Supreme Court Rejects Microsoft Appeal
Geoff writes "I assume you've gotten a few zillion of these already, but since I don't see it on the front page yet, the Supreme Court has rejected Microsoft's appeal of the antitrust verdict." It should be noted that this was expected.
to the LEGION OF DOOM!
Lex Luthur has been said to be quite sympathic of the corporation's plight.
Got Freedom?
Thinking?
This seems like good news, but what, if anything, does this mean to the current findings of anti-competitive practices and what penalties will they be forced (if any) to pay. Seems to me that the jucicial system is willing to say that M$ is bad, but what are they doing to try and rectify the situation. Will they:
:-).
1) Force M$ to open the Windows source, 2) Force M$ to had the source to a couple of other companies to try and force competition with a set group of compatibility standards, 3) Change their minds and break the company up into an OS company and an application company, 4) Provide yet another solution, 5) Slap them on the wrist and tell them "Don't do this anymore"
M$ has so much history regarding their threat to competition, that the time has come to stop talking and start actually doing something to them. Maybe we need someone like Milo (Antitrust) to come along and bring them down... so to speak
Microsoft: Who do you want to sell your domestic policy to today?
OK,
- B
http://www.bradheintz.com/
- updated
This ruling means most of Judge Jackson's findings of facts are upheld. It means that Microsoft broke the law. And it means that Bill Gates and the people in Seattle were, quite simply wrong.
But it doesn't mean a thing in terms of Microsoft's behavior, right now. Here comes Windows XP, clearly with Microsoft having set their sites on Real, Inc. Now we'll have to see what sort of a deal Bill can buy from the Bush administration.
Quite frankly I'm surprised that the Bush administration is arguing for oversight, rather than breakup. Fox watching the chickens? I hope not.
This is the question I have been pondering for a long time now. There is no doubt that msft hurts other companies by integrating the best ideas in to the OS itself, but that must be a plus for the consumer. Yes, they will pay more for things they do 'not' need but I have found myself using most of the features in XP and I know I don't want to give them up. Integration with the OS is the key to their success, and you can not argue that you can do less with windows now than in the past. Anything that is gaining momentum towards universal acceptance like music and web browing belongs in the OS so the functionality can be extended across the board. Just look at all the places embedded ie is showing up for instance. Maybe they have put a lot of companies out of buisness, and maybe they need to open up more of their interfaces to spurt new ideas, but a breakup? I would be pissed. Despite what anyone says about microsoft stealing ideas, the best artists steal. In fact, linux is a unix clone. There is no reason not to use a good idea, in fact it should be the norm. It might even help the linux crowd after examining each programmers idea of the perfect interface. I don't think I could imagine something other than a monopoly controlling the operating system market. We don't need two or three different logic systems, one is complex enough.
PS: I did use linux for four years on the desktop and have given up hope in that arena.
At least it will still take a while for this case to finish. In the mean time the current economy can strenghten again and the general feeling will be more altruistic.
MicroSoft lost this case but there are of course more to be fought. Let's see those before we begin whining.
Anyway. If MicroSoft continues to put out products as they do now they will themselves destroy what they created. Look at the last couple of weeks. All the bad press sure rings a few alarmbells over there. Gartner who has been very lenient (not pro but not contra as well) towards MS are now actively advising to drop MS products in the internet arena.
No... i'm not afraid of the future. MicroSoft will get what it deserves.. whatever it deserves.
I've scoured the DOJ website and the wire services but can't find any response from the DOJ. Granted this is overshadowed by other issues they're focusing on atthe moment but surely they have a response... Anyone wnow what or where it is?
--CTH
--Got Lists? | Top 95 Star Wars Line
[BZZZZZZZ] Wrong... tell 'em what they're going home with Don Pardo.
So you're telling me that the tech market in the last 5 years has been technically sound and the ONLY thing that made them collapse was Microsoft? I think you may need to brush up on how the market works. Sure, bellweather stocks influence smaller stocks, but if a smaller stock is FUNDAMENTALLY SOUND it will survive.
