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Linux "is not piracy" Says Microsoft Lawyer

dipfan writes "Further to this Slashdot piece on the activities of the Business Software Alliance, the BBC reports on a European conference on piracy organised by the BSA. The good news is even Microsoft distinguishes between open source software and piracy; it quotes Microsoft's top in-house lawyer Brad Smith as saying: 'Linux is a way of developing software whereas piracy is copying.' The rest of the article is the usual panic-attack about the size of software piracy in general, and how this is holding back the software industry in Eastern Europe, according to Brad. Although the article notes the irony that despite all the piracy, software sales are forecast to grow from $50 billion in 2000 to about $90 billion by 2005."

610 comments

  1. full text by trollercoaster · · Score: 2, Informative

    Jane Wakefield
    BBC News Online technology staff
    line
    Tech industry leaders gathered in Brussels have reiterated the growing threat of piracy to the software industry in Europe.

    The warning was issued at a conference, organised by the Business Software Alliance (BSA), which attracted delegates from firms such as Microsoft, Apple, Adobe and Symantec.

    The meeting was told that in 2000 the software industry in Europe lost $3bn to pirates.

    This figure is thought to be only a tiny fraction of the amount of piracy that is going on every day on the internet.

    "We can't estimate how much piracy is on the net but in one day we found a million sites under a search for one of the codenames for pirated software," said a BSA spokesperson.

    Unacceptable

    For an industry that commits millions of pounds to research and development, and that contributes six times as much to Europe's GDP as the consumer goods industry, the levels are unacceptable, the BSA says.

    "It is a risk most other businesses don't have to deal with - having 34% of your product stolen," BSA's president Robert Holleyman told the conference.

    According to Microsoft lawyer Brad Smith, piracy has transformed the nature of the software industry in Europe.

    "If there wasn't piracy there would be more software companies in Russia and Eastern Europe," he said.

    Instead Russia has become an enclave for pirated software and Microsoft has recently declared a five-month amnesty for Russian and Ukrainian internet cafes to switch to legally licensed software.

    Software pirates range from professional businessmen to teenagers selling illegal programmes from their bedrooms to organised criminals.

    Organised crime is giving the BSA the biggest headache.

    "Criminal organisations can sell software direct, as well as through retail channels," said Symantec lawyer Art Courville. "So, it is harder to monitor."

    Tightening legislation

    Europe has a greater rate of piracy than the US - around 34% compared with 25% in the US. Software leaders put this down in part to differing rules in Europe.

    "Some countries in Europe had copyright laws dating back to the 1940s," pointed out Apple lawyer Peter Davies.

    The last thing that you want is to create havens where the legislation is weaker

    BSA spokesperson
    That is about to change as the European Commission puts into force a directive intended to harmonise civil laws governing how courts deal with cases involving intellectual property.

    All BSA members are hopeful that this will act as a deterrent.

    "The last thing that you want is to create havens where the legislation is weaker," said a BSA spokesperson.

    Change of attitude

    There is also work to be done on educating the public about the importance of intellectual property, especially as a web counter-culture advocating free software, such as music downloads, continues to grow.

    Open source software such as Linux is not seen as a threat to the work the BSA is doing, however.

    "Linux is a way of developing software whereas piracy is copying," said Microsoft's Brad Smith.

    He does believe that stopping the pirates could have a dramatic effect on the current pricing of software, however.

    "As the legal market grows, there is more investment in new products and enhanced competition. A healthy market leads to more attractive prices for consumers," he said.

    Despite the efforts of the pirates, the software industry in Europe is looking pretty healthy.

    It is forecast to grow from £35bn in 2000 to £67bn by 2005.

    --

    Slashdot, come for the goatse, stay for the trolls.

    1. Re:full text by trollercoaster · · Score: 0
      You are very welcome. Please, in the future, refer to the terrorist attacks in September by the catchy term nine-one-one. Don't forget to reference NYC as "ground zero." Thanks and have a nice day.

      --

      Slashdot, come for the goatse, stay for the trolls.

    2. Re:full text by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I would rather refer to it as "The day the U.S.A finally fucking woke up and realised that the rest of the fucking world hates them"

      Calling it "nine-one-one" is also as retarded as the USian ass-backward date system. To the rest of the civalised world (The part of the world that fucking hates the U.S.A), the date was 11/09/01.

    3. Re:full text by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Theft! MY ASS!!!!!!!

      I propose we show the RIAA, the MPAA and the BSA what theft is.

      We'll call it - "show those bastards what theft is day"

      Here's how it works. You walk into a store, take the latest Hollywood crap film, the latest crap Top 40 album, and any of the BSA's products - Illustrator, Office, etc. Put it in your pocket and leave the store.

      That's theft!

      The BSA has to realize that their products would not be in the top spot if it wasn't for (at one time legal) copying and installing on home computers. How many art students can afford Illustrator? None. How many art students can learn about Illustrator, do amateur work on it, get a job, use the software in "the real world" and then increase Adobe's sales? All of them.

      I mean shit - who out there pays for this crap? I don't. I can't afford to give Microsoft $150 every 9 months for incomplete upgrades. I can't afford to give Adobe $10000 every other year for their upgrades. I use pirated versions - and I don't feel bad about it at all.

      If I didn't have a bootleg of Windows 2000 server and workstation, I wouldn't have the skills to perform a migration. By migrating - just one client, to Windows 2000, I help sell several hundred licenses.

      If I didn't have bootlegs of all the Adobe software, I wouldn't be able to support them in the real world.

      The fact that you can get this shit for free (if you try hard enough) is what keeps qualified tech support people in 2nd and 3rd tier industries.

      Shit, if I could download an "evaluation copy" of Reuter's or Bloomberg, I would be an expert on that too. Instead, these firms end up ramping up the TCO for their clients because the job skills are impossible to get outside of the client environment.

      Hey, its simple math. More qualified techs for a given product means that more IS departments can provide support for a product meaning more firms can buy a product. Simple as that. If the product is difficult to support, and people can't roll their own skillset, the product will never grow in in its installed base, and the product's future will be left to the people least likely to help it: the software firms' marketing departments.

      Hell, marketing departments for software should be banned, as part of the Industry's Best Practices. These shit for brains are the reasons developers get sued out of existance.

      Hell, shareware is the key. Look at winzip for crying out loud. You don't really have to pay for their product - but if you are in a corporate environment, they probably buy licenses a few hundred at a time. Winzip's happy. I'm happy. Shit, even when my firm would buy Winzip licenses, I still churn out the registration code with a cracker!

    4. Re:full text by 0x0d0a · · Score: 3, Insightful

      We can't estimate how much piracy is on the net but in one day we found a million sites under a search for one of the codenames for pirated software

      Downright misleading. Search for "warez", get a million hits, trumpet about how software is being stolen. "We can't estimate...but we found". If you can't estimate it, why are you spitting out these meaningless figures, other than to feed the press? I think the best counterclaim would be to have people follow the top, say, hundred links and see what percentage of those pages *actually* contain links to pirated files. Be interesting, actually.

      There are legitimate numbers that could have been given. The number of Hotline servers serving files containing given strings. The percentage of computers without licenses found when MS audits are conducted. The "number of times transferred" statistic some IRC file serving bots put out. Number of napster or gnutella hits for a search for the name of a piece of software. Call me naive, but it seems that if piracy is as big a problem as the BSA is telling everyone, they should be able to come up with some meaningful statistics.

      I also love the BSA's emphasis of organized crime. Most software is pirated through organized crime? Please. Oh, maybe in China or Russia, and I don't live in eastern Europe, so I can't really say there. But in the US (and, I would assume, western Europe), the BSA likes holding up the Mafia on one hand and asking legislators "Don't you want to stop this?" Most software pirated in the US is from casual copying, end of story.

      Now, all this doesn't mean that piracy isn't a real, legitimate problem. But that release has as much spin on it as I've ever seen.

      As for the token handed to Linux, I don't know why that was in there, unless it was to try to split up the groups of people (pirates, OSS folks) who don't really approve of the BSA.

      I don't know if Microsoft is evil, but a search for "microsoft evil" on google spits out a quarter million results...:-)

    5. Re:full text by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's how it works. You walk into a store, take the latest Hollywood crap film, the latest crap Top 40 album, and any of the BSA's products - Illustrator, Office, etc. Put it in your pocket and leave the store.

      That's theft!


      And how is that different from downloading them off of the net? Sure they are now short a box and a CD and in the end you have the exact same thing.

    6. Re:full text by ComputerSlicer23 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Most software pirated in the US is from casual copying, end of story

      I'll just point out, your offering up exactly the same non-supported, anecodotal evidence as the BSA here. Personally, I have never come across a "professional" pirate. I use know some pretty hardcore warez people which isn't neccessarily casual coping. You probably have a similar experince as I do, that most of it is just John Doe installing the latest Windows on several of his machines without licenses.

      However, that doesn't preclude the possibility of an organized crime group doing it for money, it just means you have probably never come across it. I agree with you that it is most likely casual copying, but don't accuse the BSA of having no stats, and then offer up facts with no statistics. At least try to say in my experience, or something, don't state is as a fact. Gives credibility to when the BSA does that, and they have a slightly bigger reputation then either you or I in the eyes of business people.

      Oh yeah, and I'd worry if the BSA started using stats. Stats are the single easiest way to lie, because you tell the whole truth, just inaccurately by using the property of your stats to show what you want. Stats are a wonderful way to lie.

    7. Re:full text by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We'll call it - "show those bastards what theft is day"

      Here's how it works. You walk into a store, take the latest Hollywood crap film, the latest crap Top 40 album, and any of the BSA's products - Illustrator, Office, etc. Put it in your pocket and leave the store.


      Great idea, you go first. We'll be raising bail for you here on slashdot.

    8. Re:full text by jnana · · Score: 1
      The difference is that copying is not theft. If you take the software out of the store, you are taking a product that they would otherwise get money for; if you download the product, you are merely copying some 1s and 0s.

      It is the difference between stealing a book from a shop, and photocopying a book that your friend owns.

    9. Re:full text by duren686 · · Score: 1

      I've also never come across a "professional pirate."

      Nope, no eyepatch-wearing sailor has ever plundered my ship, waved a sword at me, and told me to walk the plank.

      Apparently, the BSA links those to ogranised crime, though.

      --
      Y2K Compliant since the late 1890s
    10. Re:full text by j0nkatz · · Score: 0

      let me guess...

      Your either a "flappy head" or a "crooked tooth tea bagger"?

      Also, it's civilized not civalised.

      --
      Don't mod me, bro'!!!!
    11. Re:full text by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I beleave the Linux is not piracy. One thing that Microsoft needs to understand is that, if you charge $1000 dollors for software that is burned into a 50 cent CD and only cost them a total man hour of $250,000 to develope (Which isn't that much considering that they will easily sell over a million copies in a short amount of time) people will start to think, why spend money that I can't afford to make money or just have fun when I can barrow the same software or download it from some where for free. It's the sad old bussiness mentality. Make money fast. If they cut the price of a lot of their products, they might find that they can make more money buy selling in bulk for a lower price. How many times have you thought to your self, "I'll wait 'till it goes on sale" about any thing. As a consumer you want the product but don't want to pay the extreme price. How many people want barrow shirts from friends? It's because they want to look good but can't afford to pay the high price. Think about that.

  2. In other news by Burritos · · Score: 0, Funny

    The sky is blue

    Grass is gren

    Voicemail is cool

    1. Re:In other news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      true, true

  3. Ehh, Microsoft again... by Local_h61 · · Score: 0

    Hmm, another plot to take over the world by microsoft... now surprising. I think General Bill Gates is up to something ;) Just look at all the microsoft news that are coming up.

  4. funny thing is by Jacer · · Score: 2, Insightful

    for each new copy protection scheme, you'll have ten ways to circumvent it from release groups (fleet, razor, ect.) and most of the people who pirate would never buy the software in the first place (like me for instance) so, i'd be a wise choice on their part to drop the charade on fighting piracy, pocket the money they save by not actively persuing it, and enjoy the software growth

    --
    --fetch daddy's blue fright wig, i must be handsome when i release my rage
    1. Re:funny thing is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you wouldn't by it then you shouldn't need to use it or pirate it in the first place. Curiousity is not a legal reason to break into someone's house is it ?

    2. Re:funny thing is by gfxguy · · Score: 2

      That's an interesting note... While I don't condone piracy, it's important to recognize that they probably spend more money than they recoup on their efforts to stop it.

      For some time it's been widely accepted that piracy is going to happen, but you make better products and you make it worthwhile to buy the real deal and somehow, magically, those companies manage to stay in business - both in the entertainment industry and in computer software.

      Also, that 34% figure is probably way out of whack, but why don't they look at it like this: all the copy protection crap we put on our products is incoveniencing our honest customers in a two to one ratio over pirates.

      Yes, that's a good business practice.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    3. Re:funny thing is by Jacer · · Score: 2

      i'm one to believe that intellectual property is not property, there is something entirely different about tangible and intangible products, that's why you have a lot of software pirates who will produce copy after copy of software, but wouldn't borrow a penny from anyone without asking. a better analogy is this, if you had all the parts sitting in your garage to build yourself a brand new bmw, do you have the right to do so? according to patent, no, but you own the parts....

      --
      --fetch daddy's blue fright wig, i must be handsome when i release my rage
    4. Re:funny thing is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Fleet" - FLT - is "Fairlight". Not that I'd know anything about such things, of course.

    5. Re:funny thing is by rapid+prototype · · Score: 1

      actually you can build the bmw, you just can't call it a bmw or sell it. and you had probably not try to take it in for warranty service...

      -rp

    6. Re:funny thing is by ergo98 · · Score: 1

      There is a very, very small minority of the population that has any idea where to find pirate software, or who "release groups" are, and even if they did most people would cringe at the idea of dealing with software from unknown people that you know has been tampered with (why not stick a little trojan in there while circumventing the copy protection)?

      Copy protection is, and has always been, for the common man with normal motivations, to ensure that convenience doesn't encourage him to criminal means. I use "the club" on my car even though I know that a "professional" car thief could circumvent it in seconds, but for Jimmy the 16 year old car jacker it works superbly. The same idea holds true for software protection.

    7. Re:funny thing is by Alien54 · · Score: 2
      Microsoft has always be concerned about piracy.

      check out this XP update page for example:

      http://www.download.windowsupdate.com/msdownload/u pdate/v3/static/RTF/en/5360.htm

      This update resolves the "Playback and Copy-Protection Issues When You Try to Play the Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs DVD Movie" issue in Windows XP and is discussed in Microsoft Knowledge Base (KB) Article Q310510. Download now to be able to play Disney's "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" Platinum Collection DVD.

      --
      "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
    8. Re:funny thing is by cscx · · Score: 2

      That could probably moreso indicate Disney being concerned about piracy... I remember back in the day Disney's were the only home videos that were next to impossible to copy without special equipment... for, uh, "personal backup copies" of their VHS films, y'know... =)

    9. Re:funny thing is by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      Why couldn't you call it a BMW, if it's made entirely of BMW parts? It's still a BMW if you take one completely apart and put it back together, isn't it?

      And while there is obviously no warranty on it, I fail to see why you couldn't sell it.

      This is, of course, ignoring road-worthiness testing and all the legal paperwork for it to be a drivable 'car', but that doesn't have anything to do with what you call it.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    10. Re:funny thing is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who the fuck is 'fleet'? Never heard of that group before.

    11. Re:funny thing is by drik00 · · Score: 2

      bullshit, you can build a Harley-Davidson from scratch, with all the correct parts, and its still a Harley...

      This is how most people get Harleys, since there is usually a multi-year waiting list to get one from the factory.

      --
      Beer, now there's a temporary solution -- Homer Jay S.
    12. Re:funny thing is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Harley's suck. Only losers think Harley's are cool, and the loser chicks that like guys with harley's. Who would want a bike that breaks down every 2000 miles, when they could have an authentic japanese rice rocket that will last forever, and run rings around your american trash bike.

  5. Duh... by david+z,+horse+guy · · Score: 0

    ...how can you steal something that's free?

    --
    I'm a lacto-ovo-pesco-carno-vegetarian
  6. Was there a question? by rnb · · Score: 1, Redundant

    I never realized it was possible to easily confuse open source and piracy. One says "take our software--please!" and the other says "take our software and die die die!"

    Maybe I just haven't been following these things very closely, but those two things don't seem to be all that similar.

    1. Re:Was there a question? by johnburton · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well even the GPL license states that you can't just copy the software without agreeing to the license agreement, and so it's pretty safe to assume that unless you know otherwise that it's "piracy" to just copy the software. That's true for both "commercial" and "free" software - you need to agree to the license (including paying any fees etc.) to be able to copy the software legally. As most "non-computer" people have little idea about how their software is actually licensed, it's probably fair to assume they don't know the difference between free software and pirated software. We might not like that level of ignorance, but I suspect it's true.

      --
      Sig is taking a break!
    2. Re:Was there a question? by timlyg · · Score: 0

      What an understatement

      If Linux is piracy, then Microsoft is PIRACY TOO, and Even WORSE.

      Shame on you! Mr. Lawyer.

    3. Re:Was there a question? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is this redundant, when it is the third post, and neither of the other two have said it?

      Who are these moderators, and who gave them their beers?

    4. Re:Was there a question? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      J'ai une question, comment ils penser cela ils peuvent entretien de détritus au sujet du linux? Linux est un meilleur OS que des Windows. Je pense que le Microsoft essayent diffamez le linux devant le monde.


      Comment est-que le linux a monte dans une discussion au sujet des pirates? Pour-quoi a fait il la mention de Microsoft? Il semble comme la merde a moi!


      J'ai une idee, nous devrions faire des emplacements d'enchainement appelle des pirates de Microsoft. Il leur donnera un gout de leur propre medicin!

    5. Re:Was there a question? by Doomdark · · Score: 2
      GPL license states that you can't just copy the software without agreeing to the license agreement

      Depends on what copying you are referring to. If you mean "get myself a copy of a GPL'ed software" then you are wrong. No licensing is needed; GPL doesn't really enter the picture here.

      If you mean handing out a copy to another person, then you do need to agree to the license; that's considered distribution, which is what GPL is built on (that is, restrictions on distribution, not in use). [I know I know, this is just GPL FAQ... sorry if I'm preaching to choir here].

      An interesting question is how would Gnutella and other networks be handled as there people can distribute GPL'ed software automatically and almost without realizing they are distributors? It's more of an academic question, probably, since if you just take a "valid" GPL'ed thing and hand it over, it does still contain GPL license stuff and will still be in accordance with GPL... but still, an interesting point; "implicit agreement" with GPL?

      --
      I like paying taxes. With them I buy civilization -- Oliver Wendell Holmes
    6. Re:Was there a question? by sheean.nl · · Score: 1

      --translated this with my o-so superb French knowlegd (not)--

      I have a question, how do they think that they can complain or refuse linux? Linux is a better OS than Windows. I think that Microsoft test defame linux in front of the world.

      How can it be that linux goes up in a discussion about software piracy? Why did Microsoft mentioned it? It seems like shit to me!

      I have a idea, we should make sites of software piracy of Microsoft. It will give them a taste of their clean medicin(?)!


      I think Microsoft just wanted to look good by saying that they don't think that Linux is bad in a way nobody have yet complained to them about. But nobody (afaik) have made a comparison between Linux and piracy software so they are just saying something completly needless (and a bit confusing).

      BTW, this is a English site, so why can't you just write in a language everybody here understands (=English) and bother your fellow-french's at French sites with your French messages.

      --

      If at first you don't succeed, then sky diving definitely isn't for you.
    7. Re:Was there a question? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of which english I know, the english not is very good. I thinking was in french better my post would understand for all. To me seems that many the workers in the computer science know the languages of the countries foreign. I apologizing if I make the mistake.

    8. Re:Was there a question? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      O which english I know, the english not is very good. I thinking was in french better my post would understand for all. To me seems that many the workers in the computer science know the languages of the countries foreign. I apologizing if I make the mistake.

      Ahhhh, this is an American English site, and we all know Americans don't know foreign languages :)

    9. Re:Was there a question? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nice troll!

  7. News To Me by rubinson · · Score: 5, Funny

    Linux is a way of developing software...

    And all this time I was under the impression that Linux was an operating system kernel!

    1. Re:News To Me by quinto2000 · · Score: 1
      "We can't estimate how much piracy is on the net but in one day we found a million sites under a search for one of the codenames for pirated software," said a BSA spokesperson"
      Perhaps "way of developing software" is BSA's codename for kernel.
      --
      Ceci n'est pas un post
    2. Re:News To Me by Dr.+Awktagon · · Score: 2

      'Linux is a way of developing software whereas piracy is copying.'

      And I always thought "piracy" was the illegal plundering of ships and boats. I love newspeak!

    3. Re:News To Me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They took a day to get a million sites - Google found about 2.9 million sites in about 0.04 seconds.

    4. Re:News To Me by Servo5678 · · Score: 5, Funny
      And I always thought "piracy" was the illegal plundering of ships and boats. I love newspeak!

      Maybe it's all in how you develop your software.

      Normal: "I'm going to compile my latest version of code."

      Piracy: "Avast me hardies, I'm going to compile me latest booty! Arrr!"

    5. Re:News To Me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And "kernel" only refers to something found on corn cobs, and "memory" exists only in people's minds, not silicon.

      Languages evolve - it's not always "newspeak".

    6. Re:News To Me by 1155 · · Score: 1

      Linux is an kernel

      Linux is an operating system

      Linux is a way to code software...

      Which one would you tell the world if you sold windows?

    7. Re:News To Me by ch-chuck · · Score: 1

      The speaker, Brad Smith, is a lawyer - Msft is largely a mrkting / legal defense outfit. In depth knowledge of software sciences constitutes only 10% (at most) of their overall activity. (Recall the emBallmer's referance to a Hardware Application Layer).

      --
      try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
    8. Re:News To Me by Thud457 · · Score: 0

      You hit the nail on the head.
      The BSA/RIAA/MPAA don't know from pirates.
      Real pirates waylay you on the high seas and take your property on threat of death. And they might rape you to. That's a little bit different than little Johnny violating copyright by copying the "Lion King".

      --

      the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    9. Re:News To Me by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Not terribly new -- we called it "piracy" back when we copied LP's to tape, before half of Slashdot was born. The term trickled up from the masses, not down from the record companies and software houses, because we liked the image - it made us sound all underground and outlaw and radical, instead of just too cheap to buy the album ("Eight bucks for a Kiss album? Fuck that, man!")

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    10. Re:News To Me by Buck2 · · Score: 2, Funny

      ("Eight bucks for a Kiss album? Fuck that, man!")

      Man, I totally agree. They're not even worth the diskspace.

      --

      As my father lik@(munch munch)... ....
    11. Re:News To Me by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2

      I had to confess to my daughter recently that well, yes, her Dad had once owned a Kiss record. My only defense was that it came with a record club deal, and I never paid for it. :)

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    12. Re:News To Me by 56ker · · Score: 3, Funny

      Pirate: Ha ha Jim Lad - what be in this treasure chest.
      Jim Lad: Shiver me timbers there be 1000 pirate copies of Windows 98
      Parrot: Pieces of 98, Pieces of 98.

    13. Re:News To Me by Thud457 · · Score: 0

      "it came with a record club deal, and I never paid for it. "

      So did the artists get any royalties on it?
      I didn't think so.

      --

      the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    14. Re:News To Me by Bilestoad · · Score: 1

      Anyone remember the Amiga disk copy program that sang "yo ho, yo ho, a pirate's life for me" as a background loop?

    15. Re:News To Me by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 3, Insightful
      ("Eight bucks for a Kiss album? Fuck that, man!")

      Man, I totally agree. They're not even worth the diskspace.

      Obviously, you've never seen the LP version of the double album "Kiss Alive II". I still have the copy I bought 25 years ago. It folds out to show a vivid color 24x12 inch live concert photo with the band raised on hydraulic platforms in front truly impressive array of fireworks and huge orange fireballs. It contains a 12x12 inch book detailing the "Evolution of Kiss". It has two nice big 12 inch vinyl platters. I think it came with some 24x24 inch Kiss posters, but I've lost those over the years.

      This package had real value that is still interesting today. I think that side IV even has some good music on it.

      I'd bet if you bought the CD version today, you'd be lucky to get 4 inch sheet of paper with the list of titles on it.

      I think the record companies hurt themselves when they started selling $17 products that have almost zero value-add over a bootleg copy.

    16. Re:News To Me by Shadarr · · Score: 1

      Well yeah, you can easily find 3.4 million sites with Google, but I'd be very surprised if any of them contain actual pirated software.

    17. Re:News To Me by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      Who says bands get paid from the retail sales? Put it this way -- if I go to Walmart and write a bad check for the latest whatever, do you think they take back the royalties?

      My conduct was smarmy, no question -- it was a debt that I owed and never paid -- but it's Columbia House that has a grievance with me, not Kiss.

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    18. Re:News To Me by Oliver+Wendell+Jones · · Score: 2

      I think it was called "Mirror" IIRC.

      The irony of it, at least as I remember it, was that it played Disney's Pirates of the Carribean theme ("Yo ho, yo ho, a pirate's life for me!") over the screen that reminded you to not use it for copying software for illegal purposes...

      --
      A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing -- Emo Phillips
    19. Re:News To Me by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2

      It was Dressed to Kill, I think, and see, I'm one of those people who's more concerned with how the album sounds than with how it looks, and while I grant you that nobody puts on pyro like Kiss, at the end of the day they still sound like, well, Kiss.

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    20. Re:News To Me by Afrosheen · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A million sites, 999,999 of which were links to other links with porn popups and redirects to another link page with 'vote for top 50 to continue' that takes you to another porn site. Yeah, great research fellas. Anyone can type 'warez' in a search engine and come up with crap, but it takes an honest effort and lots of digging to come up with sites that actually have anything.

    21. Re:News To Me by zCyl · · Score: 2

      And all this time I was under the impression that Linux was an operating system kernel!

      No no no, you must be thinking of Windows.

    22. Re:News To Me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Different situation.

      I suspect that record club freebies are not counted when writing the royalty checks. All those "12 CDs for $0.01" clubs are owned by some record company. They probably write them off as a promotional expense. Just like artists don't see any royalties on freebees given to record stations.

      But the bigger inequity is the shifty accounting that the big record companies are notorious for when writing royalty checks.

    23. Re:News To Me by Servo5678 · · Score: 1

      Pirate: We must be buryin' our booty. Prepare the map! X-Windows marks the spot!

    24. Re:News To Me by bobKali · · Score: 1

      It's about controling the language so that you can control the scope of any discussions about the topic. The term piracy has such a long history of violence, theft of physical property, that it "loads" any debate over intelectual "property" rights.

    25. Re:News To Me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Reminds me of an old CP/M chanty we used to sing...

      Yo Ho, pip[1] it away!
      The software pirates are we.
      Be it Basic or Cobol,
      or Fortran or Algol,
      We always get it for free!

      [1] For the youngsters in the crowd, pip (Peripheral Interchange Program) was the CP/M copy utility.

    26. Re:News To Me by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      And PIP always sounded so cheery, too -- "Yeah, pip it over here, will you?". "Copy" is dull, by comparison, and "cp" isn't even pronounceable. Plus pip had that whole reverse-syntax thing going for it.

      For years I kept pip.bat files on DOS systems that just did "copy %2 %1" so I could keep pipping.

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

    27. Re:News To Me by drik00 · · Score: 2

      for the record, my first copy of AC-DC's Back in Black was stolen by me out of mom's car...

      --
      Beer, now there's a temporary solution -- Homer Jay S.
    28. Re:News To Me by drik00 · · Score: 2

      >Linux is an kernel
      >
      >Linux is an operating system
      >
      >Linux is a way to code software...
      >

      Linux is a way of life, man...fsck the establishment! Power to the people!

      yeah, dig it.

      --
      Beer, now there's a temporary solution -- Homer Jay S.
    29. Re:News To Me by Reziac · · Score: 3, Funny

      Sounds like a parroty error to me!!

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    30. Re:News To Me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ohhhhh. That is horrible. I mean really bad.

    31. Re:News To Me by ender81b · · Score: 2

      Hot damm. You are right. That is a perfect reason why people don't want to buy 17$ cd's and perfer to burn them - they lose nothing. If they would start doing cool stuff like that again.. neat. I wonder if the piracy rates for things like Box Sets are any different than for regular CD's?

    32. Re:News To Me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you can't pronounce cp, assign it a pronunciation.
      say, pip? :-)

    33. Re:News To Me by cmckay · · Score: 3, Informative

      it takes an honest effort and lots of digging to come up with sites that actually have anything

      This is true for the web, but there are other ways that require much less effort... *cough* IRC *cough* :-)

    34. Re:News To Me by jo42 · · Score: 1

      Linux is a hack, use FreeBSD instead.

    35. Re:News To Me by Pogue+Mahone · · Score: 2
      Yeah, I know it's late, but I just can't resist....

      ...compile me latest booty!

      Long John Silver: Load the booty into the boats, Jim lad!
      Jim: Aye aye, Cap'n, I'll start the booty loader right away

      So mod me down ...

      --
      Every bloody emperor has his hand up history's skirt [Peter Hammill/VdGG]
  8. BSA by DoctorPepper · · Score: 3, Informative

    I heard a radio commercial for the Business Software Aliance this morning while driving into work. This was a first in the Jacksonville, Florida area. I suppose the BSA will start harassing businesses in this area now.

    --

    No matter where you go... there you are.
    1. Re:BSA by chill · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Just now? They've been all over Orlando for the last year and a half. The company I used to work for got their HQ (Long Island City, NY) audited and scared the hell out of the Orlando office I had converted to about 1/3 Linux. They forked over big $$ for licenses they don't need, use or want -- just to avoid the hassle.

      The BSA is nothing more than a legalized protection racket.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    2. Re:BSA by ackthpt · · Score: 3, Interesting
      It's amazing how they come off all reasonable like on the radio, isn't it?

      They ran ads back in January in the SF Bay Area (e.g. KCBS 740) about how important it is to keep a clean shop and comply by the grace period end. Nothing about imperial stormtroopers installing software on your PC's or Servers, or demanding audits which would be unthinkable in short timeframes, or even the extortion of large wads of cash and total capitulation as the only other option.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    3. Re:BSA by kableh · · Score: 2

      Agreed. My company is in Orlando. I heard those ads on the radio a few months back. It didn't scare us too much, though, as we've completed several audits for Microsoft already.

      I love how Microsoft touts their products as having a lower TCO than Linux, since "anyone" can administer Windows. Do they factor in lost man-hours due to audits? We aren't a big shop by any means, under 100 users, but because we have a site license we have to perform an audit every few months. This can take days for me and my co-worker to finish.

      To be honest, when I was a kid I pirated software like mad. I didn't have any money, and neither did my mom, and I wasn't profiting from it by any stretch of the imagination. Now that I'm doing this for a living, I won't hesitate to buy software that I like. $15US for a handy shareware program is a pittance. I make it a point to encourage those around me to buy software too. I can see parallels with the music industry as well. Give people a chance to try it out, and sell the registration for a reasonable price, and you can't lose!

      Strong arm tactics like those employed by the BSA and xxAAs turn people against you. Treat people like pirates and they will oblige. Make it more of an ethics issue, and maybe they will think twice next time they go to grab the latest version of Photoshop off Limewire.

    4. Re:BSA by Capt.+DrunkenBum · · Score: 1

      Here is a question that has been on my mind for quite a while.

      What is BSAs authority to demand a software audit?

      What I mean is. If the send you a letter and you reply "Get stuffed!" What can they do about it?

      --

      Not everyone deserves a 320i

    5. Re:BSA by Ian+Wolf · · Score: 2

      First you pray you are legal, and have no disgruntled employees.

      Once they have sufficient evidence to convince a Judge, they can launch a suit and get an audit via court order. Then you're screwed.

      --
      "The words of the prophets are written on the Slashdot walls."
    6. Re:BSA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You realize why this was advertized in the Bay Area? All the laid-off (and really pissed off) techies get to get revenge on their former employers..

    7. Re:BSA by jgerman · · Score: 2

      Hmm, you'd think that it would be a conflict of interest for a court ordered audit to be handled by those that started the suit, or were even employed by them. If they have to file a suit and get a court ordered audit, they should be required to have an independent auditor handle it.

      --
      I'm the big fish in the big pond bitch.
    8. Re:BSA by mpe · · Score: 2

      I love how Microsoft touts their products as having a lower TCO than Linux, since "anyone" can administer Windows. Do they factor in lost man-hours due to audits?

      Or the lost hours of the average user trying to administer Windows. Which includes the system not being adequatly protected from the end user, because they "need" the ability to mess around with critical things.

  9. Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux? by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Here it is in a nutshell:

    Ideas developed and shared undermine Intellectual Property. i.e. If you invented a better moustrap and GPL'd the design, then MSFT wouldn't be able get a patent on it, and thus license for big fees or lock any other developer or competitor out.

    Having to include source to something they didn't invent and can't get along without is their problem and, like any reasonable minded person, don't want problems. They like to keep it simple, by owning or having license agreements on IP.

    How anyone actually associates Linux with Piracy is beyond me and reflective of a lack of understanding the spirit of MSFT's gripes.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  10. Piracy is copying? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    "piracy is copying."

