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Doing the Math in the Microsoft Anti-Trust Cases

coupland writes "Bob Cringely has posted this week's column and has made some interesting comments. He says that regardless of what happens in the EU, DOJ, and class-action proceedings, Microsoft can't lose. Why? Because they make more money by paying lip-service to the law and accepting the occasional fine than by complying. He even does some simple math to prove his point. Fascinating stuff."

407 comments

  1. Re:FOAD by SA3Steve · · Score: 0

    I'm pro-Microsoft...and even I find this type of a post completely useless and irrelevant to any reasonable discussion. Modify the parent down here...

  2. Total BS by Neil+Blender · · Score: 1, Troll

    There is nothing to stop the EU from retrying them and upping the fine if they keep it up. That's like saying you should get life for your first parking ticket.

    1. Re:Total BS by xianman84 · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'd say anti-trust violations are a bit higher up on the old crime scale than a parking violation. For example, if I commit murder for the first time should I only be issued a parking ticket? Then depending on however many people I kill after that the penalty should only incrementally go up?

    2. Re:Total BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing stopping MS from pulling every windows liscense in Europe too then suing those that don't comply...

    3. Re:Total BS by Maestro4k · · Score: 5, Insightful
      • There is nothing to stop the EU from retrying them and upping the fine if they keep it up. That's like saying you should get life for your first parking ticket.
      Did you actually RTFA? Cringley points out that even that won't matter. The justice system moves so slowly that by the time the new trial winds down and MS has to pay the fine, they'll have earned billions more than the fine costs them, even adding in interest from the original fine date. The EU's max fine isn't enough to even dent MS.

      I hate to say it (because I don't care for Microsoft's actions) but I'm afraid Cringley is right, MS will win no matter what as far as the courts and anti-trust goes. Ironically the biggest threat to them is possibly Wal-mart's new PCs coming with Sun's Java Desktop on them. What's so ironic about it is that Wal-mart is another example of a company so huge that it can just ignore compliance because it'll cost it less to pay the fines.

    4. Re:Total BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The justice system moves so slowly that by the time the new trial winds down and MS has to pay the fine, they'll have earned billions more than the fine costs them, even adding in interest from the original fine date. The EU's max fine isn't enough to even dent MS.
      You can't be sure of how fast the justice system in the EU can move if it's apparent that a company is abusing the system. In the US we have seen that it can pay to just stall everything, I'm not so sure about the EU. Besides someone pointed out that they may well be fined before any appeals are resolved.

    5. Re:Total BS by JPriest · · Score: 0

      Trusts are not as threatening as they once were, most of the anti-trust legislation was passed with a very different world in mind (non global economy). Things have changed a great deal since then.

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
    6. Re:Total BS by IamGarageGuy+2 · · Score: 1

      When the original fines were levied, I figured that monetary demands were not capable of slowing MS down. Cringely puts it very well that the power can not change hands with the court system, MS has it figured out. The only 2 ways I see this being resolved is with actual demands by the courts (do not sell another product in our country until you meet these criteria) or with another competitor to usurp them. >>Now I can see where the zealout part of Linux comes in.

      --
      Stay tuned for new sig...
    7. Re:Total BS by B'Trey · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually, that's not a bad analogy. I park illegally and get a parking ticket, but I can only get one a month. I go to court and they charge me a $10.00 fine and tell me to use the parking garage. But the parking garage wants $25.00 a month to park. So I can park illegally and risk a $10.00 fine every month, or I can pay $25.00 up front to park legally. Which would you do?

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

    8. Re:Total BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cringely points out that the maximum fine the EUCC can levy is 10% of global turnover, which is less than half of the profit MS earns from its operations in the EU. In other words, the EUCC could levy the maximum fine it's allowed to levy every year, and MS would still make a huge profit from its EU operations.

      Remeber that the EU isn't a national government, so the options available to the EUCC are much more limited than those available to, say, the USDOJ.

    9. Re:Total BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      where do you live? Where I live, you can get multiple parking tickets/day and if you get too many (even if you pay them!) they can impound your car.


      Of course, if you're a UN diplomat, you can park on top a pedestrian without a warning.

    10. Re:Total BS by B'Trey · · Score: 1

      Of course you can in the real world. But in this example, they can only give you one and, while you're waiting to go to court on that one, they can't give you any more.

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

    11. Re:Total BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      interestingly, cities have found that there are people who park on the street and then leave the car there. Reason? It's cheaper to take the $15 over-the-limit fine each day and pay it rather than pay $20 to park in a garage for 8 hours.

      The result was that some cities have started to allow meter maids to issue an additional citation for each additional hour or so a car stayed past it's limit. In other words, say a car gets a ticket at 10am, and still there at noon, would get a second ticket. And a third at 2pm, and so on....

      Go ahead, ask me how I know.......

    12. Re:Total BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Which would you do?

      Well, I'd make damned sure that repeat offenses don't get you into felony territory.

      They just might.

    13. Re:Total BS by btakita · · Score: 1

      Thats the beauty of capitalism.

    14. Re:Total BS by jfdawes · · Score: 1
      RTFA.


      So Microsoft will pay the European fine, which will have no impact on their behavior. They will appeal the decision, which will freeze any real enforcement action and effectively authorize continuation for another two to five years of otherwise proscribed behavior while the appeal moves forward.
    15. Re:Total BS by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

      John McLaughlin says YOU'RE WRONG!

      Actually, Bill Gates will be eaten by a school of pirhana in October 1908. Steve Balmer will be paralized from the head down as the result of a fall of stage while performing a ritualistic monkey dance to celebrate his ascendancy to the throne of MS corp. In a strange turn of events, Linus Toravalds will become CEO of the software giant and will squander the company's fortunes in a vein attempt to raise penguins in Africa.

      The world will decide that it was better off before the advent of the computer, and will revert to living in caves.

    16. Re:Total BS by paulydavis · · Score: 1

      Were i live NY (binghamton) 1 parking ticket unpaid gets your registration revoked and a bench warrent for your arrest! (I should know I have till next week :) )

    17. Re:Total BS by tquadra · · Score: 1

      I agree that Microsoft won't "lose" money - not directly from the sue, but I don't agree Microsoft won't lose. They are already losing a lot and the law thing just make it worse.

      Think you are a company about to buy some software solution for something.
      You have 3 options, all of them have the same features and the same price.
      Which one you will buy? The one who are being sued? I think not. And we know that Microsoft solutions aren't the best and the price... well I don't need to talk about the price.

      Think about the effect of all those sues on there shares?

      These is Microsoft worst time since ever and not a good time to be sued and lose.

    18. Re:Total BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Other than it would lose them a stranglehold in Europe and provide enough incentive for Europe to go totally Linux and...excellent idea - go for it M$!

    19. Re:Total BS by Maestro4k · · Score: 1
      • Think you are a company about to buy some software solution for something. You have 3 options, all of them have the same features and the same price. Which one you will buy? The one who are being sued? I think not. And we know that Microsoft solutions aren't the best and the price... well I don't need to talk about the price.

        Think about the effect of all those sues on there shares?

      Well seeing as WordPerfect office is out there and cheaper than MS Office, and there's Open Office (for free but minus a database), and Star Office (also cheaper) and companies keep buying MS Office, even though MS is still being sued...

      I'd say it's not having much if any effect on their shares.

    20. Re:Total BS by fatphil · · Score: 1

      There's a scheme, of dubious legality, here in Finland called "puumit", or "bums", which will pay the no-ticket fines for you if you're caught on any of the public transport system (bus, tram, metro, train). Signing up to the puumit scheme costs about half a fine, or equivalently one week's travel, per month.

      FP.

      --
      Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
  3. Great Business Plan! by Kirill+Lokshin · · Score: 0, Redundant

    1. Crush competition.
    2. Get sued for monopoly abuse.
    3. ???
    4. Profit!

    Guaranteed to work!

    1. Re:Great Business Plan! by tsg · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Step 3 is: Make so much money that the fines just become a cost of doing business.

      I seem to remember[1] this being a problem with the EPA laws years ago. The cost of disposing of waste legally was more expensive than dumping it illegally and paying the fine. It's a no brainer from a business point of view. As long as non-compliance makes them more money than compliance, even with the fines, guess which they're going to choose.

      [1] this might be an instance of "creative memory" rather than actual fact, but the analogy still holds.

      --
      People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
    2. Re:Great Business Plan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah! You tell the fucking stupid faggot! I've had just about enough of these stupid fucking slashdot jokes now. Is it just me or have they been on the increase lately?

      And I certainly won't stand for any shit from those 700K+ UIDS either. Quite honestly, the collective intelligence displayed by these fuckwits is just about a match for the single-celled bacterial organisms that feast upon the festering, unflushed faecal excretions that typically decorate the walls of my toilet bowl.

      Thank you for your concern and most thoughtful input on this crucial matter.

      Charles.

    3. Re:Great Business Plan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For a while the city of Atlanta was paying $50,000 for illegally dumping waste into the Chattahoochee river. It was cheaper to pay the fine than to fix the problem. I don't know if the city is still doing it though.

    4. Re:Great Business Plan! by Elektroschock · · Score: 2, Informative

      Harmtut Pilch of FFII provides a great Analysis on Montis decision.

      Hartmut's document in short:

      EU Boosts Microsoft's Monopoly

      The European Commission's competition procedings against Microsoft have led to a verdict which gives a big boost to Microsoft's monopoly position in the OS market and helps Microsoft expand this position to other markets. While the Commission may have earned substantial revenues for itself by imposing a one-time fine of 1% of Microsoft's liquid cash reserves, the smallprint of the verdict gives Microsoft green light to kill its main competitors in the operating systems market. This smallprint was simultaneously reinforced through backroom deals in the Council's Patent Policy working party, of which copies have been leaked to FFII. Immediately after the announcments the stock value of MSFT rose by 3%.

    5. Re:Great Business Plan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WTF!?

      Learn writing in non-code-text, Mussolini!

      All your base are belong to me!

      And btw... In Soviet, Russia, old jokes tell you!

    6. Re:Great Business Plan! by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1

      This brought about sunday trading in the UK. The DIY stores and waterstones made more money by trading on sunday than the fines they paid. Eventually the law was changed.

    7. Re:Great Business Plan! by tsg · · Score: 1

      Well, sometimes it works out for the better. I've never understood why stores would want to close on one of the two days most people can shop. Or why people would want to cut their available shopping time in half.

      Laws like that are silly. They don't help the businesses or the people.

      --
      People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
    8. Re:Great Business Plan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sunday shopping is the best-known and longest lived example of so-called "blue laws". Search on the term if you want to know where it all came from. It's an American term, but applies to Britain too.

  4. "Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by vudufixit · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Bill Janklow was a recalcitrant breaker of traffic laws. He went on record saying, "Oh, I'll just pay the fine" even though he probably racked up enough violations to have his license taken away. He kept on "paying the fine" until his car met a motorcyle and the person driving the latter was killed.

    1. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by JWW · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Where are you from? I didn't know of anyone outside of South Dakota, who even knows about Janklow.

      But you are correct, he even got a large number of "warnings" while in office. Once he got elected to the house he should have gotten a driver to drive him around (espically if the health concerns he used in his defense were vaild).

      Oh, and to stay on topic. Yes, I do believe that one day MicroSofts flouting of anti-trust laws will actually get them in trouble. But, it took Janklow almost 30 years to get in trouble driving, so it might be a while.

    2. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by vudufixit · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I knew about this because it was a national story. I honestly don't follow much about South Dakota, although I loved driving through and seeing the Badlands and Mount Rushmore in person.
      True, my comment wasn't especially relevant, except in the sense of it being an example of a powerful person who broke the law repeatedly and was content to shrug it off and "simply pay the fine."
      It's especially egregious in the case of politicians, because they routinely exempt themselves from justice.
      It's outrageous that a person ran through a stop signal, and killed someone. It's more outrageous that they were a persistent violator of traffic laws. It's even more outrageous that this was someone who makes laws and is sworn to uphold them.

    3. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by Maestro4k · · Score: 3, Insightful
      • He kept on "paying the fine" until his car met a motorcyle and the person driving the latter was killed.
      An apt analogy considering how many small companies Microsoft has killed over the years through its practices (both legal and illegal ones).
    4. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by Rydian · · Score: 1

      I'd say a lot of Minnesotan's know about Janklow as well.

      Anyways, Janklow really isn't paying his dues either, 100 days in jail for vehicular manslaughter is a slap on the wrist compared to the maximum of 20 years that could have been given to him. It disgusts me that the person he hit and their family are the ones that are really paying for his crime. I'm sure if it was just an average person that was in the same situation, they would have gotten much closer to the maximum sentence.

      --
      chown -R us. /base
    5. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by JWW · · Score: 1

      I didn't know it got that wide of play nationally. I only saw in on national news twice.

      Now local news .... that was another story entirely, you couldn't miss the story locally.

    6. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But killing companies is legal. In fact, it can be good business practice...

      --
      Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
    7. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by dnoyeb · · Score: 1

      If the laws stay as they are today, that is possible. But laws have a tendency to move towards support of the property holders.

      I would have expected an EU fine of x Euros per day until compliance is achieved. You simply can not put years of work into a one time payment.

    8. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by JWW · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The punishment is really not that out of line. There was a story recently about a women convicted of driving drunk and killing someone who appealed because the judge forced her to carry a picture of her victim and the family gave them a picture of him in his casket. She lost that part of the appeal, but getting back your post, her total jail time in that case was 30 days.

    9. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by RickHunter · · Score: 1, Interesting

      And if a truck or something had hit and killed Janklow when Janklow was driving recklessly, you can bet that his family would have the driver declared a terrorist and dragged off to Guantamo Bay.

    10. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by jamonterrell · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'm following it too. Because I like to ride the "latter" (motorcycles). He needs to pay with about 20 years of his life, and never being allowed to drive again. I don't think this is an appropriate punishment for everyone who happens to kill a motorcyclist by driving wrecklessly, but when you've been called on it as many times as him and refuse to change, you deserve it.

      On that same note, Microsoft needs to have an appropriate punishment as well for their continued and blatent disregard for the laws of every country in the world. They need to be given a chance to comply with the laws and the slap-on-the-wrist fine they received. However, if they still fail to comply with anti-monopoly rulings and change the way they do business... after all the chances they've been awarded then they need to REALLY be punished. I'm thinking something along the lines of having their intellectual property right to collect money for use of their product needs to be revoked until such time as they can comply. Basically, if they don't sell a product that complies, then they should be restricted from selling any product at all. And to prevent them from holding out by simply not letting people have windows, their right to the exclusive distribution should be revoked, and users should be allowed to use a "communal, free" license to their software until such time as Microsoft can provide a copy of it that complies with rulings.

      Jamon

      --
      I can count to 1023 on my hands. Ask me about #132.
    11. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by bccomm · · Score: 1

      I can vouch for that too (see profile)

    12. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by Angry+Pixie · · Score: 1

      Where are you from? I didn't know of anyone outside of South Dakota, who even knows about Janklow.
      I think the reason most outside of SD know of Kanklow is that he made network and cable news with his case. The guy has always admitted that he likes to drive fast, and that he couldn't help himself.

      The sound of "I can't drive 55" playing in the background.

      I'm not sure I agree with the government's attack on Microsoft. I like MS products these days, and I'm not blind to anything MS has done, but I cannot make the connection between anti-trust suits against Microsoft and a better playing field for MS' competitiors. The reason is, is that in between the two is the government which benefits both from suing Microsoft and from helping Microsoft stay on top. Oh, fuck it, I'm just jaded.

    13. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      I'm in FL & even I've heard of that idiot.

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    14. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Bill Clinton is a recalcitrant sex-adict and serial molester/rapist. He got away with it too.

    15. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by larry+bagina · · Score: 1
      killing companies isn't a crime.

      KMart went bankrupt. Am I liable because I didn't shop there?

      MCI/Worldcom went bankrupt. Am I liable because I didn't use MCI?

      If (when) SCO goes bankrupt, will it be our fault for not using UnixWare (and paying our $699 linux fees)?

      Companies survive and prosper because they provide a good or service people are willing to pay for. If they can't manage to do that, it's ultimately their own responsibility.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    16. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by Codifex+Maximus · · Score: 1

      > I'm not sure I agree with the government's attack
      > on Microsoft. I like MS products these days, and
      > I'm not blind to anything MS has done, but I
      > cannot make the connection between anti-trust
      > suits against Microsoft and a better playing field
      > for MS' competitiors.

      Anti-trust is designed to level the playing field - that is it's very core purpose - it's definition.

      > The reason is, is that in
      > between the two is the government which benefits
      > both from suing Microsoft and from helping
      > Microsoft stay on top.

      Microsoft's actions are based on profit motive. They weigh profit potential and then take action without regard to the letter of the law or the overall health of the computing industry. As long as it's profitable it's gonna be done. The government is not trying to put Microsoft out of business; they want a healthy market (or at least I hope they do) which everyone benefits from.

      --
      Codifex Maximus ~ In search of... a shorter sig.
    17. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by jacksonscottsly · · Score: 1

      there's something strangely comforting about having someone on slashdot bash my former congressman

      --
      [ you and I are ugly ]
    18. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by bergeron76 · · Score: 1

      Based on your premise, Microsoft would have to be found guilty in roughly 50,000 "globally-significant" countries for them to "suffer" and/or lose their ability to continue abusing consumers and governments.

      --
      Don't think that a small group of dedicated individuals can't change the world. It's the only thing that ever has.
    19. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by bergeron76 · · Score: 1

      In this new "global economy", the formula needs to change significantly.

      The WTO / UN needs to come up with a figure similar to the following:

      Global value * (number of companies that they've "settled" out of court with) * (a random number between 0 and 250) / 7 (continents)

      The resultant fee would more than discourage monopolistic behavior and consumer abuse.

      The reality, however, is that most of us have already realized that our rights are long lost and now all we can do is just bend over and take it.

      Anyone have any lubricant?

      --
      Don't think that a small group of dedicated individuals can't change the world. It's the only thing that ever has.
    20. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by Angry+Pixie · · Score: 1

      Anti-trust is designed to level the playing field - that is it's very core purpose - it's definition.
      That Microsoft is an illegal trust is not a new concept. The government has fought Microsoft and won many times before... and yet the obvious result, in accordance to the definition obviously has not occured; otherwise people would not bitch and moan so much about how Microsoft still illegally dominates the market. Anti-trust proceedings did put an end to AT&T's bad behavior, but it has done nothing to Microsoft.

      The government is not trying to put Microsoft out of business; they want a healthy market (or at least I hope they do) which everyone benefits from.
      That was my point. The government does have a clear preference for Microsoft to stay on top however. Just considerings things mathematically, a single corporate giant can produce greater profits and employment than several small moderately successful mom-and-pop software shops. At the same time, the government wants the market to do all the work for it, so a market with no competition is undesirable. But there are those out there who unreasonably expect the government to kill the giant and parade its bloddy carcas through the streets.

    21. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by yulek · · Score: 1

      anyone who rides a motorcycle knows the story. the ducati.net list was busy for months following the story.

      later it became national news.

      --
      in this age of communication i'm just not getting through
    22. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by Kaiwen · · Score: 2, Informative
      One night during my freshman year at university, as I approached a crosswalk, I habitually glanced both ways despite the walk light in my favor -- fortuitously, as it turns out. Off to my left, a car veered suddenly from left lane to right, dodging around the traffic waiting at the red light, then veered quickly left again. I waited. Sure enough, he arrived at my intersection just in time to pick off the last five or six pedestrians crossing before me, dragging one woman more than fifty yards under his front bumper before coming to a stop. Needless to say, she didn't survive.

      The driver -- drunk, with two priors and a suspended license -- was reported to have said to the judge at his previous court appearance, "What's the problem, your honor? I haven't killed anyone, have I?"

      Well, no, not yet.

      How many innocent pedestrians has MS picked off in its drunken careen through the anti-trust regulations?

      Lee Kaiwen, Taiwan

    23. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1

      Actually, it's funny you should mention this. I don't pay insurance even though it's required by state law. The chances of me getting into a car accident are so slim, I'd just as soon take my chances. Further, the chances of it being my fault (assume 1-1) make the monthly cost of insurance a pretty high amount to put out under the assumption that I"ll hit someone, it'll be my fault, and I'll cause any real damage. So the fine is much less than the insurance itself, and every state gives you a chance to fix your record by getting insurance for awhile. It takes 2-3 tickets before they crack down, and it could take me years to rack up that many tickets. Drive safely, keep your lights in good order, don't break any traffic laws, and don't do anything stupid.

      INsurance is for pessimists and nihilists. I've paid out a total of $100 in fines over the last three years. Even if you're the best driver, how much would it have cost to have insurance? Remember, no car accidents either. ;)

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    24. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by Bigbutt · · Score: 1

      Us motorcyclists in the DC area followed the case as well. I'm sure he got lots of airplay up on the usenet groups. I'm also hearing rumblings of folks who normally go to Sturgis bailing in protest. I don't see punishing the state for the idiocy of a single person even if the SD folks elected him but that's me.

      --
      Shit better not happen!
    25. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by Phekko · · Score: 1
      • Oh, and to stay on topic. Yes, I do believe that one day MicroSofts flouting of anti-trust laws will actually get them in trouble. But, it took Janklow almost 30 years to get in trouble driving, so it might be a while.
      I doubt mr. Janklow had quite as large funds or even the number of dirty political connections Micro$oft do, either. I'll believe the end for Micro$oft is near right about the same time SCO goes bankrupt
      --

      Sigs for Nerds. Sigs that Matter.
    26. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by gujo-odori · · Score: 1

      There are several things wrong with your thinking. So many it's hard to know where to start.

      1) I don't know how much your car is worth, but for the sake of argument let's say it's five years old and worth about $7500. Now, let's say that someone who thinks just like you do hits your car. It's totalled, you're pretty badly hurt and spend a couple weeks in the hospital and a couple months after that seeing a physical therapist, and your injuries are such that you can no longer do your job. You have no car, a lot of health care debt, and no source of income anymore. Remember, the other guy thinks just like you and even though he was found to be completely at fault for the accident, you're screwed because he had no insurance and no money.

      2) You screw up and hit someone. The other vehicle is heavily damaged and all occupants of the vehicle require hospitalization. One requires long-term care. You are found to be at fault, and you are responsible for several hundred thousand dollars worth of expenses. The other people had uninsured motorist coverage and health insurance, so they are mostly taken care of. You are taken care of too, by their insurance companies' lawyers, who strip you of everything you own in the world and have a judgement against you that will take most of the rest of your life to pay off.

      3) Your car is stolen. No insurance? Oops.

      4) If you don't live in LA this might not apply as much, but a lot of people carry guns in their vehicles. Hitting somebody's car and spouting your shortsighted philosophy on insurance could get you nominated for a (well-deserved) Darwin Award.

      I'm sure people could think of a lot more.

      BTW, do you have health insurance? If you're married and have kids, do you have it for them? What about life insurance in case you get shot for hitting somebody and not having insurance, or any other unforeseen events happen to you (this kind of assumes being married; single people have far less need for life insurance). If you are being true to your insurance philosophy, the answers to those questions should all be "no." After all, you're not likely to have a catastrophic illness or injury on any given day and not likely to die on any given day, either. Right?

    27. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1

      Heh. Your entire post assumes I'll get into an accident. My whole point was that I'm gambling that I won't get into an accident. And that if you never get into a wreck, car insurance is a worthless expense and it is cheaper to pay the fines when/if you get them. If you don't defeat that one piece of reasoning, you will not be able to defeat any of it, since it is all built from there. Well, you might be able to hit a few points here and there, but not with that argument.

