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Microsoft's Long-Playing Business Record

khendron writes "The Globe and Mail has an article which tells it like it is. Microsoft is looking at it constant court costs and anti-trust fines as simply 'the cost of doing business,' and has no intention of changing. A telling quote 'Losing or settling case after case, Microsoft has tested the bounds of antitrust and patent infringement law, with little evidence that its power has waned or that its behaviour has been substantially changed. Rivals and many legal experts say antitrust law itself has come out the worse for the skirmishes, while Microsoft appears to have built the ongoing scrutiny, fines and remedies into a strategy showing scant sign of reform.'"

92 of 380 comments (clear)

  1. wow, I thought the law was supposed to protect us, by garcia · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "I can tell you with 100 per cent certainty that when managers are deciding what features to put inside products, they are not considering antitrust issues unless it is in a very narrow area covered by the DOJ settlement," said Matt Rosoff, an analyst with Directions on Microsoft, a research firm that closely covers the company.

    Unfortunately, because of how these types of things have been handled (including laws), they have been either way too specific or way too broad. On one hand we have the DCMA that has sweeping implications for tons of different situations. It has done little but allow for more lawsuits from bigger fish against the minnows. I believe its intention was to protect but it ended up making everything so vunerable. On the other hand, we have MS' settlement. They are basically allowed to do what they want based on what they think is best. What the fuck kind of punishment is that? As long as they stay within the narrow constraints placed on them they are good to go. Asked whether the "rule of reason" test would have prevented Microsoft from bundling the browser, the issue at the heart of the Justice Department's antitrust lawsuit, Mr. Ballmer was adamant: "I would still integrate a browser. We would still integrate the Media Player. ... Nobody ever said the browser did not meet the rule-of-reason test. It absolutely met the rule-of-reason test to go in." You just HAVE to love that. Ballmer getting to decide what's ok and what's not.

    While I have reservations about both the browser and the media player being "integrated" (for obvious tin-foil-hat reasons), I am more concerned w/the simple fact that THEY get to decide for themselves what is all right. After all the fucking money that was wasted coming to this fucking "punishment" why don't we have a team of REAL FUCKERS telling MS what to do? Hmm, looks like it is the other way around eh?
    And to think, I always believed that the laws were to protect those that could not easily protect themselves.

  2. Which is why fines are not the right solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It just allows the rich companies to continue to abuse the system and break rules that other smaller companies have to follow. Once you're in power, it's much easier to stay in power.

    1. Re:Which is why fines are not the right solution by Tango42 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Fines are fine (pardon the pun), it's small fines that don't work. Fine MS half it's cash, and it would have an effect (after a few court cases). You simply have to fine them more than they gain from breaking the law.

      If you don't think fines are the solution, then what do you suggest? Gaol sentances? Might work, but who do you put in gaol?

    2. Re:Which is why fines are not the right solution by bfg9000 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Once you're in power, it's much easier to stay in power.

      I think you've just figured out the Slashdot Karma secret. Once you get that karma bonus on all your posts, you're a GOD, I tell you, a GOD!!!

      Of course, watch this one get modded down...

      --

      I'm not normally an irrational zealous dickhead, but I figure "When in Rome..."

    3. Re:Which is why fines are not the right solution by rokzy · · Score: 5, Funny

      the nineteenth century phoned, and they want their spelling of "jail" back.

    4. Re:Which is why fines are not the right solution by Chiasmus_ · · Score: 5, Interesting

      If you don't think fines are the solution, then what do you suggest? Gaol sentances? Might work, but who do you put in gaol?

      Here's a novel solution.

      Fine Microsoft, sure, but instead of making that fine payable to some country's department of justice, make it payable to a competing company.

      Microsoft may not miss $100 million too terribly... but it might not be thrilled about having to fork $100 million over to, say, Red Hat. In other words, replace criminal sanctions with something more closely resembling civil liability.

      Rather than distribute the fine among all Microsoft's competitors, which would render it worthless, I'd suggest picking one of its top twenty competitors out of a hat and giving them the whole chunk.

      I wonder if that would solve the speeding problem, too... instead of fining you, they could just look up your religious or political affiliation, and force you to fork over $100 to the organization they suspect you would have the most distaste for ;)

      Yes, I see some obvious problems with this plan, but forcing Microsoft to pay Apple or Linux companies is still a fun idea to kick around.

      --
      "Beware he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he deems himself your master."
    5. Re:Which is why fines are not the right solution by Needanewnick · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Were you paying attention to the OJ thing?

    6. Re:Which is why fines are not the right solution by Moofie · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yep. And convicted felons serving jail sentences aren't allowed to go out and see a movie with their buddies.

      When you break the law, you get punished. Those punishments restrict your freedom. Please explain to me the hole in my reasoning.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    7. Re:Which is why fines are not the right solution by TheAJofOZ · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The rest of the world called: apparently they'd like Americans to learn to spell "gaol" properly.

    8. Re:Which is why fines are not the right solution by danharan · · Score: 5, Insightful
      If you don't think fines are the solution, then what do you suggest? Gaol sentances?

      Revoke their corporate charter.

      Corporations are not people. They are a legal fiction granted by the state for the purpose of shielding investors from liability. This is necessary and proper when a project is so big that investors can't be expected to be responsible for day-to-day operations.

      A long time ago, probably when we still spelled jail "gaol", we would revoke a corporation's right to exist if it exceeded its rights as set out in their charter. Then after a bit of judicial activism, corporations became "people". They don't have the right to vote, but have the right to free expression. They can lobby the government that gave them the right to exist to change the laws. And most importantly, we no longer believe we have authority over these creatures.

      Many corporations, if the "three strikes and you're out" principles were enforced would be abolished. Corporations routinely get away with murder, or at the very least criminal negligence causing death. I'm not making this stuff, or saying it to be inflammatory. Remember Bhopal? There are many more examples. And how about Thalidomide? Tobacco companies whose executives consistently lied? Often the corporation only gets fined or settles out of court.

      Microsoft could probably be split into smaller units with little harm to investors and no layoffs. The only thing that would be sacrificed would be the legal fiction of Microsoft.

      The question is, how long will we allow these serially criminal entities to operate unchecked? How long until we recognize that sovereignty means we can re-assert our rights and dissolve them?
      --
      Information: "I want to be anthropomorphized"
    9. Re:Which is why fines are not the right solution by zogger · · Score: 2, Insightful

      he's still a multi millionaire, plays golf and travels where he wants to, and has an never ending string of (apparently insane/masochistic/suicidal) blondes. His life ain't over or ruined *that* bad. True, he might not get a commentators job again, what does he care, he ain't gonna miss a house note payment or lack a nice ride or anything no matter what.

      With that said, I don't think he did it! I think the evidence shows (arguably, this is just a guess on my part but a semi informed guess) his oldest son from his previous marriage did it, OJ knew about it but covered it up, knowing the state didn't have enough to convict him for it,so he gets his son off by going through the trial, plus he got his jealousy revenge on his wife. Fascinating case, I think you can google for more info on that angle to it.

  3. Fines are often too low all-around by AtariAmarok · · Score: 4, Funny

    Fines are often too low all-around. Look at the rich Porsche driver. He can easily afford to pay those speeding tickets, can't he?

    Now, if Microsoft could be made to pay, let's say, in free goods. Imagine if the government could force them, say, to actually GIVE AWAY an internet browser and also a media/sound file player with Windows. That would really show 'em, right?

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
    1. Re:Fines are often too low all-around by John+Courtland · · Score: 4, Interesting

      In Europe there's a country... I think it's Finland, they base fines on your income. The fine for driving over the limit is a product of the severity and a percentage of your income , for example. I think that's a better way to handle it.

      --
      Slashdot is proof that Sturgeon's Law applies to mankind.
    2. Re:Fines are often too low all-around by Tango42 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The rich have ways round paying income tax, so surely they can get round paying speeding fines?

    3. Re:Fines are often too low all-around by lukewarmfusion · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Similar: Many companies ignore environmental regulations because it's much more expensive and difficult to fix the problem than to just pay the fines.