So it wasn't the irrational exuberance of the telecom industry that fucked up Cisco, Lucent, et al, it was the gov't action against Microsoft? So it wasn't the fact that many pure dot.com companies were generating NO revenue that wasn't their downfall, it was the gov't action against Microsoft?
Nice troll. No clue.
REDMOND, October 21, 2001 -- Microsoft annouced today their new "Microsoft Court XP" software. The software settles legal claims using Microsoft Law XP technology, the company's new standard for legal systems. According to Microsoft's press release, the software is capable of establishing legal precedent, providing checks and balances against the "other three branches of government", and also "upholding the supreme law of the land."
The software, which will be bundled with all new pressings of Windows XP, is Microsoft's bid for entry in the competitive court market. Entry will prove difficult, but a Microsoft spokesperson expressed optimism. "We are confident that our innovative concept can compete. Just think about it: checks and balances, like, who'd come up with that shit? Innovation, baby! Can't touch this!"
According to the company's web site, Microsoft Law XP will be released under a "shared source" model in which selected plaintiffs and defendents using Microsoft Court will be allow to view the laws under which they are being tried, but not to modify or redistribute them. "We wanted to draw on the best of both worlds," said Microsoft spokesperson Craig Mundie. "We like the collaborative aspect of the Democratic model, but feel that its viral transmission of rights to all citizens constitutes a real threat to the intellectual assets of businesses."
Some critics charge that the release, which follows closely on the Supreme Court's rebuke of Microsoft on October 9, is an anti-competitive move by Microsoft, and an attempt to use monopoly power to take over the market for legal systems.
"This is more M$ FUD," said one post moderated +4 (Insightful) on Slashdot, "They're bundling this software with their OS, and the software keep reassociating itself with the 'legal action' file type. Sure, all the p0w3r u53rz will work around it, but most of those inept peons we call the public will file a suit, and end up using their software without even realizing they had an option."
Mundie vigorously denied these allegations, calling them "the unreasonable accusations of a vocal minority."
"I just want to emphasize Microsoft Law is an open standard," said Mundie.
A source at Microsoft, on condition of anonymity, told reporters, "All your law are belong to us."
So what remedies would accomplish these goals? (Assuming the third is also a goal?)
Now what does this accomplish? It doesn't force MS to give up their precious source code. It makes anyone free to compete with MS. MS can't complain -- they must play by different rules since they have the monopoly over the standards -- so they should document them. Just as the phone company should open up the plug-and-electrical-spec format for third party telephone equipment. Conversely, MS is free to compete with anyone else who chooses to compete with them. If MS can build a better office suite than joe blow, then great, they should win in the market. They should just not win because of their monopoly. They should sink or swim based on the merit of their product. But in doing so, they can't prevent others from competing.
Based on the remedies I describe above, others could build office suites, file servers, and Win32 programs on equal footing with MS. Who wins now comes down to product merit and marketing. But not strictly due to monopoly control.
Similarly to MS not having to give up their valuable impleentations of these specs, it is expensive for others to create interoperable implementations in order to compete.
These arguments all would make sense to the court.
(of course, it's hard to compete with free implementations. heh, heh.)
I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
overruling an 8-1 decision of a fairly conservative court will do no good to its
own, already fairly shaken, reputation.
It's good news because it means that the finding
of fact are now the official undisputable truth as
far as all US courts are concerned.
But there's a long way to go before we see anything good coming from the case. It is too soon to party and too soon to despair.
-- look, cheese ahoy!
>but at least the Supreme Court has the wisdom to see how Microsoft was conducting business was wrong.
...or maybe they just refused to even look at it.
The high court declined without any comment or dissent to review the June 28 ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals
So, the appeal papers came back with a big red 'REFUSED' stamped on them. It isn't like they spent months and months looking over the entire case and came back and upheld Jackson's finding of fact.