      It's the opposite of gambling in Vegas. When you gamble in Vegas you bet on low odds that you'll win. Now let's reverse it. let's say you play the game (any game, pick one), and you do not win/lose. Rarely, however, you lose big and it takes all the money you have to stay in the game. Someone offers you $100/hand and guarantees that when you lose, you won't have to pay out of your pocket for the loss. Take the deal? I wouldn't. ;) (Yeah, my example is poorly contrived, oh well)

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    28. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by gujo-odori · · Score: 1

      And you assume you won't get into an accident.

      I live in LA. Every day (really!) on every freeway in LA, there is an accident. Often on some of the major surface streets, too. There was a multi-car, multi-injury accident along my route to work just a few days ago.

      All of the drivers in all of those vehicles, insured or not, all have two things in common: they all never really thought they'd get into an accident, and they all did.

      Completely ignoring the law and the fact that you could, in theory, get shot by an irate motorist who just learned that you are uninsured, you have a moral obligation to carry insurance. Yes, a moral obligation. You don't have to carry collision, you don't have to carry comprehensive. You don't have to carry uninsured motorist. You can take your chances on all those things, figuring your car won't be hit or stolen, or if it is, the other driver will be insured. That is your right.

      However, unless you are independently wealthy, you have a moral obligation to carry insurance because it pays the bills you can't pay if you are in an accident and it's your fault. No one ever thinks they will be in an accident; that's why they are called accidents. But you don't *know* you won't be. None of the 30,000 or 40,000 or so Americans who die in traffic accidents every year left the house that day thinking they were going to be in an accident, let alone be killed. You just never know when it will happen. Get insured.

      And no, I'm not in the insurance business :-)

    29. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by Bob+Uhl · · Score: 1
      Hit by Uninsured Driver What are the odds? If they are 1 in 1,000, and insurance costs more than $7.50, then destruction of the $7,500 car isn't worth it. Likewise for the rest of the costs involved. Hitting Someone Else Again, what are the odds? If I have a 1 in 1,000 chance of hitting someone and losing all my assets, and my assets are $20,000, then keeping a Jackson in the bank is sufficient to account for the odds; I'm better served using the rest of my money for other purposes. Car Theft A common misconception. Liability insurance does nothing whatsoever in the case of theft; that is a separate concern. In my own case, I have reasonable liability insurance (slightly above the state-mandated minima) and have chose not to go with any theft or self-inflicted damage coverage, since the cost thereof over three years exceeded the value of my vehicle. Once again, multiply the cost by the probability. Being Attacked by Someone Else Not only is this really a sub-case of (2), it is also an offensive libel against the many responsible gun-owners out there. Once again, though, it comes down to multiplying probability by cost.

      Insurance is usually an inherently stupid game to play: you bet that the insurance company will spend more on you than you will on them; they bet you will spend more on them than they will spend on you. Which do you think will win?

      Insurance does have its place, though: when the (perceived) costs are sufficiently high, it makes a lot of sense. Were I married, I would consider the cost of my wife having to work to support herself sufficiently high that I would wish to have insurance such that she would be able to live well in the event of my death. Likewise for health insurance &c.

      But as a single guy, it makes no sense whatsoever for me to waste money on health insurance, life insurance or the rest. I save a large portion of my salary, and take my chances. In the long run, the odds are extremely good that I'll come out well ahead. If not, well that's life.

    30. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1

      No one ever thinks they will be in an accident; that's why they are called accidents. But you don't *know* you won't be. None of the 30,000 or 40,000 or so Americans who die in traffic accidents every year left the house that day thinking they were going to be in an accident, let alone be killed. You just never know when it will happen. Get insured.

      You also don't *know* that you will be in an accident. It's what-if. What-if I crash into some dude's car today? What-if-I-don't?

      Right now, I'm at an income level that makes insurance take food out of my kids' mouths. Now, it could be managed somehow, if I *really* wanted to. Fact is, I'd rather put insurance money in the bank, and what-if I hit somebody, I pay out of my own pocket. That is my plan, actually, to never get insurance, and when I can "afford" it, put it away instead of buying insurance. Insurance is a big black hole that you only ever get back what-if you actually hit somebody. So my plan is to become self-insured and have the money in a place where it can gain interest, be invested, what-have-you, and grow. Rather than a black hole, it'll be somewhere useful to me.

      But you're still quoting numbers that are very small (30k-40k Americans die each year in car accidents, compared to how many that continue to survive driving cars that don't crash). Yes, it can happen to me. In fact, I've already been in wrecks (and I had insurance, and so did the other guy, so one time my company paid him, and the other time his company paid me). Statistically, I'm very *very* unlikely to ever be in a wreck again, and I get to be counted among those who have already been in wrecks. I know how real the possibility is, and I know what the consequences are. But I also happen to be in a demographic in which the chances of being in a wreck are very small. Very very small. Smaller than my dick, so small. So small that IBM would bet on it, and you know large corporations don't bet on anything unless the chances of failure are small enough that it's a "sure thing".

      So, the choice is "spend this not-insubstantial amount of money each month" or "don't spend this not-insubstantial amount of money each month". The qualifying fact from which I have to make this decision are very low odds, and insurance is putting money away what-if that-event-whose-chances-of-happening-are-so-astro nomically-low ever happens to me. It's a no-brainer. The chances of me being stopped and getting ticketed are greater.

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    31. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by ColaMan · · Score: 2, Funny

      50 million stoners in the US & we can't vote out the War on (some) Drugs? WTF?

      Cheech: "man, I know there's something I was supposed to be doing today... what *was* it?"

      Chong: "I dunno man, pass the bong."

      Cheech: "Ah fuck it - if it was important I'd remember... man, I'm feeling hungry - you up for pizza?"

      And so yet another chance for the stoner revolution dies ;-)

      --

      You are in a twisty maze of processor lines, all alike.
      There is a lot of hype here.
    32. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by Noehre · · Score: 1

      It was pretty big news up here in Fargo.

      Pretty much everybody I've talked to can't believe that he basically got away with it.

      And now he has the nerve to try and take his case to the Supreme Court so he can get off with even a lighter punishment.

      The funny thing is that he was apparently a proponent of all things 'tough on crime.' Apparently manslaughter isn't 'crime' in his book.

    33. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by warrax_666 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Statistically, I'm very *very* unlikely to ever be in a wreck again,


      Oh, I'd say the odds are about the same as before your first accident... The odds of getting into two accidents within, say, 1 year are pretty slim. That does NOT mean that you suddely become "almost immune" to accidents for 1 year if you happen to get into an accident today.
      --
      HAND.
    34. Re:"Oh, I'll just pay the fine..." by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      Right now, I'm at an income level that makes insurance take food out of my kids' mouths. ... Fact is, I'd rather put insurance money in the bank, and what-if I hit somebody, I pay out of my own pocket.

      First, if you do get into an accident, the lawsuits that may result will take a hell of a lot more food out of your kids' mouths than any insurance payments will. Fact is, I've had to sue assholes twice who caused accidents and were uninsured. In one case, he got away with it, but not without building a pretty hefty record for himself in the process (missed court dates, contempt of court judgements, etc.). In the other case, she paid FAR more on repair bills, court costs, and attorney fees than she ever would have in total insurance payments on the crappy Datsun B210 she was driving when she caused the accident: she shelled out over $9000, not including whatever she spent to replace or repair her old B210. I imagine basic coverage on a B210 can't be more than $50/month or so, which means she burned up more than fifteen years of insurance payments in a single wreck.

      Second, I don't know about where you live, but in all the states I've lived in, you have to hold in escrow about $100K per vehicle before you can exempt yourself from carrying insurance -- and then ALL that money is a big juicy target in ANY accident, whether you're at fault or not. Given the cost of parking that much money (you can't invest it), it's just stupid to not pay insurance. Therefore, if you're having trouble feeding your kids, being able to sock away a hundred grand is just a pipe dream, not a "plan".

      Third, if you can't afford insurance, PARK YOUR FUCKING CAR AND WALK. I don't like the current system at all, particularly states like mine with insane "no fault" rules. But people like you just make it harder for people like me. That first guy I sued left me high and dry without a way to get to work. So, fuck him. I don't care whether he could feed his kids. If things were that tight, he should have been riding a bus. Or maybe he shouldn't have had kids. Regardless, his irresponsible, selfish attitude resulted in his problem becoming MY problem.

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

  5. Postponing trials and appealing... by Phisbut · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Any company that can afford the legal game and then postpone the trial and then appealing the decision will make more money by doing that than by complying. Considering they (Microsoft or any other company) can still use their current strategy during the time of the appeal, or before the final judgment is made (it took what? 5 years for the WMP case in Europe?), a couple of million of Euros is nothing compared to what they did in those 5 years.

    Judges should act quicker and allow for much less delay is anti-trust cases, because time plays against the ones they're trying to defend.

    --
    After 3 days without programming, life becomes meaningless
    - The Tao of Programming
    1. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by Kirill+Lokshin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Judges should act quicker and allow for much less delay is anti-trust cases, because time plays against the ones they're trying to defend.

      Innocent until proven guilty, remember? There's no reason that someone accused of anti-trust violations should have less of an opportunity to defend themselves than anyone else.

      Having said that, I agree that the length of time most (not just anti-trust) trials take is riduculous, especially when you count the years of appeals. The obvious solution would be to create some special court to hear the appeals in such cases (rather than having them go through several levels of appeals), but that would require messy changes to the judicial system.

    2. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by SheldonYoung · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There is also another reason to postpone trials and drag the legal battle out as long as possible... deprecation and interest. A rate of 5% interest over 3 years on 600 million is approximately 100 million dollars. That's got to be like, what, a thousand bucks for every lawyer?

    3. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This is why we need criminal penalties for the people, not the companies, who commit antitrust crimes. Microsoft isn't hurt at all -- but Gates or Ballmer would certainly be hurt by a prison term, regardless of how much money they have.

      And oh yeah, they should be in jail until their cases are decided, just like defendants in a murder trial. Let's see how much they try to delay things then.

      There's a certain amount of precedent. Martha Stewart is almost certainly going to prison, and Dennis Kozlowski will probably be in the same boat once the trial finally happens right. ('Course, if you're a corrupt executive who's good buddies with Bush&Co., you're safe ... but that's a whole 'nother argument.) We send executives to prison for enormously complex financial crimes that most people don't even understand -- it seems to me quite obvious that we should do the same to those who violate laws whose meaning and intent is entirely clear.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    4. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      How about a limit on the number of appeals, then?

      Correct me if I'm wrong, since I've (thankfully, I feel) not had much experience with the court system... but when you appeal don't you move up in the court heirarchy? Or at least to a DIFFERENT court? Sooner or later they're going to run out of courtrooms, then they'll have to accept the verdict!
      =Smidge=

    5. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Innocent until proven guilty, remember?

      Corporations aren't people, and we don't have to give them ANY of the rights given to us PEOPLE in the constitution. Fuck 'em.

    6. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by jmv · · Score: 1

      Innocent until proven guilty, remember?

      That's only for criminal offenses. Of course, I'd like criminal code to apply to corporations, but right now, the civil code is what matters. There's no innocent until proven guilty in the civil code.

    7. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by takotech · · Score: 1

      ... deprecation and interest.

      So is the MS strategy to wait until their APIs are outdated so the Feds will not have a case?

    8. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by takotech · · Score: 1

      As long as they are going to Federal pound-me-in-the-ass prison and not some white collar resort prison w/ conjugal visits.

    9. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by chimpo13 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Which brings us back to Bill Janklow again. 100 days in jail for vehicular manslaughter. How much time do you think Ballmer or Gates would do?

      I'm surprised that Janklow even got 100 days. Tennessee Senator Koella was drunk, hit a motorcyclist and left him to die on the road. Koella served no time. And then they named the road after Koella when he died of natural causes.

      Martha Stewart is going to prison because she's not politically connected, and probably because she's female. If only she was in Skull & Bones...

    10. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by CaptainCarrot · · Score: 2, Informative
      Neither of the two cases you mentioned are valid precedents here. Martha Stewart's company hasn't being charged with anything; Stewart herself has. Her case was all about insider trading with respect to her personal, not corporate, investments. In Kozlowski's case, his corporation was the victim, not the beneficiary, of crimes which he personally committed.

      The problem is that the ways the laws regulating monopolies are written don't criminalize executives who actually make the decisions for the corporation to engage in illegal behavior personally responsible. Of course they probably should -- but this is still a different class of crime altogether than the instances you cited.

      --
      And the brethren went away edified.
    11. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by Jardine · · Score: 1

      The obvious solution would be to create some special court to hear the appeals in such cases

      I'm pretty sure they have those. Strangely enough, it's called the Court of Appeal. And if you want to appeal a decision that the Court of Appeal has decided didn't appeal to them, you appeal to the court above them to get your appeal heard. Depending on the jurisdiction, there's not a whole lot of levels to these. I can't think of any that has more than 3 higher courts.

    12. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 1

      Fair enough; I was using "precedent" in a conversational sense, not a legal sense. I do understand that neither the Stewart nor the Kozlowski case sets a precedent that can be used in court against Gates or Ballmer. What I mean was pretty much what you said -- that the laws should be rewritten so that "executives who actually make the decisions for the corporation to engage in illegal behavior" pay criminal penalties themselves, rather than hiding behind their corporations' mountains of cash.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    13. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by bergeron76 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Are injunctions on product distribution not possible?

      There needs to be a bill passed into law such that ANY PRODUCTS THAT HAVE BEEN FOUND TO BE MONOPOLISTIC IN BEHAVIOUR, or SIMILARLY CONTROVERISAL SHALL BE IMMEDIATELY INJUNCTIONED AND WITHDRAWN FROM PUBLIC SALE UNTIL SAID CASE IS COMPLETED IN ITS ENTIRETY.

      A subclause stating that the above could only apply if the manufacturer was FOUND GUILTY ON MULTIPLE COUNTS OF ANTI-COMPETITIVE BEHAVIOR AND IN MULTIPLE COUNTRIES / CONTIENTS would easily put a limiting factor on potential "abuses" of this new law.

      Anyone want to help me get it passed?

      --
      Don't think that a small group of dedicated individuals can't change the world. It's the only thing that ever has.
    14. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by 357_Magnum · · Score: 2, Interesting

      We do have one problem though, the 14th Amendment, which says that any person born or naturalized in the US is a citizen. Of course that happens to include corporations as has been sucessfully argued many times in the past. as can be seen here (It's a .pdf sorry). So when Microsoft does something Gates and Ballmer can't be taken to jail. There are many that want the 14th Amendment to be amended, however it has not proved effective. Something interesting though is that the 14th Amendment is also what gives us the right to sue the corporation in the first place.

      --
      Dulce et decorum est Pro patria mori.
    15. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by tsaimelv · · Score: 0

      But people depend on microsoft.

      A complete injunction on microsoft products would backlash because microsoft products run the world. Whether you love or hate microsoft, a vast majority of corporations and individuals depend greatly on microsoft products and it will be very costly to switch to alternatives, e.g. MacOS or linux, even if this is good in the long term. The short-term effect will be companies that go around the injunction and buy products in different countries. Then, when the injunction starts hurting the bottom line, companies will pressure legislators to remove the injunction. The fact is that a big-time injunction of microsoft products would probably hurt the (european or otherwise) economy more than the benefits of forcibly removing the microsoft monopoly. This is similar to forcing everyone in the USA to give up gasoline and switch to hydrogen powered electric vehicles. If it's ever going to happen, it will be a slow process.

    16. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Who the fuck has Gates hurt, physically? Anti-trust is a bullshit buzzword that's been floating around for a few years by the socialists who want governments to control your access to everything. Think about the consequences before you start putting people in jail.

      More (much more) than half of the jailed in the US are drug-related. Why is it illegal if so many people want it? Because fucked-up idiots who believe the propaganda are letting it happen, like you.

      Go home and think about what you've done.

    17. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by Atmchicago · · Score: 1

      The problems with your phrasing are:

      1. Similarly controversial is too vague.
      2. If I accuse you of having a monopoly then you have to withdraw your product. Regardless of whether or not you do have a monopoly.
      3. The subclause doesn't help with the above problems.

      My 2 cents.

      --

      You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make it dissolve.

    18. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There needs to be a bill passed into law such that ANY PRODUCTS THAT HAVE BEEN FOUND TO BE MONOPOLISTIC IN BEHAVIOUR, or SIMILARLY CONTROVERISAL SHALL BE IMMEDIATELY INJUNCTIONED AND WITHDRAWN FROM PUBLIC SALE UNTIL SAID CASE IS COMPLETED IN ITS ENTIRETY.

      Everyone has their right to a fair trial, and the vagueness of the above statement assumes guilty until proven innocent.

    19. Re:Postponing trials and appealing... by redwyrm · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The first clause is contradictory. How can you be certain that a product is monopolistic if you haven't even finished the case? We have a bad case of chicken-and-egg syndrome here.

  6. I did the math by krray · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Interesting take on things -- and I will say that I am no Microsoft fan. I was ticked when I had to pay the Windows tax to get a PC during the time period Microsoft got away with such tatics. Working in IT myself and being a business owner I will say that as a end user I do not trust Microsoft anymore. Not for a long time. WFW3.11 and NT had it going on back in the day. 95 came to market too soon (and no, I didn't buy). 98 wasn't any good until the se release. Me was nothing but a money grab. 2K is barely usable and XP is a joke (IMHO :).

    Funny -- of course the offices all run on Linux (and/or Netware to this day, thank you :). New desktops are either OS X or Linux based. Period. Where possible (CAD groups) the networks have been segmented off and there's little Windows worlds that, in a couple of my offices ... can't see the Internet. Ever. Yeah, I believe it has come to that (already). Funny, but the networks always ... just work. Always.

    There something wrong with this guys equations ... and I believe that it does NOT account for people like me. There's many of me out there it seems. I took my mom and dad off Windows years ago and they THANKED ME. Go figure. My contribution to the Microsoft coffers since 2000? $-0-

    It sure seems that with EVERY major computer type company you look at they're all going one Unix or the other. IBM is Linux. Redhat Linux (obviously :). Mac's are BSD based. BSD is alive and strong, don't think it's not... Novell has gone Linux. HP and Dell want into the mix directly. What do the best tv video recorders all run on?

    Microsoft obviously has enough money to be a around for a long while. Even while their markets are being eaten left and right. Windows is, well, a technological JOKE at best -- comparing it personally to any of the Unix's out there. OpenOffice sure isn't going away. Who knows WordPerfect may decently re-appear and there's always -X- company out there to come along. What else does Microsoft make money at? Not much.

    I see their bottom line continueing to be eaten away -- left and right. Mean while their costs will continue to sky rocket and things will be, well, fun to watch...

    1. Re:I did the math by ajutla · · Score: 1

      Microsoft may in fact always have a niche in the OS / office application industry. Many people still find *NIX too hard to understand (yeah, I know it's easy to figure out, but there are some extremely computer-illiterate people out there). Windows is crummy compared to Unix in my opinion, but for the general user, Windows is probably better. You can plug peripherals in and they Just Work. You can do mundane, everyday office things with Windows and it Works pretty well. Granted, try to do anything complex with a Windows box and it falls over, but for basic computing needs for those who are computer illiterate, it's probably the best solution. Some people will always want a basic OS that comes preloaded on their computer that does the basic stuff they're used to. You know, the type of person who uses their computer twice a week to check their e-mail or write letters or whatever. That's why MS will continue to be profitable; their main user base isn't going anywhere.

    2. Re:I did the math by NanoGator · · Score: 5, Informative

      "2K is barely usable and XP is a joke (IMHO :)"

      Those of us that use XP and 2k would not agree with you. They are both a hell of a lot more stable than Win95/98/SE/ME. 2K in particular is very popular with 3D artists who couldn't bear to lose a render to a crash.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    3. Re:I did the math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny


      They are both a hell of a lot more stable than Win95/98/SE/ME

      In a rear-end collision a Corvair is safer than a Pinto.

    4. Re:I did the math by ajutla · · Score: 1

      I use XP. Well, I dual-boot it with Linux on one of my machines. It kind of is pretty sucky. It is more stable than is Win 95/98/Me, but it still suffers from the major Windows flaws, nameley:
      The system gets slower and slower as time passes; cruft builds up in the registry and there's no way to get rid of it.
      The system IS more stable than other versions of Windows but still crashes for no reason; things break when they're not supposed to. For example, for the last month I have been unable to change my desktop background. Why? I have no freaking idea.
      It's still significantly slower than Linux. I find myself waiting on explorer to open a directory a lot longer than I should.
      So XP, while calling it a joke might be slightly too harsh, is still, basically, crap.

    5. Re:I did the math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny, but the networks always ... just work. Always.

      Funny, my networks always worked too - even mixed environments of Novell, Windows, and *nix...dumbass...

    6. Re:I did the math by Tony · · Score: 3, Funny

      Those of us that use XP and 2k would not agree with you. They are both a hell of a lot more stable than Win95/98/SE/ME.

      That's damning with faint praise....

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    7. Re:I did the math by egriebel · · Score: 1
      My contribution to the Microsoft coffers since 2000? $-0-

      So what's your point? Many people can agree with this with the proliferation of Kazaa and other P2P apps. Some people can even boast further back than that ;-)

      --
      ACHTUNG! Das computermachine ist nicht fuer gefingerpoken und mittengrabben. Ist nicht fuer gewerken bei das dumpkopfen.
    8. Re:I did the math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The idea that the registry slows down Windows machines is a myth. The true culprit of slowdowns is buggy drivers, whether it's the software kind or the hardware kind. The reason is that Windows XP allows drivers to load with the kernel. When they begin to misbehave, Windows acts poorly.

    9. Re:I did the math by Maestro4k · · Score: 1
      • WFW3.11 and NT had it going on back in the day. 95 came to market too soon (and no, I didn't buy). 98 wasn't any good until the se release. Me was nothing but a money grab. 2K is barely usable and XP is a joke (IMHO :).
      I know this is just your opinion, and I'm not a Microsoft fan, but you seem to be saying Windows 2000 and XP are worse than 98se, WFW3.11 and Windows NT. 2000 & XP have proven to be far more stable than any previous OS from Microsoft for me, as long as you keep the patches uptodate. (To be fair though you have to keep UNIX and Linux machines patched or they'll get hacked as well.)
    10. Re:I did the math by Doogie5526 · · Score: 1

      I dont know of many 3d apps that run on Win9x. The only MS OS he really didn't talk down to was 98se (ment almost exclusively for home users). How about doing you rendering on Linux? Lots of studios do.

    11. Re:I did the math by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't think it's just about drivers. The hardware I use at work is pretty locked down in terms of hardware but these W2K PCs just get slower and slower as time goes on. Every so often (approx. once a year) I have to reimage my hard drive to clear out whatever it is that makes things run slow. Even my wife's PC, on which we install next to nothing beyond what it came with, is beginning to get annoying after only 4 or 5 months.

      --
      Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
    12. Re:I did the math by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      " It kind of is pretty sucky. It is more stable than is Win 95/98/Me, but it still suffers from the major Windows flaws, nameley:
      The system gets slower and slower as time passes; cruft builds up in the registry and there's no way to get rid of it."


      Yep. You gotta reinstall Windows once a year. Though I think Windows is alright (not perfect, but more than adequate...), I really hate that aspect of it. Here's hoping Microsoft does something about that. (Although I wonder how many people have purchased new computers that seem faster because the registry's clear...?)