      It may not be the prevailing opinion around here, but I don't think Microsoft is in the wrong for many of these things. A media player? An Internet browser? Who would want to buy an OS that didn't have many of these features? They might not be the best, and they might not be worth using at all... but having them should not be a crime. If you buy Windows, or Mac, or any other OS, you should expect (no, you should want) to get as much as you can with it.

      Every Linux distro I've used came with quite a bit of software that saved me the time to download, install, etc.

      This isn't to say it's OK for them to "hijack" your OS by making it impossible to remove (IE) or to force you to use it over competitor programs, but simply bundling it is a good thing - not a crime.

    4. Re:Fines are often too low all-around by netfool · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I never understood why this wasn't done here in the states. $50 is not the same to Joe Average as it is to Joe Billionaire.
      If it was 5% (I know, a high percentgage, just using it for an example) of their gross yearly income, then we're all on equal ground.
      Taxes should be the same way. No more brackets, we all pay 28% or something.

      --
      Left 4 Dead Gaming Group - http://www.l4dgg.com
    5. Re:Fines are often too low all-around by zenpiglet · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You're spot on with the environmental regulations point, but it's as much the fault of the state/legal system for allowing this to happen.

      When I first left school a number of years ago, I had a temp job for a few months in a local paper mill.

      The mill sat on the banks of a local estuary where it pumped out tons of effluent every day. This was all perfectly legal as long as they kept the chemicals and impurities they discharged within certain limits.

      I was amazed to find that they were never within the limits. They alway exceeded it by a long way and every month when the local water authority inspected the plant they were fined for this.

      The authority had the rights to issue instant fines up to 10,000 per-incident, but never gave anything more than a 200 fine. The mill owners loved this as they reckoned that to upgrade the effluent treatment plant would cost over 50,000, so they could keep paying the fines for years and still make a profit!

      All the while the estuary was a different colour each day from the dies and stank terribly at low tide, never mind any possible toxins seeping into the surrounding land/water.

      Isn't capitalism wonderful?

    6. Re:Fines are often too low all-around by jazman_777 · · Score: 2, Funny
      The rich have ways round paying income tax, so surely they can get round paying speeding fines?

      Yeah, they'll just slow down, the fine-evaders!

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    7. Re:Fines are often too low all-around by aWalrus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In the case of any sufficiently large monopoly, the rules *have* to change. Bundling is ok in an industry in which there is competition, but whenever Microsoft bundles something into the OS, they usually kill an already established industry (Netscape, Real, etc.). This is not good for the economy, and ultimately it also sucks for the customers, since sistematic elimination of competition leads to stagnation of technology (how many years have we had to put up with no updates to the piece of crap browser that is IE 6?).

      So yes, it seems very simple and very nice and on first impression they should let them conduct business as usual, but when you stop to think about it, they're killing companies, stealing technology and then sitting on their ass doing nothing until they have to do it all over again (which is why they fear Open Source, because it's not susceptible to this kind of attack).

      --
      Overcaffeinated. Angry geeks.
  4. Once again... "In other news" by w3weasel · · Score: 4, Funny

    In other news today...
    grass declared green
    sky said to be "bluish"
    water is often wet
    sigh...

    --

    Just as irrigation is the lifeblood of the Southwest, lifeblood is the soup of cannibals. -- Jack Handy

    1. Re:Once again... "In other news" by CrackedButter · · Score: 3, Insightful


      In more news today
      Grass can be yellow
      sky is black at night
      Sapphire breaks the myth on the last one

  5. Re:wow, I thought the law was supposed to protect by msim · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As others have said elsewhere, around 60 Billion in cash = deep pockets to bring out some seriously nitpicking lawyers.

    They have the resources to just drawwwwwwwwwwwwww any legal experience out beyond viability for anyone other than a decent sized business (personally that's why i think that class suite from the US states pretty much folded in their favour anyway).

    "You want to sue us? fine, stand there while we smack you about the head with a 2x4 a while first please"

    --

    Life is like a box of chocolates, you never know when your gonna get food poisoning.
  6. Anyone else notice? by __aagmrb7289 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That everything in here is pure speculation? There are no confirming quotes from Microsoft (contrary to the title and description of the article). There are guesses by people outside the company. I'm not saying this isn't true. EVERYONE is saying it. But this is hardly new or useful.

    1. Re:Anyone else notice? by Shimmer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Of course it's speculation. Assuming it's true, do you really think anyone from inside Microsoft would confirm it on the record?

      --
      The most rabid believers in American Exceptionalism are the exact same people whose policies are destroying it.
  7. Integrating Software by Henry+V+.009 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is there anything that Microsoft has been sued for "illegally integrating" that a Linux distribution or Mac would be caught dead without? Monopoly or no monopoly, a modern OS requires an internet browser and a video player.

    Anti-trust law is not supposed to be government or corporate welfare project.

    1. Re:Integrating Software by PhxBlue · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Is there anything that Microsoft has been sued for "illegally integrating" that a Linux distribution or Mac would be caught dead without? Monopoly or no monopoly, a modern OS requires an internet browser and a video player.

      A modern OS should not, however, require threats from Microsoft to raise prices to OEMs who bundle alternative browser or media player software with their PCs--which is exactly what Microsoft has been caught doing. And can you name another OS that ships with only one browser?

      --
      !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
    2. Re:Integrating Software by Coryoth · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Is there anything that Microsoft has been sued for "illegally integrating" that a Linux distribution or Mac would be caught dead without? Monopoly or no monopoly, a modern OS requires an internet browser and a video player.

      I believe the difference is thus: If you are installing MS Windows you must also install IE, and WMP, and all their other knicknacks. You can't remove them either. That means if an OEM wants to ship a PC with MS Windows on it, they have to ship a PC with IE and WMP on it. At best they can include some other programs as well, but IE and WMP are required to be there. Given that MS Windows has 90% desktop share, that means effectively on any new computer, you have to have IE and WMP installed. That's where leveraging a monopoly (which is the bad part) comes in.

      On the other hand, were Linux to even have an effective monopoly, what is getting forced in the install? Does a distro have to install mplayer, or xine, or totem? Is there any requirement that Mozilla, or Firebird, or Konqueror, or Opera, or Galeon or Epiphany be the installed browser? Those choices are up to the distribution - or the OEM if they want to roll their own. Yes, you have to install a media player and a web browser these days on any modern OS install - the question is, do you get to choose which one to install, or are you forced to install some out of necessity?

      If Mplayer slid downhill while Totem got th Gstreamer backend going and improved massively is it likely that Distributions might move to having Gstreamer instead of Mplayer? Yes. Would this be hard to do? No.

      If Windows Media Player started to lag in development while quicktime, or helixplayer shot ahead, would OEMs be able to install the better media player instead of WMP? No - at best they could install it alongside, and hope that WMP doesn't have some hardcoded stuff that pulls it up for certain actions (hey, IE certainly does!).

      What we're saying here is that there is no level playing field for these apps on MS Windows. Were Linux to be in the same position, doing the sort of bundling it does now, which media player, or web browser, or office suite gets bundled would be entirely up for grabs. It's an open market on Linux. On MS Windows it's whatever MS has, plus possibly some competition bundled alongside.

      That's a big difference in a competeive market with narrow margins.

      Jedidiah.

    3. Re:Integrating Software by AsimovBesterClarke · · Score: 2, Funny

      > a modern OS requires an internet browser and a video player.

      You bet. When I start the first pot of coffee, and grab the cream from the fridge in the morning, the first thing which comes to mind is how great it would be if only I could watch a video or surf the web on these appliances.

      --
      Ads are broken.
    4. Re:Integrating Software by dustmite · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Do product-tying laws apply to free (as in $) products? That doesn't make sense to me.

      (What you're referring to is "product-tying" and certainly wasn't invented by MS. If you have a monopoly, you can use product-tying to effectively 'force' people to buy other products too. So say you're the only guy in town who can sell pens (say, by making special deals and cutbacks for local stationary retailers). People need pens, and now they need to buy them from you. So now you introduce a "special offer" where every time someone buys a pen, they get a pencil bundled with it too. Only catch is, they have to buy it with the pencil, they can no longer buy the pen by itself. So effectively if they want a pen, they have to buy the pencil too. Then you go argue that this is "good for customers" because your research shows that "94.3% of people who use pens also use pencils".)