    So 18th century pirates just boarded your ship, copied everything, and left?

    1. Re:Piracy is copying? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      Arr matey, we didna listen to th'fsckin church wit thar bullshit 'bout clonin'!

      We cloned thar women'n thar booze'n then let 'em go. Arr, it worked out good, me harties, cause they'd come back th'next month and we'd do it 'gain!

    2. Re:Piracy is copying? by ChemEGod · · Score: 1

      That's what happened in "Amazon Women From The Moon".

      And when the captain saw the FBI warning he sarcastically said, "Ooooooooo, I'm sooooooo scared".

    3. Re:Piracy is copying? by g1zmo · · Score: 5, Funny
      So 18th century pirates just boarded your ship, copied everything, and left?

      Isn's that what copyleft means?
      --
      I have found there are just two ways to go.
      It all comes down to livin' fast or dyin' slow.
      -REK, Jr.
    4. Re:Piracy is copying? by Buck2 · · Score: 1

      At the time I say this, it's rated: -1 Offtopic.

      Heh.

      --

      As my father lik@(munch munch)... ....
    5. Re:Piracy is copying? by Markusis · · Score: 1

      The word "Piracy" as it is used in the software industry originally was used by authors (that's right...authors) when describing the tactics of publishers who were distributing works that were not okayed by the author first. Nowadays it is used by the publisher to describe the actions of users who want to have control over content that they bought.

    6. Re:Piracy is copying? by TicTacTux · · Score: 1
      So 18th century pirates just boarded your ship, copied everything, and left?

      What Lawyers argue about is whether they left with the originals or the copies. If they left with the originals, they are just thieves while when they sacked the copies they're pirates in the stricter sense [MS' sense, that is].

      What is still unclear is whether the victim is allowed to peruse the copied incarnations of his/her former belongings or whether that was to be considered second degree piracy.

      BTW: AFAIK pirates only looted those who previously ripped off some civilization. Just to prove that w/o MS' (and others such as CA) rip-off there weren't any piracy...

      Sell your software at decent prices and that problem will go away.

      --Ben

      --
      Use The Source, Luke!
    7. Re:Piracy is copying? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So 18th century pirates just boarded your ship, copied everything, and left?

      Oh, and that isn't evil enough for you? Do you ever hear any sea chanties on CD nowadays? No? That's because the pirates put all the artists out of jobs!!!

    8. Re:Piracy is copying? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Has anyone lookied at the DNS config files for Windows? They look just like the config files for BIND (the common DNS server used on Linux).

      Not to mention that the Microsoft implemenatation of TCP/IP is taken right from Free BSD. Sounds like piracy to me...

      What do you think?

    9. Re:Piracy is copying? by mpe · · Score: 2

      The word "Piracy" as it is used in the software industry originally was used by authors (that's right...authors) when describing the tactics of publishers who were distributing works that were not okayed by the author first.

      How old is this usage, could it possibly date back to Queen Anne? When copyright had been taken away from publishers and assigned to authors for the first time.

  11. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Someone moded this down!? Read the article before moding!

  12. Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by bildstorm · · Score: 5, Funny

    Is it just me or does this contradict things?

    They tell us we can't buy machines without an OS. Then they say that we're not allowed to remove the OS. Oh, and we can't give away the machine without a Microsoft OS either.

    Oh, and you can be sure that they think that a machine with Linux preinstalled is an OS-free machine.

    These guys play both sides so much you'd swear they were U.S. negotiators in the Middle East. Well, granted, Microsoft has been more successful. Bill Gates to solve the crisis in the West Bank???

    --
    The power of accurate observation is commonly called cynicism by those who have not got it. - G.B. Shaw
    1. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by user32.ExitWindowsEx · · Score: 1

      Last time I checked, all three religions shared the same deity.

      --
      "Evil will always triumph because good is dumb." -- Dark Helmet
    2. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      North African Muslims invaded Spain in the 700's and killed millions before Charles Martel kicked them out. Learn your history, fag.

    3. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      christians and jews both have a long history of destroying others holy places. I don't know where you got your confusion from....

    4. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey man...things are tough all over. A wise man once said that. ;-) No group has been without its darker times.

    5. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by Lendrick · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Oh, and you can be sure that they think that a machine with Linux preinstalled is an OS-free machine.

      ...but as Linux users, we know better. It is, in fact, a free OS machine.

    6. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by linzeal · · Score: 1

      hello I'm allah, g-d, and jesus h christ. would you like fries with that ?

    7. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by km790816 · · Score: 2

      Microsoft, like a lot of companies, is in a weird situation.

      People at Microsoft are not evil. They like software. They like helping people.

      ...but they want to be paid. They want their stock to increase in value so they can retire and send their kids to college.

      People are surprised that Microsoft, which makes it money from selling intellectual property, doesn't like the GPL. Guess what: the GPL takes away a lot of control from intellectual property.

      Do I think MS goes to far with their FUD? Yes.
      Do I think they should try to work with the open-source community in a more open and honest way? Yes.
      Do I think they should be more honest with themselves and their customers about the benefits of the GPL and the problems with proprietary software? Absolutely.

      Do I think people are going to stop weighing the business realities of the market and their current offerings to follow a list of 'shoulds'? Probably not.

      Microsoft embracing open-source is like the Catholic Church allowing female priests. It might happen, but it will by slow and painful because doing so is to admit that they were wrong for a LONG time...or at least not completely right.

      There is my $0.02.

    8. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by MisterBlister · · Score: 1

      And then, on the other hand, Microsoft bundling a free browser with the desktop is anti-competitive. KDE bunding a free browser with the desktop is 'cool'.

    9. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And who just killed 6000+ people in one fell swoop?

      And who continually fights over not only religions, but denomonations (sects) of the same religion. Those pesky Zionist racists? I don't think so.

      I think athiests are the only people that have killed more people because of their faith than Muslims. Stallins 20 million Christians, Hitler's 6 million Jews.

    10. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They haven't said any of those things.

      They said OEM's can't sell dual booting machines, or machines without an OS.

      They have said that if you donate a machine, it had better have the original version of MS on it (as opposed to a new version that doesn't have a license).

      And personally, I never open that little bag, to signify I accept the EULA, so I guess it really doesn't matter if it forbids me from taking it off or not.

    11. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was to read:

      They said OEM's can't sell dual booting machines, or machines without an OS, and still get massive discounts.

    12. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by mpe · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      (since nobody ever understands what I'm referring to, this thing would have been over years ago if the Israelis knew how to manipulate world opinion like the other countries in the Middle East.

      Israel concentrates on manipulating the opinion of one country, the USA.

      And Muslims have a long history of destroying everyone else's holy places when they occupy a new land, because their god is the ONLY god. The Jews and Christians don't because their god is the biggest, not the only.)

      Rather ignoring the point that the god worshiped by Jewdeism, Christianity and Islam is the same god.
      Which is part of the problem with the city of Jerusalum.

    13. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by Thud457 · · Score: 0

      "I'm King of the Universe. I don't know what I'm doing in a place like this."

      Getting dangerously close to being b'hai, bud.
      (Currently my favorite optimistic theory vs "God, by definition, is also the biggest ASSHOLE in the universe".)

      --

      the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    14. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by ScoLgo · · Score: 1

      So use Gnome. Or a console. With Linux you at least have choices. Last time I checked there's only one window manager on a winbox.

      Also, on most distros that I'm aware of, Konqueror is not the only browser installed with KDE.

      --
      "Michael, I did nothing. I did absolutely nothing - and it was everything that I thought it could be."
    15. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by Cosmix · · Score: 1

      Well, if massive discounts are at stake, then the OEM's would not be able to compete without them.

    16. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Name one time the Jews destroyed the holy places of another religion.

      Can't find one? Not suprising...it never happened.

    17. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      Bill Gates to solve the crisis in the West Bank???

      Lives could be saved if weapons blue-screened when you pulled the trigger.

    18. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      last time i checked, all three religions were full of horse shit.

      there is no god, it is all mythology.

    19. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by Jagasian · · Score: 2

      Note that 6000+ people were not killed during 9/11. The number is roughly 3000 people. Yes thats still allot, but I am just trying to keep the facts more accurate.

      Sectarian violence still exists between Christian denominations. It doesn't exist between Jewish sects, but the saying goes that if Israel didn't have so many enemies, it would destroy itself from within.

    20. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by rnturn · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The beef isn't that IE is bundled with the ``desktop''. It's that IE is being pushed as part of the operating system.

      And your KDE comment is wrong as well for a couple of reasons:

      1. The browser may be ``bundled'' with the desktop but I am not forced to use it. I can delete it. I can remove the icons. I can remove the references to it from all of the desktop menus. Try that with IE and Windows; it's difficult.

      2. The desktop is not part of the operating system. I can use something other than KDE. Or no ``desktop'' at all and still have the ability to use a browser. Heck, if I don't want graphics I can omit the desktop altogether and still browse. Try that with Windows; it's not possible any more.

      Don't try to equate Microsoft's comingling of IE and Windows with KDE's (or Gnome's, etc.) bundling. It's not the same thing.

      --
      CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
    21. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also, on second thought, you should also read the bible and Torah for more examples of Jews destroying other holy places of another religion. Especially in the old testament, the Jews are referred to as a tribe... many times warring against other tribes... killing their people, destroying their temples, etc...

      Of course, the Bible and Torah aren't necessarily historical documents, but I am sure that they have some historical truth to parts of them regarding acient kings, wars, etc...

    22. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by jnana · · Score: 1

      I agree completely, but the Q is pretty bloody close to a God, and I met 'him' in a vision so can vouch for 'his' existence ;-)

    23. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by theCoder · · Score: 1

      Only your enemy's life would be saved -- you'd still be dead...

      --
      "Save the whales, feed the hungry, free the mallocs" -- author unknown
    24. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      That's because KDE doesn't use its monopoly to stop RedHat from including Gnome.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    25. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um. While we're in the business of keeping facts straight...

      The Jews have been around for thousands of years, longer than any other non-race-based group of people, and they have yet to destroy themselves within.

      There is sectarian violence within Jewish sects. Yitzhak Rabin, a former prime minister of Israel (the first to have his peace proposals rejected by Yasser Arafat, in fact), was assasinated by a Jew in the name of religion. Also, the JDL (famed in the US for plotting to blow up a mosque) has been known to incite or carry out violence against Jews and is generally an anti-Semetic organization.

      It may be the case that Israel would destroy itself from within if it didn't have so many enemies, but there is always someone trying to rid the world of Jews, so that's not something to worry about.

    26. Re:Linux ok. MS-OS free machines not by nathanh · · Score: 2
      And then, on the other hand, Microsoft bundling a free browser with the desktop is anti-competitive. KDE bunding a free browser with the desktop is 'cool'.

      The problem wasn't with the bundling per-se. It was when an OEM bought Windows and tried to remove IE to install the (at-the-time) superior Netscape browser. Microsoft threatened the OEM until the OEM caved in.

      The KDE package also bundles a browser but an OEM is permitted to remove konqueror and install another browser. In fact, the KDE people even tell you how to do this.

      This is the fundamental difference. You can't ignore it. The judge certainly didn't, nor did the appeals court. Bundling is OK. Product tying is not. Microsoft did the latter. KDE does the former.

  13. Dont forget... by Bob+McCown · · Score: 4, Funny
    ..standard includes:

    #include "StandardWhineAboutExpensiveSoftware.h"
    #include "WhineAboutOnlyUsingItOnce.h"
    #include "RantAboutNeedingPhotoshopInsteadOfGimp.h"

    etc...

    1. Re:Dont forget... by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      Actually, I haven't seen any "I need Photoshop instead of GIMP" rants in a while.

    2. Re:Dont forget... by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 2

      That's because most Linux advocates have wisely stopped suggesting GIMP as a Photoshop replacement. Don't get me wrong: I use GIMP a lot for consumer-grade tinkering, but it's still not a Photoshop replacement by any means. Even I still find the selection tools clunky and unintuitive compared to Photoshop.

    3. Re:Dont forget... by MrResistor · · Score: 2

      I have, but I troll for them, apparently... ;)

      What bothers me about them is they're always posted AC and never give any reasons for needing PS over GIMP other than "GIMP isn't ready for primetime". I maintain that it's a matter of training rather than actual capability of the software, and no one has yet refuted that claim (at least not with anything more than empty rhetoric).

      I'm just a casual user, not a graphics guy, but I'm very much interested in exactly what functionality is missing from the GIMP.

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
    4. Re:Dont forget... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      CMYK.

      Any bitmap editor without that is just a toy.

  14. Well Duh.... by adam613 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Of course Linux isn't piracy. It would be extraordinarily difficult for me to pirate RedHat when I can get it legally from their website.

    This is another one of those "We'll look like we're compromising on this minor point so that people can buy into our other major point" things. Linux may not be piracy, but it is viral and anti-capitalist and bad for consumers because it's supported by hobbyists with PHDs in CS rather than a major company whose tech support knows as much as their average supportee (is that a word?).

    What is the market for Linux like in Europe? Does M$ have any more reason to be worried over there than they do here?

    (sorry if this is a dumb question, but I'm an American so I have no clue what goes on outside of my own country)

    1. Re:Well Duh.... by iamwoodyjones · · Score: 1

      M$ has every reason to be worried in every market. Just as a word is used so often, that it loses its copyright and becomes public domain so will OS's. It's bleeping edge apps that will be the only things without GPL equivalents.

    2. Re:Well Duh.... by quinto2000 · · Score: 2, Informative
      This is another one of those "We'll look like we're compromising on this minor point so that people can buy into our other major point" things.
      It's bigger than that. All that MSFT needs to do is associate the word "Linux" with "piracy," and the innuendo is enough to scare off many businesses.

      And in Europe, yes, Linux is much more popular. A number of people don't want to rely on an American company for their OS.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas un post
    3. Re:Well Duh.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe Microsoft has a lot more to worry about in Europe than in America. Lots of Goverments and Corps are thinking seriously about switching, mostly because of the new and fscked licensing schemes of Microsoft. The Linux desktop has gotten far enough that this is possible, only I don't know what office software they will use, likely it'll be Sun or Open Office.

    4. Re:Well Duh.... by minion · · Score: 3, Interesting

      They have much more to loose in Europe than here. When our government brought Microsoft to court, every country that uses Microsoft software took notice. Why? Because here you have a company, who's products you use to make your business function, under scrunity for illegal business practices, under foreign laws. That worried many counties. Legal ramifications that you have absolutely no control over.

      To those people, Open Source software just got a lot more appealing, because a foreign power can't take it away from you.

      --

      -- If we don't stand up for our rights, now, there will be no right to stand up for them later.
    5. Re:Well Duh.... by elflord · · Score: 1
      This is another one of those "We'll look like we're compromising on this minor point so that people can buy into our other major point" things.

      Rubbish. It's a timely clarification regarding the recent confusion with various freeloader movements (eg Napster) and the free software movement.

    6. Re:Well Duh.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a friend in Toronto who subcontracts to eastern Europe and there are quite a few scandals in those countries where Microsoft 'convinced' various ministers that it would be in their best interest ($$) if they didnt go the Linux route.

      Considering that most of those countries are being sold off parcel by parcel, this isnt much different to what's happening there but it introduced a whole new segment of people to the Microsoft way of doing business.

      For countries with lots of capable people but little money and ruined economies, Linux just made the most sense.

      Unlike Mexico, where support has proven to be a problem, my friend assures me that this wouldnt have been the case in Eastern Europe.

    7. Re:Well Duh.... by mpe · · Score: 2

      It would be extraordinarily difficult for me to pirate RedHat when I can get it legally from their website.

      Actually it would be quite easy to pirate Linux. e.g. build an "appliance" without offering your customers the source code.

  15. Atoms != Electrons by asmithmd1 · · Score: 1, Interesting
    I know it has been said before, but this quote makes me mad.

    "It is a risk most other businesses don't have to deal with - having 34% of your product stolen," BSA's president Robert Holleyman told the conference.

    Why do they insist on equating an illegal copy with a stolen copy. The "thief" in the stolen copy case has not deprived the owner of the copyright of anything, the victim still has everything he had before the "theft"
    1. Re:Atoms != Electrons by 56ker · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I would say that part of the secret behind Microsoft's success is that there are plenty of people out there running pirate versions of Windows on their desktop. Without these - Microsoft would have far less of a monopoly.

    2. Re:Atoms != Electrons by First_In_Hell · · Score: 0
      I think the stealing aspect refers to the potential sale of the software. Perhaps without any way to get it for free people would have no other choice but to buy it. That is not to say that all of the 34% of stolen copies they referred to would have been purchased, but I am sure that some of them would have resorted to it.

      You also have to realize the pirated copies that are then sold on a street corner for 75% lower than retail value.

      The point is the potentail sales went over to people getting free copies or pirated copies at a high discount and in each case the developer of the software gets nothing.

    3. Re:Atoms != Electrons by Minstrel78 · · Score: 1

      Yep, this is my biggest gripe with the spin on copyright infringement of software (piracy for you media folks). Sure, piracy doesn't help the software creators any, but it absolutely does not equate to the theft of physical product.

      The way they cook their numbers is by potential lost sales of the product; each person illegally copying a piece of software didn't buy it, so a sale is lost. This is only half as bad as the impact of the theft of a physical product. If you steal an apple from my fruit stand, not only do I not get to sell the apple to you, because you've stolen it (loss of one sale), but now I can't sell that apple to another person either (loss of another sale).

    4. Re:Atoms != Electrons by PW2 · · Score: 1

      Why do they insist on equating an illegal copy with a stolen copy?

      They probably feel they need to justify their existance this way.

    5. Re:Atoms != Electrons by spectecjr · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why do they insist on equating an illegal copy with a stolen copy. The "thief" in the stolen copy case has not deprived the owner of the copyright of anything, the victim still has everything he had before the "theft"

      Here we go - in very tiny words for you, ok?

      You go into a store. Software Product A is sitting on the shelf for $10.

      You go around to your friend's house. Software Product A is copied to you for free.

      Producer of Software Product A has now lost a $10 sale.

      Whether you would have bought it for $10 or not is irrelevant - you made a copy, so it obviously has value to you.

      Therefore, you are depriving the software company of their profit on that product.

      If you disagree with this, then fine, disagree with the software company too - and DON'T USE or COPY THEIR PRODUCT.

      Simon

      --
      Coming soon - pyrogyra
    6. Re:Atoms != Electrons by MrFredBloggs · · Score: 1

      Yeah, thats all very well, but where is the `theft` and where is the `piracy`. Both these words already have meanings in dictionaries which have nothing in common with the definitions as implied in the article - indeed in almost every discussion about software `piracy`.

      You might just as well compare murder with breaking someones windows cd.
      "ooh, look at him - hes guilty of software murder! Murderer!!"

    7. Re:Atoms != Electrons by spectecjr · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Yeah, thats all very well, but where is the `theft` and where is the `piracy`. Both these words already have meanings in dictionaries which have nothing in common with the definitions as implied in the article - indeed in almost every discussion about software `piracy`.

      *sigh* I bet you bitch about the difference between hacker/cracker too.

      The theft is in the copying. You have made/taken a copy which you were not allowed to do so. Therefore you have taken the data without their permission. Given that you have something which belongs to someone else which you didn't have before, and you have it without their permission, that is theft.

      Simon

      --
      Coming soon - pyrogyra
    8. Re:Atoms != Electrons by oliverthered · · Score: 1

      I am a software developer, and have used a lot of pireted software in my time, becuase a) i couldn't have afforded it any how b) to evaluate the software and c) so that i could get a job using the software.

      so in the case of 'A' the developer wins (larger use base), and loses nothing as i couldn't afford the software.

      in the case of 'B' the developer wins, if i like a piece of software I usually buy a licence.

      and in the case of 'C' the developer wins, the company I work for has to buy another licence, I may decided that because the software was infuential in getting a Job that I will buy a licence.

      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    9. Re:Atoms != Electrons by Zack · · Score: 1

      Exactly! Oh, wait. No. You're exactly wrong.

      I didn't win the lottery, so I've suffered a net lost of $320 million this year. Damn. At least I should get a tax break. Because I feel like I should have gotten that money, and I didn't, that means that I lost it.

    10. Re:Atoms != Electrons by asmithmd1 · · Score: 2

      So you are saying that if I go into a store and put a copy of The Sims under my jacket and walk out without paying it is the same as burning an illegal copy of a friend's game? I have to disagree

    11. Re:Atoms != Electrons by MrFredBloggs · · Score: 1

      >*sigh* I bet you bitch about the difference
      >between hacker/cracker too.

      Its not something i spend much time thinking about, but as someone who was aware of cracking as part of the Amiga/St/etc cracked game/demo scene of the `80s, and also knew a few hackers (as in `computer security breakers`), i think i`m justified in using the UK definitions. Especially seeing as i live there! You godda problem widdat?

      >The theft is in the copying

      You mean `what i`m calling theft is copying`. When i tape the simpsons off the tv, i dont think of it as `theft` of the equivalent episode on video - do you?

      >You have made/taken a copy which you were not
      >allowed to do so

      This is correct in most cases, yes.

      >Therefore you have taken the data without their
      >permission. Given that you have something which
      >belongs to someone else which you didn't have
      >before, and you have it without their
      >permission, that is theft.

      No, lost me again - see, its that little leap. You could have changed that last word to `kidnapping` or `assault` or `shopping` or any other word, but if it already has a meaning at odds with your new definition, i`m afraid its simply another form of domain-squatting.

    12. Re:Atoms != Electrons by spectecjr · · Score: 1, Troll

      So you are saying that if I go into a store and put a copy of The Sims under my jacket and walk out without paying it is the same as burning an illegal copy of a friend's game? I have to disagree

      Well, let's run the numbers, shall we?

      Development team for 2 years: $4 million dollars.

      Cost of goods on a copy of the sims... oh... say $6.

      Store Price of The Sims: $49.95

      Store Take: ~ 50%

      You have just deprived the software company of $18.97 of revenue.

      Breakeven to the company: 212,000 copies need to be sold.

      So yes, it's the same as burning an illegal copy of the game. The only difference being that those $6 for the box, manuals, CDs, etc don't necessarily get given to the manufacturing company.

      HOWEVER, if your copying causes a copy to be sent back to the software company as a return from the distributor, that means that they take a hit of a little over $24.

      So it's complicated. Depending on how far you take each argument, it is arguably *worse* for you to copy the software than it is to shoplift it -- because at least with shoplifting, they're insured against the loss.

      Simon

      --
      Coming soon - pyrogyra
    13. Re:Atoms != Electrons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whether you would have bought it for $10 or not is irrelevant - you made a copy, so it obviously has value to you.


      No, it's not irrelevant.
      I made a copy FOR FREE, rather than buy it.
      Assume that sans this option, I wouldn't
      have bought it. That means the value it has
      for me is less than the amount they are asking.
      Possibly, near zero value.

      They lost no profit, because they never would
      have made any off me.

      What about the idea of paying someone for their
      time and effort, not for your use of the product?
      For instance... I like to pirate video games.
      Sometimes I play them, get a bit of enjoyment out of them, but not enough to make me actually
      value the game. It has no persistant value to me.

      On the other hand, sometimes I play one, and consider it a game that I would buy.
      So, I find the current market price, and send 'em
      a check.

    14. Re:Atoms != Electrons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I disagree with that, and I'll use company X's software anyways. How do you like them apples?

    15. Re:Atoms != Electrons by spectecjr · · Score: 2

      I made a copy FOR FREE, rather than buy it.
      Assume that sans this option, I wouldn't
      have bought it. That means the value it has
      for me is less than the amount they are asking.
      Possibly, near zero value.

      They lost no profit, because they never would
      have made any off me.


      It's leeches like you that give leeches a bad name.

      Look: they don't want to give you free entertainment. They want to sell entertainment to others.

      If you don't like that, don't do it. Don't fuck with other peoples livelihoods just because you're too cheap to buy your toys.

      I hope one of these days I get the opportunity to steal from you.

      Simon

      --
      Coming soon - pyrogyra
    16. Re:Atoms != Electrons by spectecjr · · Score: 1

      Exactly! Oh, wait. No. You're exactly wrong.

      I didn't win the lottery, so I've suffered a net lost of $320 million this year. Damn. At least I should get a tax break. Because I feel like I should have gotten that money, and I didn't, that means that I lost it.


      Sorry, but that's a facetious and completely orthogonal argument.

      They're selling their stuff. They do NOT give you permission to have it for free. If you don't like those terms, walk.

      Where the hell did you come up with that lottery ticket thing?

      Tell ya what. We'll make your salary completely lotto based, and see how you feel then. How does that sound?

      Simon

      --
      Coming soon - pyrogyra
    17. Re:Atoms != Electrons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am selling air. now please die.

    18. Re:Atoms != Electrons by ashitaka · · Score: 1

      So you are saying that if I go into a store and put a copy of The Sims under my jacket and walk out without paying it is the same as burning an illegal copy of a friend's game? I have to disagree.

      Let's see you walk into Electronic Arts and say that.

      --
      If you don't want to repeat the past, stop living in it.
    19. Re:Atoms != Electrons by ivan256 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Ok, we're going to take words away from you now, because they mean things, and you don't want to acknowledge that. We're going to use math instead. You can't argue with math unless it's added up wrong. Here we go.

      Software company 'A' sells a piece of software for $159.95. User 'Bob' doesn't have $159.95 to spend on software. Now, if we take the amount of money that company 'A' has when 'Bob' doesn't buy the software, and subtract it from the amount of money that the company 'A' has when 'Bob' pirates the software we get the indisputably correct amount of money that company 'A' has lost from 'Bob's piracy. I hope you can add, because here we go:

      $0 - $0 = $0.

      That's right, the company lost $0. $0. That's it, just $0.

      I'm a professional software developer. That's what I do for a living. I fully understand that software piracy is bad, but to say that every pirated copy is a loss of money is just a lie. Some are, some aren't. I just showed you the math to prove it. Stop spreading you BSA marketing department lies.

      If you want people to listen to you, more importantly if you want to influence people, then you have to tell the truth. People aren't stupid, and they can tell when you are lying to them. If you want to convince people to stop pirating software, you will have to find honest arguments, and you should know that there are many of them. Even 'Bob' the hypothetical software pirate can add, so your arguement won't work on him.

    20. Re:Atoms != Electrons by Carbonite · · Score: 1

      Although it's not the perfect analogy, I believe that the lottery example was meant to convey the point that every case of piracy does not result in a lost sale. Just as a lottery player can't claim to have lost $10 million every time they lose, a software company can't say every incident of piracy costs them $50 (or whatever the software sells for).

      It is quite relevant whether the pirate would have bought the product had piracy been impossible. Unfortunately the only way to tell for certain would be if a alternate world existed where piracy did not exist, yet all other variables remained the same. Aint gonna happen. I don't know exactly what percentage of pirates would have bought the product in this alternate world, but it's going to be pretty far from 100%.

      So bash that lottery example all you want, just understand the message the poster was conveying.

      --
      ich muß mehr Kuhglocke haben
    21. Re:Atoms != Electrons by Soul-Burn666 · · Score: 1

      Very true!!

      Many people I know use pirated versions of 3DS-Max. However I don't think the creators really care that people use it for free.

      Why is that? A license costs a bit over 3000$ (if i'm not wrong), and no home user / amatuer can afford that.

      But after the user knows how to work the program, he gets hired to a big firm that buys alot of licenses for a huge sum of money. The program becomes very popular and is bought by many firms, since they know they can hire many of these pirates.

      Who wins? The users (after breaking the 5-6 defences that are placed on the program), the program devs cuz their program is more popular and bought by firms and firms gain from very experienced users.

      --
      ^_^
    22. Re:Atoms != Electrons by dougmc · · Score: 2
      And I waited until the Sims were on sale and bought it for $30 (actually, I didn't have to wait very long. Things usually go on sale when brand new, and then much later as they hit the bargain bin, which will probably take a LONG time for the Sims.)

      I just deprived the software company of $9.98 (either your math or my math doesn't quite add up, but that's ok.) Does that make me only 47% better than somebody who copied it?

      Or, even worse -- suppose I had decided that I didn't want the Sims at all? Then I've deprived the software company of $18.97 of revenue. That makes me exactly as bad as a pirate, doesn't it?

    23. Re:Atoms != Electrons by Zack · · Score: 1

      Where the hell did you come up with that lottery ticket thing?

      Some people just can't read can they?

      Because I feel like I should have gotten that money, and I didn't, that means that I lost it.

      Want to read that again? I guess you're eyes must be going bad to have missed it earlier.

      Because I feel like I should have gotten that money, and I didn't, that means that I lost it.

      That's the entire point of their argument. And it's wrong.

      They feel that for every copy of X out there, that they should recieve money for it. Fair enough. But just because they believe they should have recieved the money doesn't mean that they've "lost it" when they don't.

      So if they sell one copy for $50, and two copies are pirated, they suddenly are in the hole $50? How does that work?

      They're selling their stuff. They do NOT give you permission to have it for free. If you don't like those terms, walk.

      Umm.. I never argued that. Irrelevent to the discussion.

      Tell ya what. We'll make your salary completely lotto based, and see how you feel then. How does that sound?

      What? Are you high on something? Irrelevent to the discussion.

    24. Re:Atoms != Electrons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Development team for 2 years: $4 million dollars.

      Cost of goods on a copy of the sims... oh... say $6.

      Store Price of The Sims: $49.95

      Drowning a family of sims in the 1' x 1' pool with no ladder in the backyard: priceless

    25. Re:Atoms != Electrons by zangdesign · · Score: 2

      Well, you just proved that theft does equal piracy and that piracy equals theft. Using your examples, either method deprives the producer and/or distributor of their share of revenue on the software product in question.

      By shoplifting you deprive both. By piracy, you deprive the producer.

      --
      To celebrate the occasion of my 1000th post, I will post no more forever on Slashdot. Goodbye.
    26. Re:Atoms != Electrons by ivan256 · · Score: 2

      I agree that piracy equals theft, and I did show that with my example, however you say "either method deprives the producer and/or distributor of their share of revenue on the software product in question". This is not true in the special case where the revenue is $0. When a person will not otherwise buy the product, the revenue that the company is loosing is $0. Because of that, only in cases where the software pirate would have actually paid for the product does the piracy result in a loss for the company. This is different then with shoplifting, since the revenue is less then $0 in the transaction because the company had costs involved in physically putting the product on the shelf that they can now not recover.

    27. Re:Atoms != Electrons by ScoLgo · · Score: 1

      So true.

      I would even take it a step further and submit that this is exactly what Microsoft wanted. Originally, they didn't care that people 'pirated' Windows because it achieved the goal of giving them desktop supremacy in the market. They were perfectly happy making their money off applications. If they were at all concerned about people copying windows, they wouldn't have made it so easy to do. They would have implemented some attempt at copy-protection long ago. Now that they have attained such a large user base, it's time to tighten the screws. This is why I'm migrating everything I can to Linux and holding off on upgrading from Win98 for as long as possible.

      --
      "Michael, I did nothing. I did absolutely nothing - and it was everything that I thought it could be."
    28. Re:Atoms != Electrons by Rary · · Score: 1
      "Therefore you have taken the data without their permission."

      Nope. Didn't take anything. Only copied it. If I go to the public library, borrow a book, take the book home, sit down with a pencil and a huge stack of paper, and write out the entire book word for word by hand, then return the book to the library, have I stolen the book? I have made an exact duplicate of the content of the book. I lost out on the packaging (the cover, the bound pages, the specific font used, etc), just like a software pirate loses out on the packaging (the box art, the manuals, the picture stamped on the CD), but I have a perfect copy of the content (assuming I didn't make any mistakes in my writing). Did I steal the book? Am I a thief? Did I just cost the author/publisher $39.95 (or whatever the book sells for in stores)?- There's no such thing as a "right to profit".

      --

      "You cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war." -- Albert Einstein

    29. Re:Atoms != Electrons by h0mer · · Score: 0

      I work at CompUSA, and currently The Sims retails for $50. Our cost is $40. Games, movies and CDs tend to have very little markup at the store level. Media companies make a lot more per unit then you would think.

      --


      I'm on top of my game like I'm standin' on Xbox.
    30. Re:Atoms != Electrons by SuperMediocre · · Score: 1

      If you steal an apple from my fruit stand, not only do I not get to sell the apple to you, because you've stolen it (loss of one sale), but now I can't sell that apple to another person either (loss of another sale).

      What??? How can you sell an apple twice? If I steal one apple, you can't sell one apple. You could've sold it either to me or to another customer, not twice. You loss the value of one sell. Just as for an illegal copy of software.

    31. Re:Atoms != Electrons by Flower · · Score: 2
      It has enough value for someone to violate the copyright owner's distribution rights and make an illegal copy of the software. Now our hypothetical pirate may say "but I wouldn't have bought it for $X anyway" HOWEVER if the copyright owner had the resources to collect on the illegal copy they would get $X.

      The only reason our pirate isn't getting hauled into court is because it is fiscally prohibative for the copyright owner to do so over a single copy. The pirate is getting value out of the product while the producer is not being compensated. Call it what you want, spin it as a cardinal sin or as a mere faus pax, but it is an act which is wrong and illegal.