      "The system IS more stable than other versions of Windows but still crashes for no reason; things break when they're not supposed to. For example, for the last month I have been unable to change my desktop background. Why? I have no freaking idea."

      Sorry, can't say I share that experience. I've had people tell me all kinds of horror stories about 2K and XP, but man I've yet to run across it myself. I honestly think they're telling me the truth, but I can't help but wonder what's going on inside their machine. I've had a number of machines that have run 2k and XP, never had any of those problems. Never had spontaneous freezing (except for using RealPlayer...), BSODs virtually never happen (my DVD burner caused it once...), and I haven't lost work due to inopportune crashes caused by Microsoft.

      That's not to say Windows has been the best OS ever. Yes, I have had stupid things happen. Just last week I had to stop a service just to make my wireless connection work reliably. How lame is that? Bear in mind, though, that I recently spent nearly 2 weeks straight rendering a scene for my demo reel. There was a lot of swapping going on as the data in the scene exceeded the amount of RAM I had. No reboots, no crashes. Everything just worked. Even browsed the web while it was plugging away. (Dual proc machine, to boot.)

      Is Windows problem free? Oh hell no. Does it have its annoyances? Oh hell yes. But if I can do all that rendering work for 2 weeks straight, then crap isn't the word I'd use.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    13. Re:I did the math by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "I dont know of many 3d apps that run on Win9x."

      Earlier versions of Lightwave and 3D Studio MAX worked fine on 9x. The problem was if you didn't reboot Windows once every day or so, it would do it for you. And yes, this includes Windows 98. When I went to 2K, I'd reboot every 2 weeks or so. Linux can run circles around this, but when it's 2 weeks, it really isn't that B of D.

      "How about doing you rendering on Linux? Lots of studios do."

      I'm not opposed to it. I just can't, though. Lightwave does have a Linux based network renderer. But i do the development on the same machine I render on, so Linux doesn't really buy me anything there. The Layout/Modelling prorams are Windows/Mac only. If they made a Linux version of Lightwave, I'd be tempted to try it. But Linux would have to be better than Windows. Uptime alone doesn't cut it. The apps and everything else I need to do still need to work. (I can forgive the lack of games, though.) Linux has some of that, but not all of it.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    14. Re:I did the math by Alcohol+Fueled · · Score: 1

      I agree with NanoGator. I used Windows 2000 while I was in school, because that's what the IT department had on the computers. It ran fairly well, with the occasional hiccup. I currently use Windows XP on my desktop and laptop, and I have *never* had a crash yet. Compare this to the first computer we had, which ran Windows 95, and its a huge difference. Windows 95 crashed almost every other day. Want to send an email? Oops, better handle that BSoD first...

      --
      Ah am not a crook! (\(-__-)/)
    15. Re:I did the math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      And multi-tasking still sucks. I just got my work machine "upgraded" from NT to XP and I see zero difference in multi-tasking. If anything NT was better because XP freezes for periods greater than 10 seconds when doing intensive disk IO and NT never did that. Explorer is still very unstable and doesn't handle large directories well at all. Finally, I never had a machine that swapped when it went to the screen saver. XP seems to swap everything out just to run a screen saver. No it is not SETI...

    16. Re:I did the math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
      Every so often (approx. once a year) I have to reimage my hard drive to clear out whatever it is that makes things run slow.

      I think it is the drivers. Microsoft also calls some of these drivers, "services", if you're interested. Get the service controller command line tool. A command of

      sc query type= driver bufsize= 15360
      will tell you all you need to know about suspicious drivers. Then read some of the sc documentation to find what to do next to rid your system of those drivers.
    17. Re:I did the math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try running Regmon from www.sysinternals.com to see how many redundant accesses there are to the registry.

    18. Re:I did the math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a Windows Me installation that was upgraded to Windows XP. This is a computer purchased in summer 2001, upgraded in spring 2002. I have zero problems with it. Never reinstalled. It runs beautifully, with no system crashes. I don't know what you do on your computer, but filesharing programs and/or viruses/spyware may be to blame.

    19. Re:I did the math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Finally, I never had a machine that swapped when it went to the screen saver. XP seems to swap everything out just to run a screen saver. No it is not SETI... ...is it Re_ImportantDocument.scr?

    20. Re:I did the math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus Christ. Maybe if you didn't install every piece of spyware that you come across on the web and are perhaps a little bit more vigilant on the stuff you DO decide to install, then you wouldn't have to rebuild every year. I have never needed to rebuild for performance reasons, and I find the people that do are simply clueless idiots who have no idea about basic "housekeeping tasks" for computers. Also, maybe some basic training in using disk defragmenter might help too.

    21. Re:I did the math by danaris · · Score: 1

      Hey, mate, ever try one of these?

      Sheesh. There are more than 2 platforms out there, you know--and guess who came up with the "just works" slogan?

      Dan Aris

      --
      Fun. Free. Online. RPG. BattleMaster.
    22. Re:I did the math by Durrik · · Score: 1

      Also look at how your swap file is set up. If its set to dynamic you might be screwed. As you run your system and you need more and more memory the swap file grows, and gets fragmented. The defragger that comes with W2K doesn't defrag it. You need to use something like diskeeper to defrag it, and it usually helps speed the computer back up.

      This is the only obvious thing to me that makes the system go slower as time goes on, that doesn't get fixed by a reboot. There's probably hundreds of other things that cause it but I'm not sure what they are.

      --
      Software Engineer & Writer of Military Science Fiction and Fantasy Blog: petermwright.com Twitter: WrightPeterM
    23. Re:I did the math by blaksaga · · Score: 0

      Hehe...from my experience 98SE was more stable than XP. And 2000 blows it out of the water...but none of them can even compare to unix, linux, bsd, or the plethora of other good OS's.

    24. Re:I did the math by Doogie5526 · · Score: 1
      Yeah, those were the few I had in mind. Coming off of windows (actually, I'm still using XP slightly more than 1/2 the time due to other apps), I still feel better rebooting after a week or so.

      I like being able to drop to console and save some RAM when rendering (and the ease of network rendering too). I hate how I just don't know of any good apps for doing some things in Linux yet(editing and compositing, excluding the expensive Shake, comes to mind). Any suggestions? I also haven't done much with the Gimp because I'm still try'n to get my Wacom working in Fedora.

      I dont really mind the lack of games as much anymore. If there's not a linux version, it likely emulates fairly well. I'd say I've seen more games avaliable for Linux than Mac (or at least released sooner).

      Right now I prefer Linux for its console/networking/everything else, and windows for its UI. Yeah I may be using linux mostly for the Neet-O factor right now, but it is my hobby OS... and my hopes of getting away from the Microsoft tax.

    25. Re:I did the math by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "Maybe if you didn't install every piece of spyware that you come across on the web and are perhaps a little bit more vigilant on the stuff you DO decide to install, then you wouldn't have to rebuild every year."

      That's the sad part, I'm not installing everything under the sun. It's a nasty bottleneck with Windows. Get over it.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    26. Re:I did the math by Rares+Marian · · Score: 1

      What kind of design flaws could it possibly have that the swap doesn't get fixed sfter reboot?

      --
      The message on the other side of this sig is false.
    27. Re:I did the math by Sepper · · Score: 1

      Re-use the swap file to accelerate boot time? I haven't check, but I'm sure it's a possible explanation... It may be a design problem, but with a closed-source application this BIG we will probably never know... and we probalby won't care anymore when the nest installement comes up...

      Mod -5 : Drunken comment...

      --
      I live in Soviet Canuckistan you insensitive clod!
    28. Re:I did the math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's all one needs to do to "fix" a fragmented swapfile:

      1.) Set the swapfile to a static (max and min) 32 MB in size.

      2.) Reboot the system.

      3.) Go back in, and resize it to a static 512 MB (both max and min).

      You are done. Never allow Windows 2000/XP to play with the swapfile size on its own. Set it to a static 512 MB and be done with it.

  7. What a suprise by imgumbydamnit · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What whould you do if the parking ticket cost less than the parking meter?

    --
    To err is human. To arr is pirate.
    1. Re:What a suprise by awtbfb · · Score: 4, Interesting

      We had a similar situation when I was at school. Paying to park at the meters for the bulk of the day was more than the parking ticket - which could only be issued once per car per day. The rule became, put coins in the meter if you'll be there less than 4 hours, otherwise, skip it.

      Of course, they may have wanted it that way since it requires less labor to process the ticket than it does to haul away all those coins.

    2. Re:What a suprise by System.out.println() · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I actually put this to use last quarter. I parked in the parking lot by my dorm, where parking passes were $70 and tickets were $25. I knew that unless I had to park there more than 3 times, it'd be cheaper to just park there.

    3. Re:What a suprise by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "We had a similar situation when I was at school. Paying to park at the meters for the bulk of the day was more than the parking ticket - which could only be issued once per car per day. The rule became, put coins in the meter if you'll be there less than 4 hours, otherwise, skip it."

      The school I was at had an interesting solution to this problem. Every time you got a ticket, the new fine was the previous fine times 2. If you paid $10 on the first offense, the second offense would be $20, the third would be $40, etc.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    4. Re:What a suprise by gid13 · · Score: 1

      At McMaster in Hamilton, Ont., it costs $15 for a full day of parking. If you park off campus, a ticket is apparently $12. And sometimes that'll get you closer to class.

    5. Re:What a suprise by Texas+Rose+on+Lava+L · · Score: 2, Funny

      Did anyone ever come back from vacation to find $10,485,750 worth of tickets on their windshield?

    6. Re:What a suprise by DR+SoB · · Score: 1

      In York Mills Station, Toronto, Ontario, parking costs $5 for night parking (if you want to go bar hopping). The fine? $4 if you get a ticket. Have I ever paid? Yes, I was fooled once? How many times have I parked there without paying? >10. How many tickets have I got? 5. You do the math..

      --
      Mod +5 Drunk
    7. Re:What a suprise by seffala · · Score: 1

      This is the way it used to be in Austin (before my time). My father-in-law had a business downtown when he was young, and the meters were more expensive than the tickets. He'd rack the tickets up by the hundreds, until they changed the rules, and he found his car towed one day.

    8. Re:What a suprise by brandonY · · Score: 1

      Georgia Tech, in its infinite wisdom, solved the problem of people not being willing to pay the $350 for a parking permit by towing all cars with 3 tickets, whether or not they've been paid off.

  8. Well, of course... by ajutla · · Score: 3, Funny

    They're Microsoft! What, were you expecting them to play nice?

  9. For everyone else's benefit by Raul654 · · Score: 4, Informative
    --


    To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
    --E.C. Stanton
  10. How they'll pay Sun Microsystems... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Word on the street is that Sun will get $2 billion dollars of vouchers for Windows 98 and Office 97.

    1. Re:How they'll pay Sun Microsystems... by darth_MALL · · Score: 0

      hand delivered by Clippy

  11. TO antitrust,competition,consumer & trade prac by NZheretic · · Score: 4, Informative
    Wednesday, March 10, 2004
    A plea for relief from Microsoft's escalating anti-competitive tactics.
    An open letter to antitrust, competition, consumer and trade practice monitoring agency officials worldwide.

    The role of trade practice and antitrust legislation is to provide the consumer with protection from abusive business practices and monopolies. In one of the most serous cases of monopolization in the information technology industry, the agencies charged with protecting the competitive process and the consumer have utterly failed to stem the offending corporation's anti-competitive practices.

  12. Same concept as the old-style FCC finings by Theaetetus · · Score: 5, Insightful
    ... with Howard Stern.

    Previously, the FCC was limited to fining $27,500 per offense - and Clear Channel, pulling in many millions a year syndicating Howard Stern, would gladly pay the small fine knowing that the 'controversy' only increased his ratings, resulting in even higher profits for them. When the FCC recently changed their fine structure to $275,000 per station per offense, that could result in many millions in fines each time... which is what resulted in Clear Channel dropping Stern from most of their stations.

    In both this and the EU/Microsoft cases, small fines don't work, and large fines will either be appealled and reduced or attacked as being unreasonable. The only solutions that will actually change behavior are the ones that will cause serious economic harm, without seeming unreasonable - suspending licenses of non-complying stations, or forcing Microsoft to open code/APIs and unbundle apps (or even splitting up the different sections of the company.)

    -T

    1. Re:Same concept as the old-style FCC finings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      This is not insightful, Stern was dropped before the fines were raised.

    2. Re:Same concept as the old-style FCC finings by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 1

      He was only on 6 Clearchannel stations, so we're only talking $1.6mm. Clearchannel, being in bed with the current administration, more likely booted Howard off for his anti-bush comments and used the current situation with "indecency" fines as an excuse. Keep in mind that far-worse stuff comes out of the mouths of Clearchannel's own DJs.

    3. Re:Same concept as the old-style FCC finings by m000 · · Score: 2, Informative

      The Howard Stern Show is syndicated by Infinity Broadcasting, a subsidiary of Viacom. Clear Channel dropped the show from the six of their stations that carried it before any increase in the fine structure. It was done in an effort to suck up to the feds, as the Chairman(?) of Clear Channel was to appear before Congress the following day.

    4. Re:Same concept as the old-style FCC finings by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Well if you're cynical the actual situation now is:
      EC: hey MS, you make lots of money, hand over 1% of your cash.
      MS: Uh, no. Why should I?
      EC: We'll allow you to charge the OSS people to use your APIs.
      MS: Now you're talking.
      Sun: Give us 1% of your cash pile, and we'll give it back to you to license your stuff, stop bugging you and start beating the OSS people (don't forget the licenses!).
      MS: Cool.
      Samba folk: Uh-oh.
      Ignorant people: MS loses EC anti-trust case and pays small fine.

      --
  13. Re:TO antitrust,competition,consumer & trade p by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    An open letter to antitrust, competition, consumer and trade practice monitoring agency officials worldwide.

    ...who will never see it, and wouldn't give a shit if they did see it. Basically a form of masturbation.

  14. Interesting, but his economics are wrong. by airrage · · Score: 1, Troll

    I like Bob, but invariably he always argues the economics from the business side. What about what you and I paid for this legal battle? What is the average cost of an anti-trust proceeding?

    What they needed in this, and many other anti-trust cases, is to think outside the box: why not use the RICO statutes? What not have the Federal Trade Commission declare Microsoft OS defective and pull it from shelves? Why not go after Bill and Steve like they did with Enron's Skilling and Lay?

    I think Bob is a good at prognosticating, but seriously, every time he starts talking BUSINESS he simply misses the point.

    --
    "This isn't a study in computer science, its a study in human behavior"
    1. Re:Interesting, but his economics are wrong. by Kirill+Lokshin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What not have the Federal Trade Commission declare Microsoft OS defective and pull it from shelves?

      IANAL, but I believe that a product can only be pulled if it poses a (physical) danger to its users. Buggy as Windows may be, I hardly think software poses that kind of threat (unless it is used in life-threatening environments, which the EULA specifically prohibits, anyways).

      In any case, there's a difference between going after a company for its behavior and removing products from the market for political reasons. Nobody should be forced to buy Windows; but if I want to use it, there's no reason I should be prevented from doing so, either.

    2. Re:Interesting, but his economics are wrong. by lordscotus · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Enron's Skilling and Lay? ... What?! Ken Lay et al. get a free pass as long as Bush is in office. It's the same with Microsoft, whom they just adore! I *hope* the next President is a little smarter than GW!

    3. Re:Interesting, but his economics are wrong. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People shouldn't forget that Enron thrived under both Republican and Democratic administrations.

      See the timelines at http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/special/enro n/1127125 and http://www.corpwatch.org/issues/PID.jsp?articleid= 2278.

      Skilling and Lay will get a free pass regardless of who is in the Whitehouse because they are rich and well-connected.

    4. Re:Interesting, but his economics are wrong. by Angst+Badger · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What they needed in this, and many other anti-trust cases, is to think outside the box: why not use the RICO statutes? What not have the Federal Trade Commission declare Microsoft OS defective and pull it from shelves? Why not go after Bill and Steve like they did with Enron's Skilling and Lay?

      Actually, Cringley peripherally touches on that question, too, by noting that Microsoft has a lot of political allies. It is, of course, a matter of popular wisdom that money buys legislation, but that's not strictly true. You are, for example, not ever going to cough up enough dough to get Tom DeLay to advocate for same-sex marriage or to get Teddy Kennedy to sponsor a bill in favor of racial segregation. All but a few of these people really are ideologically driven, and all the money buys you is wiggle room, which is significant for most politicians, but not all-consuming.

      The real problem is that there is an ideological faction in Congress -- which is primarily but hardly exclusively Republican -- which sees business and making money as a good thing, and which naively reasons, therefore, that bigger business and more money must be a better thing. These ideologues are not (especially) corrupt or stupid, but they are blinded by their own dogma. The libertarian wing of the faction is particularly blinded by their adherence to the doctrine of a self-correcting market because they refuse to recognize that, all other things being equal, wealth is itself a competitive advantage.

      This will not change except at the ballot box, and it will not ever be the primary issue: the average person doesn't care enough about this to choose a candidate on the basis of their feelings about Microsoft or antitrust laws.

      Now, mind you, I'm not arguing against being politically active by any means, but the best way to fight Microsoft (and Oracle, Adobe, Macromedia, etc., etc., ad nauseam) is to write excellent free end-user software. Sure, it's still necessary to fend off the more ridiculous legislative initiatives and vote wisely, but in the end, making the better product will win out.

      (Now, by "better", I mean better in the eyes of the average consumer, not the average software engineer, but that's a rant for another occasion.)

      --
      Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
    5. Re:Interesting, but his economics are wrong. by FeloniousPunk · · Score: 1

      What they needed in this, and many other anti-trust cases, is to think outside the box: why not use the RICO statutes? What not have the Federal Trade Commission declare Microsoft OS defective and pull it from shelves? Why not go after Bill and Steve like they did with Enron's Skilling and Lay?

      I think Bob is a good at prognosticating, but seriously, every time he starts talking BUSINESS he simply misses the point.


      No, he's right on the point. Cringely is laying out the case how Microsoft in the current legal environment always comes out ahead, no matter what. Your ideas about going after MS are all fine and well, but Cringely is not outlining new scenarios to take down Microsoft, he's making a point about the inadequacy of current legal tools to punish bad business practices by companies like Microsoft. And he concludes that until the situation changes, Microsoft won't. That was the point - not to fantasize about misapplying existing law to get Microsoft.

      --
      I know this because Tyler knows this.
    6. Re:Interesting, but his economics are wrong. by eddy+the+lip · · Score: 3, Funny
      I *hope* the next President is a little smarter than GW!

      My cat's free next November...

      --

      This is the voice of World Control. I bring you Peace.

    7. Re:Interesting, but his economics are wrong. by Draknor · · Score: 1

      Wow - excellent post! That has to be one of the most accurate and succinct explanations of our system that I've ever read.

      Wish I had mod points :(

    8. Re:Interesting, but his economics are wrong. by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1
      All but a few of these people really are ideologically driven

      Many, perhaps most, of the major politicians (particularly those who want government to be larger) are driven by power lust and their ideology derives from power lust. It's cause and effect in a positive feedback loop.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    9. Re:Interesting, but his economics are wrong. by the_womble · · Score: 1
      The real problem is that there is an ideological faction in Congress -- which is primarily but hardly exclusively Republican -- which sees business and making money as a good thing, and which naively reasons, therefore, that bigger business and more money must be a better thing.

      Very true. It does help that very few politicians understand technological industries, or how they differ economically from manufacturing: e.g. negligible marginal cost of production and very strong network effects.

    10. Re:Interesting, but his economics are wrong. by IamLarryboy · · Score: 1

      "The libertarian wing of the faction is particularly blinded by their adherence to the doctrine of a self-correcting market because they refuse to recognize that, all other things being equal, wealth is itself a competitive advantage."

      So what?

      God forbid somebody has a "competitive advantage." People are different : THIS IS NOT A BAD THING! This does not imply that anyone is better only different. In fact people being different is a good thing as it lends itself to specialization.

    11. Re:Interesting, but his economics are wrong. by killjoe · · Score: 1

      It is a bad thing because it means that all markets eventually end up with a monopoly. The only think that prevents a worldwide monoply of all markets by one company is legislation.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    12. Re:Interesting, but his economics are wrong. by Forgotten · · Score: 1

      They may in fact be driven by powerlust, but they don't believe themselves to be. They believe themselves to be driven by ideals - to be idealogues, as the parent poster noted. They will then act in ways consistent with that belief, and become more idealogically driven in order to rationalise those actions. It's a feedback loop, and it's why politicians (and many other people) tend to extremes.

      There is a difference between someone's actual motivation, and their perceived motivation. The key point to consider is that they will act in concordance with their perceived motivation, even when it actually opposes their actual motivation - at least for a while and to a large degree (then they turn around like Talleyrand, but that's rare and visible, if easily forgotten).

  15. MOD PARENT UP -- INSIGHTFUL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought so, anyway.

  16. Well, Duh! by fm6 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Anybody who's followed Microsoft's legal hassles -- or the legal hassles of any big corporation -- knows this stuff.

    Back during the Watergate scandals, a big corp got caught making illegal contributions to a Republican slush fund. They had to pay a fine, of course. A reporter, noticing the paltry size of the fine, remarked to one of the lawyers, "I'll bet your fee was higher than that." The lawyer responded heatedly, "I should hope so!"

    But don't respond with a round of lawyer bashing. That's like blaming garbagemen for pollution. Instead, go out and elect a President who will appoint an Attorney General who thinks that anti-trust laws need penalities that actually hurt.

    1. Re:Well, Duh! by tsg · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Instead, go out and elect a President who will appoint an Attorney General who thinks that anti-trust laws need penalities that actually hurt.

      These two are mutually exclusive. Anyone who can get elected will have had their campaign financed by someone that this hurts. Anyone who hasn't had their campaign financed by someone that this hurts can't get elected.

      --
      People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
    2. Re:Well, Duh! by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 0, Troll

      Excuse me, but your bias is showing.

      If I recall correctly MOST of Microsoft's Revenue came during the Clinton Administration. In fact, the monopoly status of Microsoft can be directly attributed to the time the company "modernized" windows. Windows 3.11 was fairly stable at the time and WordPerfect and Lotus both were finally running under it well enough.

      Then Win95 came out and BROKE all the third party applications AND only Word and Excel ran stable enough to be useful.

      I blame M$ on Clinton and Janet Reno.

      (not really, just showing you how bias works)

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    3. Re:Well, Duh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, so a President other than John Bush or GW Kerry, then? Shame the Democrats let themselves be tricked into throwing away Howard Dean and Wes Clark...

    4. Re:Well, Duh! by Simon+Garlick · · Score: 1

      Instead, go out and elect a President who will appoint an Attorney General who thinks that anti-trust laws need penalities that actually hurt.



      These two are mutually exclusive. Anyone who can get elected will have had their campaign financed by someone that this hurts. Anyone who hasn't had their campaign financed by someone that this hurts can't get elected.



      Congratulations. The most concise and insightful comment I've read today.
    5. Re:Well, Duh! by fm6 · · Score: 1
      Was it my imagination, or were there some serious anti-trust actions against Microsoft four years ago? Which magically disappeared when the Justice Department changed bosses.

      I'm not saying that you can't buy influence in Washington. But you can only buy so much. Individuals may not have as much influence as big corporations, but they have some. To simply give up and walk away is a cop out.