      It's all fine and well though if competition is possible in the market, because then another competitor will come in and sell just pens, for cheaper. But Microsoft strong-armed OEMs, forcing them to sell only Windows, and to sell it with every PC they sold. It's all in the findings.

    5. Re:Integrating Software by Coryoth · · Score: 2, Informative

      But as of Windows XP SP1, while the components might be physically present on the hard disk, you can block access to them. You can do this as part of the installation in a SIF file, or post installation using the "Set Program Access and Defaults" button. This can be used to (for instance) configure a new default Internet browser (I use Firefox), a new default mail client and a new media player. If you use the "hide" option, the applications are simply not available to the user. I use this in corporate environments to prevent access to Outlook Express

      And you can lay very high odds indeed that that functionality is almost entirely due to the first antitrust case. Had that case not gone ahead I very much doubt that Microsoft would be offering such functions. And in the end you still have to have them installed.

      I think the european decision was interesting - they have to produce a version of Windows with no WMP, so that OEMs can bundle whatever they prefer instead, or if they want, they can get and bundle WMP. Under such a situation, it would be interesting to see what media players the OEMs choose to add to a Windows install.

      Jedidiah.

  8. It's not working by Paulrothrock · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When a company can simply write off 'punishments' as costs of doing business, they cease to be punishments. Increase the fines, or make them percentages instead of amounts, if you want to change anything. (Percentages would be better because it would affect small companies the same as big companies.)

    Microsoft, like all other companies, has one duty: To make as big of a profit as possible. It's up to society, and therefore the government, to provide them with economic incentive to be nice and play fair.

    --
    I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
  9. Is governments role destroy what it cannot control by jmulvey · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Great summary line from the article: "Government is really not equipped to regulate in such a fast-moving industry as technology," Rosoff added. "That's why the most aggressive antitrust commentators originally pressed for the breakup of the company."

    So whose fault is it that Government is "inequipped" to regulate high-tech? If I was inequipped to teach my son about how to walk, and he tried to do it himself, should I cut him off at the knees?
    And is it moral to destroy a company simply because you can't move faster than the marketplace for its products? And if the marketplace moves so quickly to make monopolies, might it not move equally quickly to destroy them?

  10. break Microsoft into pieces by mabu · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The best thing that could ever happen to the PC industry would be breaking MS into pieces. Separate the OS from the application division. That would be wonderful.

    I just ran Windows Update and now my CD Burning software no longer runs reliably. I have no idea why, but I'm pretty sure that if I was running Microsoft-brand CD burning software, I wouldn't have this problem.

    It's sickening to have to constantly update non-Microsoft applications because changes to the OS wreak havoc with all non-Microsoft applications. I have to assume the software companies aren't whining that much either, as they get residual income by selling updates and upgrades because of Microsoft's ever-changing environment, but for the rest of us, it's the pits.

  11. Captain Obvious strikes again by AtariAmarok · · Score: 4, Funny

    "They are giving away Internet browsers and media players, dumbass."

    Captain Obvious has saved the day! Thanks! None of us ever knew this.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  12. Ironic by Misch · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In a 1997 e-mail to investor Warren Buffett, senior Microsoft executive Jeff Raikes summarized the company's strategy in simple terms. . .

    "If we own the key 'franchises' built on top of the operating system, we dramatically widen the 'moat' that protects the operating system business," Mr. Raikes wrote. "If I owned the most successful daily newspaper in Buffalo, I wouldn't want to leave it to my competitor to own the Sunday edition."


    Ironic, because Buffalo has had only one newspaper since the Buffalo Courier-Express folded in 1982. The only one that is left is the Buffalo News.

    There is no competitor to leave the sunday edition to.

    --

    --You will rephrase your request for me to go to hell. Goto statements are not acceptable programming constructs
    1. Re:Ironic by MrHops · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Doubly so, since Warren Buffett owns said Buffalo News...

  13. Attitude Adjustments by cptofmysoul · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The unfortunate truth is that for Microsoft to do business differently the attitudes of people in a lot of different positions has to change.

    Just to name a few:
    Investors have to realize that pumping money into a company that turns around and puts the money in the bank is ultimately the same as putting their money into their own bank.

    Businesses have to realize that the one-supplier solution for IT is as bad as a one-supplier solution for anything else.

    The government has to realize that they don't want a company competing with them for control over the masses.

  14. 'no intention of changing' by BHearsum · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Microsoft is looking at it constant court costs and anti-trust fines as simply 'the cost of doing business,' and has no intention of changing.

    This tells me that new steps need to be taken. If fines aren't a deterrent for them, then something else should be imposed.

  15. Re:Repeat? by rduke15 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Didn't Crimly just cover this?

    You mean Robert X. Cringely in "Now the Only Way Microsoft Can Die is by Suicide". Yes, and it was discussed on /. too.

  16. No teeth to take a bite out of them by tackaberry · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Microsoft has had the beat us if you can, stop us if you can attitude for some time. You can't blame them for wanting to take over the world...doesn't everyone. The failure here is to successfully demonstrate that in taking over the world they have used dirty tricks to snuff out the competition. Until any settlement hurts them either in the wallet (unlikely) or in their ability to operate as a company (split them up), they will continue with business as usual. Either the laws are outdated/weak, or the cases are flawed - or both

    The other problem is that the average non-slashdot computer user probably thinks Microsoft first when they buy software - why? everyone uses it - so it must be the best, and half the time Microsoft is giving it away, whereby the competitor is trying to build/stay in business. Bundling applications/features that drive other companies out of business (regardless of the quality of the programs) hurts everyone but Microsoft. Although I wonder if things were flipped and if Apple had the 90% share would companies/governments/people be suing them for including iPhoto/iTunes/iMovie, etc?

  17. This is news? by nurb432 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Of course they think this way.. they pretty much can do what ever they want and pay for the fines out of petty cash.

    once you get this large, its just factored into the marketing budget.. and they move along, business as usual, unfairly crushing competition, and securing market share for the future to more then make up for the difference.

    The ONLY way to stop them is to ban them from selling their products. Repeated fining and hand slapping is useless.

    Sitting around stating the obvious over and over gets us nowhere..

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  18. List of Companies Microsoft has Crushed? by EvanKai · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Has anyone seen (or made) a complete list or timeline that Microsoft has crushed this way? I know Apple, Netscape(/AOL), and Real have all "settled" with Microsoft in the past. And recently, Sun, InterTrust, and Lindows.

    Who can you add?

    1. Re:List of Companies Microsoft has Crushed? by Mr.+Sketch · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Once they bundle virus scanners with the OS, you can count mcaffee and symantec in there.

  19. M$ and the law, not an easy problem by dnamaners · · Score: 2, Insightful

    U know this whole Microsoft problem is a bit of a hard topic. Microsoft business practices are clearly evil. They can do nearly anything they want and it and get away with it as few have enough power or money to even phase em.

    On the other had it is important to remember we can have "a law for everything" laws simply reduce freedom and will make a never ending sea of red tape for the next guy that may want to enter that market. Even "protection" laws designed to level the playing field or save lives historically have often only had short term benefits coupled to long term economic and "safety" losses.

    Of course the more laws you add has its own costs as well, sorting through all that legalese requires and ever larger load of parasitic lawyers to clear the path along the way to prosparity. Even with such sound legal advice today one (a business) must expect to incur numerous silly lawsuits what ever course they take. As even the lawyers cant figure out what is really legal form time to time ("...rigidly defined arias of dbout and uncertainty").

    The choice litigate the evil empire (M$) and break it up like bell at the expense of freedom. Or on the other hand, let em slide and continue to muscle out good competeiton and suffer a loss of an unknown goods and services in the form of products we will never see.

    *it's a no brainer choice, A,) damed if you do, B.) damed if you dont.....

  20. Not alone by michael_cain · · Score: 5, Informative
    Microsoft is looking at it constant court costs and anti-trust fines as simply 'the cost of doing business,'

    MS is not alone in this behavior. Large local telephone companies are regulated by the states in which they operate, and many of those states require certain levels of company responsiveness when customers call -- eg, that 95% of calls be answered by a person in less than 30 seconds. Staffing to the necessary level has historically been quite expensive, and the level of fine that the states can impose for non-compliance relatively small. When you have to decide between spending $20M on additional staffing, or pay a $10M fine, the answer is fairly obvious.

