. We're primarily Macintosh-based, but have been really moving towards PCs the past couple years. I'm no Linux bigot by any means, in fact, I don't like Linux.. OH SHIT HERE COME THE WILLIES GOTTA GO

  246. Re:Compatibility will be maintained at some level by Jeremy+Allison+-+Sam · · Score: 2

    > They might release some kind of "client
    > upgrade", which coincidentally breaks Samba.

    Sigh. What do you think Windows 2000 did ? Why do you think we had to get Samba 2.2.1 out as soon as we did ? What do you think Windows XP is planning *right now* (search the Samba lists for the new breakage in XP... it's not hard to find).

    They do this *EVERY RELEASE*.

    This is what it means to be on a Microsoft treadmill. I want to warn the Ximian/Mono folks not to get into the same situation that we're in.....

    Regards,

    Jeremy Allison,
    Samba Team.

  247. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by Sir_Real · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The patent covers only the encryption procedures for how a user password is changed, but as part of the transfer protocol, it is a potential dependency for all developers who have to mimic the Windows file system and seek to interoperate with it. For example, successful interoperation with Samba might make the Samba project subject to Microsoft demands for patent licenses and royalties.

    Which means MOSX 10.1 will not be able to use the password encryption procedures without MS permission. This could be DCMA test if the SAMBA team decides to go ahead with the implementation of the password encryption. Of course, a black box shouldn't be patentable... I mean, if the code produces the right output with a different algorithm, then it should be kosher, (or parve, I'm bad with analogies).

    Andrew

  248. Yawn. Why not a GPL'd NFS driver for windows. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Trying to constantly crack and stay compatible with SMB is a losing battle. IIRC, samba still cannot serve the "user list" to windows 9x machines for USER level sharing.

  249. sick of this. by Brigadier · · Score: 3, Troll


    I'm so tired of MS and thier contrary ways. they forever claim that they work for teh benifit of the consumer. Samba is the best if not only solution for interconnectivity between MS networking protocols and Unix. I've used this over and over again in MS, Apple networks, where there is a single Unix server. but yet MS intends to cut this off. how is this helping the consumer. True capitalism you dont muscle a customer to buy your product by stamping out the compitition you make a better product. Ms however does not understand this. Yet on the other hand we have the Gov getting in bed with big business. I really wish slashdot and the like activist woudl start writing their congress man or woman about this. when the old folks prescription goes up or someone threatens to take away there driving privaliges look how quickly they act. we need to adopt the same stance and start fighting for our rights as consumers in a free market.

    1. Re:sick of this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Linux folks have nothing to complain about -- they are so dependant on Samba because their NFS implementation stinks to high heaven. And if you have to talk to Unix, Microsoft loves it that you are using their protocol. Pretty much puts them in the catbird seat.

    2. Re:sick of this. by Mansing · · Score: 1

      > From Micorsoft's perspective, the "best
      > interconnectivity" is "no interconnectivity".

      Actually, it is the "best interconnectivity" is "Our Internconnectivity"

    3. Re:sick of this. by catbutt · · Score: 1

      Here's a refresher of economics 101: "Perfect competition"....the ideal situation where capitalist economies operate most efficiently...there is really no concept of "winning". You can see perfect competition (or really close to it) in commodity markets such as grains (wheat etc), and stuff like computer memory.....where no one "wins" per se, and there is one and only one price a rational merchant will sell his goods for at any given time (based on supply and demand). Monopolies .... or situations where one merchant can significantly affect the market....are the exact opposite of perfect competition, hence anti-competitive. Admittedly, perfect competition is a theoretical extreme and cannot happen in all parts of the economy, but understanding the theory behind it is essential to understanding why what microsoft does is so bad. This is a very good, concise explanation of the concept of competition (and anti-competitive acts): http://www.consumersinternational.org/campaigns/co mpetition/competition2.html

    4. Re:sick of this. by catbutt · · Score: 1
      Well, perfect competition is ideal in many senses, in that it tends to approach a "reasonable" price for the goods. In a stable, perfect competition situation, you make a decent living at it, but don't get fabulously wealthy. In economic terms, it is ideal in that it is fair and balanced, and sellers are motivated to produce things efficiently and sell them for a fair price.

      Still, my point was that the term "anti-competitive" certainly does apply to microsoft, as they are at the opposite extreme of perfect competition. And while perfect competition may not be ideal in everyone's eyes, the oppostite extreme is far, far worse. All the principles that capitalism are based on break down when one player has too much control over the market.

      I'm all for people being able to get rich with their contributions. But a situation where they can be a bully is not so good.

  250. Terrible Article by 0xA · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I read the article twice and I really don't see the issue.

    From reading the article I understand that there is the potential for Samba or any other open source app that realies on CIFS to have to mimic a function that happens when a user changes their password (I am asuming that this is part of MS/CHAP). The problem being that MS might hold a patent on something, that possibly would have to be implimented by said open source app and as a result MS could charge some sort of licencing fee. Maybe

    What a friggin joke! The author comes up with a scenario which is has no factual basis, decides it could be a bad thing and then get various people in the community to provide quotes that agree with him.

    This is FUD, a pure and perfect example of FUD. ZDnet is getting worse evey year.

    1. Re:Terrible Article by n8_f · · Score: 1

      This sounds like a recent article. Maybe the writer was trying to emulate Chris Morris? Or perhaps this is closer to an example of the kind of journalism he was satirizing.
      I expect I'll read about /. readers firebombing the cars of Microsoft parents by mistake.

  251. Re:turn it around then... by Grendel+Drago · · Score: 1

    No, silly, so windows clients and linux clients can connect to a windows or linux server running NON-CRAPULENT NON-OBFUSCATED OPEN SOURCE SAMBA woo hoo yeah.

    As in, you're no longer dependent on MS for your filesharing needs; there's a free fileserver that's a drop-in replacement.