    6. Re:Well, Duh! by fm6 · · Score: 1

      The gaps in your logic are mond boggling. But I see no point in explaining them to you -- anything I say will just be further proof of my "liberal bias".

    7. Re:Well, Duh! by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      > Instead, go out and elect a President who will appoint an Attorney
      > General who thinks that anti-trust laws need penalities that actually
      > hurt.

      Wrong tactic. No Democrat will give a rats rear about it unless they think they can tap a vein to suck revenue out of for thier immoral income redistribution schemes, and then they won't be dumb enough to actually kill such a cash cow.

      No Republican will act to harm business. A position I tend to agree with, btw as a good libertarian.

      The only hope is to get a Republican to remember that, according to the founding lights of capitalist thought, monopolies are BAD for business.
      Also, monopolies are almost always a result of government interferrence with the free market so eliminating them IS in perfect harmony with conservative principles. While Microsoft might be piling up more money than the Pope, they are causing great harm to the economy as a whole. It probably wouldn't be hard to prove at least a 1% drag on US GDP due to their monopoly sustaining actions when one combines the harm to all of the other IT companies and the wasted productivity that comes from an unhealthy dependence on Exchange and Outlook/Outlook Express.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    8. Re:Well, Duh! by fm6 · · Score: 1
      No Democrat will give a rats ....

      No Republican will act to...

      And on what do you base these categorical statements? Are you asserting that no politician in either major party has ever acted against your stereotypes? Because they have. It isn't easy to make them do it, but it is possible.

      Of course, that means thinking about politicians as individuals rather than convenient little categories. Lots of work, I admit.

      The attitude of previous administration towards anti-trust was worlds away from what we've got now. Yeah, it still sucked, but even the difference between "sucks" and "sucks a lot" is worth fighting for.

    9. Re:Well, Duh! by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      > Are you asserting that no politician in either major party has ever
      > acted against your stereotypes?

      Oh course there are a few exceptions (Sen. Miller and Sen. McCain come to mind) on both sides. But nothing like enough to count when it comes to voting. Because when the chips are down there only a couple of major schools of political thought and to be effective you have to pick one and stick with it, at least on the major votes.

      > The attitude of previous administration towards anti-trust was worlds
      > away from what we've got now.

      Really. Did you really believe the DOJ under Reno was actually going to break up Microsoft? Do you really believe the end settlement would have been different enough to break the signal to noise ratio? More importantly, would it have been severe enough to get above the pain threshold Cringley is talking about, where it is less painful to actually obey the law instead of just pay any fines and pay lipservice to the law? Because I certainly was never prone to any such delusion.

      Doesn't matter though, the DOJ did all they could realisticly do, keep M$ occupied and off balance long enough for the Penguin Legions to get onto the battlefield, and that has now happened.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    10. Re:Well, Duh! by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      I am neither Republican nor Democrat. I am a Libertarian. I don't care if you are liberal or not.

      Of course my post was filled with illogic. That, after all, was the point, it mirrors the illogic of the parent post.

      Blaming Bush for M$ is just plain stupid, as is blaming Clinton.

      My biggest complaint about most liberals is that the are too stupid to realize when people are SARCASTIC.

      The proof is in my -1 Troll. That moderator is an idiot.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
  17. bah... by SnappleMaster · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The article does have some valid points but there's some stupid stuff in here as well.

    In anti-trust law the actors are individuals, companies, and regulators. The clock rate of the overall system was defined no later than the 1930s when the most recent anti-trust laws were passed. The primary data bus is provided by the U.S. Mail.

    Holy mixed metaphors Batman! This just makes no sense. Actors and clock rates! Please... don't overclock your actors! Also what is the US Mail doing in here? Maybe I missed something but I don't recall the USPS having anything to do with Microsoft's legal difficulties.

    It looks tough, but Microsoft gets to appeal, remember, and this particular part of the EU bureaucracy has been reversed on appeal two out of the last three times. So whatever the fine, Microsoft has two-to-one odds of not having to pay it

    I don't recall the proper term, but this is logical fallacy. The fact that the EU has a lousy record does not give MS 2:1 odds of beating the rap. This is not coin-flipping, this is complex legal stuff. Simple odds do not apply.

    However, I really love the last paragraph, especially the suggestion that justice be meted out through death and maiming. I'm all for that!

    There are only two ways for a society to address such taking advantage of a legal system. One way is to drag that legal system into the 21st century, which isn't going to happen in America. The other way is to dramatically simplify the legal system along the lines of nomadic justice where there are no prisons nor even capability for collecting damages, so all correction comes down to death or maiming. That isn't going to happen, either, so Microsoft wins.

    --
    Be happy. Nothing else matters.
    1. Re:bah... by Tony · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Holy mixed metaphors Batman! This just makes no sense. Actors and clock rates! Please... don't overclock your actors! Also what is the US Mail doing in here? Maybe I missed something but I don't recall the USPS having anything to do with Microsoft's legal difficulties.

      An "Actor" may not be a person; it is an "object" that has an "action." ("Gratuitious" use of quotes provided by Qwerty(r).) He is comparing the legal system to a digital system; it kinda works, I guess.

      As far as the USPS is concerned: the modern legal system is designed to use the USPS as a medium to transfer large amounts of data, via "packets." These packets are generally yellowish in color.

      The USPS is slower than, say, a network of connected computers (hypothetically called an "Internet"), at least for less-than-massive amounts of data. Since our legal system is currently designed to use the USPS, Microsoft can use this high-bandwidth, extremely high-latency data bus to their advantage: the longer it takes to convict, sentence, and enforce violations, the more money Microsoft makes from their illegal behavior.

      I don't recall the proper term, but this is logical fallacy. The fact that the EU has a lousy record does not give MS 2:1 odds of beating the rap. This is not coin-flipping, this is complex legal stuff. Simple odds do not apply.

      If the EU had a record of *not* reducing the remedy on appeal, I would feel much more confident about this. As it is, since they have a history of reducing the fine on appeal, I certainly don't feel very confident they'll have the balls to stick to the original remedy.

      Simple odds don't apply, but you can use past behavior as an indication of future behavior with a fair amount of confidence.

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    2. Re:bah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you hear that whoosh? that was Cringely's article going right over your head.

    3. Re:bah... by lawpoop · · Score: 4, Interesting
      He is using metaphors, but they are certainly not mixed. They are apt! Apt, I say!

      Basically Cringely is arguing that the court system, whose timetables are based on pre-industrial information flows (i.e. the time it takes a man on horse and buggy to get the handwritten documents from the lawyer's office to a court house), cannot keep up with the hijinks MS is pulling in the relatively fast-paced digital age. By the time this particular case goes through appeals, etc., the story will be ancient in computer terms. MS will have screwed consumers 50 ways from Sunday in the meantime.

      As far as USPS, or European postal systems having to do with MS legal difficulties -- how do you think the documents were presented to the courts? Fax? Email? ;) Now, reflect and understand why the courts can't keep up with MS-BS.

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    4. Re:bah... by SnappleMaster · · Score: 1

      Hm... ok yeah I kinda get it. I'm sure sure why this computer system has actors but you're right the rest is rather clever.

      Mod my original post "idiot - RTFA slower" please. :)

      --
      Be happy. Nothing else matters.
    5. Re:bah... by aristotle-dude · · Score: 1

      Don't know anything about UML or Analysis and Design do you? Actors in analysis speak can represent a user, the system or a system component when you are trying to describe a use case (workflow).

      --
      Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
    6. Re:bah... by SnappleMaster · · Score: 1

      Apparently I do not! :)

      --
      Be happy. Nothing else matters.
    7. Re:bah... by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      Basically Cringely is arguing that the court system, whose timetables are based on pre-industrial information flows

      Something I'd like to comment about this is that even in pre-industrial times, injunctions used to be imposed to stop the continuing behavior. When you think about it, the same way in which not injuncting allows a generation of computer time to pass, injuncting would allow a generation of computer time to pass *without* the offending product(s). The amount of actual cure that would conceivably provide would be pretty amazing. I'd think the best thing any case being issued now could do would be to place 90% of the effort into just injunctioning and dragging the case out. Touche.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
  18. Nothing you can do... by opusman · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I thought Bob was unusually long winded this time. All he is basically saying is that Microsoft have so much money that no court-imposed monetary penalty can possibly be a problem for them. This is obvious I would have thought.

    Even a forced break-up, splitting up the OS and Office divisions, would probably not slow them down too much. Then you would just have 2 monopolies instead of 1.

    The forced open-sourcing of Windows is the way to go!

    1. Re:Nothing you can do... by SnappleMaster · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "The forced open-sourcing of Windows is the way to go!"

      I hope to God you are kidding. Not only would this be completely unfair, but it would also be an admission that Open Source cannot compete with MS.

      If you think forcing MS to open source is fair, maybe you wouldn't mind if the state turned your lawn into a public park? Property is property.

      --
      Be happy. Nothing else matters.
    2. Re:Nothing you can do... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you think forcing MS to open source is fair, maybe you wouldn't mind if the state turned your lawn into a public park? Property is property.

      Yes, but as a *punishment* it does make some sense. Suppose you were guilty of constantly blowing up public parks with dynamite, and the court tried to come up with a really fitting punishment.. turning your property over to the city might be acceptable punishment wouldn't it?

    3. Re:Nothing you can do... by Mr.+Sketch · · Score: 1

      The forced open-sourcing of Windows is the way to go!

      That is a bit overkill and unnecessary. All they would have to do is open the APIs and File Formats which would allow interoperability with third party applications and that should be sufficient.

    4. Re:Nothing you can do... by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "The forced open-sourcing of Windows is the way to go!"

      And why's that?

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    5. Re:Nothing you can do... by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      If Windows was ordered Open source it would be a disaster, nobody would be able to connect to the internet with all the worm traffic

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    6. Re:Nothing you can do... by tsg · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not only would this be completely unfair

      You mean, like Microsoft's anti-competitive practices?

      but it would also be an admission that Open Source cannot compete with MS.

      It would be no such thing. Whether the source code to Windows is open has no bearing on how other open source products perform, except how they interact with Windows components. But closed source products would benefit the same way.

      Property is property.

      Intellectual property is NOT property.

      --
      People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
    7. Re:Nothing you can do... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Property is property

      Yes it is. However information is not property. Copyright law and property law are entirely different because information and property have virtually nothing in common. The attempts to turn copyright law into a mirror of property law are just resulting in severly broken copyright law.

      if the state turned your lawn into a public park?

      Well, if I were selling drugs out of my house they would probably seize all of my property and sell it at auction. They *could* make a park out of it, but why would the gov't make a park when they can just pocket some cash?

      And as for copyright penalties, there's a rather facinating (but very rarely used) doctrine of "misuse of copyright". Anti-trust abuses are a perfect example of misuse of copyright. The result in such a case is a revokation of copy rights. The work in question effectively falls back into the public domain. There are a handful of cases on it.

      Not exactly the same as open-sourcing it, but pretty close. And I'm sure that most of the then copyright-free source would turn up one way or another anyway.

      Such a result on Windows would be quite drastic, but it's almost tempting considering how systematic Microsoft's abuses have become and how no other action has had any result. The only thing that had any chance to restore a healthy market was the order requiring Microsoft to spin off it's Office software division, and that got nixed simply because the talked to reporters about how bad Microsoft's abuses were.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    8. Re:Nothing you can do... by Wholeflaffer · · Score: 1

      Isn't a fine the same thing as government confiscation of property?

      If you can't fine Microsoft in a reasonable fashion with an $XX billion fine, wouldn't the forced opening of some code be a reasonable alternative? maybe you could let MS have the choice, and let them put a price tag on their own code!

      --
      Certified Microsoft Notworking Specialist
    9. Re:Nothing you can do... by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      Intellectual property is NOT property.

      Then there is no such thing as a valid license when it comes to ideas. Not even the GPL. If it's not property, then nobody can control it. If nobody can control it then nobody can be stopped from using it any way they see fit - including ways that the author deems unfair.

      Do you contribute to any open source projects, or otherwise produce any work that is protected by a public license? If so, how would you feel if you discovered that your work was incorporated into a commercial product that was not open source? If intellectual property is not property, than nobody has ANY right to say 'no'. Way to shoot yourself in the foot, dude!

      Freedom is either had by all or by none. Can't be selective and still consider it a 'freedom'.
      =Smidge=

    10. Re:Nothing you can do... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You mean, like Microsoft's anti-competitive practices?"

      Nope.
      Microsoft won the OS war fair and square, from scratch.
      If you open source losers think you deserve to rule the desktop, you have got to go fight for the loytalty of consumers in the open market, just like everyone else.No special treatment for open sorcery here pal.
      Any attempt by American-hating Euro-socialist , hard line left wing crazies to sieze the property of an American company will be met with full force.
      Europe doesn't gave a very good record when it comes to wars with America.

      "It would be no such thing. Whether the source code to Windows is open has no bearing on how other open source products perform, except how they interact with Windows components"

      If Windows has no bearing on how open source performs in the market, why on earth is it then that this open source slasdot site and its cohorts (including you) spend like 90% of its posts and its time obsessing about Microsoft 24x7x365?
      And why on earth should Microsoft care about making it easy for linux to "interact with Windows components" like you cliam?
      After all, Microsoft does have over 96% of the desktop. Its linux that is trying to establish a foothold here.

      "Intellectual property is NOT property"
      Spoken like a typical linux Bolshie arnachist creep.
      Of course intellectual property IS property, maybe even more so than a house is a property or at least equally so.
      Your pathtic attempt to steal Microsoft and other intellectual property to the open source community will fail.

    11. Re:Nothing you can do... by opusman · · Score: 1

      If you think forcing MS to open source is fair, maybe you wouldn't mind if the state turned your lawn into a public park? Property is property.

      The difference is that the world economy is not more or less totally reliant on my lawn, and I haven't already made $100 billion out of it.

    12. Re:Nothing you can do... by tsg · · Score: 1

      If it's not property, then nobody can control it.

      Copyright law does not, under any circumstances, give you any property rights to an idea. It gives you exclusive rights, and those rights are limited, as is the duration of those rights. Because ideas are not real. They are, by definition, imaginary. They can also be copied and disseminated without diminishing the original idea. You cannot be deprived of an idea. That's what makes it fundamentally different from property and not inherently deserving of protection from theft.

      Copyright is the incentive to share those ideas so that society may benefit from them. It is the means, not the end.

      --
      People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
    13. Re:Nothing you can do... by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, Copyright is not about benefiting society. It's incentive is that it grants the creator the exclusive right to to copy it. That's benefiting the creator only, and that guaranteed benefit is what gives the creator the incentive to release his ideas in the first place.

      Copyrights are designed to expire for the benefit of society. This is why Disney and others are constantly trying to extend the duration of copyrights, so they can keep control of their property. It is for the benefit of society to prevent copyrights from becoming fucntionally permanent, not abolishing them altogether.

      Arguing that ideas are not physical is merely a matter of symantics. When you copyright something, you own it in every legal sense of the word. You might not be able to deprive someone of an idea, but you can deprive them of the fruits of their imagination - and that's what copyright law is intended to prevent.

      Nobody wants to steal ideas anyway. Ideas are worthless. It's what you can do with those ideas that is valuable, and the result of acting on your ideas becomes your property. Intellectual Property. Protected, for a limited time at least, by law. If you decide to give it away that's great, you can do that. If you want to sue the guy making cheap plastic knockoffs of your "idea", you can do that too. Because you own it.
      =Smidge=

    14. Re:Nothing you can do... by tsg · · Score: 2, Informative
      Sorry, Copyright is not about benefiting society.

      Not according to the Constitution:
      Article I, Section 8, Clause 8

      [Congress shall have the power]
      "To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;"

      source

      Notice that it does not just say Congress can create copyrights. It is very specific, not only in what they can do, but why: "to promote progress". Not "to give authors a method of income", to promote progress.

      When you copyright something, you own it in every legal sense of the word.

      No you don't. Not in any legal sense of the word.

      From Title 17 of the United States Code,

      S106. Exclusive rights in copyrighted works
      Subject to sections 107 through 122, the owner of copyright under this title has the exclusive rights to do and to authorize any of the following:

      (1) to reproduce the copyrighted work in copies or phonorecords;

      (2) to prepare derivative works based upon the copyrighted work;

      (3) to distribute copies or phonorecords of the copyrighted work to the public by sale or other transfer of ownership, or by rental, lease, or lending;

      (4) in the case of literary, musical, dramatic, and choreographic works, pantomimes, and motion pictures and other audiovisual works, to perform the copyrighted work publicly;

      (5) in the case of literary, musical, dramatic, and choreographic works, pantomimes, and pictorial, graphic, or sculptural works, including the individual images of a motion picture or other audiovisual work, to display the copyrighted work publicly; and

      (6) in the case of sound recordings, to perform the copyrighted work publicly by means of a digital audio transmission.


      source

      Sections 107 through 122 are limitations on those rights. Nowhere does it say you own it.

      but you can deprive them of the fruits of their imagination - and that's what copyright law is intended to prevent.

      No you can't. If I have the recipe for a bundt cake and I give it to you, I still know how to make bundt cakes. There is nothing you can do to prevent me from knowing how to make bundt cakes. You can tell everyone in the world how to make bundt cakes and I will still know how. The only thing you can deprive someone of by using their idea is the benefit that copyright creates in the first place: the ability to profit from the sharing of the idea. Without copyright, those benefits don't exist, so saying that copyright was created to prevent deprivation of those benefits is ridiculous.

      Nobody wants to steal ideas anyway.

      You can't steal ideas. There's nothing to steal. You can only copy them. You can't own ideas either, because there's nothing to own. They are imaginary. They only exist in the mind. If you're going to sit there and tell me you can own something that is imaginary, you need to have your head checked.

      It's what you can do with those ideas that is valuable,

      Exactly. And that's why copyright was created: to encourage others to share their ideas so society may benefit from the use of the ideas. It was a compromise. We want to benefit from your ideas, but we realize there's little incentive for you to share them since they can be passed around for free. So we are going to delay the benefit to society and allow you to be the sole source of copies of your work, which we will protect, but it is going to belong to the public later.
      --
      People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
    15. Re:Nothing you can do... by Archibald+Buttle · · Score: 1

      As well as being unfair to Microsoft, it would not be possible to force them to open source Windows.

      Don't forget, Windows is a very big and complicated piece of software. It includes a whole load of technologies and techniques that Microsoft has licensed from other companies and are covered by patents. The code is confidential because it can't be anything but, and that's also why their source-level licenses require people to sign non-disclosure agreements.

      Had Microsoft developed Windows all by themselves though forcing them to open the whole lot would be a great idea.

      The best we can hope for is to force them to completely open their APIs and file formats.

    16. Re:Nothing you can do... by zcat_NZ · · Score: 1

      Congress has the right to grant to authors and inventors exclusive rights to their works or discoveries, to promote the sciences and useful arts.

      They don't have any obligation to do so, and if a company is using copyright in a way that is so clearly damaging (as Microsoft is), the most effective remedy congress could impose is this;

      "You have abused this right that WE have granted you, so now we are going to revoke it".

      Windows and Office become free to anyone that can obtain them through whatever means. What Microsoft subsequently do with the source code is entirely up to them. They might be able to continue making _some_ profit by releasing windows and office as an open-source product and selling support for it, which seems to be a viable business model for most Linux vendors.

      --
      455fe10422ca29c4933f95052b792ab2
    17. Re:Nothing you can do... by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      Notice that it does not just say Congress can create copyrights. It is very specific, not only in what they can do, but why: "to promote progress". Not "to give authors a method of income", to promote progress.

      That's actually the opposite - it's very generic! It does not say anything about how to promote progress, only that congress is empowered to come up with a way to do it. Copyright law promotes development of ideas by granting the creator exclusive rights to his creation, and it promotes progress by limiting how long he can retain those exclusive rights. It takes advantage of human greed to intice people to do stuff, then forces the fruits of their efforts into the public domain. The key is that for a limited time, the creator owns that fruit.

      One definition of "own" is to have control over. (transitive verb, sense 2). If you have exclusive control over the work, you own it. It's mine, hands off buddy! Just because it doesn't use the word "own" doesn't change the intention that the creator has "exclusive rights" to whatever, and if you are the only person who can reproduce, create derivative works, distribute copies or show it in public, that's control. Control = ownership.

      Now let's visit your analogy to show you the point I was making more clearly.

      Let's say you had the best friggin bundt cake recipe ever. I mean this kind of thing puts you on the map. You decide you can make some cash by selling bundt cakes out of your house. You start baking and turning a tidy profit. You can't make them fast enough.

      One day, you and me are talking over a slice of bundt cake, and you tell me how you make it so damn good.

      The next day, someone from ConglomoCorp calls my house offering me a huge lump of cash for that recipe. I decide our friendship isn't worth that much cash, so I give it to them. Next month, grocery stores across the country are having problems keeping ConglomoCorp Bundt Cakes on the shelves. They are just as good as yours and are a fraction of the price because of mass production.

      Suddenly, you ain't making any money from your cottage industry. Because you insist that you can never own an idea, you can't do jack about it. Guess you have to find a new job, eh?

      Let's take this in a more abstract direction. Say you're putzing around one day and come up with an idea for a story about this young boy named Larry Topper who ends up becoming a powerful magician and having all sorts of adventures. You write your book and share it with your friends, who in turn share it with their friends, and so forth.

      You don't care, you can't own ideas. Information wants to be free!

      Two years later the mega-blockbuster hit "Larry Topper and the Secret Decoder Ring", the third installment of a tremendously popular series of feature length movies, comes to a theater near you. You haven't made a penny from the billions of dollars this franchise has made. You're not even mentioned in the credits.

      Why should they? You can't own ideas, and you've lost nothing, right? You still have your idea and a copy of the original manuscript, right? They didn't steal anything from you...

      Copyright is about not having to "share" ideas. It's about greed and control. That's also what capitalism is about, in case you didn't figure that one out. Humans are greedy, selfish bastards and in order to benefit the whole of society laws have to be structured to take advantage of it while providing checks and balances to make sure it stays under control. "We'll give you exclusive legal control over your ideas, but only if you promise to give up that control after n years. Sound fair?"

      Unfortunately, once a company gets powerful enough they can start to change those laws and upset the balance, but that's another topic.
      =Smidge=

    18. Re:Nothing you can do... by tsg · · Score: 1

      That's actually the opposite - it's very generic! It does not say anything about how to promote progress

      Read it again. "by securing for limited times the exclusive rights of Authors and Inventors to their respective writings and inventions." That's the only method they have available. No other way.

      One definition of "own" is to have control over.

      But they do not have complete control. There are a number of uses that are not covered in their exclusive rights. So they only partially own it. In the loosest sense of the word, they do own it, but that definition in no way implies that the thing being owned is property.

      You don't care, you can't own ideas. Information wants to be free!

      Ideas don't want anything. They are free until you put artificial constraints on them.

      Why should they? You can't own ideas, and you've lost nothing, right? You still have your idea and a copy of the original manuscript, right? They didn't steal anything from you...

      Well, what have I lost? It didn't cost me any money. And I still have my story. I can still tell it, I can still read it, I can still know it. They've taken nothing from me. If you're suggesting that I've lost the revenue to the film, I never had it, so how did I lose it. I also never had any right to it so what have I lost? The only thing I am deprived of are the benefits that don't exist in your example of life without copyright, because copyright is what gives you those benefits. So I've lost nothing.

      Copyright is about not having to "share" ideas.