      Whether the pirate would have bought the copy or not is irrelevent. He doesn't dictate the value of the software. The copyright owner does. Now I may question how they arrive at their numbers but I won't deny the fact that an illegal copy is for all intents and purposes a lost sale. As others have said before me, if you don't like the price don't use the product.

      That lottery analogy is just plain wrong.

      --
      I don't want knowledge. I want certainty. - Law, David Bowie
    32. Re:Atoms != Electrons by lpp · · Score: 1
      They feel that for every copy of X out there, that they should recieve money for it. Fair enough. But just because they believe they should have recieved the money doesn't mean that they've "lost it" when they don't.

      No, they feel that for every user of their software out there, they should receive money for it. And I back that argument. I may not like the BSA or their tactics, but if I write some software, and I license it such that I do not give permission for a user to copy it and give the copies to someone else, then logically, assuming honest users, for every user of my software, I should have been paid my asking price.

      As for the argument of having lost NUMPIRATES*PRICE dollars in lost revenue being inaccurate due to some folks copying software that they otherwise would not have bought, if software is crucial enough for someone to use, they will find a way to pay for it or do without the functionality or find an alternative.

      Any argument that it is better for the software companies to allow this type of casual copying since it increases their user base misses the point that it is unethical for those users to do the casual copying in the first place. Not to mention illegal.

      Lynn

      "Like Flames On A Fire - These Are the .sigs of Our Lives"
    33. Re:Atoms != Electrons by Zack · · Score: 1

      they feel that for every user of their software out there, they should receive money for it.

      Whatever, doesn't change my argument one way or the other. Feel free to substitute that in my previous post.

      As for the argument of having lost NUMPIRATES*PRICE dollars in lost revenue being inaccurate due to some folks copying software that they otherwise would not have bought, if software is crucial enough for someone to use, they will find a way to pay for it or do without the functionality or find an alternative.

      I know people who have pirated copies of Photoshop on their computers. Why? They installed it once to make a button for their web page. And that was the last they used of it. Sure, MS Paint could do the same thing, but in their mind "Graphics = Photoshop" so they wanted to use Photoshop.

      Now this user hasn't used the software since the day after installing it. It's not "crucial" to them, so would you insist this represents a $PRICE loss to Adobe? I'd say that it doesn't. The software really has no use to the person who has it. They installed it to play with it once.

      These people wouldn't buy Photoshop if it cost $1. They have no use for it.

      if software is crucial enough for someone to use, they will find a way to pay for it or do without the functionality or find an alternative.

      Or find a way to use it without paying. What if the software isn't crucial, and they just want to play with it for a while? To understand the software to be used in a job?

      Oh, no job, no money, can't buy software, can't learn software, therefore no job.

      it is unethical for those users to do the casual copying in the first place. Not to mention illegal.

      Ethics is all a matter of opinion. Law isn't. (well sorta..)

    34. Re:Atoms != Electrons by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      Pay attention. No one said it wasn't illegal. They said the loses were not real loses, as the company would not have made that much money had their been no pirates, and it is not a lost sale if it would not have been purchased by that person in the first place. The defination of a lost sale is a sale that does not occur due to piracy, and thus it is only a lost sale if a sale would have occured otherwise.

      A real world example: Do you know how stores talk about how much they lose to shoplifters? The amount of money the item cost them, not the amount of money the item was selling for. And it's partially for this exact reason, that a good many shoplifter wouldn't have bought the item anyway. (Most shoplifters are either teenage girls who shoplift because of hormones, professional thieves who resale the items, or just plain poor people.)

      Of course, if the BSA were to use this approach, they'd have $0 loses to piracy, which is obviously incorrect. A lot of people will just copy the software instead of buying another copy, especially at some companies.

      But that's not all copying, by far. I know people who could not have afforded all the software they've pirated. And who do not use 95% of it anyway. If you sprayed them with some magical anti-piracy ray, they certainly would not be running out and purchasing copies of Autocad to sit unused in a box on their computer table.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    35. Re:Atoms != Electrons by ashitaka · · Score: 1

      I hope one of these days I get the opportunity to steal from you.

      Don't lower yourself to his level.

      --
      If you don't want to repeat the past, stop living in it.
    36. Re:Atoms != Electrons by jgerman · · Score: 2

      Whether or not a person would have bought the copy is completely relevant. He doesn't have to dictate the value of the software. The dictated value could be anything, it could be ridiculously high, that doesn't mean it's worth it. I'm not so sure why it's difficult to understand. If there is no way I'll buy a piece of software then you have no lost revenue due to me. You've lost ABSOLUTELY nothing. You didn't front the costs for the blank cd's, you didn't pay for the paper I used to photocopy the manual. YOU DON'T EVEN KNOW THAT I'VE COPIED IT. It's a completely different situation than theft.

      --
      I'm the big fish in the big pond bitch.
    37. Re:Atoms != Electrons by lpp · · Score: 1
      I know people who have pirated copies of Photoshop on their computers. Why? They installed it once to make a button for their web page. And that was the last they used of it. Sure, MS Paint could do the same thing, but in their mind "Graphics = Photoshop" so they wanted to use Photoshop.

      This doesn't change the fact that they used an illegal copy. And just because someone has a mistaken concept of the capabilities of various applications (MSPaint vs Photoshop) does not give them the right to ignore the licensing restrictions that the developer of the software has put in place.

      As for only having used the software once and never having touched it again, again, that is irrelevant. If I produce something and place restrictions on whether you can make copies for your friends (or even your enemies) then you have no right to make those copies. Maybe it would be financially a good idea for me to allow it, but we are supposing that the vendor has NOT allowed it.

      As for finding a way to use it without paying, the instances you bring up...wanting to play with it for awhile...understanding it for a job...don't give anyone any rights to copies not authorized by the vendor of the software. It gives them reasons why they WANT those rights, but not the rights to make the copies. And finally:
      Oh, no job, no money, can't buy software, can't learn software, therefore no job.

      So. Let's take an engineer who needs/wants to learn ANSI specs for a job or just for fun. No job, no money, can't buy access to specs, can't learn specs, therefore no job. That doesn't mean that they have a right to gain illegal access to those specs. Now, as it turns out, there is a legal recourse. Go to your local library and check out copies of the books if they are available. Problem solved. The specs are allowed to be used in that fashion. Commercial software licensing typically is NOT licensed to allow for such access.

      As you pointed out, your user does not view the software as "crucial". So one shouldn't now make the argument that "without a means of accessing the software freely, I can't afford to pay for it" as if it is their God-given right to use my software without compensating me. Either pay me or don't use it. I don't provide any other options and taking another option means you are using the fruits of my labor (even if the tiniest possible subset of features of my product) without my authorization. Let's be clear. I'm not arguing that enforcing my desires in this case would be financially rewarding for me. I am arguing that no matter how little of a product's functionality you want to make use of, you ought to obey the terms of their product licensing in order to use that functionality or you ought to not use their software at all. And that from a vendor's point of view, if a user cared enough to make use of their functionality (i.e. as you point out, for many folks Image Editing assumes Photoshop), then they would have cared enough to purchase the product had the license been enforced. Your casual user should have had the sense of right and wrong to understand that, unless someone is robbing you of fundamental and essential rights, if they require even the most onerous compensation in order to gain access to their product or service, and you are not willing to pay the price, then you should not use that product or service.

      And before it begins, I can recognize that my statement is likely going to create responses of the type So if they required you to XXX in order to YYY, you would just do without YYY? where some combination of XXX and YYY would make my position sound stupid. My gut feeling is that software, at least at the present time, does not fall in the category of things that I will fight to death to have a copy of. If you want to discuss some value of YYY other than software, do it somewhere else. I'm talking about software here.

      And lastly...
      Ethics is all a matter of opinion. Law isn't. (well sorta..)

      I think that pretty well sums up our differences.

      -Lynn
    38. Re:Atoms != Electrons by Zack · · Score: 1

      Okay, we're arguing about two different things here.

      You're trying to convince me that pirating software is illegal. I know. I never said otherwise. The "casual user" who used it once was to point out that not every "pirated" copy out there is being used, and therefore shouldn't be counted as a "loss". If I sit here and burn CDs of photoshop over and over again, they don't lose more money.

      The company is NOT LOSING MONEY .

      I was arguing that when a company says "We lost $5 Billion" from piracy, that they're full of it.

      Oh, and "ethics" _are_ a matter of opinion. Like religion. And "emacs vs vi". All opinion.

      If you decide to respond don't bother telling me that piracy is illegal. Don't tell me that piracy is unethical. that's your opinion. We all already know it.

    39. Re:Atoms != Electrons by arkane1234 · · Score: 1

      Look: they don't want to give you free entertainment. They want to sell entertainment to others.

      They need to start making something worth while then, if it's not worth much if anything to him.

      If you don't like that, don't do it. Don't fuck with other peoples livelihoods just because you're too cheap to buy your toys.

      In todays world of the "buy it, then try it, don't like it then screw you" economy, I fully support copying and trying. If they made something good, you'll want the manual/cd/official support that comes with it. Whether or not he's too cheap to buy his "toys" is of no concern considering he already stated that it's not worth it.

      That means that since he tried the product out (gasp) and found it to be worth less than he's willing to put out, the outcome is that he's not going to waste money. That doesn't make him cheap, that means that he's a good consumer.

      It's just illegal nowadays to be a good consumer in the computer arena.

      I hope one of these days I get the opportunity to steal from you.

      Awwww yeah....
      Spoken like a real corporate businessman there. (no sarcasm...)

      --
      -- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
    40. Re:Atoms != Electrons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if I sell you an apple and you save the seeds from the apple to grow an apple tree, have you not stolen from me all the apples that grow on your tree?

    41. Re:Atoms != Electrons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Copyright isn't a moral right. It's not property. It's a means to an end. It's a neccessary evil, and it only deserves respect to the extent that it's neccessary.

  16. Wrong assertion from the lawyers by bokmann · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No... Piracy should be defined as 'breaking the license the software was issued under'.

    If they get away with defining 'piracy'=='copying', even in people's perceptions, the main distribution method of linux will be severely hampered. I can't tell you how many times I've seen someone receive a burnt CD with 'Red Hat xx' scribbled with a magic marker, and they ask something like, "is this legal?". It just 'feels' like you are doing something dirty.

    It is only illegal to copy it if you have specifically given up that right. As the GPL says, "Most lices are created with the purpose of taking away your rights..."

    1. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by Nightpaw · · Score: 1

      It is only illegal to copy it if you have specifically given up that right. As the GPL says, "Most lices are created with the purpose of taking away your rights..."

      I thought they were there to make your head itch.

    2. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by bokmann · · Score: 2

      In fact, now that I think about it, the BSA's role is 'enforcing the license to prevent piracy'... Maybe someone should ask their help the next time someone takes something that is GPL'ed and tries to turn it into a closed-source product... wouldn't that be 'making illegal copies'? The copies don't follow the license agreement the person agreed to...

    3. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by repoleved · · Score: 1

      ermm.. actually distributing copies is illegal by default under (many or most) copyright laws.

      The GPL offers you permission to copy, on the condition that you make the source code available (not necessarily free of charge, but available), and that you distribute the GPL along with the source code.

    4. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Piracy should be defined as 'breaking the license the software was issued under'.

      Microsofts idea of licensing software is meaningless. There is no license involved in copyright You don't need a copyright for users. Users just use the software. They don't need a license. If you use the software in your program then you need to check the copyright.

    5. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by ocie · · Score: 3, Funny

      JW: So tell me about the free software.

      VV: So what you want to know?

      JW: It's free right?

      VV: It's free, but it ain't 100% free. I mean you can't just walk into Fry's and grab a copy of Red Hat off the shelf without paying for it. You have to download it or copy it from a friend.

      JW: That's because it's under the GPL.

      VV: Right. It breaks down like this It's leagal for you to buy it, it's leagal for you to copy it and if you are into programming, it's legal for you to modify it. Companies can sell the software, but that don't matter, 'cause you can turn around and give away copies of it. Limiting redistribution is a right the GPL explicitly doesn't give developers.

      --
      JET Program: see Japan, meet intere
    6. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by MuMart · · Score: 0

      Actually having MS FUD confuse people into thinking that all copies of software are illegal could be beneficial in some ways.

      I'm sure a lot of the linux vendors would like to be able to force people to buy the boxed copies rather than getting dupes. If average people are convinced that £1 cheapbytes cd is a bit dodgy (which is unlikely imho) then the linux people will have more money in their war chests ...

      After all - linux can always undercut Windows on price ...

    7. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't tell you how many times I've seen someone receive a burnt CD with 'Red Hat xx' scribbled with a magic marker, and they ask something like, "is this legal?".

      Well, the contents of the CD may be perfectly legal but there may be a case of trademark infringement there.

    8. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by linzeal · · Score: 1

      has anyone tried to solicit sex in exchange for the source? can you insist the payments are made in rubels?

    9. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by iabervon · · Score: 2

      You are actually required to offer them the source code as well, since reproducing the software is not a right that you have by default. You should probably say, "No, it's not", scribble "Ask XXX for source CD" on the CD, and say, "Okay, now it is. Thanks for reminding me."

      It is illegal to copy without a license. What is legal without a license is using your copy, including transferring it to new media as required to use it (e.g., from CDROM to hard drive or memory, or CD to sound waves). The GPL gives you permission to copy, provided you also offer source.

      You probably doon't really need to offer the source yourself, because Red Hat will provide it directly to whoever asks, even though they only, strictly speaking, have to give source to people who have gotten binaries directly from them.

      Makes me wonder how many GPL binaries out there cannot legally be copied, because the source has been lost.

    10. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by LinuxHam · · Score: 2

      It just 'feels' like you are doing something dirty

      I absolutely 100% do not feel dirty copying Linux CDs. When I copy Linux CDs for people, I try to give them the "30 second sale" (or more like 10 seconds!) with something along the lines of, "Microsoft expects you to pay a couple hundred dollars every few years for the most basic functionality you use on your PC, including surfing the web and exchanging email. Some people have written software that replaces Windows and offers the same functionality. But these people released their software in such a way that no one will ever be required to pay anyone else for a copy of it." I usually carry a set of CDs with me so that when someone says, "yeah, I really have to get a copy of that some day" I can reach into my bag, and reply, "here you go! I could legally charge you for this, but I'm not going to :)"

      --
      Intelligent Life on Earth
    11. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by Wolfier · · Score: 2

      Good point. How do we make FSF a member of the BSA?

    12. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by hacker · · Score: 2
      I can't tell you how many times I've seen someone receive a burnt CD with 'Red Hat xx' scribbled with a magic marker, and they ask something like, "is this legal?". It just 'feels' like you are doing something dirty.
      It's perfectly legal to do... however you probably paid a nice fat royalty to the RIAA and MPAA for the purchase of that blank CDR media, data or otherwise, depending on which country you live in.

      How lovely is it to know you're supporting the illegal extortion tactics of the crooked music industry by burning your favorite free Linux distribution onto a blank CDR media. It's not even music, and the music industry (note: not the artists) benefits.

    13. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by repoleved · · Score: 1
      I am not a lawyer but...

      can you insist the payments are made in rubels?

      I think that you *could* ask for anything you want. Basically you have the GPL, which offers you certain rights (i.e. the right to sell modified derivatives of the source code, which would otherwise be retained by the copyright holder), in exchange for something. If you take the right to sell modified derivatives of the source code, and the GPL was in place, then you are deemed to have entered into a legally binding contract where you must now live up to your end of the bargain.

      has anyone tried to solicit sex in exchange for the source?

      Maybe, but this would have certain disadvantages:
      1. it may be illegal to solicit sex in your country, in which case the contract is voidable
      2. even if it worked, you might find it hard to travel to italy for one encounter, to alaska for the next, to jordan for the next...
      3. even if you got around those problems, you are only inviting disaster upon yourself, since each encounter carries a risk of serious infection, and you have a virtual guarantee that no children will result from this in a day and age where contraceptives are available before, during, and up to 6 months after the fact.


      All in all, I personally think that you would be better off trying to get money, since with that you can go to the gym, buy nice clothes and a nice car, and live a better life.
    14. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by gamorck · · Score: 0

      I wish I had some mod points - because your skit was funny as hell. Its too bad most of the people here wont get the Pulp Fiction reference....

      J

      --
      I love idealists not because I am one, but because they make life bearable for pragmatists such as myself.
    15. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by ryanvm · · Score: 2

      As the GPL says, "Most lices are created with the purpose of taking away your rights..."

      Jeez - that's a pretty negative view of lice.

    16. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      This is the second time today I've seen a comment like this.

      If the software on the CD is Red Hat Linux, no, it's not trademark infringement. You can only infringe trademarks if you are misrepresenting something, it is perfectly legal to use trademarks to describe the things that are trademarked.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    17. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But not to redistribute them.

    18. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      Yes, it is. If the trademark describes the object, it's perfectly okay. Or do you think all the 'Ford' ads in a local newspaper are copyright violations?

      If it is the product being described, it is perfectly okay to call it by the trademark.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    19. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it has nothing to do with copyright. Trademark law is different from copyright law. At least get that part straight.

      You can use a trademark, such as Ford or Red Hat, to refer to the product or company for which it is trademarked. But if you build a replica of a Ford, *and* put a Ford logo on it, that is not going to sit well with Ford's lawyers.

      If you copy Red Hat Linux onto a CD, that's OK. If you pass it off to someone else with a label that says "Red Hat Linux", which implies the official support of that company, you're crossing a line. But you should be free to say something like "This contents of this CD are an exact duplicate of Red Hat Linux X.X". That however is different from the original example where the copy was actually labeled "Red Hat".

      Just exactly what constitutes crossing that line is a legal question and the answer may vary from one courtroom to another -- not all judges interpret the same law in identical ways. That is why, in my earlier post, I said there "may" be a case of trademark infringement.

    20. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      The copyright thing was just me posting after I just got up. I know the difference between trademark and copyright law, but the rest of the discussion was about copyrights, so I just typed that word.

      You can use a trademark, such as Ford or Red Hat, to refer to the product or company for which it is trademarked. But if you build a replica of a Ford, *and* put a Ford logo on it, that is not going to sit well with Ford's lawyers.

      If you build it with Ford parts, they don't have any complaints at all. Like I said, you can take apart a Ford and put it back together, and it's still a Ford. You can take a bunch of Fords and take them apart and put them back together randomly, and, yes, they are still Fords. And, if you have the time and money, you can puchase parts that compose a Ford and build one yourself. All these are 'Fords', and can be called such.

      If you copy Red Hat Linux onto a CD, that's OK. If you pass it off to someone else with a label that says "Red Hat Linux", which implies the official support of that company, you're crossing a line. But you should be free to say something like "This contents of this CD are an exact duplicate of Red Hat Linux X.X". That however is different from the original example where the copy was actually labeled "Red Hat".

      Calling something Red Hat Linux in no way implies a warranty or support.

      And this is a completely idiotic discussion. Have you honestly never seen a mirror? They put redhat mirrors in a redhat/ directory. Have you never puchased 'Red Hat' from cheapbytes or some such place for a dollar a CD? Guess what, it says 'Red Hat' right there on the CD. Not 'Copy of Red Hat'.

      It's not a trademark violation, ever, to call something what it is. Those CDs contain the Red Hat distribution of Linux. It is perfectly okay to call them such, and sell them as such, because that is what they are.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    21. Re:Wrong assertion from the lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you should go to http://www.redhat.com/about/corporate/trademark/pa ge4.html and http://www.redhat.com/about/corporate/trademark/pa ge9.html and read what it says there.

      At the first link you'll read what I've been saying all along.

      The second linked page lists specific permissions granted by Red Hat. They are not permitted because trademark law permits them, they are permitted because Red Hat's trademark policy (which I think is more liberal than most) permits them. Note there is a paragraph specifically covering FTP sites. That is why you can find redhat directories on mirror sites.

      According to that page you can use the trademark for internal distribution. I don't think that covers giving disks to your friends, unless such copies somehow qualify as "internal copies" -- admittedly that phrase is a little ambiguous. Maybe it depends on whether the friend lives in the same house or not.

      In the case of cars built with all Ford parts, but not using Ford assembly labor in a Ford factory, I can't say -- Ford would be within their rights to enforce their trademark against such builders, but enforcement is up to them. My guess is their lawyers wouldn't be as kind as you expect them to be.

  17. No wonder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No wonder he says that, GPL is backed by the copyright law. And Microsoft supports the copyright law. Hence, GPL is a virus...

  18. I think their numbers may be off by quinto2000 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    "We can't estimate how much piracy is on the net but in one day we found a million sites under a search for one of the codenames for pirated software," said a BSA spokesperson"
    They forgot to mention that all of the sites had the same broken links to servers that had only porn popups, not warez.

    And wow, it sure took them a long time to figure out the "codeword" for pirated software :)

    --
    Ceci n'est pas un post
    1. Re:I think their numbers may be off by TheTomcat · · Score: 3, Funny

      Google:

      Searched the web for pirated software. Results 1 - 10 of about 73,600. Search took 0.11 seconds.

      Did you mean: warez

      ---

      Searched the web for warez. Results 1 - 10 of about 4,110,000. Search took 0.07 seconds.

      I's an ebil haxxor.

      ---

      S

    2. Re:I think their numbers may be off by Zwack · · Score: 1

      Wow, Only 1 million in a day... Google gives me over 4 million hits in a few seconds...

      I guess they were using a different "codeword"

      Z.

      --
      -- Under/Overrated is meta-moderation, and therefore is Redundant.
    3. Re:I think their numbers may be off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you mean: warez

      Dang, for a minute there I thought google had gotten even better at actually interpreting your search terms.

      Would've been way cool... :)

    4. Re:I think their numbers may be off by SIGFPE · · Score: 2
      1. Warez: 4,290,000
      2. Crackz: 874,000
      3. Serialz: 817,000


      Maybe they used 'crackz' not 'warez'
      --
      -- SIGFPE
  19. orwellian by koekepeer · · Score: 1

    software sales are forecast to grow from $50 billion in 2000 to about $90 billion by 2005

    sounds like a typical case of doublespeak to me

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

      What's even more annoying is that if
      sales fall below these figures,
      they'll say pirates "stole" that much money
      from them.

      Even worse is the trend nowdays for companies
      to somehow expect that they have a right
      to future projected earnings, like it's already
      money that they've made. And that anything
      which hurts this, is "stealing" money them.

      Or the idea that the projected increase in future
      profits isn't itself increasing as much as was expected, but it gets termed a loss in profit.

      WTF?
      Doesn't anyone measure their sucess by
      the money they ARE making, the perceived
      quality of their product, customer loyalty?

      software sales are forecast to grow from $50 billion in 2000 to about $90 billion by 2005
      Ah, but you see my friend, our projections also
      should that without pirates, software sales
      could possibly be around $200 billion by 2005!
      That's right! Piracy will cost us $150 in the
      next five years!

      <retches>

  20. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What idiots modded that down?

  21. Eastern Europe? by ymgve · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If anything, I believe piracy has progressed the software industry there, atleast the MS-centric part of it. If they didn't have illegal copies of Windows and VC++ to develop on, there is no way they'd be able to afford the real thing. So in a way, pirated software helps Microsoft, because then more people are able to develop Windows applications.

    1. Re:Eastern Europe? by geekoid · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Your right.
      You know how MS got so popular? People took copies home from work, installed it on ther machines so they could 'work' from home.

      My 98 system went down this weekend, lost everything. I went to reinstall Ofice 98. Turns out there where in the box that got lost when we moved. You think I'm going to buy my next copy?

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:Eastern Europe? by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 2

      The recent essay contest sponsored by Wipout drove this point home: the license cost for a single seat of, say, Visual Studio is as much as sixty percent of the per capita income of your average Sri Lankan. There's no concievable way that people from those parts of the world can afford to put the software on very many machines legally. The options are to pirate or to do without, and doing without doesn't do much for their software industry, or indeed any industry.

    3. Re:Eastern Europe? by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      /me shrugs

      Well, if MS wants to take away their dev tools and make them use gcc, I'm certainly not complaining.

      The BSA is second only to Red Hat and IBM in Linux advocacy, abeit indirectly.

    4. Re:Eastern Europe? by Joseph+Vigneau · · Score: 1
      the license cost for a single seat of, say, Visual Studio is as much as sixty percent of the per capita income of your average Sri Lankan. There's no concievable way that people from those parts of the world can afford to put the software on very many machines legally.


      Many software companies (and I would guess M$ included) charge different amounts in different countries, often with caluses in the license that restrict the use of the software to these countries...

    5. Re:Eastern Europe? by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 1

      My 98 system went down this weekend, lost everything. I went to reinstall Ofice 98.

      Wow! How did you get a Mac version of Office (98) to install on Win98?

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
    6. Re:Eastern Europe? by HiThere · · Score: 2

      I'm not sure about the Windows OS, and I'm not sure about the time period, but there was a period (brief?) when, at least for Office, it was in agreement with the license for you to install a copy on your home machine as well as your work machine provided that you were the only person to use either copy.

      The next time I checked the license (a different version) the wording had changed, and that was no longer legal. (Perhaps this was after the MS compiler had triumphed over Borland's?)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    7. Re:Eastern Europe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is true. If it wasn't for piracy, MS would not have such a large market share in Eastern Europe.

      But individual users and companies over here do not have to steal software, because they can use Open Source software.

      There is a thriving software industry in EE, not as rich and varied as in the USA, but a lively one.

  22. Make up your minds... by Drachemorder · · Score: 3, Funny
    Make up your mind, Microsoft! Is it piracy, or is it just a virus?

    Sheesh. Are there any insulting comparisons Microsoft hasn't yet made?

    1. Re:Make up your minds... by xenode · · Score: 1

      Well, at least they haven't said Linux is like Windows.

    2. Re:Make up your minds... by oyenstikker · · Score: 2

      Linux's mother was a hampster, and its father smelt of elderberries!

      --
      The masses are the crack whores of religion.
    3. Re:Make up your minds... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think they've compared open source to rapists or child molesters yet.

      But since, as you've noted, they've already publicly made associations from OSS to thieves (piracy), mass murder (virii), and terrorism (attempting to bring down the economic system by halting the progress of ideas and software) this is probably the next step.

    4. Re:Make up your minds... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      weeeeeeeeee!

  23. in other news today by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    -The Sun Rose This Morning. Again!
    -Gravity Works
    -Light Found to Move Very, Very Fast.

  24. My thoughts on the article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the $50 Billion - $90 Billion is grossly exaggerated. I think about anyone out there would say the market is stagnant, halted, or even in REVERSE for software. I have all this outdated crap software that I never ever ever will touch ever again for the rest of my life.. And you think I'm about to pay $60 for another software package? ha.. yeah right. This is why the market is crashing.. people don't and *won't* pay. ;)

  25. Lower prices? Yeah, right. by Chewie · · Score: 3, Insightful
    My favorite part was the quote from the story:
    He does believe that stopping the pirates could have a dramatic effect on the current pricing of software, however. "As the legal market grows, there is more investment in new products and enhanced competition. A healthy market leads to more attractive prices for consumers," he said.
    Anyone want to wager what the odds of BSA members dropping their prices will be? I'm guessing something involving a snowball and Hell.
    --
    49 20 68 61 76 65 20 74 6F 6F 20 6D 75 63 68 20 66 72 65 65 20 74 69 6D 65 2E
  26. Open source: the solution to piracy by mikosullivan · · Score: 2

    It's darn nice of Microsoft to admit that it's not stealing if someone gives it to you. What they and the BSA are still dancing around is that open source is one of the very best solutions to piracy. An organization that uses only open source won't have to waste its time and money maintaining license compliance. Of course, this doesn't help software sellers, but in the spirit of the very capitalism they claim to support: that's their problem. The companies who make money in some way besides selling software (i.e. most of us) aren't obliged to provide welfare to Microsoft.

    --
    Miko O'Sullivan
  27. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by elflord · · Score: 3, Insightful
    How anyone actually associates Linux with Piracy is beyond me and reflective of a lack of understanding the spirit of MSFT's gripes.

    The problem is that you have software like Napster that represents the freeloader movement getting confused with the free software movement. Popular websites like slashdot do more to hurt than to help with this problem. A lot of people are under the false impression that Linux and open source are about "free beer", and if you believe that, then it's not an enormous stretch to conclude that Linux is about piracy.

  28. New Acronym? by ocie · · Score: 2, Interesting
    software sales are forecast to grow from $50 billion in 2000 to about $90 billion by 2005

    What do you expect. Software is write-once sell-many (WOSM)


    --
    JET Program: see Japan, meet intere
    1. Re:New Acronym? by TRACK-YOUR-POSITION · · Score: 1

      WOSM?

      awesome!

  29. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by flatrock · · Score: 1, Redundant

    Microsoft is a Software company. They make their money selling software. They don't want to try selling support or hardware or some other product to fund their software development. They want to charge for the actuall product they sell rather than shift the cost of developing software on to some other product. That's why they don't like GPLed software. With GPL software you can't sell the software itself, the expenses of developing the software must be shifted elsewhere.

  30. at least people are getting closer . . . by jmt9581 · · Score: 1

    "Linux is a way of developing software whereas piracy is copying." At least people are getting a little closer to using hackers' terms correctly, last time I checked Linux is a kernel for an operating system that uses tools developed mostly for the public domain. But it's good to know that not even people at Microsoft think that Linux == piracy.

    --

    My blog

  31. Eastern Europe ?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "If there wasn't piracy there would be more software companies in Russia and Eastern Europe,"

    This has nothing to do with the piracy. This guy knows how is in E Europe or Russia ? There are no money for food, let alone software. The water and heating for a small apartment (for one month) is more than half of a monthly salary for a University teacher. Do you resonably expect any individual to buy ANY software ? An for the companies, if they had money, they would first give more money to their employes (the usual monthly salary beeing 40-60 $).

  32. Re:Lower prices? Yeah, right. by phloon · · Score: 2

    You don't think it'll lower prices? Remember when music started coming out on CDs? They said that would lower the price of music recordings...

    They were so right.......

  33. Wow he looks good for his age. by QuaZar666 · · Score: 1

    According to the picture he looks maybe 50 (if that) but according to the test he is at least 115 years old.

    "Smith graduated summa cum laude from Princeton University, where he received the Class of 1901 Medal"

    (i know its a type)

    1. Re:Wow he looks good for his age. by Danse · · Score: 1

      Apparently he had to study quite hard to become the lying weasel he is today.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    2. Re:Wow he looks good for his age. by rcastro0 · · Score: 1

      Or maybe he received a Medal that is given annually because of funds raised way back by the Class of 1901 ?

      --
      Quem a paca cara compra, paca cara pagará.
  34. Opportunity cost by Kris+Warkentin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Lots of money will continue to be made in software simply because piracy is a pain in the tuckus. If you come right down to it, most software hasn't really gotten that much more expensive over the years.

    Take games for example. They still usually cost around $50 bucks, just like they have for years. I pay $50 dollars for my tax program every year now because, after all, what's $50 bucks? 10 years ago it cost the same and we used to get 5 people together and pay $10 bucks each. Now we just buy it because it's more of a nuisance to pirate than it is to just pony up the cash.

    Games are relatively cheap too. If you use a pirated version, half the time you're having problems like, "I need the latest 1.09 patch for such and such bug/feature but it breaks my 1.07 pirated no-cd version". It's just easier to buy it than it is to go surfing warez sites/kazaa, etc. My time is more valuable than that.....surfing for warez takes time away from gaming. ;-)

    --

    In Soviet Russia, hot grits put YOU down THEIR pants.
    1. Re:Opportunity cost by Danse · · Score: 2

      Everything else even remotely related to computers has gotten drastically cheaper over the years. Everything except Microsoft's software. It has actually gotten more expensive. Gee... I wonder why that is... could it be... monopoly?!

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    2. Re:Opportunity cost by interstellar_donkey · · Score: 2

      If you use a pirated version, half the time you're having problems like, "I need the latest 1.09 patch for such and such bug/feature but it breaks my 1.07 pirated no-cd version".

      So all the bugs that are in games in the first release are'nt due to bad coding, poor QA, and market forces rushing to get games out in time; They are really copy-protection elements. I never thought of it that way, but gosh, it makes sense.

      --
      The Internet is generally stupid
    3. Re:Opportunity cost by sheldon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      " It has actually gotten more expensive."

      Prove this statement. I dare you.

      Go back and check the price of the original DOS, the original Windows... Windows 95 and so on. The price of the OS has remained almost constant as long as I can remember.

      Then if you go and compare the price of Microsoft's offerings to other comparable products in the industry you'll see software has gotten drastically cheaper because of Microsoft.

    4. Re:Opportunity cost by Quixadhal · · Score: 1

      Amusingly enough... I usually find myself buying a nice new game, and then it sits on the shelf for a week or two until some "hax0r" out there makes a no-cd crack for it. THEN I go install and play it!

      Am I being an evil pirate? No, I'm being a paying customer who is sick to death of stupid copy-protection schemes that require me to fill my hard drive with the full content of the game, but STILL swap the damn cd's around like we were back in the Commodore 64 floppy disk days.

      Get a clue software people! CD's are not software, they are distribution media, and I should be able to microwave them once it's installed if I want to.