    -grendel drago

    --
    Laws do not persuade just because they threaten. --Seneca
  252. If you think about it... by ackthpt · · Score: 2
    It adds fuel to the fire for _not_ going to XP. If your shop already has SAMBA wired in, particularly to a stable process, they why would you actually consider upgrading and cutting your own throat?

    The old line "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" is really the reinforcement of conservatism in IT shops. The other factor is: How much are we going to have to spend to get it to work just like it does before we upgrade and bust it?

    Really, the only way M$ will push XP into shops with all its vile new "features" is putting it on new desktops, which means telling Dell, Compaq, etc. this is the OS we'll give you the best price break on for installing (or saying, 98? ME? 2000? No speekee you language, we only got EX PEE! All you get!)

    The truth behind M$ giving people what they want is how available new systems will be with a consumers choice of OS. If they push too hard to sell XP, it'll require subsidizing (watch out for anti-trust on this one) and cut into the bottom line they're trying to bolster.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  253. But Of course by Dionysus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Then again, it's their technology, they can do whatever they want. Heck, Linus changes the public interface to the kernel between dot releases (then again, he documents the changes). At least MS changes stuff in major releases.

    Besides, they can't make too radical changes, because people will still be connecting WinNT, Win2K to their WinXP network (if nothing else).

    So Samba driven systems might no longer be a PDC, but it should still work as clients.

    --
    Je ne parle pas francais.
    1. Re:But Of course by hearingaid · · Score: 2

      and 95 and 98. and persuaded people to download the driver.

      oh yeah, and 3.11. people are still using it. it's frightening.

      and after all, look at all the success they've had before getting people to download their updates... ;)

      --

      my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

  254. What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by Mustang+Matt · · Score: 1

    So that basically means we won't be able to access windows drives over the network without using FTP?

    Does anyone write a 3rd party samba driver?

    --
    The man who trades freedom for security does not deserve nor will he ever receive either. - Benjamin Franklin
    1. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by TheAncientHacker · · Score: 2
      If reverse engineering software had been illegal in the early 60's we'd all still be using over-priced IBM PCs.

      First off, the IBM PC was introduced in1981. Kind of embarassing to be off by 100% on recent history.(about the same as saying that World War II took place in 1880).

      More importantly, if reverse engineering had been illegal when the IBM PC came out, "IBM PC Compatible" would never have become the standard and we'd be using some derivative of CP/M.

    2. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by Zo0ok · · Score: 1

      Mac OS X 10.1 is supposed to share files on MS networks (using SMB).

    3. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by sqlrob · · Score: 1
      Not anymore.

      That only holds if done to one of 7 countries (although that list may have gotten smaller / larger)

    4. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by flacco · · Score: 1
      This could be DCMA test

      FOR CHRIST'S SAKE, PEOPLE, IT'S DMCA.

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    5. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by floodle · · Score: 1

      Couldn't someone could write some kind of jingle to the tune of "YMCA" by the Village People that would just end this DCMA garbage once and for all? I can hear it now... "It's fun to sue with the...D M C A..."

    6. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Outside of the USA, not North America. USA North America.

    7. Re:What does this mean for non-Microsoft users? by jezerbel · · Score: 1

      I am so there - anybody have a few Village People mp3's? Or would such a thing be violated the DMCA and several other copyright laws? Oh screw it I'm gonna try and patent chords from now on and anytime someone uses an Am7 I want 13 cents in the dollar from every recording..

      The fun thing would be to make an entire movie based around the DMCA - have the jacuzzi scene from the movie with Steve Guttenberg smoozing up to a few judges... "C'mon - I break a few little copyrights.. can I make it worth your while.. you wanna be in the next Police Academy movie? No problem - you can be the really cool cop with the quirky one liners - infact u can be my side kick.. oh look breasts!!" mmmm bad 80's tit flixsss!!!

      Now were we talking about the DMCA or something.. my minds wandering...

  255. *sigh* by Kanon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Did anyone *not* see this coming?

  256. death spasms by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    seems to me that (regardless of whether this particular rumor is actually true, cause there are plenty other facts out there now) MS is starting to make some pretty stupid mistakes... marketing wise. (which is a new one for them IMHO)

    plus, you gotta remember that this is NOT the 80's. Computers are everywhere, and it will only grow, if not in volume then in complexity. However, regardless of the marketing hype, it comes down to dinero (not Robert). If I am wanting to buy some software app (including OS) to ADD to my system, or am interested in future scalability and adaptability. Why would I buy something that only works with itself. I would either not be able to integrate it, or would have to buy a crap load of hardware and software, not to mention the hours (money) spent in setting these up.

    This is not theory. I myself work in (and have friends in many other companies) who have been reviewing and testing candidates for various systems, from individual servers all the way up to planetary networks. EVERY one of the apps that have been Microsoft centric have been cut. We are talking 50,000 to 1,000,000 dollars that these apps' makers will NOT be getting now. And the reason is that while we and they are willing (if needs be) to shell out the clams for the apps to integrate into our end system, we can not and will not spend the 50 or more millions necessary to for changing all the existing systems. It is funny watching some marketing guy trying to sell us on his product. And when the question arises to its scalability and platform independance (whether where it is installed on, or what and how it communicates with other systems) they stutter and dance around until we finally force them to say it is MS only. EVERY SINGLE TIME, these guys will then fire off some defensive knee-jerk reaction on the lines of "While we at [company] are always looking for the widest use for our customers, we felt through market research that we should go with the industry leader... why would we go against the system that is in place in over 80% of the market?"

    hehehe, to this we usually respond with, "80% of the consumer end user market perhaps, but definitely NOT in the IT market" One time I even asked what the most popular 'system' is in the world, and the two guys stumbled all over themselves mentioning MS crap, until I asked if they had ever surfed the web. The light above their head was blinding, until I reminded them about how the protocols linking the internet were open and platform independant... it went downhill from there.... oh well.