      Copyright is only about having to share ideas. Copyright (theoretically) only covers the expression of the idea. There is no protection for an idea. If you're not going to share it, why should I give a shit if you make any money from it? Why should I limit my freedoms to give you a job?

      "We'll give you exclusive legal control over your ideas, but only if you promise to give up that control after n years. Sound fair?"

      Go back and look at my last post. You'll see I wrote the same thing almost word for word. The purpose is to get people to share their ideas. The incentive is the limited control we give them temporarily. Otherwise, why make them give up their rights to something they "own"?

      Half your argument appears to be why copyright is a good thing. I never once said I thought copyright should be abolished. Copyright, in the form I describe, and as the writers of the Constitution wanted it, is for society's benefit first and the benefit of the creators as an incentive only. Copyright as it stands today is broken. And given the choice between having no copyright and having what we have now, I'd choose no copyright. But we don't need to go that far. It can be fixed. But only if people like you realize that ideas are not property, they don't entitle you to anything, and the purpose for copyright is to encourage you to share those ideas with everybody else. If you don't like the deal, keep them to yourself.

      --
      People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
    19. Re:Nothing you can do... by Ben+Urban · · Score: 1

      Welcome to my "Foes" list. If only there was a "trolls" list...

      --
      Every time you run "emerge", a Microsoft drone dies.
    20. Re:Nothing you can do... by Ben+Urban · · Score: 1

      Welcome to my "Friends" list.

      --
      Every time you run "emerge", a Microsoft drone dies.
  19. Old news... by gpinzone · · Score: 4, Interesting

    MS has been doing this for YEARS. He's just catching on now? What about DriveSpace and the lawsuit by Stac? MS had to change a little code and Stac went out of business. MS stole Apple's quicktime coded for windows 3.11 and all they got was a slap on the wrists. Makes you wonder how much crap they actually got away with.

    1. Re:Old news... by Tony · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Makes you wonder how much crap they actually got away with.

      All of it.

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  20. Microsoft Opening Source? by ackthpt · · Score: 1

    Not really, it's just more "Shared Source", but probably a bone tossed in apeasement in connection with the anti-trust settlement. Interesting reading.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  21. Not hard for MS to pay - how to penalize them? by Blue23 · · Score: 1

    Cringley is right (who'd of thunk I'd say that). Not only is the amount fairly trivial, not only can it get reduced or removed via appeal, but the interest they get off the profits from that market while they are appealing will pay for a good chunk of the fines.

    So, if punitive monetary damages aren't sufficient to hurt a company, how CAN a government wield a realistic prod to get them back in line? They can't tell MS that they can't sell - companies would go crazy. Tariffs and taxes are again just money. What type of stick could a government wield to actually make MS take notice and play nice?

    Cheers,
    =Blue(23)

    --
    LITTLE GIRL: But which cookie will you eat FIRST? C. MONSTER: Me think you have misconception of cookie-eating process.
    1. Re:Not hard for MS to pay - how to penalize them? by pknoll · · Score: 1

      Jail time for the executives responsible for the decisions that led to the behaviour?

    2. Re:Not hard for MS to pay - how to penalize them? by simon_aus · · Score: 2, Informative

      Where could you start, passing laws (or using existing ones) which do not support the monopoly or fostering corporate welfare

      Declaring that that these products post a threat to national security due to lax security and undue load on government and public networks

      Deeming that the supplier has berached US and international laws and is therefore may not validly apply for government contracts

      Declaring that no government agency may pay continued licence fees to a company which has acted illegally

      Declaring that in tha national interest the government must have access to it's own data by releasing to said government all proprietry file formats and API's necessary for conversion and interoperability

      Pooling the saved licence fees and funding academic institutions to develop solutions for existing products for which there is no viable alternative MS Project, Access and perhaps Visio

      Of course this could only be initiated in the US where they have the most robust legislation in place to support such arguments, any other nation which tried it would potentially face US trade restrictions.

      --
      Stopping myself...Abort (core dumped)
    3. Re:Not hard for MS to pay - how to penalize them? by tsg · · Score: 1

      They're a corporation. The only way to hurt them is financially. The only way to make them comply is to make it more profitable to comply. I'm sure there are lawyers who will tell you it's their responsibility to not comply if it increases share holder value. The fines have to be large enough to make it unprofitable to continue paying them. Otherwise, it's just another cost of doing business.

      --
      People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
    4. Re:Not hard for MS to pay - how to penalize them? by cpu_fusion · · Score: 1
      What type of stick could a government wield to actually make MS take notice and play nice?

      Simple: criminal charges against the executives (Gates, Balmer, etc.).

      I'm not trolling here, I'm entirely serious. If the executives at Microsoft actually had to think about their actions in terms of prison time, rather than just dollar signs, they would have a new and fresh perspective on things.

      But it isn't going to happen. I'd like to see Gates behind bars, because it's exactly where he deserves to be.

  22. Corporate corruption by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why? Because they make more money by paying lip-service to the law and accepting the occasional fine than by complying.

    Sounds kind of like corporate corruption. If you are a corporate officer and you can pillage $100M and face a 10% chance of being caught and receiving a slap on the wrist (paying a $5M fine, being banned from being on a board for directors for five years, and publically announcing that you will stop breaking the law), what would stop you?

    In Microsoft's case probably most if not all of their $52B cash pile is ill-gotten and their EU fine is what, $620M? Most government taxes are higher than the 1.2% ill-gotten-gains tax.

  23. Fines are not Punishment by erick99 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I think a lot of folks equate monetary fines as the equivalent of punishment. I supposed that the EU and other such bodies might also think that monetary fines are punishing. However, as a psychologist, I know that punishment, by definition, reduces or eliminates the target behavior. I don't think that Microsoft even finds these fines as particular noxious. It's just a cost of doing business. So, if these legal bodies that go after Microsoft want to do something *punishing* so that they can reduce/eliminate certain behaviors, then they have to do something like putting executives in jail. Bill Gates might not care much about a $600M check, but laying down in a cell bed at night and wondering if his 300lb cell-mate is going to get romantic.....

    Happy Trails!

    Erick

    --
    http://www.busyweather.com/
    1. Re:Fines are not Punishment by Lochin+Rabbar · · Score: 1

      However, as a psychologist, I know that punishment, by definition, reduces or eliminates the target behavior.

      Nitpick time, the word punishment predates behaviourism and any domain specific definition of the word. Anyway, as you know positive reinforcement is a stronger conditioner of behaviour than negative reinforcement. A fine to Microsoft only reduces the extent they are rewarded for their bad bahaviour, and so has little or no effect.

      The problem is that regulatory bodies take so long to act that by the time they do the behaviour is already determined. I wouldn't jail Gates, but I would remove his personal fortune. Further since he has shown himself to be an unfit person to run a company I would ban him from any such position.

    2. Re:Fines are not Punishment by rangek · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Bill Gates might not care much about a $600M check, but laying down in a cell bed at night and wondering if his 300lb cell-mate is going to get romantic.....

      I know like everybody says stuff like this, but it is just not right. Being raped should not be part and parcel of a prison sentence. Yes, it was funny in Office Space when they joked about "pound-you-in-the-ass prison", but I am concerned about living in a world where rape is viewed as justice, even informally. While I may not like Windows and Microsoft and even Bill Gates, he certainly doesn't deserve to be raped for ruthlessly creating a monopoly in computer software

      In short, prison for executives who view themselves and their corporations as above the law? Absolutely. Should they have to make license plates or make gravel or pick up trash from the highway? That would be great. But raped? That is just barbaric.

      I know you probably didn't really mean you wanted Bill Gates raped for his crimes, and I am not trying to be the PC police or anything. I am just disturbed by how nonchalantly we seem to treat the issue of prison rape.

    3. Re:Fines are not Punishment by swb · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The real cure is to eliminate the status of the corporation as citizen. This should enable the corporation's executives and board members to more easily be held *personally* responsible for the corporations actions, be it monopoly behavior or environmental negligence.

      It's hard to know if $600M means anything to Gates personally; it likely wouldn't effect anything he does, but the fact he was losing that money out of his own pocket might have a psychological effect.

      For the vast majority of CEOs, $600M would be a devastating personal fine; many may have enough squirreled away in "safe" places that they won't starve or be on the street(cf. OJ Simpson's "pension"), but they might also not be on a 200ft yacht or travelling in a lear jet, either.

      The next step is to make many of these corporate behaviors criminal offenses with jail time as a possible option. While no CEO wants to lose a personal fortune, even retaining a cushy cash safety net is meaningless if you're making license plates in an orange jumpsuit.

    4. Re:Fines are not Punishment by Dav3K · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I couldn't agree with you more. Comments like the parent are part of what alienates this sub-culture from the mainstream. Bill has a wife and kids. Prison would mean separation from them, as well as separation from everything else he holds dear. I bet that Bill would change the way MS does business if he was faced with a real possibility of going to jail.

    5. Re:Fines are not Punishment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We treat prison rape nonchalantly because the feminists have made sure we believe that the only bad rape is the rape of a woman. Men deserve it, because, after all, "all sex is rape."

    6. Re:Fines are not Punishment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, it's because most slashdot readers are homosexual and like rough sex.

    7. Re:Fines are not Punishment by Night+Goat · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Agreed. Why is it that when women get raped, it's a serious offense, and considered "worse than murder," yet when men get raped it's funny?

    8. Re:Fines are not Punishment by Rares+Marian · · Score: 1

      If someone crushed your opportunity to experience independence and freedom of having everything in your power to live as you choose as in having a business, you'd feel raped.

      --
      The message on the other side of this sig is false.
    9. Re:Fines are not Punishment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You suppose that women in prison are never raped?

    10. Re:Fines are not Punishment by BerntB · · Score: 1
      Being raped should not be part and parcel of a prison sentence.

      I really don't understand that this system is allowed in the USA, since it obviously gives a lot of grief to the general public.

      As far as I've understood, a large proportion of victims (of both sexes) get mental problems for life. I really don't understand how smoking can be banned, but not creating a large number of people that either have the habit of being rapists or are mentally unbalanced...

      Rape is just something that you really, really want the minimal amount of in the same society that you live in.

      (Then we have the weaker argument -- human rights aspects and human suffering. [1/2 :-)] )

      --
      Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
    11. Re:Fines are not Punishment by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1
      A UK jailbird acquaintance of mine was really disappointed that they always made him share the cell with mingers (ugly people). Then the screws put a cute new one in... just as he was released. Dang! (disclaimer - I assume all his action inside was consenting).

      Do they not serve healthy food in US prisons? How come they are still 300lbs? My friend looked much fitter (and sober) inside that I ever saw him outside.

      I agree that unconsenting sex should really be stamped out; the casual mentions of its toleration seem archaic to me, but also condoms should be available when appropriate ;-)

    12. Re:Fines are not Punishment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FIRST: "I know like everybody says stuff like this, but it is just not right. Being raped should not be part and parcel of a prison sentence."

      Thanks for writing. Rape is NO joke. So you youngsters cut out making one of it.

      SECOND: "I really don't understand that this system is allowed in the USA, since it obviously gives a lot of grief to the general public."

      Rape is NOT "allowed". Everything within certain limits is done to prevent it. You can sue the authorities if you are raped in prison, so they are MOTIVATED to try to stop it.

      None the less: MORE RAPES OCCUR AGAINST MEN IN PRISON THAN AGAINST WOMEN OUTSIDE OF PRISON. Obviously more needs to be done to stop the brutality.

    13. Re:Fines are not Punishment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Rape is NOT "allowed".

      If you read about the subject, you'll find lots of witnesses claiming that the guards are helping it along.

      You write that the authorities can get sued. But rape happens to a large percentage of the prison population (check spr.org), but there are very few court cases...

    14. Re:Fines are not Punishment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who modded this to 2?
      Since when going to jail is the same as being raped??

    15. Re:Fines are not Punishment by Viking+Coder · · Score: 1

      If it's really true that Bill Gates has done that much financial harm to the world (granted, he's done more good than harm, but that doesn't excuse the harm he's done!), is his crime somehow less than that of someone who commits a minor crime and gets raped in prison?

      If you want to cure prison rape, then that's great - cure prison rape. But don't expect any sympathy for the incredibly minor fraction of inmates who happen to be in for white-collar crime - they have (in my opinion) caused greater harm to the world than their blue-collar counterparts, in financial terms.

      --
      Education is the silver bullet.
    16. Re:Fines are not Punishment by Rares+Marian · · Score: 1

      Not going to jail, but being crushed by M$ is close enough to being violated.

      --
      The message on the other side of this sig is false.
    17. Re:Fines are not Punishment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      u ignorant twat it's nowhere close. ever been raped? no I didn't think so. You belittle every
      victim of rape when you spout such nonsense.

    18. Re:Fines are not Punishment by Rares+Marian · · Score: 1

      Really.

      Lessee...

      1. Lack of control over your immediate future regardless of any effort you make.
      2. Having to endure the situation for an extended period of time.
      3. Losing one's sense of what you can or can't do to prevent a similiar situation.

      You must think only physical attacks have a profound effect.

      --
      The message on the other side of this sig is false.
  24. Japan Joins Global Pressures on Microsoft by NZheretic · · Score: 1
    Japan Joins Global Pressures on Microsoft
    The message from this country's Fair Trade Commission was clear: Japan is not about to sit idle as other global powers raise concerns over Microsoft's suspected abuses of its domination in the computer software business.
    Many voices speaking the same message can make one loud sound.
    1. Re:Japan Joins Global Pressures on Microsoft by FeloniousPunk · · Score: 1

      Many voices speaking the same message can make one loud sound.

      Yeah, a big loud "queef."

      Did you read the article? The point of it was that with the state of business legal systems in the US and Europe - and we can infer that the same probably goes for Japan - Microsoft comes out ahead no matter the legal sanction. Japan can pile on too, it simply won't matter.

      --
      I know this because Tyler knows this.
  25. Don't mod parent offtopic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funny thing is, this actually works for M$.

    I knew it! Microsoft is a troll organization!

  26. Related by crawdaddy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In other news, I wouldn't care about traffic fines if they only cost a quarter.

    1. Re:Related by DR+SoB · · Score: 1

      Until you get your insurance bill that is. Sometimes what's on the covers doesn't show you what's inside (although I don't think that relates so much to Microsoft..).

      --
      Mod +5 Drunk
    2. Re:Related by crawdaddy · · Score: 1

      Insurance costs...could those be analogous to Microsoft's lobbying efforts again Open-Source software and their involvement in that security council?

  27. Fight Club? by Aardpig · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This reminds me of the scene in the movie, where Ed Norton's character explains that if it is cheaper for a company to pay fines, than to recall a potentially-deadly product, then they will opt for the former.

    This is one rather unfortunate downside of capitalism; it only works when government has enough regulatory power to compell companies not to harm its citizens. Once a government is in the pockets of business, the citizens are in big trouble.

    --
    Tubal-Cain smokes the white owl.
    1. Re:Fight Club? by Johnny+Doughnuts · · Score: 2, Informative

      a * b * c = x

      "Take the number of vehicles in the field, (A), and multiply it by the probable rate of failure, (B), then multiply the result by the average out-of-court settlement, (C). A times B times C equals X.

      If X is less than the cost of a recall, we don't do one."

    2. Re:Fight Club? by nelsonal · · Score: 1

      Which is why we have punative damages (to make a few of those cases large enough to offset Y which was the amount saved not doing a recall). However this has led to a new problem the very powerful trial lawyers (who collect 1/3 of Y in each victory, which is the driver behind the explosion in suits we've had over the past 30 years. Y is large on a corporate scale, by design (it's positivly huge on an individual or even law firm scale).

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
    3. Re:Fight Club? by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

      gov't regulation is an entity unto itself. Why? Everytime gov't regulates something, they interfere with market conditions and almost always have an uninteded consequence (aka gov't failure). The result is more and more gov't regulation to correct the problems imposed by gov't regulation.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    4. Re:Fight Club? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kinda like the Ford Pinto case. Ford decided not to fix their gas tanks 'cause they figured it would cost them more to do this than it would in "lives."

      Unfortunately, they got creamed in legal fees. But...it's the same idea...

    5. Re:Fight Club? by leandrod · · Score: 1
      > one rather unfortunate downside of capitalism; it only works when government has enough regulatory power to compell companies not to harm its citizens.

      You assume it is actually the sole responsibility of government(s). But it is not necessarily so.

      The other, and better, alternative is that society, as the consensual, self-regulating aggregate of its individual and corporate agents.

      For example, if people are wise enough to refuse to do business with convicted monopolists, MS looses big.

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
    6. Re:Fight Club? by ebbe11 · · Score: 1
      The other, and better, alternative is that society, as the consensual, self-regulating aggregate of its individual and corporate agents.

      Unfortunately this just doesn't work - which is why we have governments. No, governments aren't perfect but then again nothing produced by humankind ever was.

      For example, if people are wise enough to refuse to do business with convicted monopolists, MS looses big.

      But people are not that wise. If they were MS would never have existed because their first big customer (IBM) would have been put out of business before they got as far as making the first PCs.

      Also, for someone to be convicted it takes a legal system. But such a system cannot exist in a vacuum (okay, it can - if you can live with a Judge Dredd type system), there must be a government that, among other things, passes the laws the legal system enforces. And how would anyone be convicted unless there is a legal system? By opinion polls? And if so, who should conduct them?

      --

      My opinion? See above.
    7. Re:Fight Club? by leandrod · · Score: 1
      > Unfortunately this just doesn't work - which is why we have governments.

      Granted. But governments will do nothing without a measure of wisdom from society. That explains a lot what's (not) happening nowadays.

      > there must be a government that, among other things, passes the laws the legal system enforces. And how would anyone be convicted unless there is a legal system? By opinion polls? And if so, who should conduct them?

      Government is too generic a term. There is the Judiciary, the Parlament and the Executive. Laws are passed by Parlament, whose election is remarkable close to opinion polls...

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
  28. Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    I think he dismisses the killing and maiming option far too quickly.

  29. Re:Tell ya what... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    Little Johnny goes out fishing with his grandpa one day. Like most grandfathers would, grandpa brings along a cooler of beer for his enjoyment. As he opens a refreshing beverage, Little Johnny asks "Hey Grandpa, can I have one?"

    "Well Johnny, can your dick touch your asshole?" asks Grandpa.

    "No Grandpa, it can't." Johnny replies.

    Grandpa tells Johnny "Well when it does, you can have one."

    So Grandpa and Johnny fish for a while when suddenly Johnny gets a big catch. As he reels it in, it turns out not to be a fish but a briefcase full of money.

    "Hey Johnny, whatcha say we split the money?" asks Grandpa.

    "Well Grandpa, can your dick touch your asshole?"

    Grandpa, being the clever old man responds "Why yes Johnny, yes it can."

    Johnny responds "Well then go fuck yourself old man, this money is mine!"

  30. Macs are Mach-based by bonch · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Mac's are BSD based.

    They run on a Mach kernel with some BSD userland tools.

    Microsoft obviously has enough money to be a around for a long while. Even while their markets are being eaten left and right.

    Heh, only on Slashdot do you see statements like this. "Microsoft's market is being eaten left and right!" I've been hearing that since 1998. Linux makes gains here and there, but it's mostly in markets in which UNIX has traditionally existed. Nobody's market is really being eaten except for UNIX. Windows is so fine-grained in the populace, it's become synonymous with computing for most of the world. Contrary to the "frustration" stories you always here, most people are happy with Windows. I can't imagine their frustration stories if given a copy of Linux...

    1. Re:Macs are Mach-based by aristotle-dude · · Score: 1

      They run on a Mach kernel with some BSD userland tools. Yes and no. There is some BSD code in the kernel. See below. http://www.kernelthread.com/mac/osx/arch_xnu.html

      --
      Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
    2. Re:Macs are Mach-based by bonch · · Score: 1

      I have; it states it's a Mach kernel with some BSD-level APIs, among other things.

    3. Re:Macs are Mach-based by aristotle-dude · · Score: 1

      Except that is not the same thing as userland tools. There are significant portions related to IPC derived from BSD in the kernel. Darwin is neither Mach or BSD.

      --
      Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
    4. Re:Macs are Mach-based by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are much more BSD parts in the Darwin kernel than "significant portions related to IPC".

      All Unix system calls (Mach system calls are of course a different matter), the entire filesystem architecture, many filesystems, networking...basically everything except tasks/threads, memory management and the device driver framework.

      Mach-based non-microkernel Unix systems have always been like this, a union of Mach and something else, usually BSD (although only MacOS X/Darwin and Tru64 are currently surviving at any significant scale).

  31. This happens.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's my understanding that this happens very often in large corporations. There was a recent article on a large pipe manufacturer that refuses to comply with OSHA standards for factory safety because it's MUCH cheaper to pay an occasional fine than upgrade; don't think this is a tactic only big n' evil Microsoft uses.

    1. Re:This happens.. by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      ...don't think this is a tactic only big n' evil Microsoft uses.

      It sure isn't. Let's not forget how Lee Iacoca dealt with the Ford Pinto's gas tank "problem". It could have been fixed with a $5 part, but it was still more expensive to install the part than it was to deal with potential lawsuits. The man should definitely be up on murder charges for that. He was fully aware of the problem, and he ignored it. Some companies actually believe it's better that a person dies, in order to make a one time payment to the family of the victim as opposed to a lifetime of payments to an injured party. Obviously, we shouldn't tolerate this, but it seems our economic system leaves no choice.

      --
      What?
  32. It seems he forgets one small detail by toopc · · Score: 3, Insightful

    He seems to base his whole article around the idea that Microsoft appeals simply to postpone any form of compliance so that they can continue to make as much money as possible.

    I wonder if it occurs to him that maybe the appeal because they don't feel what they're doing is illegal, or at least feel the punishment handed out is too harsh.

    1. Re:It seems he forgets one small detail by GuyWithLag · · Score: 1

      Ummm... No. Appeals are made by all medium-to-large corporations that lose a case. Just for the principle of it.

    2. Re:It seems he forgets one small detail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a game to them and their lawyers.

      The system has become so corrupt that a company and it's legal team simply wishes to navigate the rapids as best they can.

      This means they fight everything; and work for every last advantage. Morals be damned.

      And if something sticky comes up; they simply rationalize away their poor behavior.

      Welcome to the land of the MegaCorp.

    3. Re:It seems he forgets one small detail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Hmm, it's nice to know that feelings are the best way to make a decision.

      "Gosh, officer, I didn't feel like I was speeding."

      "I don't feel like I'm cheating on my income tax (and/or girlfriend)."

      "I don't feel drunk, I'll drive!!!"

      "This doesn't feel like I'm being sarcastic and harsh. It feels like constructive critisism."

    4. Re:It seems he forgets one small detail by toopc · · Score: 1

      Cool - semantic games.

      If it makes you feel better, replace 'feel' with 'think'. Although my point remains the same.

      In many instances, it's up to the courts to determine whether actions are legal or illegal. If you feel, think, believe etc. that your actions were wrongly found to be illegal by a lower court, you appeal.

      As much as you'd like to pretend the law is black and white, unfortuntely it isn't.

    5. Re:It seems he forgets one small detail by toopc · · Score: 1
      Ummm... No. Appeals are made by all medium-to-large corporations that lose a case. Just for the principle of it.

      Perhaps, but that still doesn't change the fact that Microsoft may think they have been wrongly found guilty. If you were found guilty of something you thought was legal, wouldn't you appeal?

      Of course you would (assuming you could afford to). Why should Microsoft be any different?