    I suppose extensive outsourcing to India or the Philipines will change the equation...

  21. Re:wow, I thought the law was supposed to protect by Mr.+Sketch · · Score: 2, Funny

    why don't we have a team ... telling MS what to do?

    We do, they're located here, here, and here

  22. 2 reasons this can't go on by Andy_R · · Score: 2, Insightful

    1) Settling with governments is not always going to be possible. With over 200 countries in the world, eventually one will stand by it's principles (or more likely get too greedy) and force a change of policy. For example, the current EU judgement is not just a fine, it's a fine + a demand for compliance. The fine will keep growing if the compliance doesn't happen.

    2) Settling with Microsoft is fast becoming a viable business model. All you need is to sell software in a market they are unfairly dominating (roll your own mozilla distro for about $0 for example) and a lawer who will take you on no-win-no-fee basis (becoming easier as case law mounts up against Microsoft).

    --
    A pizza of radius z and thickness a has a volume of pi z z a
  23. Attention Marans! by mumblestheclown · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Now, pay attention, people.

    Slashdot is nominally the home of libertarian rational actor free information blah blah blah.

    How quickly those qualities are put aside when microsoft comes into play!

    I can't believe how many threads here continue to bash microsoft and wonder why they haven't changed their ways as if by not changing their ways they are doing something wrong.

    The people writing such things are idiots. Microsoft is a for-profit corporation, not a child that can be shamed into submission through dirty looks. It's job is to win minorly inconvenient settlesments while maintaining to the maximum extent possible a dominant market position over the long term.

    If you have issues with microsoft's behavioral changes (or lack thereof), then your beef is SQUARELY with regulators and governments who have not done what is in your mind an adequate job of reigning them in. Microsoft is BLAMELESS here. It's doing what it's supposed to and what any company would do. Companies cannot have two masters--they can not credibly both work to make themselves successful and to limit themselves. This MUST be done externally.

    1. Re:Attention Marans! by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So the basic thrust of your argument is that corporations exist outside the sphere of ethical reasoning, and they are required to do whatever is in their own best interests, without regard for any questions beyond "will I get caught" and "can I beat the rap if I do?"

      Let's think about the whole "corporation as person" mentality in our legal system. The corporation you describe has no higher goal than to do whatever increases its own wealth and power, regardless of the consequences. This includes defying or ignoring regulations that govern the marketplace, buying favorable legislation, and using anticompetitive means to destroy anyone who dares step on its turf.

      If a corporation is an entity with legal presence, just like a person, then this person is very much like a class of real people: sociopaths.

      We don't allow sociopaths to walk the streets freely; we arrest them and throw them in jail. Why should a corporation be given less scrutiny?

      SHAMELESS != BLAMELESS. Please note the distinction.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    2. Re:Attention Marans! by Brandybuck · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A libertarian believes in all people should be able to do whatever they want, so long as they do not hinder other people from doing whatever they want. This is in stark contrast to the typical Slashdot poster who believes that he should be able to do whatever he wants regardless of how it affects other people. In short, libertarians argue for the rights of everyone, slashdotters argue for only their own rights or that of their narrow clique.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    3. Re:Attention Marans! by RedBear · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're so right! And just like a corporation, individuals shouldn't be expected to restrain themselves from harming others through greed and law-breaking! That means it's entirely up to you to keep me from breaking your legs with a baseball bat because I want your wallet! I shouldn't be expected to stop myself from doing this, because it's in my best interest to do it (I get your money!) I would be BLAMELESS for my actions, just like Microsoft! Pooooor little Microsoft.

      Riiight. A corporations job is to screw everyone around them and flaunt the law in order to make a buck. Why are so many posts like this modded insightful? I get soooo tired of that kind of stupidity. But I'll be happy to hold your view for a few minutes. Just come over to my place, and bring a fat wallet. Now where did I put that baseball bat... Gee, I hope you don't do your job and stop me from trying to do my "blameless" job of breaking your kneecaps.

      Yes, we should ALSO have a beef with the regulators/governments, and we DO. But no entity that does the things Microsoft has done over the years is BLAMELESS. That's absolutely idiotic.

      I can't believe how many threads here continue to bash microsoft and wonder why they haven't changed their ways as if by not changing their ways they are doing something wrong.

      They are doing something wrong! They're breaking the farking law, crushing competitors illegally (not legally), holding back innovation and perpetuating unhealthy economies through a monopolistic culture! How much simpler does it get?!?

  24. Re:Don't buy MS products. by thebatlab · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Way to keep your morals and ethics alive. The ol' "well they do it so I can" argument seems pretty flawed to me. If one person gets away with murder, does that mean we all are able to murder? If one person sues for spilling hot coffee on herself, are we all allowed to do it? If someone embezzles and gets away with it, are we all allowed to do it?

    See where I'm going with this? Maybe not b/c you're too busy "sailing the seven seas as a pirate" and basking in your self-righteous justification.

  25. Re:wow, I thought the law was supposed to protect by Locutus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    When Bill Gates goes and gets a law passed just so he can import a special car for himself, you know there's no hope that laws are there "to protect those that could not easily protect themselves"

    I don't have the URL but it was over a year ago that I read how Bill wanted a car imported and that it was sitting at the dock for months and months because he was not supposed to import the car. He hired a bunch of lawyers and they worked with their representative to have a law written up so Bill could get his car. The law was then tied in with some others that were sure to get passed and the whole bunch ended up going through.

    Do you really think Bill and Steve care about the law? With Windows and Office, it's all about protecting the monopoly. The Bush administration pulled the rug out from under the last/best effort to even the field. As stated elsewhere, a breakup of Microsoft was the best answer. It'll probably take up to 10 years for Linux and OSS to bash them down to size. Even then, they'll surely start using their billions like the RIAA and start taking any and all OSS projects to court on IP issues.

    Maybe it's time the OSS community started holding quartly Pro-Linux events. Ones where we run over boxes of Microsoft software with a steamroller driven by a penguin who's handing out free Linux/OSS CDs. Or maybe David Letterman will drop blocks of cement from a building on Microsoft CDs below...

    Then again, offering to schools, free labor and support for switching from Windows to Linux might get better press. But it's not as fun. ;-)

    LoB

    --
    "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
  26. Re:Is governments role destroy what it cannot cont by Danse · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And is it moral to destroy a company simply because you can't move faster than the marketplace for its products? And if the marketplace moves so quickly to make monopolies, might it not move equally quickly to destroy them?

    After they've been warned several times, and convicted of monopolising markets, yes, I believe it is quite moral. It's the only way to regulate a company that defies the law as blatantly as Microsoft does. Consumers have been harmed by Microsoft's strong-arming of OEMs, monopolistic pricing schemes, and squelching of innovation by competitors. Combined with their complete lack of attempts to rectify their behavior, and even arrogant comments about how they don't plan to change their tactics at all, I think we have more than enough reason to cut them off at the knees.

    --
    It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
  27. Re:wow, I thought the law was supposed to protect by cshark · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Lawrence Lessig's new book talks about the perils of intelectual property law. In regard to the Sunny Bono Act in particular he was saying that the law only protects those with money.

    In fact he went on to say that the ones with incredible amounts on money are the ones that are actually constructing law. Not exactly top secret information, but it still doesn't make me tingly when I hear it again. I don't know about you, but I can't think of anyone who has more money than Microsoft. It's a shame too. The only way to fix this situation, in my opinion is to have a complete reform in both congress and the house in how laws are made. Namely, get all that fucking special interest money out of the picture.

    It kills me to think that these assholes that I vote for every year or so would rather take money and make laws to benefit the interests of companies like Microsoft and Disney than work for my interests.

    Cringely also had a column on the subject of Microsoft.

    My only question with all of this would be:
    What happens when the costs of legal action exceeds sales for an extended period of time? Yeah, they have their cash flow, but that could only last so long. And the more of these law suits get settled out of court, the more of them there are going to be. So it seems logical to me to think that at some point, litigation may kill the beast. Although, it could probably go on for quite some time.

    --

    This signature has Super Cow Powers

  28. Re:wow, I thought the law was supposed to protect by DickBreath · · Score: 3, Funny

    After all the fucking money that was wasted coming to this fucking "punishment" why don't we have a team of REAL FUCKERS telling MS what to do?