    So, if you want to throw your money away, choose to make your product favor one OVER the other. Or you can make it as platform independent as possible and rake in the dough.

  257. Case in point of the DMCA stifling competition by StarTux · · Score: 1

    Need this silly law to be dropped, or re-written.

    Its bad enough for Linux to be fighting against a bona fide monopoly, but when you throw in the DMCA it could make it next to impossible.

    Working on projects outside of the US would alleviate this, for now.

    StarTux

  258. Patents + Microsoft = Slashdot MegaThread by Zeinfeld · · Score: 3, Interesting
    When I started reading the article there were 0 posts, by the time I finished over a hundred.

    As with all large companies Microsoft files lots of ridiculous patents. They do it for the same reason mine does, so that if they are sued by another company thay have something for swapsies.

    It would probably not be a good thing for Microsoft if their customers could not attach Linux file systems easily. SAMBA is simply collateral damage in the high stakes game between EMC and Microsoft. EMC servers are very expensive and Microsoft would love to play bigger on that turf.

    The bigger problem is that in the crackpot US PTO scheme you never know if a patent has been applied for on something until the government awards a 20 year monopoly in practicing it. The rules have been improved, i.e. made less open to corrupt abuse but they are still an extortionists charter.

    I can't remember the last time Microsoft was the plaintif in a Patent lawsuit. They have been the victim of many Patent Trolls.

    It would be an idiotic strategy for Microsoft to try to use patents to make .NET proprietary. But then again the tax cut for the ultra-rich and breaking the ABM treaty to build a 21st century Maginot line are crackpot ideas.

    --
    Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
    Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    1. Re:Patents + Microsoft = Slashdot MegaThread by Gunstick · · Score: 1

      lol, EMC and NT is not that good combination.
      On NT you can only mount the microscopic amount of 24 disks.
      On any unix server you can mount what you want. 2000 disks from the EMC box, if you wish, into one unix box.
      On NT you are stuck with 24. C: D: E: ... X: Y: Z:
      That's it!
      Now EMC had to invent special disks which are groups of disks thrown together to make one big disk so that NT can access more of the oh so expensive diskspace in the EMC box.
      Isn't this a huge workaround for a bad designed OS?

      Georges

      --
      Atari rules... ermm... ruled.
    2. Re:Patents + Microsoft = Slashdot MegaThread by ryanvm · · Score: 2
      But then again the tax cut for the ultra-rich and breaking the ABM treaty to build a 21st century Maginot line are crackpot ideas.

      Interesting that you end your commentary on the patent system with your entirely irrelevant opinions on tax cuts and ballistic missle defense.

      But don't worry - I'll take the bait anyway.

      Do you understand why the richest received the majority of the tax cut? Hmmm, maybe it has something to do with the fact that the richest are taxed a much higher percentage of their income.

      Of course, I'd wager that you knew that and you just don't see what's wrong with it. In that case, this diatribe is pointless.

    3. Re:Patents + Microsoft = Slashdot MegaThread by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
      Do you understand why the richest received the majority of the tax cut? Hmmm, maybe it has something to do with the fact that the richest are taxed a much higher percentage of their income.

      Since my family has been in politics for five generations I can tell you with absolute certainty that the reason was that the old rich supplied the majority of Bush's campaign contributions.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
  259. What about a SAMBA "Client" ?? by djhankb · · Score: 0

    A "Client for SAMBA Networks" seems to make sense. If M$ Drops the SMB protocol it would only seem natural to make a 3rd party client to use the former, most people aren't going to want to update their networks just to use this new "standard"... But a client or driver or whatever to use SAMBA networks on the windows side... It just makes sense.

    --
    --- #@$DF@#2%@^%3^&*$%FRHG%%[NO CARRIER]
  260. Re:turn it around then... by billcopc · · Score: 1

    I've been asking for this for the last couple of weeks! Why use Windows' own rather limited file sharing services when I could have the full featured tremendously tweakable Samba ?

    I want to do this because I'm still tied to Windows on my main station (think games), thus it has the best hardware and storage of all my PC's, but I want to set up an SMB share so that my linux boxen can access files on my win box painlessly (I'm setting up a box as a centralized mp3 jukebox, and another for arcade emulation :)

    Porting Samba to windows (which has already begun AFAIK) would be an excellent upgrade for anyone using Windows as a file server.

    --
    -Billco, Fnarg.com
  261. Double Edged Sword? by gibster · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I could actually see this working both ways, both against and for Microsoft. Sure, some people would choose to use an NT server rather than have extra hassle configuring ways around this, this would obviuosly benefit Microsoft through revenue and others. However, some people/companies would choose to dump Windows altogether and go with a much more free environment, such as a native network one like Linux or similar. I know I would go to Linux, and I'm sure a few other tech's would seriously consider the alternatives to a completely Windows environment, especially when there are other free or cheaper alternatives available.

  262. Re:turn it around then... by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

    That is a good idea! An even better idea would be: Don't use XP or .NET! I know in this office, these 70 or so computers will never see an upgrade past Win2K Pro [or Linux :)]. Hell we wouldn't even be using Windows if the software we HAVE to use was Linux/*BSD friendly. Hint, hint AutoDesk, Bentley, Lode, MapInfo.....

    Jaysyn

    --
    There is a war going on for your mind.
  263. insecure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't the SMB protocol supposed to be insecure anyway?

  264. I know is childish... by tarlong · · Score: 1

    but I am begining to believe that to slap this idiots in the face to wake them we, as a community, should start blocking them for a while. What? 35-45% server side share in the world and the most powerfull browser is not able to read a simple page that a lame piece of software like can easily digest... Just a thought.

    --
    What? A beutiful butterfly you say? And how exactly are you going to turn into a beutiful butterfly then?
  265. No 3rd Party? by Fatal0E · · Score: 2

    IANAP(programmer) but so what if MS doesn't write a samba (compliant) file system driver. Why not just write one or install one? That is possible isn't it?