  33. Internal Oversight Panel? by ItWasThem · · Score: 1

    Wasn't there supposed to be a panel of 3 or so outsiders brought on site to Microsoft to oversee compliance with the US ruling? What ever happened to that? Was it only a suggestion?

    I'm not saying 3 people could really change them, but are they actually there watching this unfold or has the oversight since been dissolved for some reason?

  34. Summary by DarkHelmet · · Score: 5, Informative
    No need to read the article. Here is what it says in short.
    • Microsoft is too big to care about any small-time financial punishment that a government deals out to them, since they still profit heavily in the end.
    • Any ruling the DOJ gives Microsoft doesn't mean that Microsoft has to comply to it. This is much like giving somebody who steals 1,000,000 dollars a 1,000 fine, but not force them to give the money back.
    • That Cringely guy really likes geometry.

    Maybe it's me, but that article was waay too long winded to state the obvious: As long as Microsoft can turn a profit after any sort of penalities given them, they have no motovation to comply to any sort of antitrust regulation.

    That, and that Pulpit guy likes Geometry.

    --
    /^[A-Z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Z0-9.-]+\.[A-Z]{2,4}$/i
  35. OT: your sig line by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DUDE!

    that is why Sesame Street rules... what other kids show would use the word "misconception".

    I miss being five.

  36. Cut the Gordion Knot by rgmoore · · Score: 1

    Cringly is generally correct, but he misses a very important point; MS's approach only works if the worst punishment available is a fine. In theory, at least, there are more drastic punishments available. The most obvious, and one that Judge Kollar-Kotelly should consider if she agrees that MS is failing to behave- is to break up the company. Breaking up the company was the originally proposed solution, but it was rejected as too drastic; if fines and behavioral constraints don't work then the courts should consider going back to the original idea.

    --

    There's no point in questioning authority if you aren't going to listen to the answers.

  37. This guy sucks by The+Bungi · · Score: 2, Informative
    Cringely is so far out there, so consistently wrong in amost every single slightly technical topic he tackles that I find it hard to believe that anyone still reads his crap.

    Don't believe me? Look up the last slashbork story that quoted him on anything remotely technical and read through the comments, preferably at +3 or so. Yeah, that hurts.

    Oh, but when he goes off in a bogus "M$ is teh suxx" rant, he gets airplay. I don't believe for a second he's got the scoop "from friends of friends" on what's going on with the compliance team in Redmond. Bullshit. Not that I don't doubt Microsoft is ignoring it, but that's not the point. But bring up a vague accusation using vague references to vague characters in vague positions and presto, you have a fact! Journalism at its best.

    1. Re:This guy sucks by ainsoph · · Score: 0

      Let me get this straight. An idiot (you) is trying to say that someone who is not an idiot, is an idiot?

      How do I know you're an idiot?

      People with Hotmail email addresses are idiots. Emperical evidence proves it.

    2. Re:This guy sucks by The+Bungi · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      Emperical evidence proves it.

      For future reference, it's empirical. If you're going to flame me at least learn how to spell your high' fallutin' words correctly.

      On to your "point". Let me know when you can go from your stupid generalization to forming an opinion of someone who writes a very public blog - based on the contents of said blog.

      Oh, and I also copied this to ainsoph@aol.com, in case you miss it.

    3. Re:This guy sucks by ainsoph · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Here is an opinion: Who cares about yours?

      Which is exactly my point. You may not like Cringley's writing or whatever, but someone must, because he makes a living by people reading his shit.

      Now since you *don't* enjoy it, why read it? Better yet, why spout off in a public forum, some opinionated spittle you concoct about it? Why not just ignore it, and keep your opinions to yourself and move on?

      Even better yet, please ignore me, as I am also spouting said drivel.

    4. Re:This guy sucks by The+Bungi · · Score: 1, Funny
      some opinionated spittle you concoct about it?

      I was going to say "Welcome to Slahsdot!" and then I saw your UIN. I must assume that you have other issues, then.

      I am also spouting said drivel

      Well said.

    5. Re:This guy sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was a four digit Slashdot ID on Ebay last year.

    6. Re:This guy sucks by ainsoph · · Score: 1

      lol

    7. Re:This guy sucks by eno2001 · · Score: 1

      Still a dork even now I see... After having gotten back from working abroad that past year and not having access to the net in any affordable way, I come back and The Bungi is still an idiot and proud of it. I suppose it should be comforting to me in some way that some things never change, but it's not. Oh well... BTW... from what a friend of mine told me, you will soon be a member of the "List of FAILURES" Keep watching your freaks list.

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    8. Re:This guy sucks by The+Bungi · · Score: 1
      Keep watching your freaks list.

      You need to find someone who gives a shit my man.

  38. Prison by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    All we need is a little tweak to the legal system to make the officers/directors personally and criminally liable for the actions of the company! No major overhaul of anti-trust law needed.

    Can you imagine Bill Gates doing 7-10 in prison?

    1. Re:Prison by maztuhblastah · · Score: 1

      It would, after all be his second time....

      .
      .
      .
      .
      .
      .
      ...do yourself a favor, Billy, and tell Bubba to take it easy the first few times.

  39. But Microsoft will lose. by k4_pacific · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...because of patent infringements. Patent infringements are like nukes in the IT world. Everyone has them, but no one will sue over them because, well, everyone has them. Also, given the number of patents out there, chances are every major company has inadvertently infringed on somebody else's patent. So here is how it goes down:

    Linux adoption continues to increase.

    Microsoft has a bad quarter.

    Microsoft panics.

    Microsoft digs through their 100s of patents, and find something that IBM unwittingly violated.

    They sue IBM for say, 3 billion dollars.

    IBM digs through its much larger patent portfolio and finds several that MS inadvertently vioplated.

    IBM sues MS for 60 billion dollars.

    MS wins its suit against IBM and nets 3 billion.

    IBM wins its suit against MS and nets 60 billion.

    And Microsoft is broke.

    --
    Unknown host pong.
  40. Injunctions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bob missed a key point. Our legal system has two kinds of penalties: fines and injunctions (though one of my 1st law profs liked to note that injunctions could also force someone to do something, as opposed to prevent). Incremental fines aren't what MS is concerned about, injunctions would wreak havoc on their business model.

    Microsoft could still be broken into multiple parts, and then they could no longer fund their research (call it MSN or XBox, but the red at the bottom line makes it research in my book).

    If Microsoft isn't allowed to sell a product (patents) they would be hurting.

    Bob is right that our legal system can be slow, but it can exact its punishment.

  41. Doing the math in the Linux cases: Linux cant win by stratjakt · · Score: 5, Funny

    0$ profit
    -$699 liscencing fee
    = -$699 net profit

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
  42. Poor Justice by Dr.+Mojura · · Score: 1

    "Justice may be blind, but she is also slow"..."Justice is blind, slow, and unequal"

    Hey, stop picking on poor Justice. Sure she may have put on a few pounds, is no longer nicknamed 'swift Justice' any longer and has clouded vision at times, but I'd still rather have her as my friend than my enemy.

    --
    "Nothing exists except atoms and empty space; everything else is opinion." - Democritus
    1. Re:Poor Justice by GPLDAN · · Score: 1

      Lady Justice will be played by Cameron Manheim.

  43. Corporation = Army by t_allardyce · · Score: 1, Insightful

    This is whats wrong with the world today, while the US government has made absolutely sure that where-ever you are in the world, and whatever citizenship you hold, you can be arrested without trial and taken to their camp, but companies can do whatever the hell they want - problems in one country? just move your 'location' to another country - that usually just means changing a few documents, dodgy business practices? dont worry, your legal entity is separate from your company. Fines are money so ofcourse they are going to be treated as just another cost! you have to make real consiquences for a company that breaks the law, fuck les'afairs.

    --
    This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
  44. Autos too... by red+floyd · · Score: 1

    Wasn't it Ford or GM who got caught with this sort of logic? Something about the payouts in lawsuits being less than the cost of a recall?

    --
    The only reason we have the rights we have is that people just like us died to gain those rights. -- Cheerio Boy
    1. Re:Autos too... by GPLDAN · · Score: 1

      I think it was internal memos circulated by Firestone, detailing they knew about the propensity of the tires to blow apart and cause rollovers on the Ford Explorer. And they chose to do nothing.

    2. Re:Autos too... by Texas+Rose+on+Lava+L · · Score: 3, Informative

      I don't know about lawsuits, but a number of European car makers (BMW, Porsche, etc.) regularly pay fines for failing to comply with the CAFE standards because it would cost them a lot more to increase their cars' gas mileage than it does to just pay the fine.

  45. Open source CANNOT compete with MS by RLiegh · · Score: 1

    Nothing can. Hands down. They have the laws, and they have the hearts and minds of ma and pa kettle.

    They don't just have advantages; they own every sphere; wether it's on the political, financial or lobbyist front.

    I don't think that they should be forcibly 'open sourced'; but I think that to say that it is possible for MS and OSS to co-exist in any way at all is highly, highly out of touch with the realities of the computing and legislative worlds.

  46. Digital Pollution by wtoconnor · · Score: 2, Informative

    Once again we see Cringley stating the obvious but phrasing it a little differently. The EPA fines many polluters each year but quite often the fines are much less than what the polluters make polluting. The gov't gets a little extra cash, the polluters continue to get rich and pollute and we breath foul air.

    So maybe we should view M$ programs as a form of digital pollution and turn them into the EPA. I know my health would improve if they fixed a few of their bugs:)

  47. That's all fine and dandy... by Eezy+Bordone · · Score: 2, Insightful

    but his two previous articles about EDS/NMCI and the US Navy were much more interesting.

    --

    -EB

    Do you ever walk alone like a drifter in the dark?

  48. yup, I agree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Cringely makes sense, as usual. I was explaining this same line of reasoning to my dad last night when he asked me about the "huge" EU fine. I just laughed and told him this will only make microsoft stronger.

    Microsoft, like any large company, is not a person, even though it is treated like one by the law.

    Microsoft doesn't care about the moral or ethical point of view. They just care about dollars.

    And the government can't punish microsoft by putting it in jail, that's not even possible. They can't do anything to microsoft except fine it, basically. The government can say, "you gotta do this and that", but at the end of the day, the only thing compelling MS to comply is .. another FINE!

    So Microsoft is just playing the numbers. As long as the fines are less than the payout, they'll do whatever the hell they feel like. Stretch it out, make money. Pay the fine, make money. Settle with the government, make money. They just can't lose. As an added bonus, they know the EU probably won't slap any huge fines for a long time after this.

    Here's an analogy.. like some of you who are self-employed, I pay estimated taxes every quarter. Sometimes I have a good year and I under-pay. The IRS charges a "penalty" for this, basically charging you daily interest at 8-9% annual rate, or something like that.

    You might think at first, like I did, wow, the IRS is punishing me. I'm a bad person if I underpay. No, it's just numbers. There's no moral component. There's no mark left on my record, there's no reason for me to feel guilty.

    Just run the numbers, and if you think you can do better than 9% with the money you didn't give to the IRS, go ahead, don't pay them during the year.

    The point of the analogy is, microsoft just looks at the numbers and makes the best business decision.

    Companies as large and powerful as microsoft simply don't have to comply with every law. That's the sad truth.

    1. Re:yup, I agree by gkuz · · Score: 1
      The point of the analogy is, microsoft just looks at the numbers and makes the best business decision.

      Welcome to Econ101, AC. This is exactly what they're supposed to do, and precisely what their shareholders expect. If they did any different, they'd be violating their fiduciary duty.

      You say MS doesn't care about the ethical component, as if they're violating some trust. A corporation is by its nature amoral. It is supposed to be. Its one and only responsibility is to maximize value to shareholders.

  49. i like the last option by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >Death or maiming. I chose death, Ie revoke M$ corporate charter. let all assets be sold and profits distributed to share holders. End of bussines. Ie forced liqidation of assets, and cort ordered end of bussines. Levels the playing field, and start again.

    1. Re:i like the last option by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haha, that is funny. Business would collapse around us.

  50. Happens in other companies by Quill_28 · · Score: 1

    I used to work for a large chemical company.

    Ever so often green smoke would come up out of one of the smoke stacks. One time a worker looked up and said there's another 50K in fines.
    Went on to explain it was cheaper to pay the fine then get rid of properly.

    I have no idea if he was serious.

    1. Re:Happens in other companies by djeaux · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I was trained as an ecologist & environmental scientist. The stone cold truth is that, yes, it is often cheaper to pay the fine than to install pollution controls & employ the technicians to monitor them properly. The bottom line is the bottom line.

      Something even scarier is that businesses can buy "permits to pollute" & barter, buy & sell those permits within their respective industries.

      --
      "Obviously, I'm not an IBM computer any more than I'm an ashtray" (Bob Dylan)
  51. Re:Doing the math in the Linux cases: Linux cant w by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're a moron.

  52. WAIT! by CrackedButter · · Score: 0

    This *IS* the guy with the ferrai laptop, right? Is it just me or is he generally behind everyone else when it comes to his articles? He seems stuck in 1998 still.

  53. And the punchline is... by Zoshnell · · Score: 0

    Well I guess there really isn't any. I've known for a while that, to quote the article, pay lip service and a couple of(admittedly) large fines is way more profitable then, you know, actually playing a fair hand. It's far easier to ask forgiveness then to ask permission, and unfortunately, usually more profitable as well. I mean look at all the negative press MS recieved from the Netscape thing, and the anti trust deal, and now the EU courts decision. I have absofrickenlutely no numbers to back me up, but I don't think that this will at all affect their bottom line unfortunately. Not that they shouldn't exert their weight since they are fricken huge, but why can't one be the big kid on the block and NOT a complete jackass about it? Meh, I suppose whenver money is involved people do some of the most vile things. In other news, dirt turns to mud when sprayed with water. Film at 11.

    --
    "Do you suppose that's why God lives in the Heavens? Because he lives in fear of His creations?" - Steve Buscemi
  54. The laws are unjust anyway. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Given you don't even know you broke antitrust law for sure until the govt. charges you, it's no surprise the cases take so long to resolve. The laws are completely vaugue, and give too much power to judges to enforce arbitrarily with arbitrary penalties, all for exercising the simple right of free trade

  55. Unfortunately.... by Tony · · Score: 1

    I haven't purchased a copy of MS-Windows (except the version that came with my laptop, which my company purchased for me) in many years-- since MS-Windows 3.1. So, I agree with you completely.

    Except.

    The company for whom I work is slowly switching from Unix on the desktop (NCD X-Terminals, and SunRay thin clients) to MS-Windows. This is because "The users want it."

    Now our IT staff has doubled in size (granted, we are doing more back-end stuff as well, VoIP, more databases, several satellite locations, etc), and most of the time is spent fixing broken computers that were working just fine, broken though the user swears they didn't install any new software, just this cool Santa's Workshop screensaver they downloaded off the 'net.

    More and more websites we must access require Internet Explorer. More and more databases are popping up that use MS-SQL Server, or (*shudder*) MS-Access.

    Microsoft knows what they are doing. They are using their market clout to keep people locked into their product. When people find out I don't run MS-Windows, they automatically assume I use a Mac, and they scoff. Then, they are bewildered and unsure how to react when I inform them I use Linux; it's as if I suddenly sprouted four-foot nostril hairs, and tiny gnomes were using them to rappel down my chest.

    No, Microsoft knows what it's doing, and their bottom line hasn't felt the affects of either Apple *or* Linux. All we've managed so far is to slow their encroachment into the server room.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    1. Re:Unfortunately.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Now our IT staff has doubled in size (granted, we are doing more back-end stuff as well, VoIP, more databases, several satellite locations, etc), and most of the time is spent fixing broken computers that were working just fine, broken though the user swears they didn't install any new software, just this cool Santa's Workshop screensaver they downloaded off the 'net.

      You should probably learn how to disallow installation of screen savers and other such things by users of your Windows systems. This would be much more productive in the long run than allowing them to do things they've no need to do, and then having to clean up the mess.

  56. I fail to see the connection by Doctor+Crumb · · Score: 1

    What, exactly, does his whole digital design analysis have to do with the rest of his report? After he spent all that time setting up the comparison, he dropped the analogy completely.

  57. The other odd thing . . . by JustAnotherReader · · Score: 1

    Is that the fine was becasue the EU said that bundling Windows Media Player with the OS hurt competition. However, I pay for my Music Match software because I like the way it rips CDs to mp3s, burns CDs, and manipulates playlist better than Windows Media Player. Of all the places where a better competing product could kick Window's butt the media player is certianly one of them.

  58. Why have fines? by MtbRocket · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Instead of fines, make the penaty the removal of upper level managment from the company. You break the law you lose your job. End of story. Wonder how long Micosoft would last without Bill or Steve?

  59. Speeding tickets used to work this way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The rich would just pay them and keep speeding. That's why we have points, suspensions and revocations now. Time to revoke MS' license: break them up, then face the OS division with the prospects of forced divestiture or of forced release of the windows source to the public domain.

  60. Interest and penalties by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A few years ago, people noticed that the interest and penalties on late property tax payments was less than one could make investing the money in a bond. So the savvy people simply didn't pay the taxes. The government finally caught on when tax revenue took a big dip, and they raised the interest rates.

  61. Corporate 3 Strikes... ph34r M3!!!1! by tsm_sf · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A little sauce for the goose, my friend.

    http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2003/05/05/national /main552270.shtml

    This is such a fantastically good idea. Imagine watching our congressppl(on both sides of the isle) try to explain why they can't quite support it.
    Hours of entertainment ensue.

    At your expense.

    --
    Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
  62. Re:hehehehe by JPriest · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I have had 1st post about 3 times.

    --
    Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
  63. not so fast ... by sir_cello · · Score: 1


    It is true that Microsoft can stretch out the process through an appeal that may take years while they continue to act as before.

    However, if the appeal fails and they are required to comply, they cannot avoid the obligation: if they do, the company directors can be criminally charged and put into goal.

  64. Finland has a way by Bitseeker · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Fines don't hurt enough? Finland doesn't have this problem because, for example, a traffic fine is based on ability to pay--the offender's income. That's how Anssi Vanjoki got a $103,000 speeding ticket.

  65. Cringely is a jerkoff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    self righteous dumbass with his head stuck where the sun dont shine

  66. Faint Praise by Cyberherbalist · · Score: 0
    Yes, perhaps it sounds that way, but "hell of a lot" is to "more" as "best" is to "better" in this case. My home machine (Win98SE) gets its knickers in a serious wad several times a week in part-time use (I don't upgrade because it is very slow iron), but my work machine (Win2k) gets 8+ hours per day serious development work (VS.NET w/C# and VB6) in which I frequently have two or sometimes even three instances of VS.NET open at a time, as well as Outlook running 100% of the time and two or three instances of IE6 and MS Word and it chucks a hairball once or twice a month, max. My brother's Mac gets hosed more often.

    IMHO Win2K is the OS of choice.

    --
    "The generation of random numbers is too important to be left to chance."
  67. Fines are a cost of business by Lupulack · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I once ( loooong ago ) did tax accounting for a small agency , one of the things that always made me shake my head was that , to a trucking company , fines and tickets for speeding , over-height payloads , over-weight payloads ... these were tax deductable !

    So fines are essentially permits after the fact , and they're often avoided and appealed. As has been said , make it a punishment rather than merely a tax-deductable fee for doing business , and things may change. Otherwise it goes on the balance sheet under pens , paper and lawyer fees.

    --
    The fact that no one understands you doesn't mean you're an artist.
  68. or better... by zogger · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ... stop the nonsense of giving personhood to corporations and make every legal action be directed against named individuals. If every time a corporation had to go to court, and someone was facing a personal fine, not the company's money but their personal money, or staring at jail time, they would think twice or thrice about being crooks. This nutso artifical human named the corporation is too much of an insulation for the actual humans who make decisions.

    IMO, microsoft has more than proven they are chronic serial liars and crooks,and that they will continue to be crooks no matter what, and because of that they should have had their incorporation revoked. That joke fine they got in the US of being able to print up their own fine-money-vouchers, was beyond obscene. Joe and Josephine average can't do that, no "corporation" should be allowed to do that.

  69. Free pass!?!? by Bob+Cat+-+NYMPHS · · Score: 1

    Like this free pass? Try to bash Bush after reading this:

    http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/business/8322515.htm? 1c

    "former Enron chief executive Jeffrey Skilling is appealing U.S. District Judge Sim Lake's order freezing more than $55 million in his assets....The expanded indictment charged Skilling with 35 counts of fraud, conspiracy and insider trading."

  70. Structural remedies are the only hope by alispguru · · Score: 1

    Contrary to popular belief, having a monopoly is not illegal. The specific thing MS was charged with, both in the US and the EU, was using their OS monopoly to create other unrelated monopolies (browser and media player, respectively).

    In the US, the penalty was essentially MS saying "we won't do it again" and accepting some oversight. Hasn't worked very well, has it? In the EU, the proposed penalty is a fine and required unbundling of media playing software - this may be a little more effective, if it ever gets past the appeals and enforced.

    What the US should have done was to break MS up into at least three companies - OS, Office, and EverythingElse. That way, the EverythingElse company couldn't give the browser away for free, or get away with saying "the browser can't be removed, it's part of the OS". The opportunity to do that was lost between Judge Jackson's bad handling of the case, and the Bush administration's unwillingness to smack MS.

    The nice part about structural remedies is that they can tolerate a fair amount of delay, and still hurt when applied.

    --

    To a Lisp hacker, XML is S-expressions in drag.
  71. Re:FOAD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OMG! WTF!? You've got a 300k UID and you feel the need to moan about a fucking troll in this manner?! You are a complete fuckstain, Steve, and you need to get a fucking clue before posting in future you fucking cunthat.

    Fuck you.. your mom.. and your mom's mom.

  72. michael is an idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Fascinating stuff"

    He he, wtf is that? It looks as if michael is targeting idiots reading slashdot.

  73. Crime and punishment by erroneus · · Score: 1

    If a corporation cannot be put in Jail what would the equivalent be? Being blocked from doing business for a period of time? I think it would be apt.

    Furthermore, fines are punishment but the problem is the "amount" is a fixed figure and is not proportionate to the amount of income. If I got a speeding ticket, depending on my income at the time, it could seriously hurt me if not do serious harm to my lifestyle depending on the timing and such. As someone else pointed out, if the cost of a parking ticket was less than the cost of the meter, what would you do? Yeah, me too!

    Laws should be rewritten in such a way that fines are a percentage of assets and gross income. This would level the playing field greatly though I can't help but believe other problems would somehow arise from such a practice. Anyway, the point is that the fines are punishment if they HURT!

    And back to imprisonment of corporations -- I immediately heard the cries of people saying, "what about the innocent employees?!" To that I say, "what about the innocent families of convicted and imprisoned felons?" Tough luck I say because ultimately, prison time (time out) would serve as the best possible deterrent against corporate corruption and malpractice. The threat of punishment is supposed to act as a deterrent. I think this idea could serve that point in such cases.

    1. Re:Crime and punishment by BCW2 · · Score: 1

      The alternative is a class action civil suit. Say for the time spent repairing virus and worm damage at the going rate of $50+/man hour spent. That one might be a couple Billion. Of course it would spend ten years in court, but if the publicity was handled right M$ would lose no matter what the verdict.

      --
      Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
  74. Corporate Jail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Company gets convicted as an illegal monopolist.

    Company goes to "corporate jail."

    1. Major shareholders cannot vote at AGM.
    2. Top management replaced.
    3. Profits (perhaps only dividends of major shareholders) go to fund competing startups.
    4. Other ideas?