They didn't exercise much wisdom, they decided there wasn't enough merit in Microsoft's arguments to accept the appeal.
Nah. MS said that if they (Corporate America) didn't support MS, they'd have their licenses audited!
Oh, and back on topic... The whole licensing thing is an example of how MS being a monopoly is hurting consumers, not just competitors.
Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
About a year and a half ago, I read a piece regarding Intel's soon to be launched 64-bit processor. An Intel engineer/marketing person(?) said that they were simply waiting for Microsoft to launch their Win64 Operating System.
At the time, the Linux kernel and at least a few other operating systems were ready to go on the new IA-64 processor. Unfortunately, it didn't get launched. I believe that if Intel had launched the CPU then many of us would be posting to Slashdot with a 64-bit Linux/*BSD or other OS. As quick as possible Microsoft would then have released their Win64! product, which would have been buggy and filled with BSODs. After a few months patches would be released and things would begin to stabilize.
Instead, we are still here sitting on our 32-bit systems waiting for the day when we can have true 64-bit power for our desktops. I for one, would love to see the 3D worlds that could be created with such a system. The amount of RAM that could be supported, the hard drive sizes and the impressive speed at which 3D renderings could be done would be beyond impressive.
So, is Microsoft hurting the consumer? You could say that. I am a consumer, I would love to have my hands on an Intel IA-64 or an AMD Sledgehammer processor. In a way Microsoft is hurting me by keeping the 64-bit technology outside of my grasp. Of course, I could buy a "Developer's" workstation, only thing is, I don't have that kind of money.
Then there is the idea of choice. I should be able to choose which components I want to run on the operating system I run. Of course, this option should be a choice available for power users. What if I want to rid my system of using Explorer for file management? What if I wanted to completly remove Internet Explorer? There are to many What-if's to put in here. Suffice to say, if Windows had more customizable features/services, similiar to Linux many people would be happier with the OS.
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If you ignore the other uses of a tool, does that make the tool less useful, or you less useful?
Microsoft's integration on the OS level is just being used to leverage an advantage. Applauding their supposed innovation ingores the obvious problems of single providers. Let's take music as an example.
If we assumed that Microsoft would integrate music into their OS, then no other company would be foolish enough to create a music solution. It would crash and burn before the might of Microsoft. (There is the possibility that many companies might attempt to be bought out by Microsoft... but this is a different issue.)
Now with only Microsoft as a provider, we are hindered by one development path. No one will innovate because there is no profit in innovation if Microsoft can simply copy what you have with an army of programmers.
The end result is a single attempt at a solution where everyone must use Microsofts results regardless of merit.
Contrast this to a system where the OS level is simply a layer and a music solution could be created by anyone and you see quickly that competition would give a better result. With many developers taking risks for the possiblity of profit, variety results in a better population of products. Eventually a winner emerges. Nothing had to change in the OS to make this happen... it's already in place with a seperation of OS and applications.
Integration could easily be made possible for all developers, but this bites into Microsofts profits. They wont open integration to other developers because it's a huge advantage for their own products.
I hope this explains it well enough.
This is important, people!
It means that the last door on this ruling has now closed for good (well, as much as anything closes for good in the legal system). That opens up two critical items.
First, the case that is now before the new judge is no longer contaminated by any doubt about the facts. MS, which might have been taking a delaying tactic in hopes of still getting the facts overturned, has lost that hope. That doesn't mean they won't delay as much as possible, but it does mean that they're now limited. As long as there was a possibility of overturning the findings of facts, they could spin delays to their hearts content. If a settlement was imposed, an injunction would almost certianly have been granted while the findings of fact were still in question. That finding is no longer in legitimate question, so that avenue is gone.
Second, and probably more important in the long term, the solidification of the findings of fact opens the door for damage suits against MS. IMHO it was not a co-incidence that MS settled with DR shortly after the initial finding. But there are many more suits pending, and some of the plaintiffs have no reason to hold back.