  266. turn it around then... by snake_dad · · Score: 5, Insightful
    and port Samba to windows. :)

    --
    karma capped .sig seeking available Slashdot poster for long-term relationship.
    1. Re:turn it around then... by skroz · · Score: 1

      Just for shits and grins, I've started compiling Samba 2.2.1a on Cygwin on a windows box... I'll let you know how it works out.

      --
      -- Minds are like parachutes... they work best when open.
    2. Re:turn it around then... by billcopc · · Score: 1

      Well my main gripe is that it binds itself to network adapters, not ip addresses. That poses a problem to me (and probably many others) since I have a single nic in my Windows box that handles both my external ip to the cable modem, and an alias to my internal 192.x.x.x ip. I want to share only locally, but there is no way to restrict that with windows file sharing, not even through an obscure registry tweak.

      If I want something clean and moderately secure, right now I'd need to install a 2nd nic (which will of course screw with my IRQ's and make things unlivable again for my heavily tweaked gaming/graphics box. Under linux, Samba is a walk in the park, just tell it which IPs to serve on and which ones to reject. Sure, I could set up a linux file server, but I already have 80 gb's of storage on my win box and there's plenty free space on there. I don't see the justification of buying another 200$ hard drive just for my little tinkering experiments (especially since I'm broke and full of debt :)

      --
      -Billco, Fnarg.com
    3. Re:turn it around then... by mimbleton · · Score: 1

      "rather limited file sharing services "

      How is it limited ?

    4. Re:turn it around then... by mimbleton · · Score: 1

      Well Posix uses fcntl() and allows to lock parts of the file either for exclusive or shared access.

      Win32 has a call named LockFileEx which does pretty much the same thing.

      Where exactly is that huge disparity ?

    5. Re:turn it around then... by flacco · · Score: 1
      Hell we wouldn't even be using Windows if the software we HAVE to use was Linux/*BSD friendly. Hint, hint AutoDesk, Bentley, Lode, MapInfo.....

      Yeppers, that's a real catch for us. Every time I consider what it would take to switch to Linux, I just can't get past those custom applications we have that are written for Windows only. It's not like commodity office software, where you can at least get by with a functional equivalent in Linux :-(

      how does the open source concept/strategy save us in this case? How do you get an open source equivalent of vertical-market or custom-developed software without spending your entire IT budget on it?

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    6. Re:turn it around then... by cgthayer · · Score: 1
      I wouldn't mind ignoring the setuid and locking issues entirely. I'd love to have a samba server under windows to provide "programmed" filesystems. It's very difficult to write a low-level windows FS, whereas a lot of people would like an open-source user-land server.

      The reason is not even for providing files, but for providing programmed interfaces which look like files to the system. Eg. I'd like to make a "registry" filesystem which looks like a normal windows share to the local machine. Thanks,

      --
      /charles
    7. Re:turn it around then... by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      IANAP

      Well the thing is you have _custom_ apps. I would hope that if you paid to have the apps written you could at least get the code to have it ported to another OS. If I could code, AutoDesk isn't going to give, or even let me look at their source unless I fork over a large chunk of cash. And even if somehow I managed to pull that off, I'd still have to rewrite the custom overlays for AutoCAD & MicroStation that our customers have us use to keep their jobs to spec (digitally).

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    8. Re:turn it around then... by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah, and the Hella NDA's I would have to sign to get said code....

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    9. Re:turn it around then... by atomice · · Score: 1

      Funnily enough I actually use smbclient compiled for Cygwin to access my laptop machine under Windows since Windows Printer and File Sharing doesn't get on very well with talking to it. I have to admit I've never tried smbd but doesn't it come in the same package and I don't remember any compile errors.

  267. Re:Me Lose Monopoly? Uh-oh! by Satai · · Score: 1

    What next, Microsoft(R) TCP/IP(R)?

    Well, of course. But somewhere, in a Carl Sagan-esque fashion, you could convert the hex to base 11, insert CR/LFs, reverse the order, stand on your head and look at it, and you'd see, in clear letters...

    Copyright (c) 1983 The Regents of the University of California.

  268. Re:MS Office Replacement by AlXtreme · · Score: 1
    PDF? are you serious? Do you really want to pay a $50000 bail? ;)

    RTF or TeX are heaps better, and free-er. Pdf's are horrible. And btw, this is horribly off-topic :)

    --
    This sig is intentionally left blank
  269. What's the problem? by Otis_INF · · Score: 2
    If you make a cola-flavor that tastes just like Coca Cola and Coca Cola changes its recipe so it tastes different, you don't taste like Coca Cola anymore. So you have to change also.

    You can easily develop a client driver for a different protocol than windows uses (Novell does it f.e.). So develop a Samba protocol, write a driver for win32 and live happily ever after. Then you don't have to watch out if MS' protocols will change. You control the protocl.

    --
    Never underestimate the relief of true separation of Religion and State.
  270. Sure will be interesting to see them try... by Guppy06 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Shutting out SaMBa is easy. The trick is not to shut out older MS SMB clients like, say, LanMan, Windows 3.11, 95, 98, ME, NT 3.51, 4.0 and Win2k in the process. If they pursue this too rigorously, they risk alienating customers because the new software isn't backwards compatible. Why do you think they're still putting DOS compatability in their new OSes even though the last MS-DOS release was almost a decade ago?

  271. TCP/MS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Microsoft protocol will be a new and improved TCP/IP, and all this code red is a part of thier plans.
    Read more at:
    http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20010802. html

  272. Re:Lock-in by dthable · · Score: 1

    It got worse so when the justice department finally tells M$ to back off, then they can return to their normal monopoly level.

  273. They don't need to enforce it by Skapare · · Score: 2

    They don't need to enforce the patent to use it as a whip. The greatest harm would come from simply mentioning the patent and asserting "we may have to consider looking into possible violations, and if we find any, we may then have to consider looking into requiring the appropriate licenses from the users through our usual licensing methods".