    A Nony Mouse

    1. Re:Corporate Jail by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

      There is, in fact, a corporate death penalty. Remember Arthur Andersen accounting? They were convicted of obstruction of justice. The punishment was corporate dissolution.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

  75. But that's the way it's SUPPOSED to be. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This reminds me of the scene in the movie, where Ed Norton's character explains that if it is cheaper for a company to pay fines, than to recall a potentially-deadly product, then they will opt for the former.

    But that's the way it's SUPPOSED to be.

    The company is in business solely to maximize profit. This makes it's behavior fit the definition of psychopathy/sociopathy - like about one/three percent of the population.

    The government is in business to co-opt vigilantism by providing a coherent and understandable set of rules, including punishments for non-compliance that:

    - convince most psychopaths/sociopaths that their best interests are served by following the rules, and

    - taking out of circulation any that don't follow the rules, once it becomes clear that they won't follow them.

    If the fines and other sanctions are low enough that businesses find it more profitable to be scofflaws than law-abiding, it's the fault of the GOVERNMENT, according its own legal theories.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    1. Re:But that's the way it's SUPPOSED to be. by Viking+Coder · · Score: 1

      Well stated.

      I so often hear that industry should be allowed to "self-regulate." It about makes me want to vomit. Replacing the word "industry" with "sociopaths" in that sentance highlights the repulsive nature of that view, in my eyes.

      Also, thinking about it in these terms reinforces my opinion that laws to protect whistle-blowers needs to be greater and stronger. Re-watch The Insider, or Erin Brokovich.

      --
      Education is the silver bullet.
  76. DIVIDEND by GrEp · · Score: 1

    Only one way to make Microsoft pay:

    Make them declare a dividend worth 50% of their cash reserves. There is no other way I know of to start breaking up their monopoly without burning shareholders.

    --

    bash-2.04$
    bash-2.04$yes "Don't you hate dialup connections?"| write USERNAME
    1. Re:DIVIDEND by Hassman · · Score: 1

      In fact, they plan on doing this. Now that all but one lawsuit has been settled they will either do a 1 time cash divident on the order of 1/3 of their cash reserves or a stock buyback of equal value.

      Either way each shareholder will see about 2 dollars per share.

      --
      -Mark
      Dovie'andi se tovya sagain.
    2. Re:DIVIDEND by GrEp · · Score: 1

      It is nice to see that Bush changed the tax policy in their favor so they can clean house even more.

      --

      bash-2.04$
      bash-2.04$yes "Don't you hate dialup connections?"| write USERNAME
    3. Re:DIVIDEND by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vote Kerry.

  77. Continuing Criminal Enterprise? by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Maybe it's me, but that article was waay too long winded to state the obvious: As long as Microsoft canturn a profit after any sort of penalities given them, they have no motovation to comply to any sort of antitrust regulation.

    Close. But you missed the point of part of the wind: That complying with the rulings COSTS Microsoft more than the fines.

    So it itsn't just that the fines are too little to matter. It's that COMPLIANCE is TOO EXPENSIVE, and the fines are too small to shift that balance.

    Just like alcohol prohibition and the "War on Drugs", it's explicitly PROFITABLE to DISOBEY the rulings.

    Of course this brings up a question:

    Does this behavior make Microsoft a "Continuing Criminal Enterprise"?

    If so, it could be VERY interesting if that's brought up the NEXT time somebody brings Microsoft in for antitrust or other violations.

    I wonder if the RICO laws could be applied, too.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    1. Re:Continuing Criminal Enterprise? by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Does it take a new trial for a judge to say "You're in contempt of court" for not following the orders resulting from a trial? Can't that result in a small amount of jail time immediately?

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    2. Re:Continuing Criminal Enterprise? by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

      Re:Continuing Criminal Enterprise?
      Does it take a new trial for a judge to say "You're in contempt of court" for not following the orders resulting from a trial?

      Nope.

      Can't that result in a small amount of jail time immediately?

      Yep.

      But the RICO and Continuing Criminal Enterprise statutes can result in rapid seizure of the company's assets. (These are assumed to be ill-gotten gains once it has been shown that the company is engaged in an ongoing pattern of lawbreaking for profit.)

      And they don't require the government to do the prosecuting. Individuals who were harmed can drive the process (and reap the benefits.) B-)

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  78. "wreckless" driving? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But he did wreck.

    Motorcyclists should start installing shaped charges on their bikes in carefully chosen spots. It won't take too many vaporized reckless drivers before motorcycles start getting some more respect.

    1. Re:"wreckless" driving? by lee7guy · · Score: 1

      Motorcyclists should start installing shaped charges on their bikes in carefully chosen spots. It won't take too many vaporized reckless drivers before motorcycles start getting some more respect.

      Ah, but then all motorcyclists would be declared "terrorists" and hunted down with B52's dropping daisy cutters onto them, F15's shooting GPS guided missiles at them and A10's strafing them with their very large miniguns.

      If I was a biker, I'd rather have the occasional car running over me than facing that kind of persecution.

      --
      Ceterum censeo Microsoftem esse delendam
  79. Re: please re-see FIGHT CLUB, read BAKAN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (The Corporation, by Joel Bakan, 2004)

    "The corporation's legally defined mandate is to pursue relentlessly and without exception its own economic self-interest, regardless of the harmful consequences it might cause to others."

    more at www.thecorporation.com

    ***

    (Fight Club, 1999, thanks to imdb.com)

    Narrator: A new car built by my company leaves somewhere traveling at 60 mph. The rear differential locks up. The car crashes and burns with everyone trapped inside. Now, should we initiate a recall? Take the number of vehicles in the field, A, multiply by the probable rate of failure, B, multiply by the average out-of-court settlement, C. A times B times C equals X. If X is less than the cost of a recall, we don't do one.
    Business woman on plane: Are there a lot of these kinds of accidents?
    Narrator: You wouldn't believe.
    Business woman on plane: Which car company do you work for?
    Narrator: A major one.

    thanks,
    doodius

  80. Parent is a nice troll. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Congratulations!

    1. Re:Parent is a nice troll. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      How do you figure it's a nice troll? It didn't even get a single indignant response.

      I'd classify it as a rather pedestrian and obvious troll, myself. I mean, what is this, 1998?

    2. Re:Parent is a nice troll. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was a decent troll. The troll's mistake was posting AC. These days, AC posts are only read by other ACs.

      Get a troll account, dipshit!

  81. At least he's a funny moron. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unlike yourself.

  82. Or go the other direction by Doubting+Thomas · · Score: 2, Interesting

    As you say, a person can face personal fines or jail time.

    How do you put a corporation in jail for 90 days?

    How do you give a corporation the death penalty?

    Once upon a time, the king could revoke your corporate charter, and your company went away. That's the closest thing to a 'death penalty' for corporations that I've ever encountered, but even modern trust busting practices don't go that far (Ma Bell was dismembered, but not actually destroyed).

    Similarly, the punishment for some crimes allows for any goods that were acquired in the process of breaking the law to be seized. If you have a product that violates the law egregiously, why shouldn't the benefits (profits) of that product be seized, and funneled back toward the public good?

    Fining a company that has $60B in the bank 600 million dollars is chump change. They can take that out of interest payments on their liquid assets. You really want to hurt them, you seize all of their profits (or source code) for that product. Anything less is merely an annoyance.

    --
    Just because it works, doesn't mean it isn't broken.
    1. Re:Or go the other direction by Richard_at_work · · Score: 2, Interesting

      How do you put a corporation in jail for 90 days?

      You freeze the companies assets for the 90 days, not allowing them to make any sort of financial transaction, while allowing stock market trading to commence as normal. The company is not allowed to make any sort of income during this time, all its products are removed from shelves for this duration, and the company is only allowed to work toward a resolution imposed by the court at the beginning of the "jail" period. In this case, MS would only be allowed to work toward removing WMP from windows, wouldnt be allowed to conduct any development in the EU, no sales of products in the EU.

      How do you give a corporation the death penalty?

      The court replaces the entire board of directors and upper echelon of the business with appointed people, who will run it for a period of time no less than 10 years. The old directors will not be allowed to work together for a period of 2 years. This should remove any top level influence that has caused the issue that is forcing the action. Remember, more often than not, a corporation is no more than the dicision makers. and under different guidance, it should become a different company.

      --

      Of course, the first solution above is damaging to the consumer. No sales of MS Windows for 90 days! No sales of Office for 90 days! No third party could ramp it up enough to support linux, and by my estimates, full linux support would only occur 1 to 2 years after such an order was imposed on MS.

      Just to make my views clear, I dont think this EU case is correct. MS didnt prevent any consumer from installing what they want on their desktop, they jsut followed progress and included a multimedia player, which I hope you agree is expected of a computer today. Should they be sued by third parties because they included a TCP/IP stack, which is arguably a lot harder to replace? What about the shell, as there are third party shells out there.

    2. Re:Or go the other direction by jefeweiss · · Score: 1

      A corporation is just a piece of paper that says that such and such a name is registered to do business. All of the laws that attach to corporations go back to that charter. These charters are given out by the states and AFAIK there isn't any legal reason why the charter can't be revoked at will by the state. The problem is that the "owner" of the corporation is in stock, so punishing a corporation by revoking its charter would hurt shareholders who these days don't really have any idea what companies they own.

      As far as I'm concerned that doesn't bother me to much, it's buyer beware. If a fund manager decides to buy Microsoft stock and doesn't bother to learn that they have unsavory business practices I have no problem with him losing his shirt along with everyone else's. There's far too little personal responsibility at stake when it comes to large amounts of money.

    3. Re:Or go the other direction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the NCAA can give athletic programs the death penalty (or not), why can't government reign in corporations? (Because they don't want to.)

  83. I am going to work for microsoft! by WarlockD · · Score: 1

    This artical decided it for me! All hail king Jobs! Long live the King! On a more serious note, I REALLY do. All the evidence shows that this company isn't going to go down soon.

  84. Simpler! by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1
    if you take the case that Stockholders are the true owners and the mangement are just employees then you have a much different means of punishing the company. On that note, I think that the courts should take 150% of MS cash on hand and force the stockholders to take it as dividends. that way the real owners of the company are not being fined, but rather simply being told they can't keep their money there. In addition to that eliminate all purchase of other companies, IP, and any other "exclusive" deals for 5 years. Lastly, force the OS and Office products to be sold to all people equally without any other agreements allowed...make them just like all the other monopolies...nobody gets special treatment and everybody pays the same! [to bad Dell!] Just for kix have the price be fixed for 2 years at current retail!

    That combination of things would eliminate MS as a monopoly overnight. The fixed pricing would drive away the casual consumer in droves...and force at least a few of the big guys to find another alternative...and fast. The Cash issue fixes the key problem of MS...like we all say the burn off cash to buy the customer's love and politician's favor. Take that all away and they have to focus on making profit, not their lame attempts at world domination. One key point is to give the money to the stockholders. First, it helps to build accountability and it actually improves personal property rights over those of corporations...while putting the fear of God in the corps that they could potentially be "disbanded" if they get out of line. Second, it puts MS on the other side of the "wonder kid" fence for a change.. All that money's gotta go somewhere. Much of MS money is made "selling MS" to Wall Street...once they smell money, everybody will want MS shares. But once the checks are written, those "investors" won't give a rats' arse that they once got rich... They'll look at the gutted company and not see easy money and dump stock like cow piles!

    Frankly, my opinion is that MS and Co have more money than God right now...it's time for them to stop trying to control everyone's lives and simply go a way and be obcenely rich. It's time to shake up the market and let somebody else get a shot a some money. It's like the third time Michael Jordan came back from "retirment"...it was nice, but we came to watch the new kids play...stop hogging the spotlight old man!!!

  85. Divide and Conquer by Audacious · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The only way to subdue a larger opponent is to divide that opponent's forces and proceed to conquer them. Microsoft and any other large corporation knows this and uses it against any legal strategy which is brought against it. Our government is just too afraid to use it against them.

    Remember that the original judgement order would have split Microsoft up. Remember also that they fought it tooth and nail because they knew that if it happened - then they really would have had problems.

    Remember AT&T was split up and we got better phone service. IBM had to split up and we now have microcomputers that are so cheap you could work at MacDonald's and still buy one. Microsoft should be split up so software can evolve the way it should.

    But then, Microsoft has enough money to buy anything and anyone. So the guy is right. When you are making so much money that you can thumb your nose at the law - who's laws do you live by? The answer is - no one's but your own. Someone giving you a hard time? Buy them off or buy someone who will remove the problem. And that doesn't mean you have to hire a hit man. You just need to hire/buy/create another company to put pressure on legislators, or do letter writing campaigns, or even just visit these people and hint that your company which brings vast wealth into the U.S. would leave and...well, I'm sure you get the picture.

    So did the DOJ of Utah. If you have forgotten, remember that Microsoft was in big trouble with the State of Utah for creating a company which wrote ficticious letters to them asking for leniency in their case against Microsoft. IMHO - that is a $10,000.00 fine for each and every letter written and a 5-10 in jail for each offense. Since there were litterally thousands of letters we should never see Mr. Gates or anyone else who was in charge of Microsoft at the time ever again. Yet - there have been no arrests even though Microsoft admitted they had done this.

    I think Mr. Roosevelt said it best:"...So, first of all, let me assert my firm belief that the only thing we have to fear is fear itself--nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror which paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into advance. In every dark hour of our national life a leadership of frankness and vigor has met with that understanding and support of the people themselves which is essential to victory."

    We need victory. True victory and not hollow lapdog lickings. But all we have gotten so far is a pat on the head.

    Later.

    --
    Someone put a black hole in my pocket and now I'm broke. :-)
    1. Re:Divide and Conquer by Mike+Hawk · · Score: 1

      I'm curious why you think it should be a $10,000 fine per letter? Where did you get that number? I followed your link and I don't think they did anything illegal at all. Sneaky? Sure. Tricky? Ok. Are you saying I have to sign each and every correspondence I ever send with my real name or face a potential $10,000 fine? I couldn't send a letter signed Mike Hawk or Cock Boggle or Dewey Decimal just to mess with my "representatives" or face massive fines?

      I have to say you have a pretty warped view of justice. Or maybe in this instance you are just blinded by hate? I don't know, where do you get YHO?

    2. Re:Divide and Conquer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      IBM spent years (~10?) in court, but was never split up. The reason we have cheap IBM-compatible computers goes back to Compaq reverse-engineering an IBM PC to make the first clones. That's not the only reason we have cheap hw now, of course, but it was the start.

    3. Re:Divide and Conquer by Audacious · · Score: 1

      No. The $10,000.00 fine is using the US Mail to commit fraud.

      You could send a letter however you wished. However, consider this:

      If you were under investigation for criminal actions and you began trying to influence your trial by sending letters to the state posing as different or even ficticious people. Do you think they would not slap a fine on you? Or throw you in jail for mail fraud? I believe they would. So why aren't the rules, regulations, and laws being applied equally to both you and the major corporation? That is the question.

      I also believe the only warping here is the strange outlook that it is ok for those in a position of power to do wrong and get away with it. It is also not true that I hate Microsoft. But it is true that their actions do irritate me and that all of these different things were being done by Microsoft during its trial and yet they were never brought to account for their actions. Further, although they were found to be a monopoly and found to be terribly abusing their monopolistic abilities - they were just given a slap on the wrist and, as the gentlemen in the original article points out - why bother? You aren't hurting them. Punishment? I've said all along - what punishment? The solution doesn't punish. It cajoles them maybe - but punish? Yeah - right. Punishment places a burden on the one being punished. Not that it puts them out of business. Not that it makes it impossible for them to function. But it should make it harder for them to function normally. Is it doing this? I'd have to say no. Therefore - it isn't really a punishment at all.

      So I guess I should now succumb to your flamebait on me being a hate monger and post a witty retort. Please. I really don't care that much. This isn't a discussion of personal attacks, snide remarks, or juvenile outbursts. It is a talk about outlooks on subjects. Mine is that Microsoft was never punished. What's yours?

      And to further bring this back on track: There are reasons there are punishments for the misuse of the US Mail system (which IMHO this is - and yes, it does NOT rank up there with someone sending Anthrax through the mail). But it is a misuse because they were attempting to interefere with an ongoing investigation. Thus, it is not an ad campaign such as to sell a product but instead is an attempt to stop the investigation through strong arm tactics and by attempting to overpower the state by brow beating them into submission.

      The thing is - I seem to recall that the tactics worked and the state backed down. Pity - as I believe they had more abuses to pile on top of the already large stack due to the mail campaign.

      --
      Someone put a black hole in my pocket and now I'm broke. :-)
    4. Re:Divide and Conquer by Audacious · · Score: 1

      This is true and not true. IBM was ordered to divest itself of major components as well as to do other things. The US Government put restrictions on what it could or could not do. This is the only reason Compaq was able to reverse-engineer the PC and to create clones. Further, IBM fought (and lost to some degree) the clone wars. What really happened in the background was that IBM finally gave up trying to stop the proliferation of PCs and instead drastically dropped the price of leasing the rights to their BIOS information. By the time they had done this though, the other companies who had created their own BIOSs were gaining popularity and the rest is history. IBM shut down it's plants to create PCs and/or laptops and IBM does not even make its own micros or laptops today. They are made by other companies who just slap the IBM logo onto them. (Apple's PowerPC also comes to mind. Motorola used to make Apple's CPUS. Motorola's CPUS though were really IBM creations. But Motorola did the actual production of them.)

      As for cheap hardware - that is a natural process of economy. The overhead inherent in a technologically advanced country will make, at some point, it more feasible to outsource things to other countries where the labor is cheaper. Since the labor is cheaper the items are produced at a cheaper rate. That rate, even with import duties, is still cheaper than it would have been to create the item in the original country. Which is why it is cheaper to have some place like India produce your software. Not exactly a great thing (since I was laid off for quite a while myself because of this effect) but I can understand why it is happening.

      --
      Someone put a black hole in my pocket and now I'm broke. :-)
    5. Re:Divide and Conquer by Mike+Hawk · · Score: 1

      If you were under investigation for criminal actions and you began trying to influence your trial by sending letters to the state posing as different or even ficticious people. Do you think they would not slap a fine on you? Or throw you in jail for mail fraud? I believe they would. So why aren't the rules, regulations, and laws being applied equally to both you and the major corporation? That is the question.

      Quite the appeal to fear there. If I was being tried for a crime I did not feel I commited I would do everything in my power to influence the people who held the power over my fate. If that meant writing a stock letter and sending it to my friends and asking them to sign it and send it to the governor, I would do it if it would help. As long as it was their honest opinion it should not matter who penned the original. What you are asking for is for laws to NOT be applied to everyone equally. I just want to see that they are. As I asked before, should I be fined $10,000 per letter for defending myself any way I know how? Merely mailing letters is an interference with an investigation?

      Mine is that Microsoft was never punished. What's yours?

      If one is convicted of a crime one should be punished. This is most certainly true. It appears that once again I am the only one interested in equal protection under the law. Microsoft is a "convicted" monopolist and should face the consequences for that action. However this mailing campagin you are trying to portray as fraud is unrelated. If it even approached an actualy crime you better believe the folks in Utah would have tacked it on. There were aggressively pursuing the case up until the "abuses", after all. In America we believe that being guilty of one count does not make you guily of every crime that has been commited in the history of the world. THIS is where it is easy to detect your blinding hatred.

    6. Re:Divide and Conquer by Audacious · · Score: 1

      As long as it was their honest opinion

      But was it? I did not know that dead people had an opinion. Further, upon questioning many of the people who's names were used - they had no idea a letter had been sent in their name. By what stretch of the imagination is this an honest opinion? And yes. You should be fined. Doesn't always happen - but then if you have a pair of pliers in your back pocket after sundown in Texas you can be hung from the neck until dead and they don't do that either. Just because the laws are there does not always mean they are enforced.

      Quite the appeal to fear there

      All I can say is - yeah...right. If that was an appeal to fear then I'm Alfred Hitchcock. Come on - get it together guy. If you really have a point to make - then make it.

      What you are asking for is for laws to NOT be applied to everyone equally

      Oh really? Is that what I was saying? That due to the size, money, and influence which Microsoft has - that it is being allowed to set its own terms when it comes to punishment? To flaunt their ability to twist things around so they benefit from what they've done? Or, as the original story pointed out - the punishment does not fit the crime because Microsoft is so powerful that it only takes a few days to get past the punishment. Wow. So just why did we even bother to prosecute them in the first place? We spent hundreds of millions of dollars, thousands of man hours, and we get new computers with Microsoft products installed into our schools so they can extend their monopoly even further? You know - that's like convicting someone of murder, giving them a slap on the wrist, and saying "Don't do that again." I'm sure they will be so afraid that they will never ever kill someone again. Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.... As I said before - yeah - right.

      Listen. Your logic is heavily flawed. You are saying that because I said to apply the law that I am a hate monger. When in truth - I just want them to play and suffer by the same rules and laws underwhich the rest of us have to play. And simply because it is Microsoft and simply because you might like them - does not make the rest of us automatically hate mongers. So - sorry, I just don't see your logic.

      If one is convicted of a crime one should be punished.

      I certainly hope so! But realistically - it doesn't work that way. There was a recent court case in Galveston, Texas where someone who was clearly a murderer walked free. The guy had lots of money, hired a good lawyer, and although they could find parts of the body - they couldn't find the deceased's head. Therefore he walked free. That was certainly justice!

      Realistically though. Why would IBM, Sun Microsystem, too many companies to list them all, lots and lots of people from all sorts of backgrounds (myself included), the European Community, Japan, China, in fact all of Asia, and even Australia - all of them not like the outcome of the Microsoft trial. Are we all hate mongers? Or could there just be a smidgen of truth here about how Microsoft was treated versus - say AT&T? Remember the baby Bells? Ever wonder why that happened? Think they are nicer today? No - they are back to their tricks again. (See: 1,2, 3, and many others via Google's search engine)

      However! Tell you what! Without all of the personal attacks. Without all this hate monger junk - why don't you just present your points on whether or not you believe the Justice Department should or should not use a "Divide and Conquer" approach? That is what everyone really wants to know (myself included). Be waiting to hear from you.

      Later!

      --
      Someone put a black hole in my pocket and now I'm broke. :-)
  86. This is why... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is why I argued for the break-up of Microsoft years ago.

    It's also one of the many reasons I voted for Gore. I knew that a DOJ under Bush would go easy on Microsoft -- even though Reno's DOJ had already secured a guilty verdict. And history has proved me right.

  87. This is probery why IBM is fighting SCO. by WarlockD · · Score: 1

    I wonder if its costing Microsoft or IBM anything in legal costs anyway. Don't they have their own lawyers on the payroll? If you think about it, IBM can just rub SCO to the ground, but they are fighting this in the courts. Even, on the off chance they lose, its still like having a giant standing up for the little guy (Linux). I wonder if its costing Microsoft or IBM anything in legal costs anyway. Don't they have their own lawyers on the payroll?

  88. Condensed... by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

    You can skip the article...here's the whole thing in a nut shell:

    Let's say non-compliance makes you A but costs you B.
    Let's say compliance makes you C but costs you D.
    If A-B > C-D, don't comply, just pay the fines.

    Done.

  89. Question by KnowledgeFreak · · Score: 1

    In the Article, it mentions that the root of this problem is that the legal system for anti-trust cases is built for the 1800s, and that one of the only ways to fix this problem would be to bring the legal system into the 21st century. IANAL, so what would that involve?

  90. One Solution by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Instead of imposing a token fine which they just consider a 'cost of doing business', you close them down.