    I didn't think that Real had such a package?

    Can't find it on their website. Maybe it is hidden in a similar manner to the free Real Player?

    --

    I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
  29. Re:Is governments role destroy what it cannot cont by lawpoop · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Gee, couldn't you think of a more inflamatory metaphor?

    Let's be serious for a moment. A breakup doesn't mean burning down the redmond campus, executing the manages and raping their wives and daughters. All it means is that the whole company is divided up into smaller companies, not destroyed . Why should the government do this? To protect the marketplace, which MS is abusing through its monopoly status. Legal institutions such as corporations, partnerships and trusts were invented to serve the people, not the other way around. If they're hurting us, bust 'em up.

    --
    Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
    -- Pablo Picasso
  30. Three strikes and point systems by dustmite · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Indeed. In some places there are "three strikes" systems for people who continually commit certain crimes with no intention of reform. Wealthier people also often do the same with dangerous/reckless driving behaviour (in places without point systems), i.e. they keep speeding, and just pay the fines without worrying about it. For traffic offences more and more countries are switching to point systems, which is a good thing - continue to commit certain offences with no intention of reform, and you lose your license.

    Likewise, a company that continues to break the same laws repeatedly, with no intention of reform, should have some sort of "three strikes and you're out" system, or a points-based system. A company that then habitually refuses to operate within the law should have it's license to do business revoked. Simple as that; if your business model is such that you can't succeed without continually breaking the law, you have a flawed business model and don't deserve to be doing business anyway.

  31. MSFT & The Law by Tiberius_Fel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Disclaimer: IANAL, but my father is. As has been said, it's Microsoft's goal, as a corporation, to attain as much profit as they are able to. But it's also the duty of the government to protect their citizens - including protecting them from a market where there is no choice. I've read that the Reagan administration pretty well gutted a good number of antitrust laws, and those are the sort of things that try to keep corporations in check. I, for one, am not anywhere near as pro-business as the Republican Party of the US is (and I'm a Canadian), and I am very much in favour of stringent regulations to prevent abuses of the system. While Microsoft has indeed come out ahead in the preceding legal cases, that doesn't mean that we can't change that for the future. The introduction of new laws or revision of existing ones would certainly be a way to do it. For cases where they've won, Microsoft has precedent on their side, and that can be a powerful legal advantage. By replacing the existing laws, that advantage can be negated, and the present failings in the regulatory system addressed. And, as I think of it, governments may want to think of it like disciplining a child. A fine may deter a company, but if it doesn't, you don't keep fining them in the hopes that the repetition will make it more effective. If your current measures aren't working, you switch to new ones. I'm reminded of an analogy somebody once made about World War One: Commanding Officer: "Let's rush the other guy's trenches!" *A little later* "Sir, the rush failed. Most of the men are dead or wounded." The commanding officer: "Let's do it again! I'm sure it'll work *this* time!"

    --
    Join the Empire! http://www.empirereborn.net/
  32. Dejavu... by SageMadHatter · · Score: 2, Informative

    I think I remember seen something about this... somewhere

  33. Re:wow, I thought the law was supposed to protect by dillon_rinker · · Score: 3, Insightful

    " The only way to fix this situation"

    As Jefferson said, the tree of liberty must occasionally be watered with the blood of patriots and tyrants. Go read your history some time; you'll find that the colonies' beef was not with King George, except insofar as he was the figurehead of the government. The democratically elected Parliament was passing the laws that the colonists opposed. Their opposition was largely based on economic issues, but there were some intrusions by the government into private life, as well (see the amendment regarding the quartering of soldiers.)

    Funny, that. A democratically elected body, but one that the revolutionaries felt did not represent them. A series of laws designed to increase the wealth of the already wealthy. Intrusions by the government into private life. Does this sound like ANY government you've heard of recently?

    The difference between then and now, of course, is that there is no ocean separating the government and the governed, so I predict no revolution in the USA.

  34. Folks, you can change this ... by cpu_fusion · · Score: 4, Insightful
    ... it's called voting. We have an election coming up. If you care strongly about changing the status quo, go out and preach to the masses. Decide your vote based on which candidates are willing to face off against Microsoft, the RIAA, MPAA, etc. If the Democrat and Republican candidates refuse to take a stand, vote for a 3rd party. You might be thinking you are throwing your vote away, but in fact, you aren't GIVING YOUR VOTE to the democrats or republicans either.

    I know soemone will reply with talk about how the last election was stolen, etc., but let's get past that and focus on the election that is to come. Negativity and pessamism on this are working in favor of the status quo!

    Peace.

    1. Re:Folks, you can change this ... by Anonymous+Bullard · · Score: 2, Insightful
      1. ... it's called voting.

      Unfortunately the USA doesn't have a healthy multi-party democracy which would offer their citizens a far greater choice of parties or even individual independent candidates that more closely match the voter's mix of values and priorities.

      The two parties you have are both in big corporations' pocket and pass laws at the convenience of the very wealthy, both are extremely militaristic and jingoistic (compared to most any other democracy; authoritarian states like China and Russia are in USA's class though) and a lot of energy is wasted on undermining the other party since unlike in a multi-party system there will never exist the will or need to consider the other party as a potential partner in building a coalition government.

      To make voting in the USA more reflective of people's opinions you'd first need to change your voting arrangements to allow smaller parties and independent candidates an opportunity to actually represent anyone.

      In addition, since the media in the USA is unusually concentrated in few hands some sort of revamping of the broadcasting industry would also be desirable.

      Oh, and some restrictions on campaign financing would be needed as well.

      If you'd accomplish all that, and did away with the omnipresent religious rhetoric as well, you'd be a lot like Europeans!!! C'mon, just surrender and start monkeying our time-tested cheese-eating habits. Dealing with Microsoft the European way would be a bonus for you.

      --

      Should invading one's peaceful neighbours be opposed, or rewarded with trade deals?

  35. Relative fines. by kiwioddBall · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This has been pretty obvious for several years now - breaking the law is not an exceptional circumstance, it is part of regular business, and the fines and lawyers fees etc. are just a regular business expense.

    When you have large quantities of money and can afford infinite legal resources, unlike your competitors, manipulation of the law becomes a regular business process that could even be documented.

    The only way that this can be changed is for fines for offences to be relative to the revenue of the company concerned and deliberately hurtful.

    It is unlikely that this will occur though as such companies are too valuable to the US economy.

    In other words we can't do anything about this - we are held to ransom by such behaviour.

  36. It's like the local Mob Boss by Bendebecker · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Had a friend who did consulting work for the legitimate part of the dude's business. The guy just said figure out how much doing this or that will cost me and don't worry about the legality of it. So he would come up with the proposals etc, and suddenly the local govt would make it legal in that case for the plan to be carried out. You just knew the dude was getting the plan and bribing the local govt to allow it. Same with M$. They figure out waht they want, how to do it, and then make it legal or at least pay the fines to get away with it.

    --
    There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
    most of us won't be able to afford it.
    -- Lemmy
  37. Re:wow, I thought the law was supposed to protect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    The car was a Porsche 959. Gates worked within the confines of the law, even offering sacrificial 959s for crash tests. If you read the article, he became a partner in a business to federalize the cars. The only sign of shady behaviour may be trying to import the car that wasn't approved for the U.S. streets.

    To help put this into context, motorcyclists do this all the time, licensing rare imports (a.k.a. "grey-market bikes") and two-strokes or dirt bikes for the street.

  38. Re:wow, I thought the law was supposed to protect by timeOday · · Score: 4, Informative
    Didn't look very hard, did you.

    I highly recommend the article, it's an interesting read and is quite apropros.

  39. Sorry, you get it wrong (Answer to Troll) by deck · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When you get to the end of your road you have Facism. When companies reach the point that they effectively have total control over a market the rules change. From your remarks, I would assume that you would consider it a fair game of sport to pit a team of 6 year olds against an adult profesional sports team as long as they followed the same set of rules.