    They won't get much money from such a patent and I don't think they would expect to get any. The idea is not to actually license it for royalties, but rather to raise FUD regarding the use of Open Source ... and not just Mono or the like, but any Open Source. It would be part of a campaign to discredit Open Source in the eyes of their major customers to try to head off major defections to Open Source based systems.

    IMHO, you'll never see this patent argued in legal court; you'll see it argued in the press and you'll not see it argued in private negotiations with their major customers because you aren't there to see it when it does happen. This is not so much about controlling protocols as it is about controlling buying decisions on the part of major corporations and setting a ceiling on how far Open Source software can rise into corporate offices and server rooms. I don't think they would care to wipe out Samba; rather, they want to find a way to keep their biggest customers from going that route. Microsoft actually benefits from Samba as long as Samba use is limited to the "small" part of the market (e.g. Unix) that is not economically practical for them to control.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  274. Isn't this what 'tridge' wanted? by CoolVibe · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Not emaning to troll, but:

    He said once that "SMB sucks. SMB really really sucks" (slightly paraphrased). And also that wrote samba as a compatibility thing. And that he expected it to be obsolete/not needed anymore, because hopefully people would use another (read: better) distributed network filesystem protocol. I don't know if .NET will be any better, but I doubt it.

  275. talk money by twitter · · Score: 1

    Admin knows $. Tell them how much it's going to cost them to buy and impliment the new MS junk to work their broken MS desktops. Then remind them that breaking things is a pattern with MS. Then tell them how much it would cost to fix their broken desktops. Admin is going to have eat costs no matter what. You might be able to prommise the lower cost more stable solution.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  276. cutting it's own throat by dropdead · · Score: 1

    At what point will Micro$oft realize forcing customers to upgrade and replace everything is bad business. Most companies spend years getting everything to work well. Now Micro$oft is telling them to throw away all that hard work and start over again on unproven technology or else.

    --


    By definition, a government has no conscience. Sometimes it has a policy, but nothing more. - Albert Camus
  277. MS Office Replacement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, I know that this subject has been chewed upon over and over but there is something I don't understand. Sun, Oracle, and Apple are getting hit really hard by M$'s bullying the vendors. Why can't they get together and create an Office Suite that is completely based on .pdf format ? Meaning, equivalent of Word, Excel, Ppoint that will give an ouput of .pdf file? I know that Apple can write a very pretty front end and the rest shouldn't that hard at all. By making it freely available, they can counteract M$ Office. Everyone has an acrobat reader and it is portable accross platforms. Any idea ??

    1. Re:MS Office Replacement by hearingaid · · Score: 2

      PDF sucks as a word-processing file-format.

      it stores, basically, postscript output data. like, we want the letter 'a' at this set of coordinates using this font, and these attributes. it doesn't have the "paragraph" concept, needed for word processing.

      I can't imagine how you'd use it for spreadsheets and presentation formats.

      anyway, that aside. Apple is currently being helped by MS Office. they've been touting Office for OS X.

      sun already did StarOffice.

      Oracle doesn't care. they're doing just fine.

      --

      my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

  278. Stop Complaining !!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I find this stuff very irritating.

    You have the free software people constantly having a go at MS for how cruddy their software is,
    how utterly awful the company is, etc etc etc....

    And then, the SAME people are singing the praises of something (latest example - Gnu .Net)
    that is a flagrant copy of the MS stuff !!!!!!!!

    Make your f****** mind up !!!!!

    And THEN, the SAME people complain if MS move the goal posts ! They're MS's goal posts. They can move them if they want !!!!

    If you hate MS that much then fine, but come up with some new ideas, rather than just ripping off what has already been done, otherwise you are no better than MS !

    1. Re:Stop Complaining !!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We will NEVER NEVER NEVER win agains MS until there is some better organisation within the free software community (re a /. discussion a few days ago).

      If all anyone is going to do is copy MS, then what's the point ? You may as well get the real McCoy instead ! Saying that the real thing is expensive and/or will lock everyone into MS is irrelevant if the stuff that is being made by the free software people is exactly the same ! We're no better off.

  279. Samba!= The Forbidden Dance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not enough sizzle to the name for it to have worked....if they had called it Lambada, then we would have had a winner on our hands.....

  280. Re: SMB in OS X 10.1 by geoffb91 · · Score: 1

    I would expect that MS is overjoyed that 10.1 has an SMB client... this pulls more Mac friendly sites into using NT/2000 servers, cuts down a major customer complaint about Mac and NT interoperability and also means that fewer people will use the truly lousy Services for Macintosh -- that probably means a lot of tech support calls will go away or become Apple's problem instead.

    Seems like a win for Redmond all around.

    -G

    --
    Praise "Bob"
  281. Compatibility will be maintained at some level by dcavanaugh · · Score: 1
    They might release some kind of "client upgrade", which coincidentally breaks Samba.

    I figure the next step would be for the open source people to write their own SMB client that restores Samba connectivity.

    Considering that M$ is drowning in security issues over IIS, they would be in even more trouble if their "upgrade" proved to be a security problem. I'm sure any such "upgrades" from M$ will be thoroughly "evaluated" by the hacker community.

    For some time now, M$ has treated file and print services as a commodity, almost a giveaway. M$ got into this business by providing the same functionality as Novell at a fraction of the price. It would be a classic blunder for M$ to "embrace and extend" their own file services, just as the concept is becoming irrelevant.

    To me, it sounds like their strategy is to try anything to slow down Linux. If this is the best M$ can do, the penguins will be marching into Redmond!

    1. Re:Compatibility will be maintained at some level by dcavanaugh · · Score: 1
      Yes, M$ does this with every release. Yes, they do it with just about every product. If anything, they do it to purposely break their old versions and encourage upgrades (MS Office). It would be out of character for them to do anything else.