    Prohibit them from continuing as a business.

    Also provide an injunction that prevents them from doing business during the appeal process. Thereby making it a bad thing to prolong the process ( a favorite tactic of large monopolies )

    Once the cost/risk is too great, they will behave.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  91. They Can Fine Them Again by Karl-Friedrich+Lenz · · Score: 1

    Anyone assuming that the EU commission can be ignored safely because they don't have strong enough sanctions available might be in for a nasty surprise.

    $600 million might be not ever so much compared to Microsoft's profits.

    However, if they stubbornly insist on violating European competition law, for example by not following the specific orders about unbundling and making available information, the EU could rather quickly fine them again. Maybe a billion this time.

    And if that doesn't help, another two billion a few weeks later. A billion here, a billion there, and before you know it, you are talking about real money.

    From May 1st on, the Commission also has the power to impose periodic penalty payments under Article 24 of Regulation 1/2003 on top of any additional fines.

    The system would obviously be broken if anyone making a profit of more than 10 percent of turnover by violating competition law could get away with cashing the difference between that profit and the fine.

    We will see what happens. I don't agree with the idea that EU competition law can be safely ignored.

    1. Re:They Can Fine Them Again by LoocSiMit · · Score: 1

      The system would obviously be broken if anyone making a profit of more than 10 percent of turnover by violating competition law could get away with cashing the difference between that profit and the fine. The obvious answer is to limit fines to 10% of turnover or 100% of profit, whichever is greater.

      --
      Intellectual Property
      Intellectual: of the mind
      Property: that over which one has control
  92. my favorite line... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most amusing mental image:

    And if all else fails, Microsoft can always pull up stakes and move to some other country, the very threat of which would stimulate a frenzy of political ass-kissing that could ultimately result in Bill Gates being named king of somewhere or other, possibly even of the U.S.

    I laughed v. hard until I thought about the realistic chances of this actually happening...
    I for one welcome our new royal overlords.

  93. Microsoft isn't the enemy. by Alethes · · Score: 1

    The money that's spent litigating against Microsoft and and trying to bring them down could be much better spent educating consumers. Ignorant consumers are the "enemy" -- not Microsoft.

  94. Corp Death Penalty by hummassa · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "how do you give a corporation the death penalty?". simple.
    1. seize all of its assets and auction it ASAP.
    2. put all managers, middle-management and up in jail.
    3. declare all of its rights in contracts invalid.
    4. watch.

    --
    It's better to be the foot on the boot than the face on the pavement. ~~ tkx Kadin2048
  95. The writer just wants attention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The writer uses a lot of words just to say ONE thing:
    (ignoring his irrelevant and faulty geometry analogy)

    "Microsoft is so big that it can bear the costs of fines."

    That is not news.

  96. Agree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree. It is wrong to talk like that. It is also wrong to wish a man that he would be raped.

  97. Revoke their charter? by danharan · · Score: 1
    So you have this company that views fines as a cost of doing business... why is no one talking about revoking their corporate charter?
    When we look at the history of our states, we learn that citizens intentionally defined corporations through charters -- the certificates of incorporation.

    In exchange for the charter, a corporation was obligated to obey all laws, to serve the common good, and to cause no harm. Early state legislators wrote charter laws and actual charters to limit corporate authority, and to ensure that when a corporation caused harm, they could revoke its charter.(link)


    In a country with a three-strikes and you're out policy, why can corporations continue to view fines as just a cost of doing business? They are legal people when it comes to free expression, but not when it comes to prison or the death penalty.

    While I wouldn't advocate shutting down Microsoft (though maybe companies like Philip Morris), we shouldn't feel bad if we have to split up the company into several smaller ones.

    If a democracy implements laws that subordinate entities need not bother obeying, it is not much of a democracy!
    --
    Information: "I want to be anthropomorphized"
    1. Re:Revoke their charter? by demon · · Score: 2, Informative

      Unfortunately, it seems that our government is in bed with so many corporations, and they don't want to threaten their corporate benefactors. Therefore, they'll never bring up such a thing, because of all the feathers that the subject would ruffle.

      Personally, I think Microsoft's proved more than enough times that the corporate death penalty should be an available option when companies get that large - as Cringely pointed out, in a roundabout way, Microsoft has so much money on hand, financial "remedies" aren't, when the company in question can afford to just consider fines for non-compliance as a business expense.

      --

      Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
      Max: "I'd be peeing my pants if I wore any!"
    2. Re:Revoke their charter? by danharan · · Score: 1
      Unfortunately, it seems that our government is in bed with so many corporations, and they don't want to threaten their corporate benefactors

      Applying similar logic to government... if we can't get them to do their job we entrusted them for, perhaps we need to consider revoking their charter :)

      Easier said than done, I know. But since so many people are espousing the very same views you put forward, there might be enough political power to actually do something about it, even though it's not likely to make the mainstream news.
      --
      Information: "I want to be anthropomorphized"
  98. Capitalism is a force of nature by defile · · Score: 1

    Microsoft interprets government interference as a market force and addresses it accordingly. For Microsoft, the most cost-effective way of dealing with government is to ignore it. If only we could all be so lucky...

    "My job is to apply the formula. A is the probability of failure, B is the number of cars in the market, C is the cost of the average out of court settlement. If A x B x C is less than the cost of the recall, we don't do one."

  99. Cool! by timeOday · · Score: 1

    Splitting the OS and Application division into separate companies, on the other hand, might have been meaningful.

  100. Asian nations to promote alternative to Microsoft by NZheretic · · Score: 1
    Asian nations to promote alternative to Microsoft
    Officials from China, South Korea and Japan meet in Beijing today to map out plans to promote the Linux computer operating system and other "open source" software as alternatives to the products of US software giant Microsoft.

    The meeting reflects the deep concern among Asian countries over the virtual monopoly enjoyed by Microsoft's Windows operating system and its Office suite of software. Officials hope its grip on the market can be challenged in the region by Linux.

    The US is not Europe, or the rest of the world.
  101. I did the same math by HangingChad · · Score: 1
    I have to use MS and *gag* .NET at the office, but I've completely abandoned it anywhere else. My last MS purchase was a retail copy of Win2K, the last Wintendo partition on the home network. And even some of the commercial customers are starting to incorporate MS alternatives. I see the same errosion of their market. Like acid they can't wash off. A lot of little nibbles add up to a big bite.

    It's beginning to look more and more like MSFT against the rest of the computing world. Though I'm sure they'll come out in a couple years saying they always had a Linux strategy. But it'll be different this time.

    Yeah, there are a lot like you out here.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  102. Stating the obvious by Kaiwen · · Score: 1
    Personally, I thought Cringley wasted way too many words on geometry and circuit design trying to set up what I had always thought was a rather obvious point: if penalties cost you less than compliance, you pay the penalties and just file it under business expenses. (Hmm, I wonder if it's tax deductible.)

    I would have thought any sixth grader could have figured that one out.

    Lee Kaiwen, Taiwan

  103. Unfortunately true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cringley is unfortunately correct. M$ *is* sitting on a $50Billion US cash pile. They do make in two weeks the entire fine. If asked to pay, they can work a deal to give away software. Hey, Mr. Judge: Hows about I give you all of this software $600M retail to schools instead of the fine? The judge says "Yep". A CD costs 2 bucks to burn and costs $500 retail, so M$ really pays a real cost fine of $1.2 million US. OUCH! What Cringley failed to mention (when cheerfully saying M$ won) is that there is something scarier in the jungle. M$ is the almigty lion. OSS is several hundred columns of quick and nasty army ants. The lion can stomp on some, but will get bit in the ass several hundred thousand times in the process. Running for your life only pushes over more columns. Standing still means getting swarmed. Arrogance in court means the only people with a spray gun will instead build ant farms. Sorry Cringley, MS can play fast and loose with the courts, but ultimately, payback is a bitch.

  104. Corporate Death Penalty by JohnsonWax · · Score: 1

    Simple. Revoke their corporate charter. As others have stated which should be obvious to anyone over the age of 9, financial consequences are only effective if they are sufficiently large to overcome the benefits derived by receiving them.

    In some cases, such as with MS, it's virtually inconceivable that such a financial consequence could be introduced. Even a $10B annual penalty would not be effective. Why? Because Microsoft has no other avenue that can augment their current business model enough - they'd simply become sufficiently larger abusers to cover the penalty. The true value of MSs business, barring predatory practices, is massively lower in terms of profits than what they are now so the financial penalties against MS to change their behavior would need to be unacceptably massive.

    If Bill Gates was a frequent speeder, what ticket amount would you need to levy to change that behavior. $1M would be inconsequential. $100M might get his attention, but nobody could justify that. You'd take his license away - that works for everybody. If he drives without it, you chuck him in jail. Simple. Jail essentially puts everyone on the same resource plane.

    There is no comparable move for corporations except to revoke their charter. That's the equivalent of throwing them in jail, or delivering a death penalty. Take the 3 strikes law and apply it to corporations. You get to break the law sufficiently only twice and continue in a given time period (monopoly, criminal negligence, sell weapons to North Korea, etc. - the equivalent of corporate felonies. We can make a list.) After those, you get a warning, a big fine, some kind of half-assed restriction on your behavior, but you do it a 3rd time, we declare the *corporation* as irresponsible. Shareholders will actually punish the corporation most heavily as they close in on that 3rd strike, the risk of being a shareholder increases - much as it does for corporations with poor bond ratings. That's what'd really keep things in check.

    Of course, since these guys essentially run the nation, I'd never fly.

    http://www.lightparty.com/Misc/CorporateDeath.ht ml

  105. This is how MSFT handles ALL contracts by Locutus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Finally, someone else sees this. I've seen for years how MSFT signs contracts with companies it needs software of information from. They usually end up with the product one way or another and the original owner attempts court action. Microsoft drags it out long enough that the other company has no more income and must settle for pennies on the dollar for what the technology would have been worth.

    Cringely takes this up to the monopoly cases and class actions but it's the same game. This is why I've been saying, since the mid 90's, that any company that works with Microsoft is on the road to distruction. Sure, you might find one or two companies that were bought out and survive within the walls of their Redmond offices but most are just crushed and their bones just tossed out with the trash.

    I still can't believe Sun Microsystems tried to use another legal document to settle with Microsoft. Look at all the stuff Sun and Microsoft agreed to. Dumb! Dumb! Dumb! They should have just taken the $$$ and walked away. IMHO.

    LoB

    --
    "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
  106. Amoral nonsense. by SofaMan · · Score: 1
    You say MS doesn't care about the ethical component, as if they're violating some trust. A corporation is by its nature amoral. It is supposed to be. Its one and only responsibility is to maximize value to shareholders.


    Wrong. I'll repost someone else's evidence from lower down the page...

    When we look at the history of our states, we learn that citizens intentionally defined corporations through charters -- the certificates of incorporation.

    In exchange for the charter, a corporation was obligated to obey all laws, to serve the common good, and to cause no harm. Early state legislators wrote charter laws and actual charters to limit corporate authority, and to ensure that when a corporation caused harm, they could revoke its charter. [www.ratical.org]


    Corporations have an obligation to obey the law, to serve the common good, and do no harm. What they get in exchange for this is limited liability - what we get is honest moral companies, at least in principle.

    If they violate their end of the bargain (which is far more than simply providing value for shareholders), I see no reason why we as a community should continue to extend to them the very great gift of limited liability. Every board member, every decision-maker, every shareholder should be held personally and financially responsible for their share of the damage once the decision to revoke a corporate charter has been taken.
    --

    SofaMan -- Occasionally Battling Evil With His Mighty Powers Of Indolence.

  107. Screw the shareholders by LoocSiMit · · Score: 1

    I suppose the courts should reinburse SCO shareholders when their share price plumets after they lose a few cases too.

    --
    Intellectual Property
    Intellectual: of the mind
    Property: that over which one has control
  108. Fuken niggars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i'm waiting for niggabyte hard drive...so i can use it as a slave drive

  109. MSFT had up days... by NotQuiteReal · · Score: 1
    When the EU annouced their fine (about 2% that day, I don't recall) and with the Sun agreement - up 3% today.

    Too bad I already dumped my SUNW, it was up 20% on the MSFT settlement. Go figure.

    Seems like MSFT goes UP 1% for every $500M in fines/settlements... heh.

    --
    This issue is a bit more complicated than you think.
  110. Translate all laws from Legalese to Perl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And switch on the rapid-fire legal system.
    Also, fire all the lawyers, who don't grok Perl.
    And finally, see micro$oft go down the gutter...

  111. Wrong about Martha... by frostman · · Score: 1

    Ms. Stewart, if she goes to some sort of prison, will go there because she broke the law(s) in a most serious way and was found by a jury of her (citizen) peers to be guilty beyond reasonable doubt.

    If someone else *should* go and does not, and owes their freedom to a gender or fraternity or whatever, that does *not* mean that Ms. Stewart necessarily should go free.

    A little logic would solve this in a flash... and MS is appealing, as well she should and as is within her rights. We can call her a Convicted Felon if we like, but those of us who care about our civic reputations might better refrain. The last legal word has not been spoken.

    So before you make a light comparison of Ms. Stewart to the Bush family, maybe you should think for a moment about the foundations of the US legal system.

    There may well be crimes for which the Bush presidents (and numerous others) would be charged in somebody's idea of a perfect world.

    But that has no particular relevance to the Martha Stewart case, and pretending it does only serves to reduce the seriousness of the anti-Bush position - which I doubt was the intent of the parent post.

    --

    This Like That - fun with words!

  112. how to take on Dagobert Duck by stock · · Score: 2, Interesting

    How should the Justice Department take on large multi billion dollar Corporations?

    Easy : never ever put financial sanctions on them. Only put regulatory sanctions on such Corporations. For instance take the EU vs. Microsoft case : a $600.= million fine is pocket money.

    So demand Microsoft to remove the Media Player with the sanction , that if Microsoft fails to do so in time, Microsoft would just loose their commercial chamber registration and license, and thus would be forced to stop doing business in Europe. Easy as it gets.

    Robert

    1. Re:how to take on Dagobert Duck by evilviper · · Score: 1

      On the contrary, the fine is what greatly helps pay for the companies' prosecution. The mandatory fine should be 10X what it cost to prosecute your company, in addition to whatever future legal restrictions.

      Then, there is real incentive for government to enforce corporate laws. Then there is more incentive for companies NOT to waste time with frivilous motions, delay tactics, etc, becase they are just adding to their own bills.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  113. anolgy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    replace microsoft with file traders... boy would the arguments be different. (I am no lover of microsoft but they can be beat in the market place...Trusts are a problem when the goverment force is used to continue them matter of fact its the only way they can survive.) Read Ayan Rands In Defence of Captilism the Unknown Ideal.

  114. Re:Asian nations to promote alternative to Microso by FeloniousPunk · · Score: 1

    The US is not Europe, or the rest of the world.

    No shit, Sherlock. Once again, I ask you: RTFA. Pay special attention to Cringely's remarks on the EU suit against MS.

    --
    I know this because Tyler knows this.
  115. The way to go by InrdZQdxdqn · · Score: 2

    Passing a law that forbids governments and public institutions to buy products from convicted companies would be much better and a real punishment.

  116. He's missed the point by Decaff · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The threat to Microsoft is not the fine. Its restrictions on bundling and opening up APIs, and its likely that these are going to imposed pretty much immediately. The reason these are significant is because of Microsoft's business model. They rely on sales, not services. This means that they need users to buy software and upgrades and they need to constantly expand to new markets. At the moment, these strategies aren't working very well. There are major complaints about support and licencing of existing installations and the attempts to expand look successful at first but are loss-makers: Last year MS server sales made a loss, and X-Box has always been hugely subsidised. Even worse for Microsoft, they are being threatened in their core market, as Linux on the desktop is starting to be taken seriously - especially in the corporate market. Microsoft is desperate to expand into the multimedia market: they want you to use Microsoft TVs, home media centres and portable media players. To do this they have to be able to sell XP embedded and bundle media player. These are key parts of the on-going EU investigation.

    Microsoft is a lot less strong than it looks - its all based on share value. If in a few years time desktop share starts to fall due to corporate Linux use, users are even more reluctant to upgrade yet again or purchase 6GHz machines with 4GB memory to run Longhorn, and they have no escape route into other markets because of EU action, they won't be a happy company.

  117. Eventually, the strategy becomes unnecessary... by cgenman · · Score: 1

    Once Microsoft or another company has dominated the market through strong arm tactics, the strong arm tactics are no longer necessary. The US can wag its finger at Microsoft and say that they cannot forbid PC makers from installing other browsers, but now that most people consider Internet Explorer as "the internet" and the competition is basically dead, what's the point? Microsoft may agree to not prevent OEM's from installing OS2 Warp and BeOs, but what's the point now? In the time between when the problem came to light, the investigation happened, the trial happened, and appeals were exhausted, Microsoft's dominance of a market has become so assured that their previous tactics have become unnecessary. If at that point they are "forced" to remove their strong arm tactics, there is no credible competition left to pose a threat and Microsoft has a complete hold over the standard.

    I don't think Judges will act any quicker, but I do think the stick they carry should be appropriately sized for punitive effect. If you've made 50 billion dollars through illegal activities, that's 50 billion less you should have the day after the judge's gavel hits the table. If you have gained your monopoly position through control of a standard, the group that controls that standard is now a separate company. If your top executives made most of their money knowingly through this company's illegal activities, then tomorrow those tope executives are going to have a hard time putting food on the table.

  118. The 14th Amendment by Gary+Destruction · · Score: 1

    Corporations are natural individuals

  119. Disregard --- Already posted by Gary+Destruction · · Score: 1

    Disregard child and parent. I didn't see that someone else had already posted info about the 14th amendment.

  120. I believe we are all missing the point here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The real implications of the E.U.'s verdict is not, repeat NOT the 500 million fine. It is the fact that Microsoft must release a version of Windows without Windows Media Player bundled along with it, and that full API disclosure must take place within 90 and 120 days of the verdict, respectively.

    This was a lawsuit against Microsoft's monopoly of the means of media distribution. The European court did exactly what was neccesary to hit Microsoft where it hurts.

    Ifyou look only at the sums of money involved, you miss the whole point. Microsoft could be fined 100% of revenue - Bill would just have to give Steve a little more pocket money this year than usual. Microsoft now suffer something much more damaging - lack of ability to control the competition, and, in Europe at least, a damaged public image.

  121. It's not only a matter of math. by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

    There is credibility at stake. Microsoft keeps getting in trouble with justice all around the world for business practices that affect the freedom of their customers. People should start wondering if it makes them a viable business partner to base their own vital IT infrastructure on.

    --
    ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
  122. Windows XP by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1
    Bloody fisher-price interface!

    Click on search, stupid dog comes up and it searches through every single .zip file on your harddrive, making a search for file uselessly slow. Oh well, back to the command-line...

    And that media player default skin is just offensive. Along with microsoft's insistance that every type of file (even .mid or .mp3) should be able to include executable code to aid virus propagation (not all of that was intentional, but how hard can it be to read a file!).

    Of course the problem for 3d artists was that microsoft put a crash key (the one with a windows logo, next to the ctrl and shift keys) on all new keyboards, which killed 3D Studio R4 stone dead if ever you pressed it. That's why artists would physically rip out the windows keys from keyboards.

  123. User eXPeriences :P by drhlx · · Score: 1

    I think every IT professional, if not user, has come across this phenomenon. Even if you keep everything else constant (insomuch as you have control), the thing JUST. GETS. SLOWER. My theory? It's because you get used to faster technologies around you. Use a different computer (faster) at work, and that Mac LC II at home just doesn't seem so quick any more. Even just use it once and you get a different feedback response, something much more closely approximating 'instant'.

    Of course, fragmenting etc. affects it, no doubt. But I'm talking even after a reinstall of the exact original software, the thing will just 'feel' slower. It's all based on perception. Win XP is by no means quick, on any hardware I've used (up to P4/2.4), in terms of UI response. Mac OS X is a joke on anything less than Panther on a G4.

    Personally I know it's time to upgrade my system when the UI responsiveness is too slow to bear. That usually comes with having to install the latest Internet Software (IE, Real, WMP, etc.) and/or Operating System, just to access poorly-designed websites. But even if I don't upgrade anything, my experiences with using systems elsewhere make my static, unchanging, regularly defragged and reinstalled system just that much less enjoyable to use.

  124. I ignore the fines by DABANSHEE · · Score: 1

    & would pay them off concurrently by spending a weekend in Jail every year (serving out the highest fine serves out the lot)

    Then some stupid blood fine defaulter with a Yugoslav name went & got comatosed by a lifer, so the NSW govt got rid of the pauper's alternative & now cancels peoples drivers licenses & car regos if they don't pay their fines.

    Still makes no differance - my license was cancelled about 10 years ago & I haven't re-registed my car since, but I still drive. Actually driving unlicensed/unregisted has improved my traffic compliance no end - in 10 years I only got done driving once & that was driving a mate's car that actually looked unregisted, & at 2AM at that. Served me right I spose by letting a free shot tempt me against my better judgement.

    BTW it's been over a year & I haven't paid those fines either..........fuck em I say.

  125. Property is property?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Property is property."

    Owning the word "pepsi", owning a radio, owning ocean front land, and owning my life body and freedom are the same and not different???

    Then why are the laws vastly different for each type of owning?

  126. Boxing Day fines by Mozai · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This reminds me of a law that's gone out-of-fashion here in Toronto, Canada. When I first moved here in the '90s, it was illegal for stores to be open on the day after Christmas... but the Eaton's department store would. They figured that they made more money than the fine. As the years went by, more and more stores on Yonge Street followed Eaton's example. Today, Yonge Street is busier the day after Christmas than any Saturday... despite the fact that it's illegal.

  127. But think of the bright side! by MacFury · · Score: 1
    ...even Bill Gates, he certainly doesn't deserve to be raped

    If Bill Gates went to jail and got raped, there's a good chance he would contract something like AIDs or Herpes. Nearly overnight you'd see a couple billion dollars go into researching cures for those diseases.

    1. Re:But think of the bright side! by rangek · · Score: 2, Insightful
      If Bill Gates went to jail and got raped, there's a good chance he would contract something like AIDs or Herpes. Nearly overnight you'd see a couple billion dollars go into researching cures for those diseases.

      Okay. According to this logic, it is perfectly ethical, and indeed almost obligatory, for those who are afflicted with sexually transmitted diseases and/or are passionate (pardon the almost pun) about finding cures for these diseases to rape and/or cause to be raped those individuals whom they deem able to best effect said cure. Yeah, I didn't think so.

      Rape is never right. That our resources are not optimially distributed according to some ethical code or other may be wrong, but raping people isn't going to help things.

  128. If the fine is too small... raise the fine! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If a $600 million fine is too small to effect a change in Microsoft's behavior, and the purpose of fining Microsoft is to change its behavior, then the solution is simple.

    Increase the fines until the cost of paying the fine exceeds the cost of changing the behavior. If $600 million is a slap on the wrist, would a fine of, say, one hundred times that amount be effective?

    Of course, if the purpose of the fines is simply to extort money from corporations and not to act as a deterrent to illegal action, then raising the fine to the point where it would be rational to avoid incurring the fine would be pointless.

    There's always the cynical/silly view of these things, in which M$ literally controls the world by threatening to deny Windows to any organization that interferes with it... "Call off the fine or every computer in Europe will cease to function."

  129. Spelling flame by Forgotten · · Score: 1

    s/idealog/ideolog/g - it's late, and about to get later.