    5. Re:Opportunity cost by jgerman · · Score: 2
      Actually I wouldn't say ALL of them, but I've often suspected game companies of having some bugs that are fixable with the patch that's released three days later.


      I was actually thinking about that this weekend. After I rebuilt my woindows box I decided to install Diablo II which needs to be registered in order to download patches (AFAIK), I haven't tried yet, but I don't know if there's any identifying information I need to give them (pw ect.) to get the latest patches. If there are, I sure as hell don't remember them. Furthermore, what if I had sold the game. Perfectly legal, but the next owner couldn't register it so can't get the patches.

      --
      I'm the big fish in the big pond bitch.
    6. Re:Opportunity cost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot that US$ 50,00 may be cheap for you and those in you country. But remember, the world is BIG! And for people from other countries (even in developed countries in Europe and Asia) it may be too expensive.

      For example. For me, a good price would be equivalent to US$ 20. And that amount of money here is considerable. Even in Japan US$ 50,00 is more money than it is in the USA. You cannot think exclusively based on local values. The world is globalized now, remember?

    7. Re:Opportunity cost by interstellar_donkey · · Score: 2

      I was being a little flippant there... but it sure as heck feels that the game companies go out of their way to make sure you can't update your game (in some cases, making the game playable) if you have a pirated copy.

      What really burns me is how so many games now require you to put the CD in just to play it. I keep all my CDs on a shelf, and I don't want to have to walk accross the room to find the CD, put it in the drive, just to play my favorate game. I want to be able to just start it up and go.

      So I go and download the CD cracks. I own the game, I own the right to play it, I simply don't want to have to go through the process of finding and putting in the CD.

      So I put the crack on it. Then, foolishly, I download the patch, only to find it won't run right anymore, and have to go through the whole thing again until I get too fed up and buy a new one.

      If I spent more time playing games, that would really start to anger me.

      --
      The Internet is generally stupid
    8. Re:Opportunity cost by glwtta · · Score: 2
      Yeah, at one point I realized that I could make more than $50 in the time it takes to find (and get to work) a pirated version, a lot more.

      Incidentaly, I stopped wasting time playing stupid computer games for the same reason, a bit later on.

      --
      sic transit gloria mundi
    9. Re:Opportunity cost by nathanh · · Score: 2
      It has actually gotten more expensive

      Go back and check the price of the original DOS, the original Windows... Windows 95 and so on. The price of the OS has remained almost constant as long as I can remember.

      Ok. I went to this report and inflation-adjusted figures show that Windows cost 10% more in 1999 than it did in 1990.

      Then if you go and compare the price of Microsoft's offerings to other comparable products in the industry you'll see software has gotten drastically cheaper because of Microsoft.

      Correlation is not cause. Microsoft is not responsible for prices going down any more than IBM is responsible or Apple is responsible.

    10. Re:Opportunity cost by Obasan · · Score: 1

      Amen to that. I use gamecopyworld all the time, not because I copy games (I own all the games I play) but because the copy protection mechanisms piss me off. I own a 30 gig hard disk, why can't I play the games without the idiotic "insert CD 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6" etc. bullshit.

      Basically copyprotection as it currently exists only inconveniences genuine purchasers of a product, which annoys me a lot. I also reinstalled Diablo II recently, which I bought, but found that though I still had my original cd key, Install CD and Cinematics CD, my "play cd" was missing, but I had a burned backup still. Of course a burned backup won't let you play the game so you need to crack it... and cracks for the most recent patches are hard to come by... Very annoying.

      Also many cd-keys are distributed seperately from the game media. I don't keep the game cases or documentation generally, or it gets lost easily. I keep the game cd's in cd folders. When I can peel off the cd-key and stick it on the actual game-media, I do so, or use a magic marker to write it on the disc... but again, this stuff all gets cracked within days of the game being released, I don't see what this kind of copyprotection accomplishes other than annoying legitimate users!

    11. Re:Opportunity cost by sheldon · · Score: 1

      The report didn't take into account that in 1990 in order to run Windows you also needed to purchase DOS.

      It's interesting how the report not only ignores this but tries to use it as proof that Windows costs more. In Figure 1 they note the dramatic increase in the price of Windows 95 from Windows 3.1, but they don't point out that was because Win95 included a copy of DOS.

      I will encourage you to try again, but unfortunately the facts don't support your claims.

    12. Re:Opportunity cost by nathanh · · Score: 2
      It's interesting how the report not only ignores this but tries to use it as proof that Windows costs more. In Figure 1 they note the dramatic increase in the price of Windows 95 from Windows 3.1, but they don't point out that was because Win95 included a copy of DOS.

      Your counter-argument would be valid if Microsoft had released a "Windows 95 without DOS" product. Because there was no such product you cannot claim that Windows 95 was "cheaper" than the sticker price by the price of DOS.

      My argument stands as-is. You have not successfully argued against the facts in that report.

    13. Re:Opportunity cost by sheldon · · Score: 2

      That has got to be the lamest counter argument I've ever seen.

      What's even lamer is the fact that instead of trying to counter it with logic you and your cronies decided instead to mod me down. Hmm, can't stand the truth I guess.

    14. Re:Opportunity cost by nathanh · · Score: 2
      That has got to be the lamest counter argument I've ever seen.

      I'm sorry you feel that way. It makes sense to me. Perhaps you'd like to explain what's "lame" about it instead of being dismissive?

      What's even lamer is the fact that instead of trying to counter it with logic you and your cronies decided instead to mod me down. Hmm, can't stand the truth I guess.

      I don't have any "cronies" and I can't moderate a discussion that I've posted to. Did you consider the more plausible possibility that other people (besides myself) think you are wrong?

    15. Re:Opportunity cost by sheldon · · Score: 2

      "I'm sorry you feel that way. It makes sense to me. Perhaps you'd like to explain what's "lame" about it instead of being dismissive? "

      Oh come on, are you bloody serious?

      Look at what you wrote:
      "Your counter-argument would be valid if Microsoft had released a "Windows 95 without DOS" product. Because there was no such product you cannot claim that Windows 95 was "cheaper" than the sticker price by the price of DOS. "

      How exactly does this make the argument invalid? If anything this would only make you argument valid.

      But the fact is in order to run Windows 3.1 you needed to buy DOS, thus the price of Windows was Windows 3.1 + DOS. If Windows 3.1 was $100, and DOS $50... the price is $150.

      Thus it is not fair to compare the price of Windows 95 to just that of Windows 3.1.

      "Did you consider the more plausible possibility that other people (besides myself) think you are wrong?"

      No, but I have considered the possibility that the anti-MS/OSS contingent is becoming more and more desperate as it becomes apparent they are losing the battle.

      Your argument on the pricing of Windows is just one example, your cronies mass down-moderation is yet another.

    16. Re:Opportunity cost by nathanh · · Score: 2
      But the fact is in order to run Windows 3.1 you needed to buy DOS, thus the price of Windows was Windows 3.1 + DOS. If Windows 3.1 was $100, and DOS $50... the price is $150.

      That seems like faulty reasoning to me. If I already had Windows 3.1 plus DOS, and I wanted to upgrade to Windows 95, why would I want to purchase another copy of DOS? I'd want to reuse my existing copy. The "bundled DOS" has $0 value to me.

      Also why would I want to use Microsoft DOS? DR-DOS was also available. Perhaps FreeDOS would have been usable because of increased attention to it. IBM had PC-DOS and it's probable they would have shipped Windows 95 + PC-DOS.

      Also the $50 "sticker price" of DOS covers more than just the license. It covers the cost of the box, the manuals, the shelf-space, and the support. You get none of these things when you buy the "bundled DOS" in Windows 95: you would only get the manuals and support for the Windows component. So the "bundled DOS" is clearly not worth the full $50.

      Also you're arguing that because Windows 3.1 required DOS to boot that you must add the price of DOS when comparing Windows 3.1 against Windows 95. This reasoning itself is bogus. Windows 95 required more RAM than Windows 3.1: should we add the cost of this RAM to the price of Windows 95? The report and I are comparing the price of Windows. You want to compare Total Cost of Ownership but you are being selective in what contributes to that total.

      Finally, you have no idea how much the version of DOS actually cost. Windows 95 shipped with something that was nominally called "DOS 7.0". It was incomplete compared to earlier versions and you could not install it standalone. Because it wasn't a fully featured version of DOS it's not valid for you to choose its value at $50 based on earlier versions of DOS. Could I even buy a standalone version of DOS 7.0? To me it is clear that buying DOS + Windows 3.1 as two seperate products has more value than buying Windows 95 with a crippled sub-DOS: there is more value to DOS than as nothing more than a bootloader and interrupt handler for Windows.

      No, but I have considered the possibility that the anti-MS/OSS contingent is becoming more and more desperate as it becomes apparent they are losing the battle. Your argument on the pricing of Windows is just one example, your cronies mass down-moderation is yet another.

      I'd suggest that you read what you wrote here in about 1 year's time, because you sound quite insane. There is no "contingent" of "cronies" here on a vendetta against you. I believe a number of people just think you're wrong.

  35. Linux Piracy numbers by fabiolrs · · Score: 2, Funny

    In other news: "Mozilla piracy has grown 12% last year according to MS sources. Also, GIMP piracy has also grown considerably."

    Come on MS... come on... grow up!

    --
    Fabio - Sumare/Sao Paulo/Brazil/South America/Earth/Solar System/Milky Way/Universe
    http://www.morroida.com.br
  36. Duh. by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 2

    Even Gates never failed to make the distinction. Linux is a cancer, remember, not piracy.

    Besides, at least the pirates use windows. Us linux users are much more lowlife, in their opinion.

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

      He's right. You people are subhuman. Take a fucking shower, you filthy GNU hippies.

  37. It's so nice to have their sanction! by Tri0de · · Score: 3, Funny

    In other news Micro$oft spokesman says "we magnanimously concede that breathing oxygen is not, in and of itself, stealing from us".

    To me, the big brotherish quote was:

    "Criminal organisations can sell software direct, as well as through retail channels," said Symantec lawyer Art Courville. "So, it is harder to monitor."

    yep- can't have that ol' free market in the way, somebody might be doing something unlawful

    --
    "Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but not their own facts."
    1. Re:It's so nice to have their sanction! by MaxwellStreet · · Score: 2

      Hehe. Criminal organizations . . .

      Microsoft was found to be a criminal organization, in violation of anti-trust laws here in the US. I reckon they -do- sell software both retail and direct.

  38. Well... by Sarcasmooo! · · Score: 2, Offtopic

    It may not be piracy, but it sure stole my heart.

    aawwwwww...

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

      I hear hearts are worth a pretty penny on the black market.

      - Guy who needs money

  39. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by rutledjw · · Score: 2
    With GPL software you can't sell the software itself, the expenses of developing the software must be shifted elsewhere.
    Sure you can! RedHat, SuSE, etc all sell Linux. You have to provide the SOURCE for the GPL'ed portions, that's what has to be provided. I don't think SuSE even provides dowloads of thier distro anymore.

    They provide the source, but not the actual ISOs or other form of download. I consider myself pretty savvy when it comes to dealing with OSS software, and I wouldn't want to take on compiling all of the elements of a distro!

    Minor difference? Am I nitpicking? Maybe, but it's still important!

    --

    Computer Science is Applied Philosophy
  40. Easter Europe by pmancini · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The remark about piracy holding Eastern Europe back is partially right. In Russia, Ukraine and other states you can pick up just about any software for next to nothing. Imagine paying $1.80US for Windows XP Professional? The piracy rings there are so good you get it fully cracked, you get it in nice packaging and if you need help they can sell you a ton of books that have been scanned into PDF format also on CD.

    The problem isn't piracy. It is a lack of respect or even awareness of Intellectual Property in my opinion. There is no respect for it at all, it seems, in these countries. Their legislatures are just now starting to examine laws concerning it. I am not sure which industry is bigger: China's piracy rings or Russia's. In China the piracy goes to aid specific Red Army units (in fact the rings are allegedly controled by Army Generals).

    It is an interesting problem. While we want to business with these countries, lack of protections makes it nearly impossible. At least under the rules and structure of Capitalism. While those rules can lead to our current situation where we have an agressively bad and dangerous monopoly controlled by Bill Gates, they generally are good and promote sane business practices. My hope is that Eastern Europe reforms. With China, I don't see and end coming to their ways of doing business.

    1. Re:Easter Europe by j09824 · · Score: 2
      I completely agree: getting Windows XP "Professional" for a mere $1.80 would be enough to sabotage the intellectual development of any nation. Trash like that should be made so expensive that it is out of the reach of most people.

      Let's hope the Eastern European legislatures crack down on this kind of problem. When Windows XP costs $200, as God intended it to, then open source software will look a lot more attractive to those people.

    2. Re:Easter Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Average yearly wages for these people is maybe 1000 bucks. And thats for the upper middle class. China is a country full of peasants that make less than 300 a year.
      If the BSA is such a bunch of dumb MF that they think anyone is going to have enough money to pay full price for microsoft products then they deserve to spend a few years in a gulag in Siberia. Talk about an organization that has to work incredibly hard to justify its own existence!!!

    3. Re:Easter Europe by mickwd · · Score: 2

      "The problem.....is a lack of respect or even awareness of Intellectual Property in my opinion".

      Perhaps, as they are different countries to your own they have different cultures, different ideas and different laws.

      Perhaps it is you who is showing a lack of respect.

      And as for the proceeds of piracy going directly to the Red Army......are you some sort of CIA intern on a Propaganda 101 course ?

    4. Re:Easter Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since when does the US system of economics define that which is Capitalism?

      The 'rules and structure' of the US system have very little to do with those of Capitalism.

      With bottom line tax rates exceeding 50% of personal income, the US system is far more Socialist than Capitalist.

      The rules of engagement between a person and their employer is government backed, and Communist in nature. (Why is Enron in charge of your retirement plan, medical data, etc. etc.?) Further, the government's role in the economy by selectively spending those taxes is that of centralized management, also a very Communist, and totaly un-Capitalist, ideal.

      The rules of engagement between corporation and the customer are also government backed and have pretty clearly crossed the line into Economic Fascism.

      Capitalist? Sorry, no.

    5. Re:Easter Europe by cybercuzco · · Score: 2
      While we want to business with these countries, lack of protections makes it nearly impossible. At least under the rules and structure of Capitalism.

      Pure capitalism has only one rule, supply and demand. Somone needs to take a course on economics. In a true lassiz faire free market economy, there are no rules and regulations. The market for products drives the price. if somone can produce something for cheaper and people are willing to buy it, it will get made. This is what is happening in Russia and China. Entrepreneurs are able to manufacture CD's with software on them for cheaper than the original manufacturers can. These entrepreneurs also dont need to pay R&d costs for the software, so they get an additional savings. Its like generic goods. I could buy Kleenex, or i could buy generic facial tissue. Yes generic facial tissue is a little rough around the edges, but it performs exactly the same function as kleenex does, at a cheaper price. Thats Capitalism.

      --

    6. Re:Easter Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Have any of you ever spent a month on $100 salary? Having a university degree, working a scientific job and yet - barely managing to pay one's taxes, etc.? Barely making both ends meet? And you expect such people to spend $20 on winzip, for example, or $200 for windoze?!?

      Yes, you would say, go use Linux or some other free OS. But imagine you are a university student in CS. How are you supposed to learn M$ technologies if you are to stand a chance in life? And why the fuck should you give your last savings (with which you plan to buy yourself a 10-year-old car, for instance, or maybe a refrigerator) to a software company on the other side of the world, when you can simply call a friend and have your copy of Visual Studio within a few days?

      Get real guys! The world does NOT rotate around software and licences everywhere. Some people do what they need to do to *survive*.

      Then again, it would be nice to have a windows-like programming environment for linux, so you can learn MS technologies without being a criminal and without starving...

    7. Re:Easter Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > It is a lack of respect or even awareness of Intellectual Property in my opinion.

      Probably because Intellectual Property is an oxymoron. I can't blame them for not respecting something that is a conflict in itself.

    8. Re:Easter Europe by mike449 · · Score: 1

      There was no IP in Soviet Uion. All fruits of any albor became property of the state. For example, an inventor received a fixed sum of money when he filed a patent, and gave up all his rights. Then everyone could use the invention immediately.
      I hope this helps to explain (not justify) the widespread illegal copying. And low salaries, of course.
      Ironically, many Soviet inventions were used by Western companies without any compensation (i.e. pirated), because there was very little IP rights enforcement attempted by the Soviet state abroad.

    9. Re:Easter Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting that you should mention both Russia and China. It's a pity though that you didn't check to see what the legal interpretation of copyright is in those nations.

      Neither of those countries is signatory to the international conventions on copyright, so what they're doing (selling software and scanned publications for little more than the cost of the CD)... is perfectly legal .

    10. Re:Easter Europe by kruczkowski · · Score: 2

      That's the hole point.

      Microsoft wants people to get hooked on the software, make a name so when to do get in the position to recomend software for an organization they will recomend what they know and that will be MS.

      And in Ukrane every CD is $2, be it porn or Windows XP Pro. Office XP Pro will be $8 for the 4 cd's. And if you want to know, wives cost $2000 and it includes lawyer fees and papers to get her in the US. I know becouse they have big ads at the airport.

      --
      hmm... for fun I enjoy launching DDoS attacks against 127.87.42.5
    11. Re:Easter Europe by Reziac · · Score: 2

      It's doubtless a whole lot easier to have an "awareness of intellectual property" if you're making more than $40/month, as is all too common in that part of the world.

      IOW, don't expect people to pay U.S. prices in countries where U.S. income levels don't apply, regardless of the people's personal ethics about illegally-copied software. That $1.80 per copy may well be a higher proportion of the buyer's income than the $180 you paid in the U.S.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    12. Re:Easter Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "in fact the rings are allegedly controled by Army Generals"

      "In fact" and "allegedly??" And, you didn't even provide any facts either. Don't speak out of your ass because you're incriminating yourself to be a moron.

      If piracy is so bad in those countries, then why not pack your bags and get out of doing business in those countries? They're obviously not a capitalist society, so isn't it stupid to continue to do business there???

    13. Re:Easter Europe by pmancini · · Score: 1
      And as for the proceeds of piracy going directly to the Red Army......are you some sort of CIA intern on a Propaganda 101 course ?


      Nope, I just read the world news. Not just American news. Having traveled all over the world I've come to enjoy varying perspectives. This is not speculation, they flaunt the fact in China.


      As for your innuendo that I may be disrespectful, I answer that if telling the truth as I see is disrepectful then consider me a happy bore.

  41. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by jordan_a · · Score: 2

    That doesn't explain why they are on a holy war against all things GPL. If they don't want to use it, that's fine, but why bitch that nobody else should use it either?

  42. Piracy works for Microsoft by totierne · · Score: 2

    Microsoft would secretly love to carpetbomb Eastern Europe, Russia, China etc. with their software.

    People learn to use Microsoft and end up paying later, or encouraging other people to use microsoft through a network effect ('everyone uses Word/Excel'). If Microsoft software was available only at full price they would be more likely to try other alternative. The main battle is for mindshare not dollars.

    Piracy allows microsoft to effectively sell cheap, without being accused of dumping.

    1. Re:Piracy works for Microsoft by totierne · · Score: 1

      >If Microsoft software was available only at full price they would be more likely to try other alternative [typo]
      If Microsoft software was available only at full price the users would be more likely to try an alternative

      For comparison assume
      Open Office cost $0 utility $0:

      MSWord/Excel cost $300 , utility $600
      [20 hours saved in not learning another 'non MS standard' piece of software at $30 dollars an hour]
      in Eastern Europe the utility is $200 dollars [ 20 hrs @ $10 an hour]
      so it is better to put up with spending a few hours learning Open Office, then pay for MSWord/Excel at full price.

      Open Office gets a WIN.. but

      Microsoft 'wins'/cheats :) by having pirate MS Word/Excel available at $50, making MS Word/Excel the more lucrative option by $150.

  43. Well, at least they are making that clear by JudasBlue · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is probably off topic, but I feel the need to share it.

    It is easy for those of us hip to the open source movement to laugh at this crap from MS, even though we know that some end users and such might be taken in by it. But the depths to which MS FUD penetrates the general IT community is bloody incredible to me.

    Yesterday I was talking with a mid-level QA engineer from Apple. This guy is working on a very complex product. He knows how to code.

    We start talking about software development, and I mention some things I am working on, mostly centered on Linux. At which point he says:

    "That's cool, but anything you do on Linux you would have to give away for free, right?"

    Contrary to what everyone is thinking, this guy isn't stupid. He isn't even technically inept. He works on a complex project and knows what he is doing in his problem domain.

    Anything that MS might say about Linux and open source that isn't totally negative should be lauded, because a LOT more people than some of us realize, people we think should know better, apparently are buying pretty much everything MS is trying to spread about open source and Linux.

    --

    7. What we cannot speak about we must pass over in silence.

    1. Re:Well, at least they are making that clear by jim3e8 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps the open-source community needs to put out some Sprint PCS-like ads. For example, a likeable spokesperson could run into the Blue Man Group, intuit from their color that they'd been using buggy Microsoft products, and then restore them to normal with free software. There should be some humor in there, too.

    2. Re:Well, at least they are making that clear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "That's cool, but anything you do on Linux you would have to give away for free, right?" That guy belongs to the old industrial scociety where you sell products, in the new intellectual/knowledge scociety you sell knowledge and the product comes by the way.

  44. eh? by Danse · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    The Jews and Christians don't because their god is the biggest, not the only.

    Show me one place where Christians or Jews acknowledge the possible existance of any god but their own.

    --
    It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    1. Re:eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ok, where does it say that there arent?

      1) define a Deity
      2) how do the "angels" of the christan faith not fit that definition?
      3) "thou shall have no other gods before me" not "Im the only one"

    2. Re:eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll bite.

      Satan, Beezlebub, Lucifer. A god to some, and definitely aknowledged in the bible, as well as by Christians around the world.

      That doesn't even take into consideration that Christians have free will, and are prone to believe things not expressly stated in the tenants of their religion. I personally believe in a system of diety's much like budhism, with entities with differing planes of conciousness. 7 planes, only on entity has ever reached 7 or 6, all the budhas reach 5 (as well as other dieties probably).

      It was a pretty pompous, and unenlightened response you rattled off their.

    3. Re:eh? by anti-snot · · Score: 1

      OK: Judges 16:23 "Then the lords of the Philistines gathered them together for to offer a great sacrifice unto Dagon their god, and to rejoice: for they said, Our god hath delivered Samson our enemy into our hand. "

    4. Re:eh? by Danse · · Score: 1

      That doesn't acknowledge another god. That simply acknowledges that the heathens believed there was another god.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    5. Re:eh? by Danse · · Score: 1

      For my purposes, a deity would be anything/anyone considered by Christians or Jews to be a god, as that is what the original post said. I have never heard of angels being considered gods by anyone. As for number 3, that's hardly acknowledgement of another god. I'm talking specifics here. Do Christians or Jews acknowledge the existance of any other gods, regardless of stature?

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    6. Re:eh? by anti-snot · · Score: 1
      For a spirit who is the one and only, he really seems to have an ego problem at times, no? "Thou shalt have no other gods before me", etc, seems to imply more negative consequences for other 'gods' than worshiping no god at all.

      I realize that I can't assign modern language patterns to the bible either, but if it were written as such today, I would take the assignment of a formal name to the other diety as a pretty strong indication acknowledging his existence. There is nothing in that passage to indicate the bibles endorsement or lack thereof of this other god... its all up to the assumptions of the reader.

    7. Re:eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the parent was asking for a non-circular definition of deity. Hint: deity is a god, and a god (look it up in a dictionary) is a deity -- does not work.

    8. Re:eh? by Danse · · Score: 1

      Lucifer was an angel, not a god. That he fell from grace does not make him a god, unless you can show me some Christian or Jewish source that says that it does.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    9. Re:eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What strange kind of buddhism do you believe in that says that all the buddhas aren't *completely* enlightened, and some other being is *more* enlightened (reached 6th or 7th plane)?!

    10. Re:eh? by Danse · · Score: 1

      It's not circular. The original post said:"

      "The Jews and Christians don't because their god is the biggest, not the only."

      I never said a deity is a god or vice versa. When he asked me to define a deity, I merely pointed out that my definition is irrelevant, and what matters is what a Christian or Jew would consider a deity to be. That's completely different.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    11. Re:eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If a god is defined as a deity (it is in the dictionary (OED)), then your words "For my purposes, a deity would be anything/anyone considered by Christians or Jews to be a god" mean in effect:

      "For my purposes a deity would be anything/anyone considered by Christians or Jews to be a deity". And I repeat, this is a circular definition, and useless.

    12. Re:eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      OED: God:

      d. the god of this world: the Devil, Satan.

      1382 WYCLIF 2 Cor. iv. 4 In whiche the God of this world hath blyndid the soules of men out of the bileue.

      This is not a Christian or Jewish source, but it's clearly not totally unheard of to consider Him a God.

    13. Re:eh? by Danse · · Score: 1

      The operative phrase in that sentence is "considered by Christians or Jews", not "to be a deity." It's not saying that a deity is a deity. It's saying that a deity is anything that Christians or Jews consider to be a deity . That would be a limited subset of all deities.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
  45. Yeah, industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    For Microsoft the "industry" probably consists of sales centers. I'm romanian, Microsoft employs lots of romanian software developers, but not in Romania. They have to go to the USA.

    Don't get me wrong: piracy is bad. On the other hand, Microsoft should keep a low profile when talking about software industry in Eastern Europe.

    1. Re:Yeah, industry by Lclark · · Score: 1

      Ha, I live in romania right now, and when the people here are only making $80 a month and cant even afford food and heat why would they spend months of income for a operating system for their 3 year old computer? I think not. M$ should know that by now, if they cant make their software affordable what other opotions are there? I dont know of any other option these people have then to go down the street and buy a copy of the cd for 70 cents. That is if they can afford the electricity to run their computer at all. Hey if you are romanaian contact me :-)

  46. Grammar flame by kubrick · · Score: 1

    If anything, I believe piracy has progressed the software industry there

    'Progress' is an intransitive verb. Using it transitively (i.e. taking an object) makes it sound like part of a business report, and thus that sentence effectively loses all meaning, as no-one believes business reports :)

    --
    deus does not exist but if he does
  47. Gotta Love It by 4of12 · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    That backhanded clarification is just what I needed!

    "There is no truth to the rumours that Slashdot editors were denying that they were visited by authorities during a recent crackdown on child pornography on the internet."

    Probably we can expect further helpful educational tidbits that properly conform to Political Advertisement 101 Guidelines for drive by association with bad company.

    [Watch me go!]

    "The misguided expenditure of taxpayer money to persecute an American success story has nothing whatsoever to do with the purchasing power of special interests such as Sun Microsystems, Oracle and AOL/TW that are envious of Microsoft's leadership position."
    I think I left out Terrorism® and Working Families®, but otherwise it's pretty easy to write crap like this.
    --
    "Provided by the management for your protection."
  48. Someone needs to call shenannigans... by Danse · · Score: 3, Informative

    I can do a search for "warez" right now and probably come up with at least a million sites. These guys are so full of shit it should be criminal. They are deliberately misleading people about this issue. So, is anyone standing up to call them on it? Who has the clout to be heard there?

    --
    It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    1. Re:Someone needs to call shenannigans... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I did a search for one of the codenames for pirated software" on google and I only get 17 results... wonder what search engine they are using?

  49. Piracy is good for Big Business by Steveftoth · · Score: 1

    It is good for Big Business because it encourages vendor lock in. Just look at the most popular pirated packages, Windows, Photoshop, Office, 3DStudio Max. The only people who are really hurt by this are people who need the money to eat. Most 'real' work is done on licenced copies of the software. There's always going to be a rogue program or two around the office, but it seems to me that more pirating is done on off hours at home.

    Many of their 'losses' they claim are really not losses since many pirates don't actually use many of the programs they download. They just have them to have them, they are collectors. (Collect the entire Photoshop set version 1-10)

    Pirating has always existed, will always exist and in general I think helps the software industry. A copy is not as good as the original and if a company is only selling you a cd of information, with no value added by actually purchasing the program from them (nice manual, good support, etc), then they probably won't be in business for long anyway.

  50. Pass the word, it's time to changeover to Linux! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sample text to post to any windows web forum.

    No reason to run Windows anymore. No reason to keep paying Billy Gates his ransom. Mandrake Linux 8.2 is free and easy to use, not virus prone, doesn't crash and....
    LOOKS AND WORKS just like windows, plus....
    "SOT, a Linux-distributor is offering SOT Office, a free productivity suite partly based on OpenOffice, it is fully compatible with MS Office and StarOffice."
    More and more games are available now from major companies, all the hardware out there is pretty much supported now, and Linux comes with a lot of software already installed, nothing to buy!
    E-mail programs, web browsers and more are already installed! It's time to make the switch, and it's easy.
    You can FTP the CD-ROMs for free from this FTP site or other mirrors
    (make sure you use binary mode in your FTP transfer)

    KDE is "Windows" for the Linux OS, it's easy and is just like windows, but with all the software already installed for you.
    And there's always the Lindows project, but it's not ready yet. lindows
    The OpenOffice story is at slashdot or the SOT site
    And a good newbie site is HERE

    Why is this important to Windows users? One reason is if the RIAA has their way, Windows will be forced to make any MP3 type players copyright protected. Your only choice for freedom will be with Linux and open source.
    Windows always crashes and you get used to it. I remember when I ran Windows all the time I got used to the crashes and saving things every 2 minutes just in case. Now I leave things overnight and come back and it's still there. Even if a particular program crashes, the OS doesn't! I have seen Win 2000 crash blue screen too so it's not any better. $300 for NT isn't a good choice either.
    I spend several hours a week helping my friends with problems from viruses and locked up IE (spamware popups and hidden registry startups) and have been slowly changing them over to Linux.
    Linux doesn't get those viruses, I download them all the time just to look them over in a binary editor, people think I am crazy but they can't affect Linux. Viruses are very hard to make work on Linux, open source developers are security minded. What does that say about the Windows developers? Why run a OS that threatens your privacy and security?
    "Wine" for Linux will let you run some windows software, it is what Lindows is doing, and DOS runs fine on it. When "wine" crashes, you restart the WINDOW! it's funny!
    You have total control with Linux, you can run it 24/7 without worry, it's more hacker proof than any other OS and it's what the WWW is built on! Browsing and transfers are faster and the TCP/IP stack is designed better. Software RAID is possible and easy to do, hardware cards are supported. With Mandrake sharing a dial up connection over your private LAN is easy as pressing a few buttons.
    You can relax now, no more worries about spyware, crashes, restarts, viruses, hackers, firewalls, strange popups and a screwed up registry. There is no "registry" required in Linux, what a stupid concept that was. Spyware would be very hard to sneak past people since it's open source.
    Your "root" directory is protected, unlike windows, linux protects it's main "system" files from "user" files. No more calls to your "computer guy" in the middle of the night.
    I have personally installed Mandrake on 3 laptops and many, many different PCs, old and new. It is very, very easy now that 8.2 mandrake is out. I haven't paid for a software program in over 4 years now. I used to buy one every few months for Windows.
    After showing people Linux on my laptop they all want to try it out and are amazed at how easy the conversion was because it's just like windows!
    Give it a try! Linux programs are waiting for you to try them out! Spread the word! Pass some Linux CDs to your friends. It's time.

  51. Think of the Children! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Although the article notes the irony that despite all the piracy, software sales are forecast to grow from $50 billion in 2000 to about $90 billion by 2005.

    EGADS! Just imagine how much money could be made if we clamped down on piracy! $92 billion? $93?

  52. Re:Lower prices? Yeah, right. by kubrick · · Score: 1

    Also, enhanced competition? This in an industry in which the major play for any new company is 'get bought by Microsoft'?

    --
    deus does not exist but if he does
  53. another wrong assertion by stevenj · · Score: 4, Informative
    It is only illegal to copy it if you have specifically given up that right. As the GPL says, "Most [licences] are created with the purpose of taking away your rights..."

    You've got that backwards. It is only legal to copy a copyrighted work (other than for fair use) if you've been specifically granted that right by a license (e.g. the GPL). (IANAL)

    The default under copyright law is to forbid copying; most shrink-wrap "licenses" try to restrict your rights beyond the ordinary powers of copyright.

    --
    If a thing is not diminished by being shared, it is not rightly owned if it is only owned & not shared. S. Augustine
    1. Re:another wrong assertion by bokmann · · Score: 2

      OK, I agree that the default under copyright law is to prevent the copying, but my point still holds, that people need to understand that they are ALLOWED to copy linux.

      It is completely in the spirit and letter of the license that I can download any linux distro and install it on an infinite number of machines.

      Most people instinctively feel that you must be doing something wrong.

      The comment from the lawyer makes it sound like they are 'graciously' allowing that.

  54. A whole day? by JediTrainer · · Score: 5, Funny

    It took them a whole day?

    Geez. A quick Google search on 'warez' yields not merely a million, but 4,290,000 sites!

    Search took 0.04 seconds. How much are they paying these guys?