      I think the Ximian/Mono people may have better luck. XP will be adopted slowly, thanks to M$ anti-customer business practices. The entire .NET initiative may simply turn out to be another M$ proprietary technology that is best ignored (examples: ASP, ActiveX, WINS). An open standard that is "a better .NET than .NET" would be more or less exempt from the M$ treadmill. I don't see the Apache team scrambling to implement ASP!

      For what it's worth, Samba is one of the coolest open source products ever. As time goes by, I find myself doing less and less with file services, but Samba is certainly one of the key products that we all need to limit the influence of the "evil empire".

  282. Lock-in by loki4eng · · Score: 4, Funny

    This is all about lock-in. It is getting harder and harder for MIS departments to fight M$, but we keep getting more reasons to do so. They continually leverage their desktop monopoly to force businesses to use (buy) other software of theirs. Its nothing new, but it has gotten SOOOO much worse this year.

    --
    It's nota my planet, monkey-boy - Dr Lizardo.
    1. Re:Lock-in by samdu · · Score: 1

      For future reference, the quote in your tagline, "It's not my Goddamned planet, understand, Monkeyboy?!?!" should be attributed to John Bigboote, not Dr. Emelio Lizardo. :) -Sam Dunham "Character... is-a what you are-a in-a the dark." -Dr. Emelio Lizardo (John Whorfin)

  283. OT: Re:Sadness overwhelms me... by CBravo · · Score: 1

    DONT THEY HAVE ENOUGH?

    Until you stop paying I guess they don't. Basic rule is that a buy is made by two party's. You and a salesman (m$ in this case).

    --
    nosig today
  284. Summing it up... by chinton · · Score: 1

    Here is the gist of the article (at least what I took away from it...

    If garble blabble urgle maybe gurfle flarg perhaps frotzen arcknik. Micro$oft patent glurp rorch arkin evil urchlain irtin pormpkin Open Source quirhsh lingler saintly.

  285. MS wins through strategy by peter+hoffman · · Score: 2

    Microsoft has an overall strategy for accomplishing their goals. Until the open source community rallies behind a unified strategy Microsoft will continue to have the upper hand. (I am well aware of the low probability of the OS community developing such a strategy and the issues involved.)

    Microsoft's .Net initiative, for all its problems, is a solid plan for tying people into an infrastructure owned by Microsoft and "open" to those who are not a threat to MS. Anyone who doesn't like that idea should be looking at the big picture and trying to figure out how to create a product or service that is overwhelmingly desireable (e.g., the Web) in which Microsoft cannot participate (probably by using patents).

    In order to bring Windows users into this hypothetical product/service a Windows client would have to be created but it would always have to be a second rate client compared to those on open platforms in order to provide a pressure to move off Windows.

    Microsoft killed the command line for most people by providing an integrated view of the computer with Windows.

    They then killed the standalone office application by integrating several applications into Office which is integrated into Windows.

    When the web unexpectedly threatened this model they integrated the browser into Windows to prevent losing control of such an important component. (Viewed another way: it was discovered that office workers needed one more application besides the ones already provided by Office.)

    Now that the major classes of applications are integrated in Windows the next step is to integrate Windows into a "super-Windows" which irreversibly binds multiple machines together. This will preclude other operating systems the same way that binding Excel, Word, etc. together precluded other office applications.

    The "secret" to MS Office's success was the proprietary nature of the file formats used and COM. The same approach is being used in .Net: make proprietary the communcation of data between approved applications.

    If Microsoft succeeds in their plan there will not be another opportunity for the open source community until another dimension is added. In terms of MS products, previous dimensions included:

    1. single process on a single computer (DOS)
    2. multiple processes on a single computer (Windows)
    3. multiple processes on multiple computers (.Net).

    Right off the bat, I don't see what dimension #4 would be so we may have to live with .Net for a long time if there is no open source alternative.

    People don't plan to fail, they fail to plan.

  286. We Can always not-use & replace SMB/CIFS ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe its time for an open source replacement for SMB/CIFS ... ie perhaps Coda or AFS Sure, it is convenient to use Samba since the client software is preloaded and it matches other servers you might have ... But we could always start using something else if it has Open Source clients & servers available ... who knows ... maybe it will even be better than SMB/CIFS.

  287. Me Lose Monopoly? Uh-oh! by neflyte · · Score: 2, Funny

    Looks to me like MS is trying to go proprietary again. Just when Samba was getting real good too...

    What next, Microsoft(R) TCP/IP(R)?

    --
    "I'm not a vegetarian because I love animals. I'm a vegetarian because I hate plants." -- A. Whitney Brown
  288. Does this really effect Normal use of SAMBA? by defaulthtm · · Score: 1
    In a corporate environment the normal use of SAMBA seems to be a *NIX file + other services server accessed by windows clients, will the inability to change a windows password from UNIX have an effect?

    K

    --
    K
  289. Extraterritorial jurisdiction is BAD by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 2

    He was NOT prosecuted for his speech (officially - the speech could very well have provoked Adobe/FBI). He was charged with a DMCA violation for selling, FROM RUSSIA a product which violated the DMCA. He was in RUSSIA at the time of activity which the US is officially prosecuting him for. It was legal there.

    It would be like me, here in beautiful Nevada, driving 75 in a 75 mph zone and travelling to Connecticut and getting a speeding ticket for having driven 75 because the maximum speed limit in Connecticut is only 55.

    --
    Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
    1. Re:Extraterritorial jurisdiction is BAD by 1010011010 · · Score: 2

      They were destributing CDs.

      But I still think the real reason was that he gave his talk. Otherwise, why arrest him and not the company president, who was also there?

      The DMCA is an amendment of the First Amendment...

      --
      Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
  290. paranoid by mrm677 · · Score: 1

    Is it just me, or is Slashdot becoming a forum to discuss Microsoft conspiracy theories?