Err, as far as I can tell, all Microsoft is doing is pissing off customers. Some are even considering leaving the Microsoft desktop...
In a real emergency, we would have all fled in terror, and you would not have been notified.
IANAL, but from the occasional TV drivel I've caught, I've picked up on one important part of legal stratagy:
Settlments have a place before the ruling, right? I mean... The DOJ won, that's just been re-re-clarified again (redundancy intended). When a party is found guilty, what would possibly possess the prosecution to settle for a lower penalty? If Microsoft DOES end up with a slap on the wrist, it's going the be the definitive large scale failure of a "blind" justice system.
"You know, Hobbes, some days even my lucky rocketship underpants don't help" -- Calvin
And why don't you ask laid off tech workers why management thought everybody in the company, including the janitor, required a cell phone and Palm? Or how about companies with no business model? Or how about "Oh yeah, we're a computer manufacturer but we're special because we install linux on our machines." Yeah, that's going to save them from the razor-thin profit margins that plague all the other well established big names out there. But it certainly didn't stop investors from pushing the IPO price up so high that it would take 20 years of growth before shareholders saw a return.
But, of course, because investors created a new vocabulary and started using buzzwords like "eyeballs" to explain the vaulted "New Economy" every insane investment they threw money at was going to make people rich. 150 years of economic history and lessons (tulips anyone?) could be thrown out the window because this new industry is digital.
But of course you are right, MS is just so big (bigger than IBM even! Not.) that picking on them is just going to throw the market into chaos.
Please. Get a refund on your next version of Office and go buy a clue.
I don't want knowledge. I want certainty. - Law, David Bowie
Microsoft has lost their last hope of delaying a judgement. They have, with out a doubt, been convicted of being a destructive monopoly.
This means they have no choice but to play nice with the current judge. If they try the kind of tricks they used in the trial Bill could wind up in jail. This also means that in any future suit filed against Microsoft they will go into court with Microsoft having to prove they weren't doing any of the things they did to get convicted the first time. This puts Microsoft at a HUGE disadvantage in court.
This leads to the possibility that Microsoft will be placed under judicial supervision to ensure they do not repeat any of their crimes. How would you like it if Microsoft was forced to release complete details of all interfaces and be forced to make all net interface definitions public for 6 months before they could release an product that implements them? Happened to the US phone companies. It could happen to Microsoft.
Don't underestimate the importance of this ruling.
Stonewolf
I think that a part of the problem is delayed effects from Y2k. A lot of companies threw out perfectly good equipment and replaced it with new stuff because of Y2k concerns. The whole supply chain grew because of this, and had to collapse when demand fell to lower than normal levels.
This has NOTHING to do with MS' stock falling.
It has everything to do with the loss in confidence in the dot-bombs, which then led to a loss in confidence in the tech stocks. Please take note: Most of the technology infrastructure of the world, let alone of this country doesn't run on MS products- it runs on things like Unix/Linux, OS/MVS. OS/400, etc. Funny that most of the tech stocks have more to do with that stuff than MS.
I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
Ya lets hope s/he is as smart as Slashdot.
The whole supply chain grew because of [Y2k], and had to collapse when demand fell to lower than normal levels.
Indeed. I've never seen so many consultants warming the bench as I have this year.
The problem is that the majority of the world, i.e. your grandma with her new Compaq, don't see why Microsoft having a monopoly is a big deal. They DON'T CARE about what OS is on their PC, as long as it runs and emails their photos of their grandchildren and does their taxes without having to pay an accountant. Windows does that, so they're happy.
I'd go so far to say that, to them, competition in OSes is a BAD thing, because they might have to learn something different. In general, people hate to learn, as all of you tech support and TA folks know.
Let me emphasize this: We, meaning power users and geeks, are the ONLY people who care about this!!!