    --

    You can accomplish anything you set your mind to. The impossible just takes a little longer.
    1. Re:A whole day? by nolife · · Score: 2

      Maybe they used the MSN search engine (search.msn.com) where the first result returned is the BSA homepage, followed by a slew of FBI, Microsoft, and various other anti-piracy pages.

      I'd say the MSN search is slightly askew, a sad attempt by MS to control information. Thank you Google.

      --
      Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
    2. Re:A whole day? by NotAnotherReboot · · Score: 1

      make that 4,290,001 sites listed on google with the word warez in them.

  55. In other news... by spruce · · Score: 1

    In a recent interview Satan confirmed that the use of Windows does not automatically condemn you to an eternity of hellfire.

    "Well as it turns out, most of my subjects were Windows users, but there's no direct relationship. However with the MS purchase of evil who knows what's in store for the future."

  56. Microsoft Executive Says Linux Is Not Gay by Stonehead · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Seriously, any news here? This is just the usual rambling on piracy, which -despite all obvious exaggerations- is a problem, as it has always been for decades. But that headline shows zealotry on its finest. Microsoft has evil business practices, but it has human employees after all. DOH!

  57. silly silly BSA by grazzy · · Score: 1

    why cant they understand i make them a favour when i pirate adobes software?

    i would never afford to buy them to make some logos for a website or two i do in my sparetime. but on the other hand i learn how to use their programs ( im decent with both psp and premiere ).

    if an employee ever asked me if i wanted a video or image program i would answear adobe.

    they count so wrongly liberatly. and these "searches", utterly bullshit. non working passwordprotected zip-files that are broken.

  58. What is wrong with people?? by JMan1 · · Score: 1
    Piracy exists. Quit whining. Use it to help you instead of hurt you. Don't cripple your software. Let people "pirate" it. Big businesses will usually pay for software if they start using it, and lots of "pirates" wouldn't buy your product even if they couldn't get it for free. I know that every single piece of software I've ever bought, for myself or for the company I work for, I tried first. Often a "pirated" copy.


    What really gets me are the companies I call for an evaluation version of their software so that my company can figure out if it wants to buy a bunch, and the software companies don't want to provide a working version! Talk about shooting yourself in the foot.


    Software companies: why not look at piracy as FREE marketting, and just focus on getting the big customers to pay?

  59. SHHHH!!!! Don't say the code word! by Restil · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "We can't estimate how much piracy is on the net but in one day we found a million sites under a search for one of the codenames for pirated software," said a BSA spokesperson.

    I assume here they are referring to "warez". And yes, you will get a LOT of hits if you put that into a search engine. However, before you get TOO excited about it, understand that 99 times out of 100, you're more likely to find porn than pirated software if you actually visit any of those sites. Its a completely meaningless association.

    The majority of "warez" trading is done through IRC or usenet. Yet those who are striving to rid the internet of piracy rarely mention these treasure troves. Certainly they get mentioned as the breeding ground for evil "hackers" and for child porn distribution, but as far as piracy goes, they tend to stay rather mum about it.

    Could it be that their only real mission is one of sensationalism? They know for a fact that the average clueless newbie will do a hunt for pirated software on the web (because as far as they know, the web IS the internet), and will be disillusioned by all the porn websites, banners, and popups that they will figure its more trouble than its worth. They might trade with their friends and download some mp3's off Morpheus, but that will be the limit of their piracy activities.

    However, if lots of news articles spent a great deal of time complaining about the rampant piracy on IRC and usenet and other places, then that clueless newbie might actually decide for once that a clue isn't such a bad thing and venture into that world. "What do you mean that IE can't go there???" But once entrenched in that world, they'll be very difficult to "retrain".

    The public at large has been convinced by and large that child pornography and hacking are indeed "Bad things (tm)" and will probably avoid those places that distribute them. But software piracy hasn't reached that degree of evil in most people's eyes. So they will to some small degree actually seek it out. And deep down, there's probably an even bigger fear. Their preverbial sheep might stumble across something dangerous. "What's this here linux thing all about???"

    ok. Fine. Mod me down. :)

    -Restil

    --
    Play with my webcams and lights here
    1. Re:SHHHH!!!! Don't say the code word! by ZiZ · · Score: 1

      Actually, USENET piracy has diminished quite a bit since the proliferation of things that look like web browsers that let people read news. (Not that it's gone away, certainly; you can still find a lot of things on USENET if you're willing to spend the time). IRC? Same thing. If you've heard of it, it doesn't have many real warez-sharing folks on it anymore. (Private or restricted IRC servers and channels are another thing altogether...)

      No, the real place where warez are shared these days are peer-to-peer file transfer networks. Last time I checked on Kazaa, for instance, it reported 1.8 million users, sharing 380 million GIGABYTES of data - and a brief, mindless check turned up warez editions of just about everything you could ask for.

      Not, ahem, that I'm endorsing warez-over-P2P networks. They have enough troubles as it is...

      --
      This flies in the face of science.
    2. Re:SHHHH!!!! Don't say the code word! by morcheeba · · Score: 1

      It took them a day to find a million sites? They have to be going for a sensationalist angle -- anyone can find 4,290,000 sites in 0.04 seconds, but extending their search time and lowering the quantity of their results implies that they've gotten higher quality results -- though I doubt it. These results -- warez+zip (43,600 hits), warez+rar (24,700 hits), and warez+iso (32,000 hits) -- show that even simple qualifiers result in far fewer possible sites.

    3. Re:SHHHH!!!! Don't say the code word! by xenocide2 · · Score: 1
      Sorry man, but EFnet and FDFnet and et all are still kicking it around for warez. Sure, #united and #exceed are gone, but other channels have risen to take their place. Don't believe me then feel free to observe #imp-iso. This page helps to show whats going on.

      The way I see it the warez food chain enters the public at the IRC level, and USENET to some extent. From there things flow to private ftps and college shares, although most of that flow ends up on cd rather than public sharing. Then finally things start to trickle down to the p2p domain in a week or two. Of course as you work your way down this chain, the number of infringements becomes bigger. But the best way to stop the flow would be to nail the groups, ones a little more prominent than say "Drink or Die." Get ahold of a few Razor 1911 guys and the flow will almost die off.

      One caveat, this really doesn't hold as well for mp3's as the process has become well documented and nearly legitimized so much that many cd burner programs will handle it all for you.

      --
      I Browse at +4 Flamebait

      Open Source Sysadmin

    4. Re:SHHHH!!!! Don't say the code word! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >I assume here they are referring to "warez".
      >...
      >However, before you get TOO excited about it,
      >understand that 99 times out of 100, you're
      >more likely to find porn than pirated software
      >if you actually visit any of those sites.

      OH GOD I've got to try that!! I used to look for "porn" and all I got was pirated software!

    5. Re:SHHHH!!!! Don't say the code word! by phaze3000 · · Score: 2

      Fortunately most of the Razor1911 members aren't in the Americas. I believe DoD were targetted because most of their members were. I suspect that assuming the authorities feel that games piracy is a worthy target too (apps piracy seems to be their usual target, presumably because at $3000 for a piece of software it's much easy to invent these massive 'losses due to piracy', despite the fact that the vast majority of people downloading wouldn't have a hope of getting $3000 to spend on anything, let alone a piece of software they barley need) CLASS will be the next target, assuming they're still active (I'm not really into the warez scene any more, or at least not the PC warez scene.. :))

      --
      Blaming GW Bush for the Iraq war is like blaming Ronald McDonald for the poor quality of food.
    6. Re:SHHHH!!!! Don't say the code word! by Ian+Peon · · Score: 2
      I assume here they are referring to "warez".


      Naw, that's not it... remember that their saying that "copying" == "piracy"...


      Their search must have been for "GNU"

    7. Re:SHHHH!!!! Don't say the code word! by xenocide2 · · Score: 1

      Yea but what good would that do anyways? Oh no CLASS won't be releasing anymore fucked up games where you have to click on the right *pixel* on the OK button to continue.

      --
      I Browse at +4 Flamebait

      Open Source Sysadmin

  60. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by ackthpt · · Score: 1
    That doesn't explain why they are on a holy war against all things GPL. If they don't want to use it, that's fine, but why bitch that nobody else should use it either?

    In one word: Control.

    Per my previous post -- Microsoft's problem with free ideas is that they can't control them. No nice neat little IP License agreements or locking it away and suing everyond who tries to simulate or emulate. You can't even begin to become a monopoly if you don't have total control. Losing control means losing the monopoly.

    The funny part, really, is their approach is something like this:

    You and a friend buy one root beer float and ask for two straws. The soda jerk (Bill Gates) says no, only one straw per glass. If your friend wants a float than he has to buy his own. And don't even think about drinking half of it and then giving the other half to your friend. He'd probably have a EULA printed on the bottom of every glass.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  61. Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The US and Europe give billions of dollars to Israel and television reporting lets Israel's army get away with murder. Every time anybody dares to criticize Israel's policies, the Israeli government and American Jewish organizations are up in arms calling people "anti-semitic". And you think Israel isn't manipulating world opinion?

    Israel has displaced millions of people from their homes, failed to pay compensation, forced millions of people to live under occupation for decades, and has been settling areas that don't belong to them. Anywhere else, this would be called "apartheid" and "ethnic cleansing". And they have been able to get the world to accept this as if it were the most natural and justified thing in the world.

    I feel sorry for the Israeli people. They really deserve a safe and secure home around their ancestral homeland. But until they elect a government that respects human rights of all the people under their control and honestly works towards peace, until they start viewing Palestinians as human beings, it's a sad fact that they are condemning themselves to continued war, bloodshed, and terrorism.

    1. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course the Palestinians would never use propaganda. And blowing up innocent civilians is the most natural, justified thing in the world.

    2. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Every time anybody dares to criticize Israel's policies, the Israeli government and American Jewish organizations are up in arms calling people "anti-semitic".

      Which is utterly ironic considering that Israel has the lowest proportion of semitic people in the area. The label of "anti-semitic" far better fits what the Israeli government is up to on the West Bank.

      Israel has displaced millions of people from their homes, failed to pay compensation, forced millions of people to live under occupation for decades, and has been settling areas that don't belong to them. Anywhere else, this would be called "apartheid" and "ethnic cleansing".

      Several people, including the archbishop of Capetown, have already drawn attention to the obvious parallel.

      I feel sorry for the Israeli people. They really deserve a safe and secure home around their ancestral homeland.

      The best way for a country not to be safe and secure is to honk off all it's neighbours. The "ancestral homeland" bit is very suspect. Since many of the people in Israel are from Europe and North America. the only people who can make a sensible claim to this part of the world as their "ancestral homeland" are the Palestinians they have terrorised for the last half century.

    3. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fact that you use words like apartheid and ethnic clensing to describe Israel's activities shows that Israel is not able to manipulate world opinion to nearly the same extent as it's neighbors.

      Did you know that Israel is the only country in the Middle East with elected government officials who are Arabs? Or that over a million Arabs have Israeli citizenship with the same rights as Jewish Israelis? Or that before the current intifada, Israel treated the Palestinians better than countries such as Iraq, Jordan, and Syria treat their own citizens? If that's apartheid, then what do you call what did you call South Africa's treatement of blacks????

      The Israelis elected a government that respected human rights and worked towards peace once already. The prime minister's name was Ehud Barak. He offered the Palestinians everything Arafat now claims he wants. Instead of accepting it, Arafat ordered the murder of Israeli civilians. The Israelis got the message that making compromises was not going to change anything, so they elected Ariel Sharon the War Criminal. I disagree with his tactics as much as the next guy, but I can hardly blame those who elected him.

      Can someone PLEASE explain to me why the left wing supports a theocracy which is far beyond a police state over a society which is more democratic than that in the US? I DON"T GET IT!!!

    4. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The parent to your post never implied such a thing.

    5. Re:Huh? by berimbau · · Score: 1

      By the way, have you read this interview with Ariel Sharon in 1982? He knew what he was talking about...

    6. Re:Huh? by berimbau · · Score: 1
      The fact that you use words like apartheid and ethnic clensing to describe Israel's activities shows that Israel is not able to manipulate world opinion to nearly the same extent as it's neighbors.

      Wrong. The fact that only now the world's opinion on the Middle East conflict is changing shows the jewish propaganda is an extremely well-oiled machine. But there comes a time when corpses stink so badly they can no longer be hidden...

  62. Windows is an illegal restraint of trade by Animats · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    But Microsoft Windows is definitely an illegal restraint of trade. That's what the court decided. Remember?

  63. In even tinyer words (or is that more tiny) by nyet · · Score: 2

    Nice twist with "the product has value to you" mental gymnastics... so here's a few questions for you.

    1) What if getting a copy the product required no effort on my part?

    2) Are all things I get free of charge that are "of value to me" AND that somebody else sells piracy? For example, I hire somebody to clean my windows, I learn how they do it, then fire them and clean my windows myself. Is that piracy? Or shall we patent/copyright "a method for cleaning windows?"

    1. Re:In even tinyer words (or is that more tiny) by Kwil · · Score: 1

      1. No effort on your part? So you're just sitting there, someone walks in and throws it on your computer? In that case, the piracy falls to the person who put it on your computer if they didn't get the product legally. They're the ones it had value to (as a gift for you). If the author later activates some sort of universal-delete on all pirated copies and you lose your software, that's the fault of the person who provided it to you, not the author.

      2. No, because of gifts. It's entirely possible to receive something free of charge and of value to you that somebody else sells, and totally legally too, provided that who you get it from got it legally. As for your example, that's service v. product. To set the proper basis for your analogy, the other side would be you download a software product, you think "that's a cool product," so you then sit down and code your own. No piracy there at all. Ideas are free, implementations are not. This applies whether the idea is washing your windows, a software product, or a car. If you're willng to put the work into your own implementation, you too can wash your windows, build a car, or create a software product. If you're not, and the person who has wants money for their work in implementing, you either owe them the money or you don't use their implementation.

      --

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

    2. Re:In even tinyer words (or is that more tiny) by parliboy · · Score: 2
      nyet:

      Did you pay them for cleaning your windows before you fired them, or did you ask to know what their technique was under the pretense of hiring them, and then use their technique to do it yourself? If the latter, it's not piracy, but it is fraud. Submit yourself for flogging. And don't say that window cleaning is something that falls under common knowledge. After all, you had to learn it from a professional, didn't you?

      --
      "You're never ready, just less unprepared."
    3. Re:In even tinyer words (or is that more tiny) by x-empt · · Score: 2

      Or shall we patent/copyright "a method for cleaning windows?"

      Haha, yeah its called Windex. Hundreds of patents for cleaning windows...

      Why hasn't Microsoft attacked Windex as much as they've been attacking the GPL?

      --
      Ever need an online dictionary?
  64. If, according to Smith, "piracy is copying..." by trudyscousin · · Score: 1

    ...then Microsoft is guilty of pirating Apple like nothing else.

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, write technology blogs.
  65. Re:In other news... by NorthDude · · Score: 1

    They did not like the analogy I guess...

    --


    I'd rather be sailing...
  66. quote by waspleg · · Score: 1

    "If there wasn't piracy there would be more software companies in Russia and Eastern Europe," he said.

    "Instead Russia has become an enclave for pirated software and Microsoft has recently declared a five-month amnesty for Russian and Ukrainian internet cafes to switch to legally licensed software."

    M$ grants amnesty? what a joke, dont' they knwo that the russian mafia runs russian interests now, if i were an inet cafe owner in russia

    it's not like they have any enforcement power there anyway

    i would be shocked if even ONE of them bought ONE "legal" copy

  67. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by elflord · · Score: 2
    Sure you can! RedHat, SuSE, etc all sell Linux.

    No, they don't. If they were "selling Linux", ftp.kernel.org would be a better deal.

    They provide the source, but not the actual ISOs or other form of download. I consider myself pretty savvy when it comes to dealing with OSS software, and I wouldn't want to take on compiling all of the elements of a distro!

    Exactly. They're selling the packaging and more importantly, maintenance of that packaging. They are not selling the software itself. In particular, they may fund software development, but this doesn't directly provide them with revenue (because the end result of that development is given away)

  68. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by scott1853 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Comments like yours do more to hurt than to help with this problem.

    Ok, if you're going to mark /. as the root of all evil then at least explain yourself.

    Secondly, Yes, a lot of people are under the impression that open source means "free as in beer" because it DOES! Look at Freshmeat or SourceForge and try to find some pay products. The percentage probably can't get measures in whole numbers.

    Lastly, who the hell that reads /. or knows what open source is, doesn't know that Linux is an OS and not an idea or an action.

  69. Bradford L. Smith by deft · · Score: 3, Informative

    "Look at the Brain on Brad!"

    Smith graduated summa cum laude from Princeton University, where he received the Class of 1901 Medal, the Dewitt Clinton Poole Memorial Prize, and the Harold Willis Dodds Achievement Award, the highest award given to a graduating senior at commencement. He was a Harlan Fiske Stone Scholar at the Columbia University School of Law, where he received the David M. Berger Memorial Award. He also studied international law and economics at the Graduate Institute of International Studies in Geneva, Switzerland. He has written numerous articles regarding international intellectual property and electronic commerce issues and has served as a lecturer at the Hague Academy of International Law.

    --

    There's nothing Intelligent about Intelligent Design.
    1. Re:Bradford L. Smith by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for the informative post, Brad.

    2. Re:Bradford L. Smith by crudeboy · · Score: 1

      Impressive but it doesn't really matter here since the standard slashdotter will probably dimiss him as not worth listening to since he happen to work for the evil empire, right?

    3. Re:Bradford L. Smith by HiThere · · Score: 2

      True. The credentials means that he's probably lying by policy instead of by accident. All the credentials in the world won't change a false statement to a true statement.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  70. How about a trademark? by drew_kime · · Score: 4, Funny

    Or shall we patent/copyright "a method for cleaning windows?"

    I believe Linus holds the trademark on "Linux," and I've used it to clean Windows off of several systems.

    --
    Nope, no sig
    1. Re:How about a trademark? by Decimal · · Score: 2

      | Input command:

      > TRADEMARK "FORMAT C:\"

      | WARNING! This will cause you to recieve royalties anytime someone decides to uninstall Windows. Are you sure you want to do this?

      > Y

      | Screwing consumers: 31% complete...

      --

      Remember "Bring 'em on"? *sigh
  71. Linux, piracy confusion by z_gringo · · Score: 1

    Did I miss something or had someone previously insinuated that Linux was somehow piracy. Linux is not a method of developing software either. Perhaps Brad Smith doesn't realize what Linux is. OR Perhaps he is just trying to confuse people. Either way, He didn't make much sense.

    And the 34% figure doesn't seem believable either.

    --
    -- -- Warning. Do not stare directly at the sun.
  72. Several logic flaws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1) The "rest of the world" consists of euro trash and savages. Therefore you are not civilized.

    2) You spelled "civilized" wrong. Britain is a third world shit hole of a country. Therefore the British spelling is incorrect, proving that you are indeen uncivilized.

    3) 11-9-01 refers to the date of Novermber 9, 2001. The ass-backward date system is that of the euro trash, because, well, they are euro trash.

    4) The reason why "the rest of the world" hates America is because we are #1 and you are simply lowly euro trash. At least the Arab Muslims have the guts to act on their hatred (the ones that actually take part, not the ring leaders). You euro trash are too cowardly to do even that. That makes you euro trash even lower than the Arabs!

    1. Re:Several logic flaws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Actually, the only nations I've seen show signs of disliking us are the stupid communist nations(China, N Korea), the middle east, and some of the Euro Trash nations. Not all.

      2) Their spelling is acceptable. I don't like the s/z changing, but it is acceptable. Let's us know a mile away they're probably a fucking moron extremist environmentalist, raving about kyoto - which only one country adheres to.

      3) I've never left the US, but I prefer the international date system. Much like I prefer the metric system. (Based on tens, not some fruit randomness)

      4) Agreed.

  73. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by flatrock · · Score: 2

    They don't sell Linux. They charge for the distribution media and support. They legally can't sell Linux. They also developed very little of what goes into their Linux distributions. They are making money distributing other people's software and providing support. Red Hat, SuSE, etc are NOT software companies. They do very little product development, and have very little overhead because the software they support and distribute is free.

  74. Funny numbers by EastCoastSurfer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "The meeting was told that in 2000 the software industry in Europe lost $3bn to pirates."

    I am always curious where they actually come up with these numbers. Some kid in his basement downloading a $3,000 software package hasn't actually cost the industry anything b/c he wouldn't have bought it anyway. Now if a company like IBM bought 1 copy of office and installed on every corporate desktop then I think that is a real problem. The real question is how many companys are really in gross violations of the current laws?

    1. Re:Funny numbers by ScoLgo · · Score: 1

      Now if a company like IBM bought 1 copy of office and installed on every corporate desktop then I think that is a real problem.

      Hmmmm. I wonder if Microsoft paid for every copy of Windows, Office, etc. that they're running? I'm sure their stockholders would be interested in the answer to that one! ;-]

      --
      "Michael, I did nothing. I did absolutely nothing - and it was everything that I thought it could be."
    2. Re:Funny numbers by Stonehand · · Score: 2

      If the kid and other kids like him created a demand and the $3000 software package got duplicated at least partly because of him, he caused damage.

      If he downloaded it instead of buying a cheaper alternative that he might have opted for instead, well, yes, he caused damage.

      If he spreads the meme that software infringement is alright, say, "at least if it's Microsoft or {insert big-company-name here}" he's also causing damage, as he's encouraging others. People don't act in isolation. Recall that Napster worked because of numbers -- more people infringing meant lots of sources for people to download.

      As for companies, well, that's why there are audits...

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    3. Re:Funny numbers by dirk · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "The meeting was told that in 2000 the software industry in Europe lost $3bn to pirates."

      I am always curious where they actually come up with these numbers. Some kid in his basement downloading a $3,000 software package hasn't actually cost the industry anything b/c he wouldn't have bought it anyway. Now if a company like IBM bought 1 copy of office and installed on every corporate desktop then I think that is a real problem. The real question is how many companys are really in gross violations of the current laws?


      I have no idea how they arrive at that number, but in reality ever copy of software that is downloaded (and used, so they people that just trade software and never use any of it don't count) usually costs someone something. If someone needs a photo editing program and they d/l a cracked copy of Photoshop, they most probably would not have paid for Photoshop, so they rightly did not cost Adobe $500 (or whatever the going rate is). Of course this is not always true, but in a general sense. It is the makers of the Gimp and small apps like Paint Shop Pro that have really lost the money (okay, Gimp lost users not money, but they still lost something). These people probably can't afford Photoshop and probably wouldn't have bought it, but they probably can afford a cheaper app (or a free app) but they don't use it because they can pirate Photoshop for free. If they need a photo editing app, they may not have bought Photoshop, but they would have bought something if they really needed it. But instead they bought nothing, choosing to get a pirated version instead. So no, ever person who d/ls and uses a cracked copy of Photoshop is not costing Adobe $500, but they are costing the smaller companies and free software instead.

      --

      "Information wants to be expensive" - Stewart Brand, the same guy who said "Information wants to be free"
    4. Re:Funny numbers by jfengel · · Score: 2

      Nearly every corporation I've ever seen has at least a few instances of people who should have been buying software but chose to pirate it instead. That's often by re-installing software that they already own a license to, since few licenscing schemes bother to detect that.

      This is often done more for convenience than because people are making some sort of economic decision like, "MS Word is worth only $50 to me, so I'll make a second install of this one that I paid $100 for." If you go out to buy the software, you need to get money out of some budget for it, and have to justify that purchase. Even if the purchase is totally justifiable, it's usually just easier to steal it. These are people who want to get their work done.

      I've never known a company to resort to getting it off warez sites, precisely because that would require some effort.

    5. Re:Funny numbers by PzyCrow · · Score: 1

      ACtually I would say, not only does he not cost the company money, they actually gain money from him.

      The really expensive software packages is probalby only bought by companies.
      Lets say 3D-studio MAX. This kid d/l a pirated 3D studio MAX 4 ($3495). He spends a year or two learning the program an makeing some kewl 'l33t logos for som warez group.

      Few year later he decide to work with 3d modelling. What program does he know? 3D-stuidio! So he gets his company to buy a copy for him.
      Probalby he has already taught some friends the prog too and told a bunch of people what a great program it is.

      And for MSWindows, for each user pirating WIndows that's one less user spreading the "disease" Linux, and one more user requiering a Windows desktop at work.

    6. Re:Funny numbers by forkalsrud · · Score: 1

      > So no, ever person who d/ls and uses a cracked copy of
      > Photoshop is not costing Adobe $500, but they are
      > costing the smaller companies and free software instead.

      You're too kind to Adobe here. Every time a kid learns to use PhotoShop from a cracked copy, Adobe has received tens of dollars worth of free marketing of its PhotoShop product, at the expense of PaintShop, Gimp and the other competitors. Conider 5 or 10 years later. What would happen if the kid had been forced to use the Gimp instead of PhotoShop in his/her early years?

    7. Re:Funny numbers by armb · · Score: 2

      > I am always curious where they actually come up with these numbers.

      Made them up, probably. 78.5% of all statistics are made up on the spot to sound good.

      --
      rant
  75. You missed a step by drew_kime · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You go into a store. Software Product A is sitting on the shelf for $10.

    You decide that Product A isn't worth $10 to you. (The step you missed)

    You go around to your friend's house. Software Product A is copied to you for free.

    Producer of Software Product A has now lost a $10 sale.


    Oops, except that the producer wouldn't have had that sale anyway. So while the revenue lost to unauthorized redistribution is probably non-zero, it is ceratinly not the total retail value of the number of unauthorized copies.

    --
    Nope, no sig
    1. Re:You missed a step by slamb · · Score: 2
      > > You go into a store. Software Product A is sitting on the shelf for $10.

      > You decide that Product A isn't worth $10 to you. (The step you missed)

      > > You go around to your friend's house. Software Product A is copied to you for free.

      All other things being equal, if there were a product being sold at Store A and Store B for $50 and $30, respectively, I'd buy it at Store B. It doesn't mean it wasn't worth $50 to me, it meant I didn't want to burn $20.

      Granted, all other things are not equal here - to most people, not breaking the law is worth something. But it is not true that all people who pirate software do not consider the software to be worth its purchase price.

    2. Re:You missed a step by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You go into a store. Software Product A is sitting on the shelf for $10.

      You decide that Product A isn't worth $10 to you. (The step you missed)

      You go around to your friend's house. Software Product A is copied to you for free.

      Producer of Software Product A has now lost a $10 sale.

      Oops, except that the producer wouldn't have had that sale anyway.


      You made a mistake. The price should be:
      • $609
      which is the price of Photoshop.

      No 15 year old has $609 to spend on Photoshop. Period. When they copy it, no sale is lost. What does happen however, is that another phososhop trained geek is born, who will influence someone to buy it if she doesnt buy it herself eventually.

      But you know this.

      And please dont give me the Gimp==Photoshop line, cause Gimp!=Photoshop by a longshot.
    3. Re:You missed a step by bogusflow · · Score: 1

      "You decide that Product A isn't worth $10 to you. (The step you missed)"

      Wait a minute here. What is Product A worth then? After all if you were willing to make that free copy, there must have been something compelling about Product A that convinced you to make the effort to get it. Its a chicken-and-egg scenario. The reason that Product A isn't worth the $10 to YOU is that you know you can get a copy for $0. You are pointing out your own lack of moral values in regard to theft. We all know Range Rovers aren't "worth" $70k but would you be willing to buy one for $15k if you knew it was stolen? Piracy may be easy, but that doesn't make it right.

      --
      8 bit computing - It may be 2007 out there, but it's 1983 in here!!
    4. Re:You missed a step by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      which is the price of Photoshop.

      Who's talking about photoshop?

    5. Re:You missed a step by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I personally copy plenty of pirated software, in case I may need it one day. Shame on me. Most of that software I never even try. So, the value of the software is virtually none, and the software producer hasn't lost anything. I think of my copies as "evaluation software" although they are full featured copies of the program.

    6. Re:You missed a step by jedidiah · · Score: 2

      As soon as you make comparisons to corporal theft, any agument you try to make is morally bankrupt. Liars posses no moral superiority.

      You also ignore the possibility of simply doing without. There's a strong likelihood that the $10 product simply won't be bought, PERIOD. The asking price may simply be too high. So the buyer doesn't bother. There is also the possibility of USED software as well as deep discounts that occur after a product has been on the market for awhile.

      The real effect might be something more along the lines of the $2 that the product in question might sell for in a bargain bin 6 months after it was originally released.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    7. Re:You missed a step by ashitaka · · Score: 1

      ... in case I may need it one day.

      And there, my friend, is the value.

      And come the day you "need" the software, will you pay for it?

      --
      If you don't want to repeat the past, stop living in it.
    8. Re:You missed a step by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      No, there are plenty of reason the software might not be valued at 10 dollars even though you want a copy. You might have no money (Kind of far-fetched for $10, but not tat far-fetced for Photoshop.), you might think you'd get more enjoyment out of two movies, or a good book, or whatever. (This whole 10 dollar thing is kind of surreal, BTW. I've never seen useful software less that $25.)

      Hence, you may want to purchase it if it's 10 dollars, but you would if it was 2 dollars. That's the very basis of economic theory there, that people are willing to give up to a certain value for something, and not any more. This obviously varies based on the person.

      Now, you are correct that the availablity of pirate software has a determination on this. So, yes, some people who would be willing to buy it are going to go with the much lower priced alternative of buying it, and, yes, this hurts sales.

      However, that doesn't have any bearing on the people who would not purchase it at the store price, those people are not, in an sense, 'customers', and software companies pretending they've lost sales to them is just dishonesty.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    9. Re:You missed a step by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who's talking about photoshop?

      If photoshop cost $10 in the shop, no one would warez it. You know that. Its STUPID to talk about shoplifting boxed software that costs $10. The reality is that Autocad costs $3000, Photoshop costs $600, Illustrator $800 and so on....

      This is the real reason why those titles are warezed. If they cost the same as music CDs....

      uh oh, better back up there.

      If they didnt have such huge price tags, mebbe they would sell more boxes.

  76. The war against page narrowing ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The free world is enaged in a war.
    The war against page narrowing.
    An axis of evil seeks to narrow all information on the internet.
    It's our duty to stop them.
    Sign here !

  77. +1 Nitpick, +1 correction by jonnythan · · Score: 2

    Sorry, but not only are you wrong, but the substance of your comment is about style, not grammar.

    "Progress" is usually an intransitive verb, but it does have an (mostly obsolete, but coming back in style as you noted) usage as a transitive verb.

    1. Re:+1 Nitpick, +1 correction by kubrick · · Score: 1

      Only coming back into style among people who can't communicate clearly, and need to make their sentences longer and more verbose in order to confuse people. :)

      Still, I guess it is a matter of taste; if people want to use archaic and clunky verb constructions, it's no skin off my nose :) Sorry to trouble you (and the original poster).

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
  78. How bad Piracy can get by codefungus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    One big motivation to stomp out piracy is the current piracy situation in China. It's pretty amazing, I think.
    Right now, Piracy is such a problem in China that it actually has an impact on their economy. However, the piracy is not on software like Microsoft Office or Adobe Photoshop, it's on the software that governs assembly lines and supports large scale manufacturing, etc.
    It's so established that there are actual private networks that have been built specifically for shuffling pirated software back and forth.
    So why doesn't the government go after these private networks? Because the cost of bandwidth on these networks is much cheaper than the regular service providers...which means you have regular, legal companies using these pirate networks for everyday business use. And to top it all off, the average joe looks at these pirates as the underdog against the big bad govnt. The Chinese government can't touch these nets because they risk putting a lot of small businesses, well, out of business.
    That's pretty scary to me.

    --
    -- A cat is no trade for integrity!
    1. Re:How bad Piracy can get by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pirated copies of Windows and Office are used by the Chinese Government themselves. They have the highest penetration of Windows / Office XP, despite not having bought a singe copy.

  79. For future reference... by eyeball · · Score: 5, Funny
    Linux is also not...
    • A vegitable
    • An animal
    • A mineral
    • A verb (although I have heard people say "let's linux this project," which made me want to slap them)
    • A birthcontrol device (well, arguably)
    • A form of martial arts
    • A cure for the common cold
    • A paint remover
    • A shoe manufacturer
    • A religion (arguably)
    etc...

    --

    _______
    2B1ASK1
    1. Re:For future reference... by Sosarian · · Score: 2, Funny

      # A birthcontrol device (well, arguably)

      boot: Do you consider yourself a celebrity?

      Torvalds: Sometimes. At conferences I have a lot of people coming up and talking to me. But at the same time I don't have young girls coming and screaming at me and throwing their underwear! Which is just as well, as I'm a married man!

    2. Re:For future reference... by fr2ty · · Score: 1

      Linux is a washing powder, didn't you know? Those of you who don't believe me read, read or read

    3. Re:For future reference... by zCyl · · Score: 2

      # A form of martial arts

      Sensei Stallman might disagree.

    4. Re:For future reference... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a floor wax

      a dessert topping

      credit where due:

      (Gilda Radner): New Shimmer is a floor wax.

      (Dan Aykroyd): No, new Shimmer is a dessert topping.

      (Gilda Radner): It's a fllor wax.

      (Dan Aykroyd): It's a dessert topping!

      (Gilda Radner): It's a floor wax, I'm telling you!