    Yes - MS has the right to produce software

    No - MS has the right to bundle software together

    • Not in an attempt to use their monopoly to leverage another market
    Yes - MS has the right to build better software than other companies.
    • They have the right, they just don't exercise their right. They use their monopoly position to put out poor quality software. The US auto industry as a whole had a monopoly on car sales in the US until the 1970's. They kept putting out poor quality products and complained about loosing sales to foreign manufatures. MS can continue to put out poor quality software
    Yes - MS has the right to market its software
    • As long as marketing is not another term for lying which has been a hallmark of MS. But then again, people who express the kind of ideas you do don't believe that fraud in business is an actionable offence.
    Yes - MS has the right to not release its source code

    Yes - MS has the right to make a profit
    • As long as it is made legally. Why did MS not have to pay hefty fines to the SEC last year while other companies did for the same offence?
    Yes - MS has the right to not make public its internal protocols, file formats, internal api calls
    • It then should not market its products as general use.
    Yes - MS has the right to change its software from version to version
    • That is fine. It will make people like it less
    No - MS has the right to not make sure that each and every change to its software does not break some non-MS software
    • Not in an attempt to use their monopoly to leverage another market. When they market some of their software as a general purpose operating systems that other software companies can create applications on they don't have the right
    But then again your are just a MICROSOFT TROLL.
  40. Microsoft? by LanceUppercut · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So, what's new here? They say _Microsoft_ sees the legal fees as the cost of doing busines? LOL! Did you just wake up after a 100 year long nap? EVERYONE sees these fees as just the cost of doing busines. Tactical and stretegical lawsuits have become the integral part of any business activity in the US (and the world) long time ago, regardless of whom they originate from. Microsoft is not different form anyone else here.

    1. Re:Microsoft? by seanyboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      At which point, Ed Norton appears and gives the Fight Club talk about Risk Assessment. This is obvious. If doing (A) costs less money than doing (b), then a company will do (A).

      --
      Training monkeys for world domination since 1439
  41. Re:wow, I thought the law was supposed to protect by ministerofsickeningr · · Score: 2, Informative

    link to billg's toy car story.

  42. Re:wow, I thought the law was supposed to protect by x136 · · Score: 2, Informative
    I don't have the URL but it was over a year ago that I read how Bill wanted a car imported and that it was sitting at the dock for months and months because he was not supposed to import the car. He hired a bunch of lawyers and they worked with their representative to have a law written up so Bill could get his car. The law was then tied in with some others that were sure to get passed and the whole bunch ended up going through.
    The car in question is the Porsche 959. Slashdot pointed to an Autoweek article about six months back. Pretty interesting stuff.
    --
    SIGFEH
  43. wait until the draft goes back online... by zogger · · Score: 3, Insightful

    .. and I'll wager that you'll see a bit more than protest going on. I think the government forgot the 60s when we got rid of the draft (almost) and what was going on back then, and what happened when the returning nam vets started joining the protests in huge numbers.. And then the only support they barely got back then was from still totally buffaloed ww2 and korea war vets who saw service as automatically "patriotic". they weren't bad or wrong,they just didn't have the benefit of hindsight like we have now, they didn't know the gulf of tonkin was a pure lie.

    Now? Nope, we've seen the lies behind the big so called wars, and too many people can get real information without having it massaged through a few corporations media outlets. In fact most of the vets I know are hugely anti government, because they KNOW that they got screwed over and lied to. And I feel bad about the guys in now, they got zero info about DU rounds, little info about the effects from gulf war 1, and all of them got lied to same as us over WMD and whatnot. We are all victims, and the government wants to draft MORE VICTIMS. It won't pass before the election, but you can almost bet it will pass as soon as the election is over, because these guys are in it to grab the whole mideast and all the oil. These are these potential draftees parents in a lot of cases,and I don't see them encouraging little johnny or janey to go "join up". The government right now is in crisis mode because so many reservists and guardsmen are quitting as fast as they can. And the reason is because..they signed up to defend the US, not to fight wars to make halliburton/brown and root /carlisle group / whatever daisy chained name it is now some money or to make the middle east more comfortable for a few million belligerent people who exist on US foreign aid welfare.

  44. I Agree -- Jail Sentences by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Jail sentences are much more effective, because they have the same impact on the rich as the poor.

    But that assumes the government actually _wants_ to enforce the law, that is, where Microsoft is concerned.

    Unfortunately, that assumption is false. The government only wants to give the _appearance_ of enforcing the law -- that's why they went after Microsoft for the fuzzy and hard-to-prove antitrust violations, but they ignored cases where there were clear, proven violations, such as when Microsoft tried to sabotage Java.

    With the antitrust laws, the degree of violation is subject to interpretation, and the punishment can be negotiated. This ensures that Microsoft is never really punished, while "coincidentally" resulting in increased campaign contributions, not to mention power, for various politicians.

    But when Microsoft tried to sabotage Java ("kill Java by growing the polluted Java market"), it was a criminal act, and Microsoft was clearly guilty. That might have resulted in jail sentences for various Microsoft executives, and it would have gained the government nothing, in fact, campaign contributions would have gone down. Hence it never happened -- it was left up to Sun to pay for a civil suit.

    It would appear that we no longer live in a society governed by rule of law. Instead, we have gone backwards to a feudal society, where power and privilege determines the law.

  45. Re:wow, I thought the law was supposed to protect by Halfbaked+Plan · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It looks like an interesting article about a stick-up-the-butt Federal bureacracy saying 'you can't have that car, you'd better spend a bunch of money getting your papers in order.'

    So, I fault Bill Gates and Paul Allen for giving the bureaucrats the satisfaction of playing their game. And it looks like a bunch of people now get to drive cool cars that were formerlly verboten by the gummint.

    How's that a bad thing? Your whole attitude seems to be based in envy, nothing more.

    --
    resigned
  46. Open the formats... by Macdude · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Is there some flaw in my reasoning that the "punishment" should have been to force MS to open (i.e. publish the specs royalty free, for anyone to use) their data file formats (e.g. Office documents) and networking protocols (e.g. controlling Domains) to allow competition to compete?

    Lock in is the issue. When I can't install Jim's OS and then attach my computer to the company's Domain Controller, when I can't run Fred's Email program and access the Exchange servers, when I can't run Bob's Word processor and access Office documents, when I can't setup a server running BlueHat OS and have Windows boxes attach to its domain then we have no competition.

    --
    "Grab them by the pussy" -- President of the United States of America
  47. Re:Yep by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Tell you what. Give me twice as much money as Bill Gates, and I'll donate twice as much to charity as Bill Gates. In fact, give me twice what Bill Gates donated to charity plus one percent, and I'll gladly donate twice as much to charity as Bill Gates does. And I'll become an extremely wealthy person in the process.

    Here's the thing: Bill Gates isn't a generous philanthropist, just an extremely wealthy one. He's like anyone else who donates fifty bucks a year to the homeless shelter down on Main Street. By that, I don't mean that he gives the same amount, or the same proportion. Instead, I mean that he donates money to these causes after he's already provided for all his own needs and wants.

    Remember the parable of the Widow's Mite? The rich man gave from his bounty, while the poor woman gave despite her own need. The person who chooses to feed the hungry rather than feed herself has performed a far more generous act than someone who chooses to feed the hungry rather than... buy Oracle?

    In short, the only difference between Bill Gates and everyone else who gives money to charity is that Bill Gates has a whole lot more of it.

    Which brings us to the question of how he got that money in the first place. Yay capitalism, right? As your high UID indicates, you're pretty new here. So let me start by disabusing you of the notion that America is a capitalistic country. We have all sorts of impediments to true lassiez-faire capitalism, and that's not always a bad thing. Libertarians may bitch and moan about how much money is being spent on government programs like OSHA, the EPA, the SEC, etc, and they can certainly point to examples of excess and stupidity by any government program. But each of those three agencies arose precisely because true capitalism wasn't providing solutions to important abuses.

    We're not a capitalistic country in that we have social programs like welfare. As a country, we've decided that just because pure capitalism would let certain people starve in the streets, that doesn't mean we should let it happen.

    Finally, we're non-capitalistic in the sense that we have anticompetitive cartels and monopolies, that cannot be addressed on a consumer level, and have not been addressed by the government. The RIAA, Microsoft, and your local gas company are all monopolies of one sort or another.

    The point is, there is a broad spectrum of possibilities between capitalism, anarchy, and communism. America has chosen its spot, while many European countries are camped out closer to the socialism flag.