  291. Read the article -- paying $$$ for Mono by nachoman · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This article is more then just a bunch of wining about samba. So what, they make a new technology and render the smb protocol useless. I don't hear too many people wining about how no one uses gopher much anymore...

    The point is that we can always create a free version of whatever MS makes. For smb protocol we created samba. Samba is for interconnectivity with windows; not too many people use it for Unix sharing (usually use NFS).

    If it goes away, fine. We'll make Omni-ba that'll work with the new protocol for filesharing.

    BUT. The real problem I see here is ...

    Open-source critics of Microsoft said the company would have the opportunity to strangle an open-source project by demanding a licensing fee and royalty payments each time an open-source version of its patent was implemented.

    The whole point of Mono is to be able to have a free .NET alternative for Linux because MS has no intention of doing this on their own. Now MS says you can do all the work into implementing our system, with all of it's problems and complexities, and we'll get paid for it.

    Does anyone else see the problem here. MS if you want to get paid for a Linux/Unix version of .NET, DO IT YOURSELF!!! I mean, can they really expect people to pay to use this? I don't know how Ximian can go along with this one.

  292. duh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok if microsoft has finally decided to squash samba...

    what makes these ximian dumb asses think the same exact shit won't happen with mono? hello?

    Migeul DeIcaza and Tim O'reilly are both suspects in the crime of being big fat sell outs...well maybe their just morons, i don't know.

  293. They REALLY do want to end backward compatibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    All those existing W95/98/MT/NT4/W2K installations already out there are not making them any more new revenue, in fact they now consider the entire installed product base to be a liability against future sales. They really do want to completely re-invent the way everything is done, and require everyone to re-buy everything all over again if the users want to "stay compatible" with their current product line (of the future). They are naiively thinking that all their current customers will indeed go running off the cliff like lemmings and buy the new stuff all over again. They're dreaming.

  294. I thought they only patented "defensively" by defile · · Score: 2

    Whenever Microsoft was asked to comment on the software patents they hold, their response was noble: "We're only patenting these algorithms so some jackass doesn't come along and patent something trivial, drawing us into a stupid legal battle -- we don't believe that these patents are valid any more than you do." (paraphrased).

    Being Microsoft means that lots of people are itching to sue you over anything. Their excuse for patenting algorithms is believable, but are they willing to stick by their beliefs when their monopoly is at stake?

    It'd be a damn shame if a company as large and INNOVATIVE and fundamental to the computer industry as Microsoft felt that they could no longer compete with raw talent and great software alone.

  295. "Legacy" protocols by mikewhittaker · · Score: 1
    MS is certainly getting rid of what it calls 'legacy' protocols on Whistler/XP, at least NetBEUI and IIRC, IrDA on its XP server products.

    Note the reference to IPv6 in the article, however...embrace and extend, anyone?

  296. BS. Try looking up meaning of nondiscriminatory by helarno · · Score: 2

    Not true.

    "Nondiscriminatory fashion" means that Microsoft must treat all potential licensors equally. If Microsoft licenses this patent to all users for $1 per copy distributed, that is still nondiscriminatory. Can Ximian afford to pay for something like that? Can the Samba project afford this? Can any open source project afford to pay even $1 per download?

    Microsoft requiring licensing fees would be the kiss of death for any project.

  297. Next we will hear by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    Od a back door in SAMBA-- the key will be "Microsoft Engineers are Weenies"

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  298. ftp (scp)? by ahde · · Score: 1

    sorry, but if you want a client program, you're going to have to use the overhead. Otherwise, you have to work with the OS developer, or at least have access to their specs.

    1. Re:ftp (scp)? by ahde · · Score: 1
      Security product vendors, yes. Cult of the Dead Cow, no. They're stuck with reverse engineering. And guess who Microsoft associates SAMBA with?

  299. Microsoft is slowly marching towards extinction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Face the facts. Why they remain popular is simply put, marketing. The war on the desktop is two things, Productivity suites such as Office or Star office, and Video Games. Linux has few commercial games available and loki seems to be at least 6 months behind in porting a handful of games Mac OS/X intel version looks promising, provided they can make the install painless. Atop that, its BSD style license and larger players such as Adobe, and Macromedia finally stepping up to the plate to support it, it could only be a year or two before Linux/Unix ports of popular production suites such as Photoshop, and Dreamweaver make their way to the store So while microsoft continues its plans of trying to control and tighten key systems , they are quickly painting themselves into a corner

  300. Be surprised, then by janpod66 · · Score: 2
    Microsoft's authentication and directory structure is already changing wildly with current and upcoming releases. Making SMB incompatible would just be more of the same.

    How do they get their customers to switch? By having lots of little network effects going, keeping backwards compatibility for a while, and tying everything together. So, you upgrade to the next version of office to be able to communicate with your customers. Well, that means upgrading to the next version of Windows, but that's not too bad, since you don't really need to use the new protocols. Well, after another round or two, you do, and you end up running software and protocols you never wanted. That's the danger of having one company do everything; break Microsoft up.

  301. Change the password by using Kerberos by thule · · Score: 1

    This is easy to get around. All the new MS operating systems are going to use Kerberos. I've personally tested changing the password on a 2000 AD box from a Linux box using Kerberos. So, I don't think that this will be too much of a problem after all.

  302. SMB *not* changing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My understanding from the ZDNet article is not that SMB is changing, but that SMB already contains the patented password-changing technique. Allegedly, patent #5,719,941 is the one in question. That patent was granted back in 1998, but was filed in January 1996, long before the .NET project began. In other words, SAMBA may already be in violation of 5,719,941.

  303. MS has bullied open source with patents before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  304. Re:But will MS really break backwards compatibilit by kputnam · · Score: 1

    Judging from their past decisions... I'd say they wouldn't. Recall that Windows NT and 2000 use the old LANMAN hash from the days of LanManager... which was around when DOS was. Although keeping the LANMAN hash severely reduces the security of its other password hash, they STILL left it in.... Likely they will do the same to keep 95/98/2K/ME compatability.