      (Dan Aykroyd): It's a dessert topping, you cow!

      (Chevy Chase): Hey, hey, hey, hey, calm down, you two.
      New Shimmer's a floor wax *and* a dessert topping.
      Here, I'll spray some on your mop and some on your
      butterscotch pudding.

      (Dan Aykroyd): Mmm, tastes terrrific!

      (Gilda Radner): And just look at that shine!

  80. So did you by spectecjr · · Score: 1

    You go into a store. Software Product A is sitting on the shelf for $10.

    You decide that Product A isn't worth $10 to you. (The step you missed)


    You decide that you will not use Product A at all, because copying it is morally, ethically and legally wrong. If it's not worth $10 to you, then why would you want a copy? (the step you missed).

    If it's not worth $10 to you, why are you making a copy? What possible value could that copy have to you?

    Well, obviously it's worth something. People don't do anything for no reason whatsoever.

    I bet you go to car dealerships and drive cars off the lot that are 'too expensive' for you too.

    Simon

    --
    Coming soon - pyrogyra
    1. Re:So did you by ryants · · Score: 2
      You decide that you will not use Product A at all, because copying it is morally, ethically and legally wrong. If it's not worth $10 to you, then why would you want a copy?
      This is called begging the question.
      If it's not worth $10 to you, why are you making a copy? What possible value could that copy have to you?
      Some value x where x < $10.
      I bet you go to car dealerships and drive cars off the lot that are 'too expensive' for you to
      False analogy. The car dealership is down 1 physical car, whereas in the software case the software publisher isn't down anything.
      --

      Ryan T. Sammartino
      "Ancora imparo"

    2. Re:So did you by Pentagram · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If it's not worth $10 to you, why are you making a copy? What possible value could that copy have to you?

      Clearly, less than $10, but more than nothing. But if I have already decided not to pay for a copy of the software, then logically no action on my part can possibly lose the firm in question a sale. This is self-evidently true. Of course, it depends on whether I would have bought a copy if I was unable to make a copy illegally.

      I bet you go to car dealerships and drive cars off the lot that are 'too expensive' for you too.

      An imbecilic analogy. If someone steals a car, someone loses a car: a zero-sum game. If, however, someone copies information, the original copy still exists.

      Whatever. I thought Adam Waring was funnier anyway.

    3. Re:So did you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bet you go to car dealerships and drive cars off the lot that are 'too expensive' for you too.

      Yup! I plan to do this a lot in the next couple months.

      Of course, it's assumed the car salesman will come with me.

      Also, the dealership gets to keep their car at the end of the day. And eventually i'm going to wind up buying a car.

      It's called a "test drive". The dealership lets me do a monitored drive off the lot so that i can see how well i like the car. They let me do this becuase they realize that if i am allowed to use the car, i will realize what a good car it is, and decide that expensive as it is it is worth that amount of money to me.

      In addition to needing a car, i am currently in the market for a piece of professional music//sequencing/MIDI editing software. In the last couple months i have pirated Logic Audio and i have pirated Reaktor. I did not pirate Reason, Cubase or Pro Tools, however, becuase each of those products offered no-save-feature demos that would metaphorically let the dealer escort me on a test drive off the lot. Logic and Reaktor didn't have such demos, so i pirated them. I will pay for the full version of one of these five programs within the next month, but, what, you think i'm going to buy a car that costs thousands of dollars without seeing how it is to drive?

      You think i'm going to pay $400 for a piece of software without becoming familiar enough with it to make sure that it provides everything i need in that product, and it is worth my money?

      (P.S. : Does anyone know if Reason 2.0 will have vst plugin support? I like Reason's flexible control-any-knob-via-MIDI thing, but the whole thing is no use to me if i can't use my homegrown vst plugins. And i really don't want to buy rewire just so i can use vst plugins in Reason. Also, i hear you can pull the sampler off the rack into its own window-- is that for any equipment piece or just the sampler?)

    4. Re:So did you by arkane1234 · · Score: 1

      You decide that you will not use Product A at all, because copying it is morally, ethically and legally wrong. If it's not worth $10 to you, then why would you want a copy? (the step you missed).

      Let's skip right to the point here... the last application/game/other binary I saw at the store that was $10 was a shareware application back in 1995. Most are > $50.00.

      All morals out of the way (morals? pashaw... no one thinks of morals when I'm on the recieving end of a screw) it isn't in any regards stealing. Hell, the least that any company could do is offer a legitimate demo. Most of the time, that's why it's done! I'll go on the line here and say that most of the copying of "pirated" software I have done is to evaluate it. I have a whole slew of purchased software over here because of it. However, if I find that it crashes my system, or it doesn't work as promised I use the nice delete function because sure enough, it's not worth my time.

      Well, obviously it's worth something. People don't do anything for no reason whatsoever.

      Evidentally you don't go outside very often :)

      I bet you go to car dealerships and drive cars off the lot that are 'too expensive' for you too.

      Well, if I could somehow replicate the car by driving it off the lot for 15 minutes, wouldn't you do it? LOL Besides, driving a car off of the lot for a test drive is legal... something I don't see in the software industry. However, the trend of little tidbits costing outrageous amounts of money tends to transcend the two industries.

      --
      -- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
  81. Scary reference to copying by Guido69 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    ...'Linux is a way of developing software whereas piracy is copying.'...

    This quote scares me. Nothing to see here regarding Linux and piracy. The second half of the sentence carries the real message MS wants to bring forth. Come on, say (chant) it after me:

    Linux is a way of developing software whereas piracy is copying.
    Linux is a way of developing software whereas piracy is copying.
    Linux is software whereas piracy is copying.
    Linux is software whereas piracy is copying.
    Piracy is copying.
    Piracy is copying.
    <therefore>
    Copying is piracy.
    Copying is piracy.

    Maybe I'm just being paranoid, but I don't think so. MS has a long history of very careful wordsmithing when it comes to public statements.

    --
    - If we aren't supposed to eat animals, then why are they made out of meat? - Steven Wright
    1. Re:Scary reference to copying by interstellar_donkey · · Score: 2

      So, in other words

      Linux is not piracy, just like Windows is not piracy. But copying Linux is piracy.

      "Did you pay for that young man?"
      'No! It's free! I got it off the Intenet'
      "Get in the truck, you're going downtown"
      'But I did'nt do anything'
      "Yeah right, Pirate."

      --
      The Internet is generally stupid
  82. Boy those MS Lawyers sure are quick by Uttles · · Score: 2

    Someone should let them know that .NET is a widely available domain type and not a Microsoft product.

    --

    ~ now you know
  83. Drastically cheaper? by Christopher+Thomas · · Score: 2

    Everything else even remotely related to computers has gotten drastically cheaper over the years.

    I'm not sure about this.

    A decent, new system has cost between $1500 and $2000 Cdn ($1000 and $1300 US) for about a decade and a half now.

    You can buy a used Pentium machine for under $200, but good luck running XP on it (you run Linux, I run Linux, but most people don't, and you can't play Tribes 2 on a Pentium under any OS).

    What we get for our money has gotten better, but the cost of a system has remained more or less constant (it's a market sweet-spot).

  84. Problems with Quoting? by pgpckt · · Score: 5, Insightful


    Why does the Topic say the lawyer said "is not piracy" when the text of the submission does not use these words? In fact, the text says: "Brad Smith as saying: 'Linux is a way of developing software whereas piracy is copying.'"

    Could be just me, but I don't see the words "is not piracy" in there. We couldn't be bothered to use the actual words I suppose?

    --
    Lawrence Lessig is my personal hero.
    1. Re:Problems with Quoting? by PigleT · · Score: 2

      Hey, not to worry, it only adds to the crud we see on slashdot...

      And *neither* quote is particularly news-worthy, IMO.
      a) linux-is-not-piracy is remarkably boring. There's a dictionary at , go figure.

      b) linux-is-a-means-for-software-engineering is still wrong, it's a frigging OS kernel, deal with it.

      One word: duh.

      --
      ~Tim
      --
      .|` Clouds cross the black moonlight,
      Rushing on down to the circle of the turn
    2. Re:Problems with Quoting? by soboroff · · Score: 2

      The title is logically incorrect.

      If piracy is copying, and Linux is a way of developing software, and if copying is a way of developing software, then Linux is piracy.

      I've seen software development by copying (and not just from teaching CompSci classes ;-), and some of the best bugs come from "design by cut-n-paste", so Linux must therefore be piracy.

    3. Re:Problems with Quoting? by revery · · Score: 1

      possibly because whereas typically means "while on the contrary"

      "Read a book, you're making us look like idiots" - Handy, the Human Ton's right hand

  85. Loss vs. Missed Opportunities by Wise+Dragon · · Score: 2

    Losing sales to piracy is like missing an opportunity to profit. Find every one of those pirates and offer them a chance to buy your software for $10, and 90 percent of them will take you up on it. It's how to do this without eroding your market that is the problem!

  86. My Favorite by pb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "A healthy market leads to more attractive prices for consumers".

    By this standard, I suppose the music industry and (perhaps to a lesser extent) the software industry are "unhealthy". In fact, this makes piracy look pretty attractive, unless these "attractive prices" are cheaper than "free".

    Obviously, the reason we have piracy is *because* the current prices aren't "more attractive". Also, not everyone who pirates a program really needs it, especially not for the price that it is selling at.

    This goes double for programs that have free alternatives; most people don't really need that new copy of Photoshop 6, but why bother learning about The Gimp when you can just pirate the industry standard? Actually, bundling free alternatives to commercial software would be a good way to decrease piracy, but I doubt that most companies would agree to this, because it might also decrease *SALES*, which is all they really care about. They don't care about their customers, just their money...

    --
    pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate.
    1. Re:My Favorite by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      "A healthy market leads to more attractive prices for consumers". By this standard, I suppose the music industry and (perhaps to a lesser extent) the software industry are "unhealthy".

      This is correct. Both industries are monopolized, and that is a definition of "unhealthy" capitialism. Billg may view himself as a great defender of capitalism, whereas in fact, he is a great perverter of capitalism.

    2. Re:My Favorite by zCyl · · Score: 2

      Obviously, the reason we have piracy is *because* the current prices aren't "more attractive".

      I don't rent videotapes and copy them. Heck, I don't even record movies off of TV. Why? A movie on VHS tape can cost me $7 at my local oversized supermart.

      Commercial software isn't quite there.

    3. Re:My Favorite by crudeboy · · Score: 1
      "A healthy market leads to more attractive prices for consumers". By this standard, I suppose the music industry and (perhaps to a lesser extent) the software industry are "unhealthy". In fact, this makes piracy look pretty attractive, unless these "attractive prices" are cheaper than "free".

      Both the software- and the music/entertainment-industries are unhealthy, mostly due to that a few large companies control vital parts of the markets. Compare with the computer hardware market which is a more "healthy" market where price drops and competition works, maybe not fully though.

      Obviously, the reason we have piracy is *because* the current prices aren't "more attractive". Also, not everyone who pirates a program really needs it, especially not for the price that it is selling at.

      I disagree, I would say that it's more like people don't view themselves as criminals when they steal IP, since the original owner of the IP doesn't lose it.

      Justifying stealing by saying that you don't really need what you steal doesn't make it any less stealing...if you want it you should either pay for it or suppress your need.

      because it might also decrease *SALES*, which is all they really care about. They don't care about their customers, just their money...

      Basics of economics: If you mistreat your customers eventually you will lose them, and your sales.

      I think that if there were no piracy at all we probably would see a more vibrant market, perhaps even healthier.

      That's just my belief, and I neither work for MS or BSA...

    4. Re:My Favorite by pb · · Score: 2

      What we're talking about isn't stealing, exactly. Remember that the BSA considers every instance of pirating to be a case of lost revenue. This only holds up in the cases where the pirate would buy the software if he couldn't pirate it.

      Therefore, anyone who wouldn't buy the software if they couldn't pirate it (i.e. they don't really need it) shouldn't be counted as an instance of lost revenue--if anything, it's free publicity.

      Also, monopolies allow businesses to mistreat their customers without losing their business. And true competition undermines much of the need for piracy that people have under a monopoly.

      Therefore, I believe (almost) the converse of what you stated: if we had a healthier market (i.e. more competition, lower prices...), we'd have less piracy, and perhaps no real need for the BSA.

      And yes, all this is just my opinion too. :)

      --
      pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate.
    5. Re:My Favorite by HiThere · · Score: 2

      I don't because I don't consider any of them worth seeing. Certainly not worth seeing twice.

      If you aren't tempted, you can't call it virtue. Or vice.

      OTOH, I switched to Linux largely because I considered the MS license agreement hazerdous to my ... ?? immortal soul ?? Perhaps. It's hard to be specific. I considered agreeing to it immoral, in any event. So I stopped.a

      You, too, can repent! (Of course, the video and music industries have yet to find the Tolvards and their Stallman, so there are some big shoes that need filling.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  87. One History flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Americans are descended from us "Euro trash", therefore, you are also "Euro Trash", just without the style, sophistication or culture. It appears you're making up for this by stuffing your faces with fatty foods and loosing against Communists. Good luck with that by the way.

    1. Re:One History flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And Leonardo Da Vinci descended from an ape. Go put on some deoderant.

      (I don't feel this way, but it begged to be said.)

    2. Re:One History flaw by jlt116 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      > Americans are descended from us "Euro trash" Um... there are *some* americans who have no european ancestry. Try thinking before you type.

    3. Re:One History flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      YOU ARE WRONG, BITCH.

      First of all, there are these little known people called "Native Americans"

      Sure, one day, they probably lived near Europe. But the smell of what would become "France" sent them packing.

      Second, Europeans weren't Euro Trash until the last 100 years. You suddently became the festering shithole we see today. It was further proved by the fact we kept your asses from losing WW2 after the French surrendered to Adolf's anal vapor.
      What, we didn't come into the war until after Pearl Harbor? WRong again, Pearl Harbor was because we were giving supplies and other things to, hello hello, EUROTRASH!

    4. Re:One History flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck the Native Americans. What the fuck have they given the world except Casinos and popcorn?

  88. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, you can legally SELL Linux, and they can, and do.

    Read the GPL a few more times before you post on this again, dumbass.

  89. There you go again... by asmithmd1 · · Score: 2

    There you go again confusing the two. When you drive a car off a dealers lot you deprive him of the use of the car while enriching yourself by that same use. A zero sum situation. When you make an un-licensed copy of a program the copyright holder still has everything he had before you made the copy. Making an un-licensed copy is more akin to breaking a lease with a landlord, where stealing would be burning the place down, you must admit there is a difference

    1. Re:There you go again... by bluprint · · Score: 1

      "A zero sum situation"

      Not necessarily a zero sum situation. Let's assume the sale value of the car to the dealer was 20,000. Now, lets assume you took the car, but you would only be willing to actually pay (at maximum) 5,000 for the car.

      In this case, there has been a net loss to society of 15,000....although I agree with the sentiment of your post.

      --
      A modern day witchhunt.
    2. Re:There you go again... by Flower · · Score: 1
      That's why there are copyright laws. By restricting the distribution rights to the copyright owner scarcity is created. Piracy then becomes a non-zero sum situation and the copyright owner is being deprived of his proper compensation.

      Now someone might not agree with this legal fiction but it is legally enforcable. If someone wants the law changed then I suggest they blantantly break the law and take the jail time like any other good protester would.

      --
      I don't want knowledge. I want certainty. - Law, David Bowie
  90. Custom Software by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder if those dollar figures take into account custom software or contractors/consultants.

    The company I work for does custom software development. Not quite a consultancy, and not quite contractors.

    Our software, and that of other companies like us, go for tall dollars. Not to mention the one off, single industry programs, which all sell for quite a bit of money.

    This doesn't seem to be that big of a jump over 5 years. That barely keeps up with the cost of living adjustment.

  91. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by GungaDan · · Score: 2
    "who the hell that reads /. or knows what open source is, doesn't know that Linux is an OS and not an idea or an action."

    OK, scott1853. That tears it! I'm gonna Linux you but good! Say it again and I'll Be you, for jibbity's sake!

    --
    Eloi are stupid, throw morlocks at them!
  92. Harming Customers by ehiris · · Score: 2

    "software piracy in general, and how this is holding back the software industry in Eastern Europe"

    You can't expect somebody making 50-300$/month to pay for software that is priced to harm customers.

    I wonder how a converted to Unix user would look wearing a Microsoft T-Shirt.

    1. Re:Harming Customers by entrigant · · Score: 1

      Then don't use it... Imagine if the attitude of taking what you can't afford applied to everything in the heads of software pirates. Breaking into a Best Buy to steal that TV you really want is the same as software piracy. It is theft either way.

    2. Re:Harming Customers by ehiris · · Score: 2

      Then delete your MP3s

  93. Copying is Piracy?!?!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh shite! I just want to appologise to the entire community. I made a copy of my Slackware CD this weekend. I had no idea it was piracy!!! Thank god Microsoft made that clear for me!

    No, don't worry friends, I'm not dumb enough to believe a word Microsoft says. I don't care if they say the sky is blue, they're full of it. ;P

  94. I'm confused... by sheldon · · Score: 1, Troll

    Why do the slashbot editors constantly complain about Microsoft, promote Linux...

    But then get all defensive about software piracy?

    Look... If you don't like Microsoft but do like Linux then USE LINUX! Sheesh, give up the hypocrisy of promoting Linux but using Windows for all your real work, it's old already. Use one or the other, but if you find Windows of value at least have the decency to pay for the product.

    1. Re:I'm confused... by jgerman · · Score: 2

      Uhh, hmm. It's actually the other way around. We use Linux for real work. Why because it's better at it. What's my Windows box for... games, and that's it, and it does an awfully poor job at it to boot.

      --
      I'm the big fish in the big pond bitch.
    2. Re:I'm confused... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As long as Microsoft insists on making me pay for things I don't want, I'm going to not pay for MS products I do want. Seems fair to me.

  95. Unless you think of it this way... by The+Ape+With+No+Name · · Score: 2

    Linux is a way of developing software whereas piracy is copying.

    But in a sense, Linux is copying. It is a Unix-LIKE operating system, which attempts to give the feel of being on a classic Unix OS machine without the requisite licensure requirements other than those promoted by itself (the GPL). So, Linux is a copy, but not piracy sense the creator did not take source code from the original to create the copy. He merely looked at what that original did and mimed it. Therefore it is copying in the mimetic sense, not the representing sense, where one merely takes the code, compiles it and represents the copy as an original. Where's Judith Butler when you need her?

    --
    Comparing it to Windows will be a moot point, since El Dorado is going to have a 40% larger code base than XP.
  96. History of the World Part I by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't that the movie with the movie pirates that get scared off by the FBI warning?

    And is that the same or different movie where the two corporate office buildings start feuding as if they were two ships on the high seas?

  97. Non-commercial use only by CustomDesigned · · Score: 2, Interesting
    As has been pointed out ad nauseum already, most pirates wouldn't have bought the program anyway. It seems that any proprietary product would be best served with the "Non-commercial use only" type license - where copies are free (as in free beer) for individuals and non profit-making activities within a corporation (such as evaluation).

    This allows all the benefits of piracy - lots of people who wouldn't or couldn't otherwise buy the software get familiar with it, and you can still send the BSA out to raid corporations that use it to run their sales force without paying. It has the further benefit of not promoting the moral decay that comes with deliberately disrespecting the legal rights of copyright holders.

    1. Re:Non-commercial use only by Stonehand · · Score: 2

      Hmmm. Adobe took a different approach with Photoshop, if memory serves. There's...

      ...Photoshop (main version)
      ...Photoshop Elements (lighter version)
      ...PhotoDeluxe (lightest version)

      with radically different pricing. That way, people don't need to pay for features that they likely won't need.

      It's not a bad approach, although for some types of software it might not make sense, and they can still sell w/o squabbling over what's non-commercial.

      Note that allowing downloading, even under limited situations, also means tolerating a large number of sources, which dramatically lowers the bar of somebody infringing outside those circumstances. It wouldn't surprise me if were easier to get .MP3s of {insert boy-clone-band-name-here} latest album than it is to get a download of MLK speeches (copyright held closely by the King family, in case you're wondering), simply due to demand.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
  98. RE: Why MSFT Dislikes Linux/GPL? by Carnage4Life · · Score: 2

    I thought MSFT didn't like Linux because it competed with Windows?

    Having to include source to something they didn't invent and can't get along without is their problem and, like any reasonable minded person, don't want problems. They like to keep it simple, by owning or having license agreements on IP.

    This statement pretty much is the same conclusion I came to when I first heard the Software Ecosystem Speech from BillG last summer.

  99. Piracy is not good ... by smoondog · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Micro$oft has a monopoly. What's worse is they use those powers regularly in a way that is not productive to the consumer or, IMO, the computer industry. However, /. cannot get into the belief that software piracy is *not* a bad thing. Especially when it is commercial piracy (shrink wrapping copied/conterfeit products). The observation that sales are increasing has nothing to do with whether piracy is good/bad or affecting/not affecting the market.

    I'm surprised that the /. community gets up in arms over gpl violations but thinks piracy against the evil empire is somehow less bad. There are better ways to work for a better (more fair) computer industry.

    -Sean

    1. Re:Piracy is not good ... by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 1

      I honestly think a good portion of the /. community is anti-piracy. I know a few kids who pirate software, and one moron who lives for warez, but other than that I really don't know any pirates. None of the people I know who read /. would ever pirate anything unless it was abandonware and there was *no other way to aquire it*.

      just my 2cp

      ~Sean

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
    2. Re:Piracy is not good ... by orkysoft · · Score: 1

      However, /. cannot get into the belief that software piracy is *not* a bad thing. Especially when it is commercial piracy (shrink wrapping copied/conterfeit products).

      Isn't counterfeiting a *bad* thing? Isn't it directly *stealing* from the publishers by intercepting their *paying* customers and redirecting the money into the counterfeiters' wallets?

      Really. If you really insist on getting a pirated piece of software, copy it from a friend or download it. Don't *ever* buy pirated software. You *don't* want to know where the money ends up.

      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    3. Re:Piracy is not good ... by smoondog · · Score: 2

      Me: However, /. cannot get into the belief that software piracy is *not* a bad thing. Especially when it is commercial piracy (shrink wrapping copied/conterfeit products).

      You: Isn't counterfeiting a *bad* thing? Isn't it directly *stealing* from the publishers by intercepting their *paying* customers and redirecting the money into the counterfeiters' wallets?

      I think that is what I was saying. Perhaps my double negative confused you?

      -Sean

    4. Re:Piracy is not good ... by orkysoft · · Score: 1

      However, /. cannot get into the belief that software piracy is *not* a bad thing.

      No, I don't think that is what you were saying. I interpret it as:

      Slashdot [users] do not believe software piracy is a good thing.

      Where:

      • cannot get into the belief means: do(es) not believe
      • *not* a bad thing means: a good thing
      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
  100. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by GutBomb · · Score: 1

    they DO sell linux, and it's fine with the GPL. I can go ahead and download redhat, slap a sticker on it that says GutBomb linux, and go ahead and sell it. I don't have to make it available for free at all. only source. But then someone can make an ISO of my GutBomb linux put it up on the net, and sit is still legal. you CAN sell GPL software. otherwise, redhat is selling you a piece of media for $175

  101. Your Mother by the+red+pen · · Score: 1, Flamebait
    I like this "I wouldn't have bought it anyway and the producer loses nothing" argument.

    It's really late and I'm alone on a subway car with your mother. I think she's sexy. Now the law says your mother's sex organs are her property to license as she sees fit. I suppose that with some application of charm, or display of wealth (since it's your mother, a crisp $20 would probably do) I could convince her to grant me access to park my skin yacht in hair harbor, but maybe I don't think she's worth the effort or expense. So, I just rape the shit out of your mom for duration of the subway car.

    Now, at the end of the ride, she's lost nothing. She still has her vagina. She didn't lose any time (she had to ride to her stop anyway). All she's lost is the propery rights to her snatch, which -- based on her offspring -- couldn't have been that valueable to her anyway.

    I like the way you think. Now, where's your mom live?

    1. Re:Your Mother by spectecjr · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      *grins* exactly - it's all about respect of other people.

      --
      Coming soon - pyrogyra
    2. Re:Your Mother by ogar572 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Now thats one way to look at it.

    3. Re:Your Mother by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you saying piracy rapes the manufacturers? :-)

    4. Re:Your Mother by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is the dumbest metaphor i have ever seen.

      And i've seen a lot of dumb metaphors.. i read slashdot.

      Where are the moderators?

  102. from dictionary.com by ch-chuck · · Score: 1

    pirate n.

    One who robs at sea or plunders the land from the sea without commission from a sovereign nation.

    A ship used for this purpose.

    One who preys on others; a plunderer.

    One who makes use of or reproduces the work of another without authorization.

    One that operates an unlicensed, illegal television or radio station.


    v. pirated, pirating, pirates v. tr.

    To attack and rob (a ship at sea).

    To take (something) by piracy.

    To make use of or reproduce (another's work) without authorization.


    So, it's a common enough usage that it's in the dictionary that I just pillaged and plundered ;)

    --
    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
    1. Re:from dictionary.com by ryants · · Score: 2
      So, it's a common enough usage that it's in the dictionary that I just pillaged and plundered ;)
      As was so well put by Orwell in 1984, controlling language is nine-tenths the battle; seeing this bodes well for the copyright monopolists and not-so-well for those of us who believe in the free marketplace of ideas.
      --

      Ryan T. Sammartino
      "Ancora imparo"

    2. Re:from dictionary.com by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Only if by 'free marketplace of ideas' you mean that you get to use everyone else's ideas while providing none of your own which is what the average software pirate is.

    3. Re:from dictionary.com by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except the usage predates all the big pro-copyright groups (BSA, RIAA, MPAA, etc.).

    4. Re:from dictionary.com by YU+Nicks+NE+Way · · Score: 2

      Do you believe in a free marketplace of ideas (where ideas are traded for currency or other valuable items in a free marketplace) or do you believe in a marketplace of free ideas? The GPL demands the second -- that's the problem with it.

  103. You don't get to set X. by Kwil · · Score: 2

    Unless you created the product.

    If you create the product, you're entirely within your rights to set it at whatever price you think its worth.

    If someone else creates the product, they're entirely within their rights to establish the value. Your choices are "I accept that and will use your product" or "I don't accept that and will not use your product." They do not include "I don't accept what value you put on your work, but will use your work anyway."

    When you do this, you've devalued the authors time. If this is legit, then it's entirely legit for an employer to say "Good work. We're not paying you by the way. Maybe somebody else will. Thanks!"

    --

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

  104. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by flatrock · · Score: 2

    Let me be more explicit. With the GPL software is and must continue to be free. This means that software has no value, you can't make money off of it directly. This is saying that most everything that Microsoft has spent hundreds of billions developing in since it's creation is worthless. Sound like something worth starting a holy war over?

    Remember, Microsoft is a publicly traded company. Even if their IP isn't any less valuable, the perception that it is less valuable can have serious impact on them. Many of their employees get a significant amount of their compensation in stock options. Every time their stock takes a hit it becomes significantly more costly for them to retain valuable employees.

    Another good question is if software doesn't have value, how do you pay the developers? You can fund some development costs from support and training, but I can't think of any consumer product that's been successful on that business model. Some people write software for the joy of creating good software. Most of us write it because it's an enjoyable job that pays well. If you take away the paying well part, it's much harder to attract good employees to software fields. That means more competition between employeers, which means good programmers will cost even more.

    Free software, when taken to the extreme pretty much destroys the current business model of most every software company out there. It's questionable if selling services and support to fund software development is a valid business model. It would require shifting a lot of costs from the many people who use the software on to a few that require the support and training. I'm sure there are niche markets where that's a valid model, but I'm skeptical that it can work for wide scale consumer software development.

  105. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by LMCBoy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    They [Redhat et al.] provide the source, but not the actual ISOs or other form of download.

    You sure about that?

    --
    Liberal (adj.): Free from bigotry; open to progress; tolerant of others.
  106. Two things: by drinkypoo · · Score: 2
    A verb (although I have heard people say "let's linux this project," which made me want to slap them)

    You may have missed this trend in geek language, but some of us noticed it literally over a decade ago: all nouns can be verbed, and also all verbs can be nouned. While it is not "proper english", neither is most anyone's dialogue these days.

    As for linux not being a cure for the common cold; It may not help with that one, but it does tend to make your system somewhat immune to virii.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    1. Re:Two things: by Megs · · Score: 2
      A verb (although I have heard people say "let's linux this project," which made me want to slap them)
      You may have missed this trend in geek language, but some of us noticed it literally over a decade ago: all nouns can be verbed, and also all verbs can be nouned. While it is not "proper english", neither is most anyone's dialogue these days.

      I'm not claiming to speak for the parent or anything, and I'm a descriptive linguist à la Steven Pinker too, but come on. What does "linux" as a verb mean? Is it meaningful, even as a neologism in casual conversation? By analogy with every other verbed noun, it means "to turn into Linux." Why the hell would one want to turn their project into Linux? Surely the neologism they are looking for is "to open source" or perhaps "to GPL." I would want to slap them too.

      Meghan

      --
      Ask me about LOOM(TM).
    2. Re:Two things: by drinkypoo · · Score: 1
      I'm not claiming to speak for the parent or anything, and I'm a descriptive linguist à la Steven Pinker too, but come on. What does "linux" as a verb mean?

      Well, it depends on context, like everything else in this stupid language, but to linux a project would be to use linux as a base for it, build it on linux, et cetera. To linux a computer, of course, would be to install linux on it, but I probably didn't have to tell you that.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  107. Car jacker=Joy Rider by ergo98 · · Score: 1

    Doh! Just wanted to clarify that I don't drive around with the club on to discourage car jackings. :-) "You can only turn left! Go take the next car!"

    1. Re:Car jacker=Joy Rider by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just wanted to clarify that I don't drive around with the club on to discourage car jackings.

      Huh? You take it off? So Thats how you use it. Thought my suspension was broke, cause all it wanted to do was turn left!

  108. easy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One of the commandments is along the lines of "you shouldn't put any other gods before me".

    That's a tacit admission of other gods.

    Besides, Christianity in its 20th and 21st century incarnations tends to be tolerant of other religions.

    Muslims are stuck in a 14th century "inquisition" type atmosphere.

    I blame this primarily on the fact that people in the middle east are "simple" folk and believe whatever crap you put on their plate.

    1. Re:easy... by Jagasian · · Score: 2

      It should be noted that Islam is roughly 500 years younger than Christianity too, so being stuck in roughly the 14th century makes sense, if you view religion has a social phenomenon, as I do. Religions go through life cycles.

    2. Re:easy... by Danse · · Score: 1

      That was a commandment, "Thou shalt have no other gods before Me." I don't see it as an acknowledgement of other gods, but rather an acknowledgement that some believe that other gods exist, and that Christianity won't tolerate the worship of these other gods "over" the Christian god. If the work of Christian missionaries is any guide, Christians do attempt to halt the worship of any other god regardless of whether he's held in higher regard than God or not. It all seems quite subjective and still doesn't specifically acknowledge the existance of other gods as the original post said.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    3. Re:easy... by arkanes · · Score: 2

      The old testament, in my opinion, generally implies the existence of other gods - it's not that they don't exist, but they aren't the gods of Israel, and thus Israelites shouldn't worship them (note that the old testatment is very insular and elitist - it doesn't care about people who aren't Jews). The New Testament is more of the "I am the one, true, and only God" type thing.

    4. Re:easy... by Danse · · Score: 1

      Even the old testament doesn't really seem to me to imply the actual existence of other gods, it seems to merely accept that many believe that other gods exist.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    5. Re:easy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If that's the case, then Judaism should be a couple of millenia ahead of Christianity, and as a Jew I somehow doubt that is the case.

  109. Re:In other news... by DevilousAngel · · Score: 1

    You've got to see this testimony as more than meet the eyes!

    The fact that "good" ol' william testified and was PRO demanteling the windoze products, for 3rd party apps to be integrated in, is (I think) mainly due to the fact that m$ now feels cornered...

    Not only that, but why is that in a trial, states vs corporacy, m$ had the balls to bring over Linux? What in the HELL does that has to do in that case?

    Nothing, 'cept polishing m$'s image and making them look like they do accept competition and that they've really thoughed it would be the sweetest treatment they could get from the states...

    After all, wouldn't we all LOVE to see m$ split? =)

    --
    "Fighting for peace is like screwing for virginity!"
  110. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by flatrock · · Score: 2

    In one word: Control.

    Control is an important issue for Microsoft, but I'll add another word. Revenue. Where does Microsoft make it's money if the software is free?

    The usual answer I hear is services and support. I just don't see how they can support their product development on that kind of business model. Red Hat barely makes money, and they do very, very little software development themselves. Someone has to develop the software, and those people need to make a living. Linux distributions do demonstrate that some exellent software can be developed by utilizing a lot of donated labor, but how many of those people who are donating that labor are making their money writing software for another company. Could GPLed software become the norm? Or is it doing so well because the commercial software market is booming, and developers can afford to donate their time?

    Control is a significant issue for Microsoft, but as the largest Software company in the world. Shaking up people's faith in their business model may even be more of a problem for them.