    In closing, here is a quick list of reasons you should have a problem with Microsoft (readers feel free to add):

    * 60 billion in the bank, enough to buy up the airline industry.
    * A string of anticompetitive acts dating back to the early eighties, leading to two separate taxpayer-funded lawsuits.
    * It has been widely rumored that Microsoft is funding SCO's war on Linux.
    * Features first, bugfixes later, security wheneverwegetaroundtoit. That has been their strategy for decades, and I have no confidence that this new "security initiative" will have any success.
    * Microsoft Outlook.
    * Clippy.
    * Microsoft is a monopoly. So declares the judicial system. Monopolies stifle innovation and competition.

    --

    You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

  48. Re:wow, I thought the law was supposed to protect by robinsoz · · Score: 2, Informative

    Personally, I think they should be able to intregrate whatever features into their operating system whenever they want. When Microsoft uses skullduggery (like funding baseless lawsuits) to inhibit their competition that is absolutely wrong - but there is nothing wrong with adding features. Ever since operating systems were invented features that at first were provided by outside programs have been moving into the operating system - and if they had not installing an operating system on a computer today would be a patchwork nightmare. Also, I don't see many Linux people crying foul when features are bundled with the Linux operating system even though it would tend to reduce the use of other programs that provide those features. Everyone should be allowed to offer whatever software they desire to sell. If Microsoft (or anyone else) wants to offer a software package that will provide all the features of all the programs in existance, that should be their prerogative.

  49. Re: Would Apple be sued? by HotButteredHampster · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Although I wonder if things were flipped and if Apple had the 90% share would companies/governments/people be suing them for including iPhoto/iTunes/iMovie, etc?

    As with all questions: it depends. In this universe, iTunes, iMovie, iDVD, and iPhoto are all bundled with the OS. They are not tied to the OS. I can take iPhoto, and drag it to the Trash, and be done with it. No more iPhoto.

    Since Apple is not a monopoly, they gain nothing by tying the apps to the OS, and even if they did tie them, they would not be in violation of the laws governing monopolies.

    In this Apple-monopoly alternate universe of which you speak, it is entirely possible that Steve Jobs would have similar strategies as Gates and Ballmer. The iLife apps in this universe might be tied to OS X, in which case, they are a monopoly involved in anticompetitive behavior.

    So, to wrap up:

    • current behavior + alternate universe = no lawsuit
    • monopolistic behavior + this universe = no lawsuit
    • monopolistic behavior + alternate universe = lawsuit
    HBH
    --
    "Smart is sexy." -- D. Scully ("War of the Coprophages")
  50. Corporate Persons by Black+Mage+Balthazar · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The problem with corporations, is that they carry more rights of "real" persons than responsibilities. I say instead of fines, give them jail time. But how do you confine an abstract entity you ask?

    Simple, you freeze them in the spot. No money or supplies go in, no money or products go out. The company is effectively frozen in time, unable to do business.

    Now, most of you are probably looking at this going, "But if that happened to MS, the world would screech to a halt!" But isn't that the point others were trying to make? That having a single supplier situation is a Bad Thing. If this happened to a more diverse market, such as auto suppliers for a car rental company, the company could switch to another supplier (I'm making the assumption that if the law were like this, corps would have a sufficient backup plan to put into place).

    When the company "returned" to business, they could try and pick up their contracts again, or realize that because of their behavior, their market has dwindled. I think this would work better than a static fine (as evidenced in this case) as well as a percentage fine, since charging a small company $1000 for an infraction can also be seen as a slap on the wrist. (Now, I know that a small company and monopoly tend to be mutually exclusive, but I mean other infractions that corporate entities can commit as well.)

    1. Re:Corporate Persons by Black+Mage+Balthazar · · Score: 2, Insightful
      But that ruins the entire purpose of a corporation. The point of a corporation is to protect the owners' personal assests from being seized in the case that the business cannot pay its liabilities. If the people were not safe, then they might as well stay with a proprietership.

      However, I do see what you're going for, and perhaps when a company was "imprisoned", all the shareholders would be locked in. I think that having thousands of angry shareholders of a company, whose shares will probably decline rapidly after the freeze, would probably scare the boots of Ballmer and Gates.

  51. symptom by thayner · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Focusing on Microsoft is popular and something I'm guilty of myself, but we should really be focusing on the badly broken legal system that enables them. It's a legal system designed by lawyers to keep lots of laywers working. And the problems it causes range from being a big piece in why offshore outsourcing is taking off to being unable to handle Microsoft to Tyco's Kozlowski getting a mistrial after a six month trial.

  52. Re:wow, I thought the law was supposed to protect by UnknowingFool · · Score: 2, Informative
    I don't have the URL but it was over a year ago that I read how Bill wanted a car imported and that it was sitting at the dock for months and months because he was not supposed to import the car. He hired a bunch of lawyers and they worked with their representative to have a law written up so Bill could get his car. The law was then tied in with some others that were sure to get passed and the whole bunch ended up going through.

    I don't remember it that way. Here was the the way I remember it. Bill bought a very expensive Porsche that was is not normally exported to the US. At first it could not clear customs because in order for a car to be street legal, it has to meet minimum saftey and EPA guidelines. At the time, in order to meet safety guidelines, they have to crash test the car. At $300K each, there was no way the US government was going to buy a few just to crash test them.

    Years later, they convinced the NHTSA to accept Porche's crash test data. However there were problems with emissions. During the 90s, emissions standards got tougher on passenger cars. Several sports cars stopped being imported because of this reason (the Nissan Z, the Toyota Supra, etc). Finally, these Porches were modified enough to pass emissions. The cars in question doesn't have as much horsepower as the original but still are powerful machines.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  53. Re:wow, I thought the law was supposed to protect by The+Lynxpro · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "Funny, that. A democratically elected body, but one that the revolutionaries felt did not represent them. A series of laws designed to increase the wealth of the already wealthy. Intrusions by the government into private life. Does this sound like ANY government you've heard of recently?"

    Re-read your history. Parliament offered the colonies representation in the British parliament; colonial leaders sympathetic to the radical (dare we say, terrorist?) Sons of Liberty "organization" refused to accept the offer of parliamentry seats. Thus Parliament stuck with the "virtual representation" for the entire Empire. Parliament had to come up with ways to pay off the imperial debt which was mainly incurred by trying to evict the French from North America (Canada) which the British North American colonists bitched about for over a century but were unable to accomplish. It took the power of the British Army and the Royal Navy to beat the French into submission in the 7 Years War (French & Indian War) which ran up the debt. The colonials prospered by removing such a large threat but refused to "pay their fair share." Ever heard that phrase before? Yeah, that was a common phrase used by leprotards like Senator Barbara Boxer in the 1990s running on platforms to "make Japan and Europe pay for their defense" that went nowhere. The people in the Empire that were being overtaxed to pay for the American colonies' defense were the English, the Welsh, the Scottish, and the Irish. The American colonies, even with the dreaded *tea tax* were paying around 1% of their incomes in terms of imperial taxation. Compare that to the end of the American Revolution where the "States" on average raised taxes 15 times what they were in the pre-Revolutionary period. And the British "gave" to the independent United States of America what the colonials bitched about for years; freedom to trade with the rest of the world without British administrative interference. What was the result? Depression. The British Empire turned around and locked the U.S. out of the imperial trade system. The economic consequences of this led to Shay's Rebellion, which is noteworthy because it ushered in the Federal System as a crackdown on such counter-revolutionary activities.

    The "quartering of soldiers" is a lie. It did not happen except for Loyalist families who volunteered. Quartering referred to the practice of housing British Army soldiers in the local inns (which the inn keepers loved because it was steady income) and the colonial legislatures were forced to pay the bills since it was a defensive cost. Alarmist colonial leaders objected to keeping a standing army in the colonies since they felt it was counter to English history and their rights as Englishmen, although the British were the ones well aware that the French were itching for revenge and it was only a matter of time until the next colonial war happened.

    --
    "Right now, somewhere in this world, Scott Baio is plowing a woman he doesn't love," - Peter Griffin, *Family Guy*
  54. Hello Globe and Mail? This is the BSA calling... by One+Louder · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...we have come ta meet 'n greet ya to make sure nuthin' bad happens ta yer pretty newspaper.