  305. Flocking Masses by WyldOne · · Score: 1

    No, they don't have to be backward compatable - they just stop supporting old versions of Win. Then just watch how many CEo's will bail that dead pony just because it is 'no longer supported'. Never underestimate the stupidity of a CEO.

    --

    make Linux, not Microsoft. sin(beast) = -0.809016994374947424102293417182819
    1. Re:Flocking Masses by Guppy06 · · Score: 1
      "sin(beast) = -0.809016994374947424102293417182819"

      Gotta ask: Why doesn't the anti-Christ use radians?

  306. Does it pass the litmus test i..e. MITM attacks? by GeneOff · · Score: 1
    I agree with the poster about doing a search for prior art. It appears to be too simple to not have been discovered prior to 1998. For the moment, I'll give them the benefit of the doubt.

    Going off no more than the abstract, this seems like a weak scheme to me. The Man in the Middle attack (or simple packet sniffers) might be able to compromise the password through the change. Consider that the entire security of this rests on the encryption of Hash(old) for Message(2). It further relys on physical security of the server's password hash database. (Which if its running IIS and Code Red II worms its way in, maybe not.)

    The strength of the encryption algorithm (stream or block cipher) is paramount. 56 bit DES could be cracked in hours. I hope the actual implementation would use ADES or TwoFish or something. The one way hash should also be longer than 56 bits since its used as the key. I don't know how NT or 2000 generates these.

    In either scenario, if the hash of the old password is compromised, then Message1 is decoded. I hope they are not planning to use this for .NET or Passport.

    What I don't get is why if they are using Kerberos in 2k and ActiveDirectory, would they consider this weaker scheme.

  307. War on Microsoft by B.D.Mills · · Score: 2

    We should take active steps to derail the .NET menace.

    * Every open source server accepting an IP packet destined for a Microsoft .NET server should "corrupt" it 1% of the time.

    * Packets using patented .NET protocols should be corrupted or dropped 5% of the time.

    The net effect of these would be to make .NET unreliable, particularly if there are several hops through open source servers.

    * Data packets purporting to follow a published standard that do not conform 100% to the published standards - such as attempts by Microsoft to complete the "extend" phase - should be "corrected" so they conform. Kerberos is one example.

    It must be OK to do this because Microsoft have been doing this sort of stuff for years. Fake error messages in windows 3.1 running under DR-DOS is just one example.

    --

    The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. - Edmund Burke
  308. Re:They just don't get it.... you don't either by flacco · · Score: 1
    In >99% of the companies, the executive decision is the one that gets acted on.

    Why do you think MS sales-weasels like to EXCLUDE a company's technical folks from a sales deal when possible?

    --
    pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
  309. CIFS != .NET non-interop already here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...underlie Windows' file transfer protocol [CIFS/SMB], which will probably be used in .Net.

    Nonesense! If MS is talking about using CIFS for transport in .NET the've completely lost their minds. It's the worst possible protocol. It's fat, highly statefull, multi-layered, and pretty much every one agrees; it's an ugly, nasty, monster. You think CodeRed is bad, I've written CIFS client code and I blue screened my test machine several times tripping over oopsen in NT's server. Unicode alighment off? BSOD. InfoLevel 0x107? BSOD.

    The patent covers only the encryption procedures for how a user password is changed...

    Forget .NET. How about NTLMv2 Authentication (the infamous Kerberos extension) being the default in XP. That's right; If you put an XP machine on your network it will NOT work with Samba!

  310. Re:Retaliate with F.U.D. by B.D.Mills · · Score: 2

    Another way to retaliate would be to use good old Fear, Uncertainty, Doubt.

    Fear: Companies who are using open source solutions to save money would harm their bottom line if they use .NET because of all the license fees they would be forced to pay.

    Uncertainty: .NET is an unproven technology. Unproven technologies often fail.

    Doubt: Companies using .NET would be left high and dry if it fails. It is likely to fail because it is unproven technology.

    --

    The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. - Edmund Burke
  311. There are other ways out by ras · · Score: 1

    I am sure that if the patent really threatened to stop SAMBA development the SAMBA team would find ways around the problem. For example, they could provide an interface for an authentication "plug in" that was developed by somebody out of the reach of the patent. They could even write the plug in and make it available on a Web Site that is out of reach. Or most users could just ignore the patent. As I recall PGP has used all the of these techniques at one time or another to get around the RSA patents.

    Actually the RSA / PGP example demonstrates that patents are not very effective against open source. It is far too easy to just more to the code development and distribution to a place the patent does not apply, and then rely on the users to ignore it.

    Microsoft has a far more effective weapon available to it anyway - changing the protocol with every release. This has effectively nuked the NTFS driver for 'nix. It surprised me to hear that it causes SAMBA as much trouble as it does - I thought SMB would be very constrained by the existing client base. Obviously it is not constrained enough!

  312. If MS are in the supreme court........... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If MS are appealing against the monopoly decision then this is a handy tool to club them with. The overturning of the original judgement only stopped the splitting up of MS. They are still judged to be a monopoly and they can still be screwed by the court via there own blatant arrogance as demonstrated in this article. The ropes around their neck, let them use there own stupidity to hang themselves. Are there any groups gathering this sort of info to hit MS in court? If so how do we join in the info gathering effort

  313. Worst case.. by Ogerman · · Score: 1

    Samba isn't developed in the US, so all they have to do is release a version with and without the supposed patented password changing algorithm. (or just have a patch.) That won't stop admins in the US from downloading the full version while they transition entirely to free software. And how would MS be able to control that?

  314. Why not NFS ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if NFS is better than SMB why not create a NFS Windows Client ? Instead of making *nix, MAC/Os, etc "pretend" to be a NT Box, why not make WinXX Clients to know how to "talk" with NFS ?