  111. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 3, Funny

    "Say it again and I'll Be you, for jibbity's sake!"

    Actually, I'd rather be Bill Gates, if only for the money...

    --
    Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
  112. You missed a more important step: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Product A at all, because copying it is morally, ethically and legally wrong. If it's not worth $10 to you, then why would you want a copy"

    Since the passage of DMCA, the moral and ethical arguments against copying are off the table. If you have a loved one in an Iraqi jail, there are no moral and ethical qualms about killing the jailor to free them. Same argument for copying. They've passed a law that makes fair use illegal. As a result, I no longer morally and ethically recognize copyrights. Fair trade, right?

    But the big step you missed is "while you're copying software for me, I start banging your mother and sister in the next room".

    Hope this helps.

  113. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "If someone else creates the product, they're entirely within their rights to establish the value"

    The market establishes value. A producer sets price.

    As a consumer, I have the ability to pay 0 dollars for a product that is priced unfairly. I will exercise that ability whenever it makes sense to do it.

    Live with it. Lower prices. Give me printed manuals. Unlimited telephone support.

    Time to get over it and deal with the MARKET.

    1. Re:Wrong. Wrong. Wrong by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 1

      you want them to lower prices, give you a manual, and unlimited telephone support, and produce a product of equal of better quality.

      I suppose you think that of other industries also?

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
  114. Interesting analogy.... by gfxguy · · Score: 2

    Except that it'd be more like asking for two glasses, but the jerk says "No, this float can only be drunk from the glass that it came in".

    Not only that, but you can't donate that glass without the original root beer float in it.

    Oh yeah, and if it were up to him, buying empty glasses would be illegal because, after all, every glass needs a beverage...

    --
    Stupid sexy Flanders.
  115. It depends on what you mean by "god" by CustomDesigned · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    Christians and Jews believe in only one self-existent God. However, there are many created gods - both good and evil.

    Evil gods include creations of human imagination (idols) - or creations of God who have rebelled (Satan "the god of this world", demons).

    Good gods are subordinate to God. They include morally good creations of human imagination, Angels, and even Human Beings ("Ye are gods"). The difference with respect to New Age, is that New Age denies the existence of one Sovereign self-existent God.

    As gods made in the image of God, Human beings have the power to create - Tolkein's world, computer simulated worlds. Our creations are not on the same level as the created universe we live in, but they inherit the moral qualities of their creators - for good or evil.

    1. Re:It depends on what you mean by "god" by Danse · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but I can't accept a couple out-of-context quotes as evidence of Christian acknowledgement of the existance of other gods. The Bible says that Lucifer was an angel. Christians believe that God is "the god of this world." I think your quote is either very much out of context, or is not meant to be taken literally (as is the case with much of the Bible). The same goes for the quote about humans as gods. Angels and demons are not gods either. At least I've never found any Christian reference that considers them to be gods.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
  116. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by jordan_a · · Score: 2

    wtf? I just said if they don't want to use it thats fine, but why this holy war? If Microsoft doesn't want to use GPL software they don't have too.

  117. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Geekboy(Wizard) · · Score: 0

    Not to start a flame war, but in *BSD you just have to [cd /usr/src && make buildworld && make installworld] Maybe slightly different for specific versions, but that's all.

  118. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by dioxide · · Score: 3, Funny

    Actually, I'd rather be Bill Gates, if only for the money...


    promise me you'll spend some of that money on a decent haircut..

  119. You forgot the most important option! by Kamel+Jockey · · Score: 2
    • CowboyNeal

    Hmm... perhaps too this is debatable? :)

    --
    In case of fire, do not use elevator. Use water!
  120. Re:Lower prices? Yeah, right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've always been puzzled by this defence for anti-piracy. Once they've made it impossible to steal and since we all know we live in a software monoply - whats to prevent the price from increasing?

  121. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by flatrock · · Score: 2

    You are correct that they can charge whatever they want for the distribution, but they have no actuall rights to the software itself, and have no way to keep someone else from makeing a copy of that distribution and selling it themselves. They have no way to maintain a revenue stream from sales of the software. They can only add value above what someone else can offer by offering non-gpled products such as training and support.

    Acutally Microsoft doesn't sell Windows. The liscense it in a limited way to people. Since Microsoft licenses other people's software for use in Windows, Microsoft probably can't just outright sell Windows either, my statement that micorsoft makes it's money selling windows was where this started going wrong.

    Linux vendors can charge whatever they like for their distributions, but they don't own the software and can't keep others from copying or recareating it from the source code, and then selling the same thing.

  122. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please. Developing Linux or apps for it is like reinventing the wheel. There is nothing innovative about Linux.

  123. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by markmoss · · Score: 2

    Microsoft is a Software company. They make their money selling software. Over and over again to the same person, if they have their way...

  124. Market by Kwil · · Score: 1

    "whenever it makes sense to do so"?

    Please tell me when it wouldn't make sense to pay $0 instead of $X, given X>0.

    By this argument, slavery makes perfect sense. After all with guns and superior firepower, it grants the ability to pay $0 for a product that is priced unfairly in the slaver's eyes. Any capital expense of the guns can be written off against the long-term labor.

    The only difference is, there are laws against the latter.. oh wait, there are laws against the former too.

    --

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

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

      "By this argument, slavery makes perfect sense."

      Saying software costs too much makes slavery make sense? Huh?

      You have to be a troll...nobody could be that stupid in real life.

  125. When did it cease to be a religion? by Zemran · · Score: 1

    I will have to sell all my regalia ...

    --
    I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
  126. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by mpe · · Score: 2

    With GPL software you can't sell the software itself, the expenses of developing the software must be shifted elsewhere.

    You can sell GPL software to anyone you like, at any price you like, just that you must provide the source in accordance with the licence. However if you try and charge excessivly then any customer, who is not a fool, will simply go elsewhere.

  127. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Fishstick · · Score: 2

    >They [Redhat et al.] provide the source

    well, you read it that way... I read it this:

    I don't think SuSE even provides dowloads of thier distro anymore.

    They [SuSE] provide the source, but not the actual ISOs or other form of download


    Obviously redhat lets you download the whole distro (I just got done burnin 7.2 CDs "for a friend")

    But that being said, that's still not the same as selling "Linux", IMO.

    --

    There is much cruelty in the universe, John.
    Yeah, we seem to have the tour map.

  128. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by flatrock · · Score: 2

    I was incorrect when I said that Microsoft sells software. They license it to people. Neither Microsoft or Red Hat sells OSs. Microsoft has the rights to sell a license of their software to people because they own the copyrights, or licensed them from other developers. Red Hat doesn't have any particular rights to the software they distribute. They can charge you wantever they want for their distribution, but they aren't selling you Linux. When you buy the distribution you don't own Linux.

    Why is this distinction important? Because there's no laws agains me taking a red hat distribution, writing it to a CD, and selling it myself for less than what Red Hat is selling it for. Since I'm not paying people to develop any software or even compile and test a distribution, I can do it cheaper than Red Hat can. Red Hat could put together the perfect distribution full of the best patches and the best GPLed software. They could test and verify it works with hundreds of different computers. They could spend millions advertising it as the best Linux distribution ever created. As soon as they sell the first copy and deliver the source code, there's nothing keeping the person who bought that first copy from giving it away to every person in the world, and there's nothing Red Hat can do to directly recoup their development expenses past what they sold that one copy for. In reality, if they price their distribution reasonably they'll likly sell a reasonable number of coppies, but they aren't selling the rights to use that software. They're just selling you a bunch of CDs with some stuff they have no control over on it.

  129. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Fishstick · · Score: 2

    They don't have to, they don't even want to. They would rather see others use a BSD license than GPL. They can bitch and moan all they want, it's a free country. ;-)

    --

    There is much cruelty in the universe, John.
    Yeah, we seem to have the tour map.

  130. Microsoft thinks of Linux and Piracy interchan by Big_Breaker · · Score: 1

    Microsoft thinks of Linux and Piracy interchangeably because they both attack the Microsoft model of IP generation and control.

    They think of themselves as having a marketplace mandated, quasi official license on developing software

    It is really telling is that in Microsoft mindset Linux equated with Piracy. Their notion of monopoly and entitlement run so deep that pirated windows = linux because in terms of profit loss they are both substitutions for retail windows. They impact their franchise similiarly therefore they are the same.

    Only company that has experienced a monopoly for this long could develop a culture that needs to be reminded that competition for retail windows from pirated versions is actually different from Linux, a legitimate alternative.

    1. Re:Microsoft thinks of Linux and Piracy interchan by fuali · · Score: 0

      How can you bash Microsoft AND know what they think. I love how everyone hates them, but knows exactly how they work, function, and deal with everything.

      <Obscure_Nietzsche_Reference>
      Don't stare into the abyss too long, my freind
      </Obscure_Nietzsche_Reference>

    2. Re:Microsoft thinks of Linux and Piracy interchan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dear Spock,
      I am here on /. and I am having a conversation with a 'Logically Challenged' individual. Could you please stop by and have a chat with this person?
      Thanks

      Spock: Sorry I don't have time for this crap. Live long and prosper. Moron

  131. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by scott1853 · · Score: 2

    I don't think you'd want to Be me. I'm probably the most underpaid programmer in the country ;)

  132. I hope this isn't too far offtopic, but... by kingbill · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I want more anti-piracy protection on Microsoft software. I have several friends I've been trying to convince to use Linux for a while now. The problem is they already know Windows and they all got it for free.

    I try to tell them it would be better not to pirate, but they don't listen. None of these guys would buy Microsoft products. They're all poor college students like me. Software piracy is the only thing keeping Windows alive with college and high school students. If anti-piracy methods became really effective, Microsoft products would lose the rising generation. That would be swell. Microsoft being able to enforce anti-piracy measures is the thing that will make Linux a viable alternative on the desktop.

    1. Re:I hope this isn't too far offtopic, but... by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      Software piracy is the only thing keeping Windows alive with college and high school students. If anti-piracy methods became really effective, Microsoft products would lose the rising generation. That would be swell. Microsoft being able to enforce anti-piracy measures is the thing that will make Linux a viable alternative on the desktop.

      Hear, hear! We should be hacking Microsoft products in order to report to Microsoft how to increase their copy-prevention technologies.

  133. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Raul654 · · Score: 1

    To a certain extent, you are right. I remember in "The Cathedral and the Baazar" it was mentioned that open source isn't exactly a great model for creating new applications from scratch- most projects start out as one individual programming the scaffolding, and then others fill in the missing portions (or make existing parts better). A quick look on freshmeat reveals something - 99% of the projects there are trying to create open source alternatives to programs that already exist for windows. Only a small handful are programs that don't already exist in some form for windows.

    --


    To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
    --E.C. Stanton
  134. MS defining Linux? by wardk · · Score: 1
    this is BAD. if MS can define what you are, you will lose.


    so did this guy speak his opinion on MSFT's 'copying' Stac's code/technology/IntellectualProperty, and if that was "piracy"? didn't think so.

  135. MS sales up in Russia -- won't happen! by VasilyPupkin · · Score: 1

    "If there wasn't piracy there would be more software companies in Russia and Eastern Europe," he said.

    It is not because of piracy that the number of russian companies is so scarce. Have you seen alot of russian pirated software lately? IL-2 Sturmovik, maybe. There is not much russian software to pirate. They might copy various MS's stuff, windowses (nobody in the sane mind would get windows for $100, they dont give a fsck about BSA), but there's no russian software to pirate.

    1. Re:MS sales up in Russia -- won't happen! by VasilyPupkin · · Score: 2, Informative

      Let me reply to this :)

      Here are some examples of (IMHO)successful russian software companies:

      http://www.kaspersky.com/ "Kaspersky labs". Antivirus software.
      http://www.1c.ru/ "1C". Office, Educational, games, and localized distributions.
      http://maddox.1c.ru/ "Maddox Games", now part of "1C". Il-2 Sturmovik.
      http://www.buka.ru/

      the list goes on. Just see here at Google

    2. Re:MS sales up in Russia -- won't happen! by VasilyPupkin · · Score: 1

      The actual href is here

  136. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by jordan_a · · Score: 2

    Which brings me to this point. MS "Shared Source License" is just as viral as the GPL (see The Register

  137. BSA Radio Commercials by Aknaton · · Score: 1

    I live in the Jacksonville, Florida (USA) area and recently, the BSA has started running radio commercials about software piracy. This is the first time I ever heard of this.

    The first commercial goes on about how disgruntled employees often turn in a company for violations and how the fines can be up to $150,000.00 per work violated. "Not just a traffic ticket", the commercial goes on to say.

    In the second commercial, it talks about how if you work for a company that illegally copies software, "you are working for a company that steals".

    Each commercial provides a toll free number to reports abuses. Are these commercials pretty common in major metro areas?

    1. Re:BSA Radio Commercials by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like a Road Trip for the Scientologists!!!
      These guys know how to litigate.
      They do not take NO for an answer.
      And just maybe you might get lucky with one their brain-dead Scientollywood celebrities.

      So if you see a string of cars full of people wearing fake Navy looking uniforms heading out of clearwater , rest assured.
      The scientologists are coming.

  138. "Free Beer" == "Theft"? by waldoj · · Score: 1

    Yeah, and after I got that coupon in the paper for a free Snickers bar, I started stealing candy bars from the grocery store.

    -Waldo Jaquith

    1. Re:"Free Beer" == "Theft"? by scott1853 · · Score: 2

      Well, I think there's a BIG difference between something being ON SALE vs. FOREVER FREE.

      Of course if you want to get into a socialogical discussion about this topic, one could argue that a homeless person would not be guilty about stealing a candy bar since there is no other way for him/her to obtain it. Of course, using the same example, Hershey doesn't mandate a 3000% markup on the retail price of their products.

      On the other hand, if Joe's Chocolate Shop starts giving away free chocolate just because he wants to, it stands to reason that the public would question why Hershey has to charge money in the first place. It's all just part of the neverending utopia vs. capitalism.

    2. Re:"Free Beer" == "Theft"? by HydroCarbon10 · · Score: 2

      The homeless person shouldn't HAVE to steal his food in the first place. He should be able to walk in the doors of any religous organization and get help.

      --
      The best way to accelerate a windows box is at 9.8 meters per second square.
    3. Re:"Free Beer" == "Theft"? by Methuseus · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Even if I mainly use a windows box, I still think your sig is one of the more intelligent ones.

      Yes, yes, offtopic, but also deeply nested, so I'm not too worried.

      --
      Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity, though I'm not yet sure about the universe. - A Einstein
    4. Re:"Free Beer" == "Theft"? by bobv-pillars-net · · Score: 2, Informative
      The homeless person shouldn't HAVE to steal his food in the first place.
      The proper adjective is DESTITUTE, not HOMELESS. There are many people who have enough money for food, but not enough money for rent.
      He should be able to walk in the doors of any religous organization and get help.
      I take it you've never run a soup kitchen before. Not every religious organization has the resources to operate one. As far as I know, there is only one soup kitchen in my city, but over 2000 churches.
      --
      The Web is like Usenet, but
      the elephants are untrained.
  139. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by bmw · · Score: 1

    Many of their employees get a significant amount of their compensation in stock options.

    I wonder how many of those employees have read this.

  140. Two kinds of piracy by Solidblu · · Score: 0

    In my opinion there is two kinds of piracy and neither are right.:

    First it the WaReZ kiddies that have to have everything without spends anymore than the cost of a cdr which no matter what you'll never stop. The amount of warez kiddies are realitivly small in comparrison to the other group.

    And then there are those who use pirated software as a cheaper alternative in the home. This is done by warez kiddies giving people pirated copies of software because they want it but complain that it is expense. It is also done by some (don't troll me if you aren't part of this group) technology savy people to get others to start using technology by making it cheaper to start out.

    All in all Piracy is wrong but some companies flat out deserve every dollar they lose because they don't understand the sociological effects of the price of thier software. So seeing as to the amount of piracy going up can only be blamed on the software distributors them selves for thier own cost push inflation of prices because it obviously is not the demand that keeps driving the price of software up because people feel its not worth that much and pirate it.

  141. By definition you can't "pirate" Linux by MtViewGuy · · Score: 2

    Given the concept of how Linux is developed using the GNU Public License, the whole idea of piracy doesn't apply at all, especially when the software is encouraged to be freely copied and given away.

    I mean, the US$30 or higher you pay for a retail copy essentially covers the cost of packaging and manuals, plus probably the development costs of the software distribution. People at Red Hat, Caldera, SuSE, Slackware, etc. in fact pass out Linux install disks like AOL passes out installation CD-ROM's for their access software.

    However, the success of Linux will still be limited until they get Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) incorporated into the OS. (I believe the 2.6.x kernel will include ACPI support.) With ACPI, Linux upgrades becomes much, much easier, for starters.

    1. Re:By definition you can't "pirate" Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uhm, well the current SuSE distro (8.0) comes with ACPI so I guess that isnt a worry any more ?

  142. Jews Guilty Too by Jagasian · · Score: 2

    I just saw on the BBC how another Mosque was ransacked by the Israelis.

    And what about in the USA? The whole Jewish Defense League (JDL) conspiracy? Oh, didn't hear about that one on the largely Jewish controlled news, did you? To make a long story short, an organization that claims to uphold and protect Jewish interests was busted by the FBI for plotting to bomb Mosques in California. They got caught during the bomb material aquisition phase of their plotting. (Note that the FBI usually does do a good job of nipping things in the bud.) Is it terrorism when a Muslim ain't doing the bombing?

    What about the recent pro-Israeli rally in the USA, when Paul Wolfowitz said that terrorists must be stopped, but Palestinians are people to and have also suffered... what did the rally of people say to that? They all booed! This is a sign of a huge problem... when large out spoken groups from either side view the other as being less than human.

    Here is my tidbit of moral clarity: if you are responsible for killing people, you are committing a sin. If you are responsible for ethnic clensing, you are committing a sin. If you are responsible for stealing people's homes/land, you are committing a sin.

    According to my moral clarity "tidbits", certain Israelis and certain Palestinians are committing sins. Now, for those slow on the upkeep: WHAT ABOUT THE MAJORITY OF INNOCENT PALESTINIAN AND ISRAELI PEOPLE? Why let a rabid sinful minority run the show?

    1. Re:Jews Guilty Too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am a Jew. I think the JDL is a terrorist orgainzation. Can your simple mind graple with that contradiction?

  143. ISAAC ASIMOV WROTE... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    THE PERENNIAL FRINGE, by Isaac Asimov

    I doubt that any of us really expects to wipe out pseudoscientific beliefs. How can we when those beliefs warm and comfort human beings?

    Do you enjoy the thought of dying, or of having someone you love die? Can you blame anyone for convincing himself that there is such a thing as life-everlasting and that he will see all those he loves in a state of perpetual bliss?

    Do you feel comfortable with the daily uncertainties of life; with never knowing what the next moment will bring? Can you blame anyone for convincing himself he can forewarn and forearm himself against these uncertainties by seeing the future clearly through the configuration of planetary positions, or the fall of cards, or the pattern of tea leaves, or the events in dreams?

    Inspect every piece of pseudoscience and you will find a security blanket, a thumb to suck, a skirt to hold. What have we to offer in exchange? Uncertainty! Insecurity!

    For those of us who live in a rational world, there is certain strength in understanding; a glory and comfort in the effort to understand where the understanding does not yet exist; a beauty even in the most stubborn unknown when it is at least recognized as an honorable foe of the thinking mechanism that goes on in three pounds of human brain, one that will gracefully yield to keen observation and subtle analysis, once the observation is keen enough and the analysis subtle enough.

    Yet there is an odd paradox in all this that amuses me in a rather sardonic way.

    We, the rationalists, would seem to be wedded to uncertainty. We know that the conclusions we come to, based, as they must be, on rational evidence, can never be more than tentative. The coming of new evidence, or of the recognition of a hidden fallacy in the old evidence, may quite suddenly overthrow a long-held conclusion. Out it must go, however attached to it one may be.

    That is because we have one certainty, and that rests not with any conclusion, however fundamental it may seem, but in the process whereby such conclusions are reached and, when necessary, changed. It is the scientific process that is certain, the rational view that is sure.

    The fringes, however, cling to conclusions with bone-crushing strength. They have no evidence worthy of the name to support those conclusions, and no rational system for forming or changing them. The closest thing they have to a process of reaching conclusions is the acceptance of statements they consider authoritative. Therefore, having come to a belief, particularly a security-building belief, they have no other recourse but to retain it, come what may.

    When we change a conclusion it is because we have built a better conclusion in its place, and we do so gladly - or possibly with resignation, if we are emotionally attached to the earlier view.

    When the fringers are faced with the prospect of abandoning a belief, they see that they have no way of fashioning a successor and, therefore, have nothing but a vacuum to replace it with. Consequently, it is all but impossible for them to abandon that belief. If you try to point out that their belief goes against logic and reason, they refuse to listen and are quite likely to demand that you be silenced.

    Failing any serviceable process of achieving useful conclusions, they turn to others in their perennial search for authoritative statements that alone can make them (temporarily) comfortable.

    I am quite commonly asked a question like this: "Dr. Asimov, you are a scientist. Tell me what do you think of the transmigration of souls?" Or of life after death, or of UFOs, or of astrology - anything you wish. What they want is for me to tell them that scientists have worked out a rationale for the belief and now know, and perhaps have always known, that there is some truth to it.

    The temptation is great to say that, as a scientist, I am of the belief that what they are asking is a crock of unmitigated nonsense - but that is just a matter of supplying them with another kind of authoritative statement, and one they won't under any circumstances accept. They will just grow hostile.

    Instead, I invariably say, "I'm afraid that I don't know of a single scrap of scientific evidence that supports the notion of transmigration of souls" - or whatever variety of fringe they are trying to sell.

    This doesn't make them happy, but unless they can supply me with a piece of credible scientific evidence - which they never can - there is nothing more to do. And who knows, my remark might cause a little germ of doubt to grow in their minds, and there is nothing so dangerous to fringe belief as a bit of honest doubt.

    Perhaps that is why the more "certain" a fringer is, the more angry he seems to get at any expression of an opposing view. The most deliriously certain fringers are, of course, the creationists, who presumably get the word straight from God by way of the Bible that creationism is correct. You can't get a more authoritative statement than that, can you?

    I get furious letters from creationists, occasionally, letter that are filled with opprobrious adjectives and violent accusations. The temptation is great to respond with something like this: "Surely my friend, you know that you are right and I am wrong, because God has told you so. Surely, you also know that you are going to heaven and I am going to hell, because God has told you that, too. Since I am going to hell, where I will suffer unimaginable torments through all of eternity, isn't it silly for you to call me bad names? How much can your fury add to the infinite punishment that is awaiting me? Or is it that you are just a little uncertain and think that God may be lying to you and you would feel better to apply a little torment of your own (just in case he is lying) by burning me at the stake, as you could have in the good old days when creationists controlled society?"

    However, I never send such a letter. I merely grin and tear up the one I got.

    But, then, is there nothing to fight? Do we simply shrug and say that the fringers will always be with us and we might as well ignore them and simply go about our business?

    No, of course not. There is always the new generation coming up. Every child, every new brain, is a possible field in which rationality can be made to grow. We must therefore present the view of reason, not out of a hope of reconstructing the deserts or ruined minds that have rusted shut, which is all but impossible - but to educate and train new and fertile minds.

    Furthermore, we must fight any attempt on the part of the fringers and irrationalists to call to their side the force of the state. We cannot be defeated by reason, and the fringers don't know how to use that weapon anyway; but we can be defeated (temporarily, at any rate) by the thumbscrew and the rack, or whatever the modern equivalents are.

    That we must fight to the death.

    ©1986

  144. MSFT again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, what's up with all the ms stories lately?
    Give us a break, there has to be more interesting stuff than "microsoft says $OBVIOUS_THING"...

  145. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by flatrock · · Score: 2

    Microsoft is treated by the GPL, because the concept of quality, free software threatens them. They ignored the GPL until it became a common buzzword. There are a lot of pointy haired bosses out there that don't understand what GPL is, but they know it's free, and there's a increasing number of examples of quality software packages that are GPLed. Microsoft's marketing people see the need to address this. The problem is that the details of the benefits and consequences of the GPL are pretty hard to explain to pointy haired bosses. By the time MS dumbes down their point of view, and the marketing trolls are done spinning things, it pretty much comes out as "GPL will destroy you, run away!"

  146. What a propaganda by extrasolar · · Score: 2

    I wonder how (or if) reasonable people can see any claims of software piracy and intellectual property. It simply doesn't make sense.

    The idea that I am hurting someone by copying software.

    The idea that the creator of a work has significantly greater rights than the user or borrower of that work. (note: not in the legal sense, but in a political sense)

    Common terms such as "software piracy" and "intellectual property" are merely propagandas used instead of rational argument. I suspect that these propagandas would not hold to rational argument.

    Can you imagine a world where copyright was much stronger than it is now? At least we have some of our fair use rights. Do we have fair use rights for software? I'm not sure. And when we buy a DVD, isn't it fair use to play it on a computer--even if it runs only GNU/Linux?

    If you can't tell already, IANAL.

    1. Re:What a propaganda by joFFeman · · Score: 0

      interesting observation i've had after spending too many years in front of machines like the one i am using right now: IANAL is quite an ironic phrase, because i'd equate the cost of hiring an actual lawyer to a good-old proverbial assrape.

      --
      "Life is great; without it, you'd be dead." -Harmony Korine
    2. Re:What a propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Hire a lawyer: get raped

      2. Don't hire a lawyer: get gang raped

      Sure, it's choosing the lesser of two evils, but #1 seems like the logical choice.

  147. Linux "is not piracy" says Microsoft lawyer... by Gildor · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...in other news, Microsoft released a statement which said that the Pope is Catholic...

  148. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Erasmus+Darwin · · Score: 2
    "If you invented a better moustrap and GPL'd the design, then MSFT wouldn't be able get a patent on it, and thus license for big fees or lock any other developer or competitor out."

    The problem with this analogy is that it assumes no innovation on the part of the commercial party. Let's say, for example, that someone creates a GPL'd pump. Now let's say that a company wants to use the pump as a built-in bilge pump in a boat design. Either they GPL the entire boat design (which means they have to expand into the boat servicing industry) or they design their own (potentially sub-standard) pump.

    Now imagine if the pump was under a license similar to that used for the Berkeley DB. Under that license, the pump is free for non-commercial use (allowing John Q. Hacker to make his own pumps in the backyard and such), but requires a fee for commercial use (forcing the boat maker to pay out money but also allowing the boat maker to charge for the boat design).

  149. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Eric+Damron · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Oh, this is just too good.

    "We can't estimate how much piracy is on the net but in one day we found a million sites under a search for one of the codenames for pirated software," said a BSA spokesperson.

    I believe the "code word" is WAREZ and I believe that the inference was that because there are a lot of sites advertising "WAREZ" there must be a lot of piracy.

    Yes, there are an awful lot of sites that try to sucker people in by having "WAREZ" in their site name. Most of these sites have a lot of shareware not actual pirated software. So the inference is total crap. Not that there isn't a lot of piracy just that the hit count for "WAREZ" is no proof of it.

    "For an industry that commits millions of pounds to research and development, and that contributes six times as much to Europe's GDP as the consumer goods industry, the levels are unacceptable, the BSA says. "

    I thought they just said that "We can't estimate how much piracy is on the net..." If so, how do the know that "the levels are unacceptable?"

    "That is about to change as the European Commission puts into force a directive intended to harmonise civil laws governing how courts deal with cases involving intellectual property"

    Software piracy is already illegal. So what do they want to do? Make it REALLY, REALLY illegal?

    "There is also work to be done on educating the public about the importance of intellectual property, especially as a web counter-culture advocating free software, such as music downloads, continues to grow."

    Oh, so now we get to the crux of the matter. We're back on the "Kill Mp3s" track again. They want laws to take away fair use so that they can increase corporate profits.

    "Open source software such as Linux is not seen as a threat to the work the BSA is doing, however."

    Then why mention it? "Look! Your shoe is untied!"

    "Linux is a way of developing software whereas piracy is copying," said Microsoft's Brad Smith.

    Wrong again Bozo. Linux is an operating system. Someday Microsoft should try to create one.

    "He does believe that stopping the pirates could have a dramatic effect on the current pricing of software, however."

    And why does he bundle the discussion of Linux in with the discussion of piracy? He's not using subtle association techniques is he?

    "As the legal market grows, there is more investment in new products and enhanced competition. A healthy market leads to more attractive prices for consumers," he said.

    So does the open source movement. You can't get a better price than free. The only problem that I see with open source is that society as a whole isn't mature enough to break out of the "take what you can get and give back nothing" attitude. We need to learn to do a better job of voluntarily supporting open source companies.

    --
    The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
  150. 18th century? by jelle · · Score: 2

    Actually, sea pirates currently operating are at least as bad as they were in the past: robbing and murdering without mercy. Last December, pirates killed a famous blue water competition sailer who anchored somewhere too close to pirates with an eye on his equipment and engine. Another story about that incident here

    --
    --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
  151. Lower prices? Who said that? };o) by kiwaiti · · Score: 1
    He didn't say "lower", just "a dramatic effect". It's your fault for assuming that the "prices for consumers" would be more attractive to buyers as opposed to sellers (he didn't say "prices more attractive to consumers", either).

    Blast, here go 4 mod points :o(

    Kiwaiti

    --
    Member of the Legion Of Microsoft Haters
  152. Windows "is not homicide" says FSF advocate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Further to other Slashdot pieces on the activities of the FSF the BBC reports on a European conference on privacy organised by the FSF.The good news is even the FSF distinguishes between Windows software and homicide; it qoutes FSF's top guru Richard Matthew Stallman as saying: 'Windows is is a way of making money whereas homicide is killing.' The rest of the article is the usual panic-attack about the impact of proprietary software in general, and how this is holding back the software developers throughout the world, according to Richard. Although the article notes the irony that despite all the proprietary software, Linux installations are forecast to grow from 8 million in 2000 to about 20 million by 2005.

  153. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your statistics are completely wrong. Most (that is, atleast 50%+1) programs on Freshmeat have no Windows counterparts (other than themselves).

  154. Don't worry, they have the way out! by Perlguy · · Score: 2, Funny

    Errr, I mean they HAD the way out...

    http://www.wehadthewayout.com

    --
    -- Windows security? Sure, which ONE would you like? -me
  155. Feel free to read the rest of my post by drew_kime · · Score: 2

    You ask:
    If it's not worth $10 to you, why are you making a copy? What possible value could that copy have to you?

    The last line of my post to which you are replying was:
    So while the revenue lost to unauthorized redistribution is probably non-zero, it is ceratinly not the total retail value of the number of unauthorized copies.

    So it seems the answer to your question is: something less than $10, but possibly more than $0.

    --
    Nope, no sig
  156. In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    cats are not dogs.

  157. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by extrasolar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Actually, Microsoft has every right to dislike its greatest threat.

    The Linux kernal is more than just a better mouse trap. Its free software.

    I believe we are seeing the beginnings of the third and last stage of software. An age where software is largely mutually beneficial to everyone. Much as math and sciences are today and have been for a long time now.

    This stage is an unfortunate stage for software businesses. Because they can not continue to exist.

    And its not just the threat of GNU and the large body of free software either. Its economics. Even though software isn't scarce, lets assume it is for benefit of argument.

    What do you do when everyone has the software they need? This is the burden Microsoft has had for a while. So they play every trick in the book. Changing file formats -- more restrictive licensing -- regular upgrades -- huge marketing -- and the creation of new technologies. The hope is to obsolete the previous version of software.

    Problem is that this provides almost zero benefit for the customer. Sure -- every so often someone gets a fringe benefit from a new technology. But usually, people are happy with the software they have now.

    So, in economics, if the customer gets no benefit from a product, they won't buy it--right? And thats the future as I see it. "Piracy" is the least of their worries. Their business model is about to collapse upon itself.

    And the GNU/Linux operating system represents this collapse all too vividly. Microsoft, there is no hope for you.

  158. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by LMCBoy · · Score: 1

    whoops, thanks fishstick...I see that now, and apologies to the parent poster :)

    --
    Liberal (adj.): Free from bigotry; open to progress; tolerant of others.
  159. Microsoft's mind-numbing arrogance. by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 5, Insightful
    That Microsoft could archly give a 5 month amnesty to Internet cafes in the Ukraine and Russia is shocking to me. If the governments of the Ukraine and Russia don't want to enforce IP, that's their business. If they want to grant amnesties for violations of law, that's their business too. Not Microsoft's.

    The funny thing is that so many of the fears of a World Government were that it would come from quasi-socialistic NGO's. But here, the multinationals are coming in and dictating the property model for other countries to use. What if a nation doesn't want to recognize IP as property? What does it cost Microsoft if an entire nation opts out? After all, most Russians and Ukrainians probably aren't getting *any* real benefit from intellectual property laws - how much Russian or Ukrainian-owned software do *you* use? (US companies employing coding sweatshops doesn't count - after all, the IP is owned and enforced in the US.)

    1. Re:Microsoft's mind-numbing arrogance. by Courageous · · Score: 2

      US companies employing coding sweatshops doesn't count

      Actually, it does. If these coding shops had to fill the full bill for their setup, they wouldn't be as competitive and then would have less to discriminate themselves.