Until the rest of the world knows a) what an OS is and b) why it's good to have more of them, will the M$ case mean anything. Until then it's a political liability for the feds, as they risk a populist backlash because "they made the computer harder to use".
- Josh
No matter what the Supremes may say, SSSCA and W3C RAND have the essential effect of cementing Microsoft's monopoly and removing the only effective competition the marketplace has produced in the past 5 years.
The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
So throw together a class action lawsuit against the Microsoft execs and lawyers who knowingly broke the law repeatedly, and the stock analysts who reccomended that people buy into a company they knew were engaged in illegal practices. Microsofts violations arent exactly news, nor would they take anyone with an inkling of knowledge about antitrust law by surprise, at least since the early to mid 90's.
Yes, the fall of a company engaging in illegal practices can have an effect on the stockmarket if it is large enough. However, this is a flaw in the company itself, and their SEC filings should probably contain "Since we are violating the law left and right and lying in court, our future ability to sustain profit levels through illegal practices may be hampered by the application of law".
Oh that's right. I didn't.
Neither did I but...
But to sit here and deny that this case has had a horrible effect on the economy of this country is short-sighted and ludicrous
isn't true either. One company does not have that much sway on an entire industry. Had no action been leveled at Microsoft we'd still be looking at the same market conditions now.
Again, how did this action against Microsoft case the Telecom industry to go into the toilet? How would have NOT doing anything to MS keep all of those unprofitable dot-coms afloat?
It's going to be more of the same until we put a muzzle on Microsoft AND the Entertainment industry which is now in bed with them.
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
Please learn something about how the market works. When MS's stock first fell after they were threatened with a possible breakup, the market began to fall. Each blow against MS was a blow against the tech market as a whole. When people lost faith in MS stock they lost faith in the tech stocks. As the tech stocks fell so did the rest of the market as people begin to panic.
Was the orig post. The insinuation was that "each blow" to MS caused more damage to the tech stocks than the general state of the industry, which is complete bullshit. As I said before, a small company with good fundamentals may have their stock price influenced by a bellweather in the industry, but if its a sound company it will NOT go under. Regardless of what was done to MS (and I'm not arguing that what was done was good or bad) the tech market would still be in the crapper today. The action against MS did not have that much effect on the tech market as a whole (remember, just 3 years ago we were reading a lot of articles by analysts saying MS were dinosaurs...)
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Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day.
Teach him to eat and he will fish forever.
This case has almost nothing to do with the economy of this country (assuming you mean the USA). Tech stocks as an equity sector may have felt some hit as confidence in all tech stocks waivered-- but consider that many newer companies were flying high on promises and failed to deliver the results, also consider that major chip makers and other manufacturers reported decreases in earnings completely unrelated to the government action against Microsoft.
! Yet a single computer software company is driving the economy? I doubt it. Much more likely that companies like food goods, automotives, banks, petroleum products and the like are driving the economy. The price of energy and health care are more likely to cause ripple effects than the price of Microsoft stock or software.
:)
Then finally consider that the equities market is only an aspect of the economy, which is heavily affected by foreign trade, currency inflation, government debt, personal debt, shopping habits, and a hundred other things. And you want to say that the Microsoft case overwhelms all these other factors in importance? Half the people in this country don't even own computers or use them that regularly (see http://www.epf.org/forecasts/2001/tf20010111.pdf)
But I wouldn't expect a 20 year old college sophomore CSci student to understand a complex system like the economy.
I do not have a signature
Although I have always disliked MS for it's illegal business practices, there are far bigger reasons why this is especially important in this decade.
In the next few years, the basic methods used to pipe IP around and assuure digital rights will be implemented and deployed.
I have to admit, I am one of those crazy people who hoped that the internet would create a much more sane way of producing and distributing media, one that would eventually weaken the major corps that currently control the audio and video space (bertelsmann, vivendi, etc.)
Yet dominance of a single entity in software infrastructure makes it (structurally) easy for other monopolies to join in or meld with that infrastructure.