  55. Money talks, the rest walks. by gatkinso · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Even if the rest is the law.

    Hey, capitalism - a blessing and curse all in one... just ask Indian consulting firms and the laid off American workers they replaced.

    Look - MS has won. You are all right - their software sucks (but is Good Enough apparently), their business practices are flat out BS... but like it or not, people want Windows.

    Not Linux. Not FreeBSD - which is dead :-) - and a few want OS X. Hey I personally think they are all neat in their own ways... and interesting from an academic perspective in others. Believe it or not I dropped out of a PH. D. program in Virology so Windows is somewhat compelling to me. haw

    I really don't know why yins are so up in arms about MS's strong arm tactics. After all, DeBeers and OPEC make them look absolutely saintly - where is the geekesque indignity over them? Hey I guess we all think globally and act locally right?

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  56. that the worst idea ever by youritadvisor.com · · Score: 2, Insightful

    this is worst idea that you could come up with because it not only crossing the line between civil and criminal sanctions. but you also having the government randomly give a competitive advantage to a company, in the form of the fine you are randomly giving away. The solution is not to attack microsoft with technically/legally weak arguments like a browser case. The fact every time a competitor uses the government to attack microsoft because they lost the market to them, they create a situation where microsoft can increase their power by fighting until they establish the desired legal precident and the settle to get the issue cleared out of the way. The fact is Microsoft only intergrated the browser into the OS after SUN made the arguement that having two browsing engines (one for local files and remote files) was stupid (with ther NC). This Establishs that the DOJ should have told Netscape to go to hell. If they had done this the appeals court precedent which defined the "rule of reason" would not exist and the substantially more legitimate case for bundling media players. Had the DOJ targetted microsoft for this bundling instead without setting up bad legal precedents first a valuable line could have been drawn between applications which truely belong into the OS (tcp/ip stack, dun, internet browser) and applications which run above the application layer of the OSI and therefore truly represent illegal bundling.

  57. argue with the sick vets by zogger · · Score: 2, Interesting



    I didn[t sday they didn't get young people to sign up, they do, they don'tknow much better and the government has destroyed jobs all over. You'll find most of the kids signing up are coming from areas with depressed economies, they see three hoits and a cot and this vague promise of a college education, that's why they sign up for the most part. what I DID say was the reservists and guardsmen are quitting, a much higher rates than before. And you can go personally argue with the first wars and now this was sick vets. I have two personal friends from bushgulf war 1 plenty sick, the dust and the pills and shots combos. Here's an URL for you, the gulfwarvets.com website, you can argue with those guys direct if you follow some links around over there.

    http://gulfwarvets.com/du.htm

    And so far just from this war we have thousands sick, not getting much press though.

    As to me being a liberal, I started my political activism both working conservation and civil rights issues, and ALSO as a barry goldwater volunteer. I'm consistent, I don't see any conflict between having clean water, clean food or a clean government. to me that's real conservatism,, from the root word, to "conserve", to nurture, save, protect, husband, guard.

    I am FAR from being a liberal. I consider george bush the current occupant to be a feudalistic minded globalist, when he's not just a tin pot semi-literate dictator and chronic serial liar. He's not q conservative, and neither is the current top level leadershipof the R party conservative. Frauds, globalists, world government wishers with them in the dictartors seats, but they ain't conservatives. that part of the R party about disappeared by 68 or so. There's some remenants left, but most of them? Nope.

    DU There's a big difference handling pressed hard DU warheads, and then breathing in microsocopic dust particles from them after they are expended in the field, and doing it for hours, days, weeks, months and in the cases of the civvie populations over there and in the balkans, forever. Plenty of evidence out there that breathing radioactive dust is "not cool". It's highly PROFITABLE to take radioactive waste product that would normally cost money and be required to be disposed ofproperly like any other radioactive waste, and turn it into an expensive "product", it's a nice coincidence that DU is extremely dense and has a kinetic weapon potential to it, but it is disingenous to assert that these radioactive particles are "safe" all spread out in high concentrations into the environment of a battlefield where they blow around and get absorbed by the humans and aniimals in the area, soldiers or civilians.

    I'll also remind you of the *fact* that for years and years uncle sugar and his tame scientists told the viet nam vets that agent orange was "harmless". maybe you don't remember that, but I remember hearing that live on TV and reading about it in the news periodicals current in those days, numerous times, because it was "questioined" by people-like me in fact. I did it back then.

    The government released any number of scientific sounding papers "proving" this fact of harmlessness, and put a never ending stream of stuffed shirt paid off academecians in front of the public to spread their FUD. EVENTUALLY the truth came out, what did it take, 30 something years for them to admit it? I have even more friends from that conflict who are sick from that stuff. And it's only been in the past two years that we have official record that the whole war was based on an outright lie of the gulf of tonkin "attacks". Although many knew of it at the time, and fighting a war undeclared was still illegal.

    I DO get my facts straight before I post. Do you think I LIKE that this bad shit happens, that I gain something from it? It's not ME profiteering from screwing over vets, or heisting the economy, or getting us into highly questionable wars and getting all sorts of people killed. It wasn't ME who had business ties to both saddam hussein AND the bin lade

  58. Re:wow, I thought the law was supposed to protect by brianosaurus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    who the hell donates money to politicians

    No kidding. Right after the primaries were over, I read an article that John Kerry has to play catchup. He ONLY had raised about $100 million for his campaign, and was trailing Bush's $150 million.

    That's insane. The dollar amount alone is ludicrous. There are plenty of better ways this country could spend 1/4 billion dollars.

    But what's worse is that the "news" media implies that Kerry's big fat wad isn't enough. Sure media companies will be raking in the dough selling TV spots to the Presidential Pissing Match, but isn't there still some speck of journalistic integrity? The presidency isn't supposed to be about bling-bling.

    This isn't E! reporting about B-Fleck blowing $20-mill on a ring for his spoiled-brat ex-fiancee. This is the two people applying for the most important job in our country demonstrating that they have no fiscal responsibility.

    At least Ben was blinded by love. What's these guy's excuse?

    --
    blog
  59. Re:No draft needed, and stop the BS about DU too. by HuguesT · · Score: 3, Informative

    I don't see what politics have to do with what you say.

    Of course for your argument you are going to use a reference provided by the military, which will show no toxicity whatsoever. Perhaps the military has a vested interest in showing those results, same as they've denied for years the gulf war syndrome in veterans.

    In fact there is research in the toxicity in DU and there exist guidelines for exposure.

    DU is at least as toxic as lead (that much is obvious), with the added problem that unlike lead, Uranium oxidizes very easily upon impact and becomes a fine dust which is breathable. So DU is not very toxic in unexploded ammo, because it is not in dust form. However after use it turns into dust which is quite toxic. Also it can pass into drinking water and become toxic there. As a heavy metal it can concentrate in the body (it is not excreted) and the chemical and radioactive components do have a cumulative effect.

    So it somewhat safe to handle but not good for you to visit a battlefield where DU has been used and much less to drink the water there.

    Other references: here, here, or here .

  60. Why not jail time? by walterbyrd · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Threatening to sue people for using your competitor's product seems like a crime to me: extortion, fraud, barratry, take your pick.

    Msft isn't doing that directly, but msft is doing exactly that, via scox.

  61. Re:wow, I thought the law was supposed to protect by The-Dalai-LLama · · Score: 2, Interesting
    In fact he went on to say that the ones with incredible amounts on money are the ones that are actually constructing law. Not exactly top secret information, but it still doesn't make me tingly when I hear it again.

    I read an interesting book called The Culture of Make Believe that advanced the idea that one way to de-link political power from wealth would be to make the value of every vote inversely proportional to the amount of money the voter has. Which is to say that the more money a person has, the less his vote counts (just a clarifier, since I often wind up inverting the intended meaning of "inversely proportional").

    IANAPSG (I am not a political-science guy), and I'm sure it could never be workable, and it doesn't address campaign contributions, and it's blatantly discriminatory, and it's patently ridiculous, and so on, but the idea's got a nice ring to it, anyway.

    Especially at 3 am.

    The Dalai LLama
    ...think I'm a Lefty? This guy makes me look like Ashcroft...