      C//

    2. Re:Microsoft's mind-numbing arrogance. by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 2

      In my experience, those coding sweatshops actually do use licensed software when they are working with US companies, often enjoying the site licenses that their parent companies have - the big difference between developing and developed nations' costs is mostly labor and overhead for facilities.

    3. Re:Microsoft's mind-numbing arrogance. by Courageous · · Score: 2

      You believe that independent contractors are covered by typical site license agreements? Or are you saying that these foreign sweatshops actually _employ_ the foreign workers? Either seems unlikely to me.

      C//

    4. Re:Microsoft's mind-numbing arrogance. by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 2

      No, I mean that a lot of the 'sweatshops' are actually subsidiaries, and then are covered by license - and I mean in the case of in-house development branches for major US software companies, like the one I work for.

    5. Re:Microsoft's mind-numbing arrogance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But software is very different from IP. IP is merely the idea. Software is a hard developed product.

      If a country does not enforce IP laws (or has none, there is no such thing as international copyright law) it can and often still does enforce copyright laws.

      I am not disagreeing that what Microsoft is doing is attempting to 'run' the country, but they are entitled to offer an amnesty to pirates just as anyone else is able to. Who is to say that when the amnesty runs out, they will not start hawking down individuals to make their point and try to get some more sales made.

      - Tomasz

  160. piracy happens at sea. by jelle · · Score: 2

    Hmm. Actually, for centuries piracy usually happens in international waters where the piracy acts that were performed would not fall under the jurisdiction of any country. No countries' laws apply in international waters. If the pirates operated in the jurisdiction of a country, the pirates could be prosecuted by that country, and hence it would not be called piracy, but it would be called by what crimes occured during the piracy acts 'theft', 'murder', 'robbery', etc.

    So, piracy in history has always happened in a place where there are no laws to protect the victims.

    Now in this case, since there are laws and valid jurisdictions to protect the victims of these acts described as 'piracy' (in the form of copyright laws), I resent the use of the term 'piracy' as it pollutes the genuine history of the words 'pirate' and 'piracy'. Why don't they call it what it is: the act of 'unauthorized copying of copyrighted material'? If they did that, then it would be clear to everybody what was meant and statements like 'piracy is copying' would not be necessary, because the statement 'unauthorized copying of copyrighted material is copying' doesn't have any informative value to begin with.

    Why do they need to misappropriate a historic term. After their abuse, a 'pirates story' will never be the same anymore. Genuine piracy has nothing to do with the Internet or software, or 'IP' in whichever context, piracy has to do with parrots, hooks, eye patches, cannons, knives, strong liquor, drunks, and sinking ships.

    --
    --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
    1. Re:piracy happens at sea. by mpe · · Score: 2

      Why don't they call it what it is: the act of 'unauthorized copying of copyrighted material'?

      Because using the term "piracy" makes it sound far more serious. The term "copyright infringment" is hard for the advertising execs to make sound evil...

  161. Re:Lower prices? Yeah, right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Come on, you don't think they'd just continue
    to overcharge until they had, say, $25 Billion
    in the bank, do you?

  162. wow... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    big frekin news......... microsoft said something about linux...... whoopdy frekin shit....

  163. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by jgerman · · Score: 2
    You need to re=read the GPL, they can sell Linux, you CAN sell GPL software. That isn't prevented in any way by the GPL. Yes they have to provide the source, but that's pretty much it.


    I can pull GPL software that you wrote off of sourceforge and sell it if I want. Anyone would be a fool to buy it, but as long as I make the source available I'm completely in the clear.



    As far as just selling the packaging and support, to tell you the truth that's how I feel about MS. They're selling me a really big number recorded in a certain format on a cd. Once I have tha number I'll do with it what I want.

    --
    I'm the big fish in the big pond bitch.
  164. Free beer doesn't sound like freedom...... by browser_war_pow · · Score: 3, Insightful

    it sounds like socialism to the majority of people in the U.S. at least. It probably also sounds like that to those in the EU regimes that are socialists only so far as they can use socialist economics to control the lower and middle classes (ie the aristocrats that want to tax you and me 60-80% but want their yacts and porsches). And yes, I know socialism is not really the dirty word in Europe that it is in the US, but it can still influence center, right wing and the equivalent (if they even exist in Europe) of libertarians. Therefore insinuating a socialist connection with OSS can have an effective propaganda effect.

  165. DUH!! by bnlrules · · Score: 1

    (read subject)

  166. I don't trust MS, even on this. by theolein · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm pretty paranoid about most things MS does, perhaps because of their record of back stabbing and this is no exception. In another article on one of MS' VPs in the court talking about how allowing competitors access to the desktop is not in MS' interests because "they might boot Linux" and in conjunction with the article on how MS wants the BIOS to be flashable from Windows itself, I suspect that MS has some trickery up it's sleeve. I really do suspect that MS is planning on releasing a future version of Windows or a SP that will actively prevent you from booting another OS on your PC and I think any "nice talk" from MS with respect to Linux is imply a means to an end.

  167. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    GPL is based on copyright law for chrissakes! No technique or algorithm in a GPL'ed program is protected. How much sympathy should I have for a corporation with a four-gigabuck R&D budget, because they are unable to simply lift the code?

  168. History? by HiThere · · Score: 2

    Your history is different than mine. Mine says that not only do christians destroy other peoples holy places, even sects within christianity destroy the holy places of the other sects.

    The special thing about the middle east is that due to a historical quirk, many of the places there are holy to all three of the major religions fighting there. This also makes peace more difficult, as each one wants exclusive control of the "significant holy relics", e.g., Jerusalem ("i.e., the peace of the Jews" approx.). And Jerusalem is currently largely occupied by Muslims.

    Not that religion has much to do with this fight other than as a justifier, but justifiers can be used to keep people fighting beyond any reasonable bounds.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  169. Commercial software and piracy are... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...the best combination/invention after interest rates.

    Some software companies, specially microsoft, sells software for VERY HIGH prices and "allows" piracy. This combination of charging high prices and having their products pirated allow them to keep the monopoly (keep their products as the "de facto" standard) as everyone will be TIED to their products, and at the same time they're selling expensive products for those who cannot use pirated software.

    Just not to mention the Virus "industry" also. I am sure that million are spent to avoid such problems. Have you bought Norton 2002 yet?

    I worked in a scholl were we spent almost the same with Microsoft and hardware. We just could not have pirated software (for you to have an idea, 240 machines with windows/office. See how much windows and office costs per seat and you'll see how much money is being sent to microsoft).

    You could ask. "Why not lower the prices to, let's say, $10 so everyone could afford?"
    I think I can answer: It's simple. Most people are not willing to pay even $ 10. That's why the prices are high. And if they invent a 100% piracy-protected software (that to my knowledge is not completely impossible), they would lose their market control.

    So Einstein forget another very good invention. He once said the best invention was the interest rate, but the "economic model" that microsoft and other companies have established has to be considered too.

    Piracy does NOT kill software companies (at least some of them). It's the base for their business.

  170. Almost worth it by Xtifr · · Score: 1

    Imagine paying $1.80US for Windows XP Professional?

    Gee, that's only about $51.80US more than I'd be willing to pay. :)

  171. meanings by dalinian · · Score: 1
    a lot of people are under the impression that open source means "free as in beer" because it DOES!

    Hmm, that's correct. But most concepts have many meanings, denotative and connotative ones. This is a connotative meaning. A valid connotative meaning of "open source" would also be, say, "a geek hobby".

    The denotative meaning is more important. Each concept has only one denotative meaning. For open source, or free software (as I like to call it), the denotative meaning is found in the corresponding software licenses. And the meaning is that the user of such software is free to share, free to improve and free to use the software. This is the message I personally want to send out, and not the "free beer" message.

    1. Re:meanings by scott1853 · · Score: 2

      Hehe, just to be an argumentitive asshole, I must state that just like Linux is not piracy, you are not open source. So the message you want to personally send out is yours alone and may relate to your own open source projects but not the projects of the general populous ;)

  172. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by gol64738 · · Score: 1

    why oh why can today not be my mod points day. this post says it all.

    this post accurately reflects the number of fallacies and illogical statements the article has.
    the writer of this article should be ashamed (and arms broken)...

  173. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Courageous · · Score: 2

    "If you invented a better moustrap and GPL'd the design, then MSFT wouldn't be able get a patent on it,..."

    This actually isn't true. If you really want to protect yourself, you need to file for a patent. If you can't foot that expense, it's essential you widely disseminate your work so that it becomes a well-known piece of prior art. Even then, it's quite possible some third party could get a patent on it; if you don't have one yourself, you're effectively fucked unless you have $1-2M buckaroos to caugh up.

    C//

  174. Re:Lower prices? Yeah, right. by shawnmelliott · · Score: 1

    For those pirating software what could be cheaper than Free?

    This sounds like the RIAA. If you'd stop getting our music for free then we'd be able to be more competitive and only chart 11 dollars for a CD. What a bargain eh?

  175. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >I thought they just said that "We can't estimate how much piracy is on the net..." If so, how do the know that "the levels are unacceptable?"

    because the levels aren't "zero"

  176. Linux != Piracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is crafty.

    Just the juxtoposition of the word Linux and Piracy could stick in the mind.

    "Didn't I read something about Linux being piracy?"

    "Maybe he said Linux was NOT Piracy?"

    "Oh bother, it all seems a bit dodgy -- I'm not messing with it"

  177. Specious Association by Bob9113 · · Score: 2, Funny

    "We can't estimate how much piracy is on the net but in one day we found a million sites under a search for one of the codenames for pirated software," said a BSA spokesperson.

    I just found 125,000 web pages for "masochism", yet there are hundreds of times that many people using Windows. It would appear that page count does not accurately reflect societal penetration [sic].

  178. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When you buy the distribution you don't own Linux.

    You don't own the copyright to Linux, if that's what you mean. You do own a copy of Linux.

  179. Minor point of clarification by why-is-it · · Score: 2

    Ideas developed and shared undermine Intellectual Property. i.e. If you invented a better moustrap and GPL'd the design, then MSFT wouldn't be able get a patent on it, and thus license for big fees or lock any other developer or competitor out.

    Well, almost. IIRC, the m$ implementation of TCP/IP involved licensing the code from BSD and making a few hacks to it. m$ likes the BSD license because it allows them to take somebody else's IP, modify it a bit, and then claim the derivative work as their own. They are unable to do this with GPL code which is no doubt why they refer to the "viral" nature of the GPL.

    If they could take GPL code and re-use it in the same way, they would not have any issues with Linux.

    --
    *** Where are we going? And what's with this handbasket?
  180. Look at the word around you by why-is-it · · Score: 2

    it sounds like socialism to the majority of people in the U.S. at least.

    I'm glad you checked with the majority of people in the US to make sure :-)

    Take a look around you - the world is more "socialist" now than it has ever been it the past. Tell me, What sort of intergovernmental organizations existed 400 years ago. What was the state of public infrastructure (roads, sewers, canals) 300 years ago. What were the public recreation options (parks, playgrounds, sports fields, swimming pools, etc) 200 years ago. What were the options for public education 100 hears ago? How much public healtcare was there 50 years ago?

    Like it or note, the world is indeed a more "socialist" place. I am not sure that this is a necessarily a bad thing either...

    --
    *** Where are we going? And what's with this handbasket?
  181. As a favorite Sci-Fi writer of mine wrote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    during one of his rants....

    Zero from Zero is Zero.

    The first step to enlightenment is to realise that there is no piracy.

  182. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Methuseus · · Score: 1

    Also, isn't most pirated software Windows software? I have yet to find a pirated version of pretty much anything for linux. Granted I haven't looked, but I have seen PSX, DC, and PC piracy I wasn't looking for.

    I've seen pirate tools for linux to copy windows games, but they've always been real hard to use.

    --
    Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity, though I'm not yet sure about the universe. - A Einstein
  183. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Methuseus · · Score: 1

    shouldn't that be "I'll BeOS you" ?

    --
    Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity, though I'm not yet sure about the universe. - A Einstein
  184. Yes Linux is piracy by microsoft standards by Chayce · · Score: 1

    Software Piracy== Anything that microsoft doesent get money for.
    Audio Piracy== Anything the RIAA doesnt get money for.

    When you look at it that way everything makes sense!

    --
    I like replies better than Karma, even if they are flames, because that tells me I got someone thinking.
  185. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're fucking hilarious.

    Thanks for the laugh.

  186. *John McLauglin voice* Wrong! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem is that GPL code is written by religious zealots who wouldn't give Microsoft the time of day. Microsoft is all too willing to license technologies or buy them outright. GPL authors, though, are too bound up in hating Microsoft that they aren't willing to relicense their code to Microsoft.

    If the only choice Microsoft has with regard to GPL code is to turn its back to it, then that's what they have to do.

    The GPL hates Microsoft, but Microsoft doesn't hate truly Free software.

  187. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Eric+Damron · · Score: 1

    Well, that's true. But I don't think that's what the article was saying.

    --
    The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
  188. No, no. Software pirates don't say "Arrrrr"... by eris_crow · · Score: 1

    They say

    ar -m chest.a treasure.o

    I mean, come on - isn't this one obvious? :-)

  189. Here's one russian company that won't be buying MS by mlafranc · · Score: 1

    NAMESYS
    You all should know what they do, but if you don't try here
    To prove that they are russian, try: Namesys Developers

  190. don't forget by Afrosheen · · Score: 2

    *cough* newsgroups *cough*

    Funny how linux doesn't have a single decent gui newsreader that'll combine binaries from newsgroups like Newsbin on Windows. Probably because we don't need one for warez right?

    1. Re:don't forget by DeputySpade · · Score: 1

      Funny how linux doesn't have a single decent gui newsreader that'll combine binaries from newsgroups like Newsbin on Windows. Probably because we don't need one for warez right?

      No. It's because we have perl scripts that do it for us while we sleep.

      --


      This space intentionally left blank
  191. slrn can/does combine binaries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    slrn can and does combine binaries, but it doesn't yet do the yEnc decoding.

  192. Re:Eastern Europe IP laws by gaspyy · · Score: 1

    I just want to clarify things a little.

    "Eastern Europe" is a vague term. While the author is right about Russia and Ukraine, all Centreal & Eastern European countries that want to join the EU (including my country, Romania) have quite clear laws against piracy, online fraud and other stuff like that.

    Sure, there is piracy, but it is not endorsed or even tolerated by the government.

    I just wanted to bring this up to clear some possible misconceptions. A while ago, I wanted to but something online with a credit card and the transaction was rejected for fear or fraud. I had to email & fax them additional data in order for them to believe me that the transaction was legal.

  193. press release by Tom · · Score: 5, Insightful

    the article is one of those "got press release, changed a few words, printed it" pieces of "journalism". here's what I wrote to BBC in reply:

    Dear Jane Wakefield,

    In the article titled "Net pirates 'threaten software industry'", posted at http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_1 951000/1951231.stm
    on Monday, 29 April, 2002, 07:52 GMT 08:52 UK, you write down a few items that I don't consider to be entirely correct, and even more that are very one-sided.

    Allow me to comment on some of these items:

    > The warning was issued at a conference, organised by the Business
    > Software Alliance (BSA), which attracted delegates from firms such as
    > Microsoft, Apple, Adobe and Symantec.

    This sounds like an accomplishment with credits to the BSA, except that the BSA is funded by the firms mentioned, especially Microsoft. Once you check the speakers list against the BSA membership list, you realize that what appears to be a conference is, in fact, a PR meeting.
    Pointing this out to the reader would have enabled him to take the points made by these "delegates" with the grain of salt they deserve.

    > The meeting was told that in 2000 the software industry in Europe lost
    > $3bn to pirates.

    I have always been interested in finding out just how BSA and other "independent" researchers arrive at these figures. They don't tell. Any credible claim should name its sources, shouldn't it?

    > This figure is thought to be only a tiny fraction of the amount of
    > piracy that is going on every day on the internet.

    If I interpret "tiny fraction" as less than 10%, I'm at $30bn EVERY DAY, or about 11 trillion per year. The GDP of the UK in 2000 was $1.36 trillion. So these people are telling you that internet piracy is a business 10 times the size of the whole UK economy?
    Obviously that is, if you excuse the word, bullshit. The sentence does, however, create the impression that internet piracy is unbelievably huge.
    Even so, $30bn is more than Microsoft's worldwide net profits, and a considerable percentage of the total net earnings of europe's software industry. A claim of this size better be substantiated by serious facts and sources. Where are they?

    > "We can't estimate how much piracy is on the net but in one day we
    > found a million sites under a search for one of the codenames for
    > pirated software," said a BSA spokesperson.

    One of the "codenames" is "warez" and does indeed return about 4,230,000 hits when put into google.
    However, what kind of point does that make? "Buckingham Palace" returns 99,300 hits, but as far as I am aware, there is only one.

    More to the point, a search engine just tells you how many sites mention a given topic. Ironically, the BSA's own websites, both at bsa.org and national sites such as bsa.de or bsa.org.tr appear in the above-mentioned search for "warez", because they use the "bad word". A majority of the "real" warez sites are just traps with pornographic advertisement. A little research would have taken an hour or two and been quite revealing.

    Warez sites are very real. The BSA, however, having an agenda, is greatly exagerating both their number and capabilities.

    Finally, here are a few choice quotes that should have really ticked you off to the fact that the figures are made up:

    > The meeting was told that in 2000 the software industry in Europe
    > lost $3bn to pirates.
    [...]
    > Europe has a greater rate of piracy than the US - around 34%
    [...]
    > It is forecast to grow from £35bn in 2000

    Maybe math works differently in america, but even without a calculator I can see that $3bn isn't 34% of $50bn.

    It sorries me when I see journalists lifting whole articles almost verbatim out of corporate press releases. It is especially not the kind of reporting I expect from a respectable news source like BBC.

    For the record, I am a computer security professional with a telco company. I have been working professionally on the internet for over 5 years, and I have seen the warez scene both from inside (when I was a teenager) and from the outside now that I deal with people abusing our computer resources for these purposes or help the law enforcement agencies to track criminals through our systems.

    Piracy is real, no question about it. The BSA, however, justifies its very existence by a gross exageration of the facts, and as a very interested party should not be believed too much.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  194. Linux is dying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    FreeBSD is going to take over the world.

    1. Re:Linux is dying by microchp · · Score: 1

      As long as it is not MS, I will gladly accept either BSD or Linux. =)

      Netcraft Survey

      --
      --mcp
  195. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From the article:
    WebSideStory cautioned that these figures are specifically for Web usage.

    Gee, when microsoft broke industry standards HTML so that sites made by their products looked "bad" on anything but Microsoft products...

    ...Nah, that wouldn't interrelate to any reason why a lot of people that browser use MS browsers, would it? :P

  196. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Trolled again...

  197. Yeesh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Linux is a way of developing software, whereas piracy is copying"

    Brad who ?

    When are these bozo's going to realise that you *can* buy Linux software that doesn't fall under the GPL ?

    http://www.greymatter.com/Functions/NewSearch/Se ar chResults.asp?searchterms=Linux&page=1&esd_inc=0&s oftware_inc=1&books_inc=0

  198. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by mpe · · Score: 2

    What do you do when everyone has the software they need? This is the burden Microsoft has had for a while. So they play every trick in the book. Changing file formats -- more restrictive licensing -- regular upgrades -- huge marketing -- and the creation of new technologies. The hope is to obsolete the previous version of software.

    You also have BSA "audits" where people can end up paying twice. Because they can't demonstrate to a (highly partisan) party that they have already licenced the software

    Problem is that this provides almost zero benefit for the customer. Sure -- every so often someone gets a fringe benefit from a new technology. But usually, people are happy with the software they have now.

    It could provide negative benefit. If the new software does the job no better than the old, but contains more bugs, where workarounds are yet to be discovered.

  199. Irony by The+Creator · · Score: 1

    The text is about piracy, and you pirate the whole text.

    --

    FRA: STFU GTFO
  200. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by mpe · · Score: 2

    That doesn't explain why they are on a holy war against all things GPL.

    Because the GPL specifically prevents the code being co-opted as proprietary code. (Unless the proprietary software producer were to get a new licence from the copyright holder or copyright has expired, placing it into the public domain.)
    Also any derived work of a GPL program must be also under the GPL, this includes intermingling other code into a GPL program. Since Microsoft appear to deliberatly write sphagetti code this would mean that they would have to release just about everything under the GPL.

  201. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Rogerborg · · Score: 3, Interesting
    • How anyone actually associates Linux with Piracy is beyond me

    It's easy. Same way we associate "drugs" and "bad". It's all down to an understanding of the way the human brain interprets repitition, association, emphasis and repitition:

    Linux is a way of developing software whereas piracy is copying.

    Linux is [mumble] software whereas piracy is copying.

    Linux is [mumble] software [mumble] piracy [mumble] copying.

    Linux is [mumble mumble] piracy.

    Linux is piracy.

    Linux is piracy.

    LINUX is PIRACY.

    Incidentally, I am not - repeat NOT - trying to be cute or funny here. Microsoft are mentioning Linux and piracy in the same sentence because they are laying the foundations for Joe Reader to imagine an association. Expect to see a lot more of this in the future, especially once they figure out whether they want to demonise specifically Linux, the GPL, or Open Source in general.

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  202. Re:MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux - Agree by skaldrom · · Score: 1

    Yes, we see it here in the computer school I am working for (part time). The courses called "BLABLA for Windows" are stagnating or even have decreasing numbers of students. The courses which are getting more popular are more goal oriented like "Computer and Kids" or "Club management by PC", etc....

    Take the best tool for a given problem.. That will be nice if people begin to do that....

  203. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by RasputinAXP · · Score: 2
    Despite the fact that you obviously aren't as savvy as you claim to be, I also offer up my personal favorite, Slackware.

    Here's some more info regarding what Slack is.

    Simplicity. Stability. We don't need no steekin' RPM's.

  204. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by flatrock · · Score: 2

    You don't own the software. It's licensed to you under the GPL through copyright law. The GPL is less restrictive than some software licenses and more restrictive than others, but the software is licensed to you not transferred to you. You just own the media.

  205. Google?? by Penguinoflight · · Score: 1

    This just goes to show microsoft supermacy! They wouldn't use google like you, a free software junkie! MSN SEARCH is soo much better, why would you want more results that are more relevant? Alright, I'm just sick of IE being so featureless (you can't pick a search engine), and so many people use it.

    --
    "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
    1 John 4:14
  206. Re:"dramatic effect on the current pricing of ..." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Every time the software industry has had a chance of lowering prices, they have declined. Most likely (in my mind definitely) what will happen is that piracy will be legislated to death, and the software creators will keep prices the same - or raise them under other pretexts.

    The reality is that developing software does not take the same level of resources to create as a physical object - such as an automobile. Especially today, where more companies are saying "We provide more!" while actually providing less. Software manuals are non-existent today...packaging (thankfully) is getting smaller. All of these items lead to lowered costs - but have the same companies which are taking these steps lowered their costs on the software?

    A top software game in 1985 cost me approximately $25 US. Today, that same level of game would cost me near $100 US. Inflation is one thing, greed is quite another.

    The software industry tried this argument in the 80s - didn't they learn then? Stop wasting time and money and move on with developing real products.

  207. ah-hah! by hawk · · Score: 2
    >It contains a 12x12 inch book detailing the "Evolution of Kiss".


    the long-sought missing link!


    :)


    hawk, setting out with some moldy jam to grow a rock-group

  208. pip by hawk · · Score: 2
    reverse-syntax?


    what would *anyone* expect a=b to do?


    pip, though, has a serious bug: all important commands should contain no more than two letters.


    hawk, off to file bugs against mkdir and rmdir

    1. Re:pip by david+duncan+scott · · Score: 2
      Well, I spent four years writing code in a language that said, not
      a = b
      but rather
      b -> a

      I don't know. I usually say, "Put the suitcase in the car", rather than "Put the car around the suitcase", so perhaps "source destination" makes more sense to me. Somehow file copies and moves always seem sort of concrete to me, rather than algebraic.

      And really, any arithmetic text will tell you that "=" is a statement, not an instruction, in spite of FORTRAN, BASIC, and C. When e=mc^2, there's no movement involved -- it just does. I blame Grace Hopper.

      --

      This next song is very sad. Please clap along. -- Robin Zander

  209. Supply and Demand by pmancini · · Score: 2
    Every argument, theory and rule has a point where it is maximally effective. At the extremes it becomes ineffective or dangerous. Sort of like a slippery slope. Capitalism is good until you generate Monopolies. I am yet to be convinced any monopoly is good. The "Sherman Act" seems to believe the same thing.

    Microsoft is a convicted Monopoly. That means that the rule of Supply and Demand don't apply to them. Until this is alleviated or remedied they can't be considered capitalists. I suppose that the reason I've gotten some negative responses to my posting stem from having used them as an example. Perhaps they are a great example because even their power has a tough time enforcing their price points.

    What should happen, especially since software is so easy to manufacture once it has been completed is there should be normal rules of supply and demand in Eastern Europe. For example. If they won't pay 1,000 grivnas for XYZ Software then the price should be lowered. There is a business process called "Price Discovery" that is supposed to occur. Businesses try to find the optimal price to sell their wares at. People try to find the price they are comfortable paying. This gets interesting when there are choices among products in a line or across lines. Look at Flat-Panel monitors. You have tons of choices (DVI vs. RGB, 15" vs. 17", etc.) You also have tons of lines to chose from (Samsung vs. Sony vs. NEC, etc.) I've seen prices vary between products and lines tremendously in the past two weeks I've been looking for a new monitor. Having control means that I can buy what I want at a price I am happy with. I may have to alter what my expectations are depending on what I want to spend, but the process is there.

    This doesn't exist in Eastern Europe presently, however they are working towards it. A software company here that doesn't give it's software away would be irrational to attempt to sell via legitimate channels in Eastern Europe. They could never recover their costs. Since the pirates have none of the costs associtated with writing the software they simply have the variable production costs to overcome. You can't compete with that. Piracy and Monopoly are at opposite ends of Capitalism and are equally bad.

    Capitalism as expressed in the United States, Europe, South America and Australia (perhaps other places too, I haven't seen the whole world yet) has many rules. Intelectual Property is one of them. A stance against monopoly is another. Fair business practices, better business associations, consumer advocacy groups... the list goes on in ways that modern capitalism works to provide fairness between buyer and seller.

    The purest and most fair capitalism I have ever seen exists in the bazarrs of Kiev. You are one on one with the seller. You see his wares and the wares of the other sellers and you can negotiate right there. They sell just about anything there too. Unless there is theft or piracy involved the system is universally fair.

    If you don't respect the rights of Intellectual Property, then why respect the rights of physical property? You state that because the pirates don't have R&D costs they can pass on additional savings. Well, I can steal TV's and sell them on Ebay too. I just have to cover my capital costs (crowbar & dolly + truck rental) and my variable costs (gas, set up of ebay account, rental of storage bin) and I can pass incredible savings on to my customers. In fact it happens every day that way.

    Do you think forcing the GPL onto other's software is fair? Are you advocating that piracy is a common good? I'd like to hear more of your opinion.

    1. Re:Supply and Demand by raindog2 · · Score: 1

      I don't see why the parent hasn't been modded as a troll, since it depends upon the classic "imaginary property is real property" troll argument.

      I don't know why I'm responding either, except to say that if you steal someone's TV, they have one less TV. If you copy someone's OfficeXP or MacOSX or Mandrake 8.2, you have created a second instance of that object at little or no cost to anyone. You have borne the minimal cost of production, not Microsoft nor Apple nor MandrakeSoft. Thus, scarcity never comes into play except by writ, as described below.

      Finally, you started off with "Capitalism is good until it creates Monopolies". Yet imaginary property laws themselves are monopolies by writ, a textbook example of command economy style protectionism. You're taking something which, while it may cost money to design, costs essentially nothing for anyone to mass produce, and because limiting that would benefit some people who give you money as a lawmaker, people who would no longer have that money if their business model were subjected to laissez-faire capitalism, you declare it equivalent to physical property. Declaring it as such doesn't make it so, which is why most people in the world (just ask the BSA) understand 'piracy' to be a false concept and why the aim of the FSF and others is to break that system using its own rules. Thus, Linux and other GPL'ed software isn't 'piracy', but can be seen as an attack on the artificial constructs of imaginary property itself.

      There really ought to be a FAQ.

    2. Re:Supply and Demand by pmancini · · Score: 2

      The reason why it is not a troll is because under even classic capitalism "effort" is a commodity. Your argument's problem is it doesn't deal with the real and definable costs in generating software. I would find a counter argument more intuitive and persuasive if it looked at the concept of common good. For example, many towns have "commons" in the United States. Those commons are now usually parks but in early America they were grazeland for cattle -- it was a common good to have this land and for people to share it freely.

      Here there is a very useful analogy: not all land is considered common. Some land is private and some is public. The system of land management works best when there are both types. It is a complex system.

      Your argument is overly simplistic, or perhaps wishful, in my opinion. You don't even support most of your claims, but simply state them as fact. Considering that, who here is the Troll?

    3. Re:Supply and Demand by raindog2 · · Score: 1

      The land argument is another straw man, as land is the original scarce resource. Expertise may be a scarce resource, and many here including myself are paid well for having and using it, but the fruits of our expertise are not scarce and can be copied infinitely without cost to anyone. The work undertaken is valuable, but any one copy of the result has no intrinsic value the way that a piece of land or car or television has value. You can work with that knowledge or you can put up walls of fantasy and try to pretend you're producing something physical and scarce.

      I also don't see any backup for the assertion that simply because an industry is based on a flawed or obsolete business model (in this case, a 'product' which costs an awful lot to make the first one, but virtually nothing to make the next million) it must be allowed to exist via command economy constructs -- like protectionism in the form of imaginary property laws.

      Again, free software producers are working to correct this situation, which would make concepts like 'piracy' irrelevant -- as they were only a decade or two ago.

  210. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Having to include source to something they didn't invent and can't get along without is their problem

    Exactly. Software is something that is easy to copy (Gates knew that earlier than almost anybody) and anybody with a computer can do. They chose to try to carve a viable business in this slippery, brimstoned territory, and when the going got tough they made the decision to carve a swath with dirty tricks.

    They knew the job was dangerous when they took it.

  211. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You don't own the software. It's licensed to you under the GPL through copyright law.

    That doesn't mean anything. You own a copy of the software. You don't own the copyright to the software. What is licensed to you is the right to copy the software. You need permission to do this because you don't own the copyright. You don't need permission to do anything else with your copy of the software because it's yours.

  212. we needed that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WOW, how cool. now microsoft actually says it is ok to run linux. Must be good if they say it is ok!

    now with permission, go "Promptly" and buy or download your copy of linux and do a wipe/install of the newly ok'd o/s

  213. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What do you do when everyone has the software they need? This is the burden Microsoft has had for a while. So they play every trick in the book. Changing file formats -- more restrictive licensing -- regular upgrades -- huge marketing -- and the creation of new technologies. The hope is to obsolete the previous version of software

    You forgot the biggest one in current trends: moving software from a purchase scheme to a "rental" scheme.

    Whats unique to software rental, and why it doesn't *really* make sense, is that costs drop to precisely zero for the product (not counting the costs of the infrastructure for coordinating payments etc). When you rent a car, there is a cost to the car rental company in wear and tear etc. When you rent software, the company doesn't have to do a thing (once the software is developed) - they can literally sit back and watch the money come in, month after month - you're paying for *nothing*.

    In theory you could argue that the company will use the money for bugfixes and product improvements. Well, "Microsoft fixing bugs" is a contradiction in itself, and we know that Microsoft has no interest in improving its products when there isn't competition.

  214. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well I can't say that MS will fall any time soon. You have to take into consideration that there are still mindless milllions out there that can't figure out how to navigate Unix Clones. I think Mandrake is the closest to making a "User Friendly" version of Linux. MS will always have a place in desktop/workstation OSs as long as Linux developres continue to code only for the Technology minded. Another thing that "Unix" developers need to think of is the same thing that they complain about from MS. Making Apps that are compatible with other platforms. I think "Unix clones" are a great project for the next evolution in software but they still have a long way to go.

  215. Re:Still Unclear on MSFT's Strong Dislike of Linux by extrasolar · · Score: 2

    Thats the thing. Them millions will only switch to another OS when forced to. If forced to, then moving to GNU/Linux rather than Windows XP isn't so much of a problem.

    As far as "User Friendly" goes, I say screw it. There's a certain point where you need a logical and consistant interface to the computer--but the fact is that computers aren't for everyone. Certain applications that are likely to be used by them millions of casual users should probably be made as easy as possible. But other applications don't need to bow down to that level.

    As far as GNU/Linux developers coding for the Technology minded, an article by one of the leading GNOME developers provides a good counterargument to your statement (http://www.advogato.org/article/462.html). In fact, it proves your statement false. Developers are *consciously* aware of human-computer interactions (of course, only when developing interfaces). It just takes time to both get all the interface up to spec and to educate other and new developers to usability techniques. Both of these concerns are addressed in the above article.

    What free applications are not compatible with other platforms and in what fashion? In fact, of all portable applications I am sure you will find an enormous majority of them are free software. Why? Because we are free to port them.

    Please, don't troll me.