The idea of BMG and Microsoft teaming up on digital rights, with no competition, is an unpleasant thought. Regualr consumers, artists, midlevel producers, alternative producers...all left in the cold unless they want to play with (and pay) this media giant.
The court decision opens the door to serious conduct remedies, including "fast track" government/legal action (without a trial) when future complaints are made.
Treatment, not tyranny. End the drug war and free our American POWs.
See my user info for links.
People are stupid. Lots of people think that more jobs, more spending, etc == good for economy, regardless of whether it's real production, or waste. I guess these people will be happy with the consequences of the WTC destruction, hurricanes, etc. since there will be so many construction jobs and immense amounts of money moving around. Likewise, they would think the introduction of Mr Fusion would be an economic disaster.
Microsoft operations == destruction of capital. Nothing useful ever comes of it.
As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
REUTERS
After the rejection of Microsoft's appeal in the historic antitrust trial, the case was sent back to lower courts for rememdy solutions. Lower court judge Bete Shitekopf brought down the heavy hand of the law. "I decided after much deliberation and consultation that the only fair thing to do would be to force Microsoft to give away copies of Windows XP and Office XP to anyone who wanted one. This clearly is the only solution to help consumers hurt by this monopoly."
Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
I'm not an Itanium fan, because very long instruction word machines require a near-omniscient optimizing compiler to find enough concurrency in the code to keep the hardware busy. (Smart people are, at this moment, beating their heads against the wall on that problem. Assuming, of course, that the HP compiler team didn't get laid off.) Respected CPU architecture designers have looked at the thing and groaned. It's viewed as a move by Intel to move the industry from an open CPU architecture to a proprietary one over which Intel has a monopoly. Intel has enough patents on the Itanium to prevent cloning. The architecture is so wierd that it requires lots of new inventions to make it work, so Intel can get strong intellectual property rights by going this route. (By comparison, the AMD Sledgehammer 64-bit architecture is a straightforward extension of IA-32, minus some of the cruft.)
But if you want an Itanium machine, you can get one. Although, unusually for Dell, the Dell product page doesn't mention price or have a "Buy" button, so Dell isn't serious about selling it.
I think things that aren't part of the OS (media players, web browsers, instant messengers) should not ship with the default install.
I think Microsoft should be pretty much allowed to ship what they like with the retail box version of Windows. It's the OEM licenses that are the key, and ANY application should be permitted to be removed from the default lineup if the OEM desires.
That simple effect removes any ability for Microsoft to push their own apps on their monopoly platform and forces them to compete with other application retailers for OEM shippings.
Fear: When you see B8 00 4C CD 21 and know what it means
At that time, Microsoft made a significant portion of its earnings (like 10%) buying and selling Microsoft stock. When Ballmer made his announcement, the stock immediately dropped several points. Microsoft buys. A few days later, the market forgets, and its back where it was before. Microsoft sells, pocketing a hefty pile of money. Follow vaporware product announcements and other market-manipulating crap they do, and watch Microsoft make billions because they KNOW which direction their stock will go on any given day.
You were suckered, my friend.
Hand me that airplane glue and I'll tell you another story.
As long as Microsoft has any patents or copyrights that they could commingle with their products, they can fend off any obligation for true interoperability.
I.e., with Samba, they might document their protocols, but hold onto their patent for (really bad) password hashing and use that to exact licensing fees to interoperate with Microsoft servers.
Or, with Word, they can document that you need to use some kind of ActiveX technology (monikers? ActiveX ClassID's?) to do document embedding. And yes, you can be free to support this file format as long as you happen to be reading the file on a platform that supports ActiveX and the Win32 API on an IA32 Instruction Set compatible system to execute the ActiveX components needed.
There are so many ways that software can be designed and structured that Microsoft will always be able to entangle things in a way that will spoil the intent of open file formats and open protocols, and which will require massive oversight.
- jon
Ganymede, a GPL'ed metadirectory for UNIX