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Gates Pledges $750M to Vaccinate Children

chriskzoo5 writes "The Bill and Melinda Gates foundation is pledging $750M to vaccinate children worldwide over the next 10 years. Much maligned for his business practices, is this proof that sometimes the ends justify the means? Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity."

1,251 comments

  1. Er by DrMrLordX · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Does the Linux community have $750 million? Just curious.

    1. Re:Er by iamvego · · Score: 0

      "Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity." Since Bill Gates has bled the world dry, monopolised countries, business and home computers, the console gaming world and is now getting into the new Bluray and HDDVD standards, this gesture, although very effective and useful, is barely a dent in his finances, and for all we know, it's just in response to the peak of considerably bad press M$ has suffered in the past month. "Yes, buy Windows. Think of the children." I'll concede that it's stil a nice gesture though, and his army of accountants wouldn't be too happy.

    2. Re:Er by dnoyeb · · Score: 1

      My mother always told me not to ride in stolen cars. I assumed that meant stolen Ferraris as well.

    3. Re:Er by rbarreira · · Score: 2, Funny

      No, you should just adjust the RTFA module on your brain...

      --

      The AACS key is NOT 0xF606EEFD628B1CA427BEA93A9CA9773F
    4. Re:Er by suso · · Score: 1

      Actually, we most likely have much more than that.
      There are an estimated 18-20 million linux users. That makes it about $37.50 a person.

    5. Re:Er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      It's probably money in a useful form, as it's coming from Bill the man, not Microsoft the company.

      IMO it's not Bill that's evil but his company.

    6. Re:Er by dncsky1530 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      well it is bill gates that donated the money, not the microsoft windows community. While i dont use MS products Bill Gates is a very generous person compared to many other billionaires, and an article ofhis generosity should not be turned into a flame war. It is probably the wording of the story that will cause this.

    7. Re:Er by essreenim · · Score: 3, Insightful
      is this proof that sometimes the ends justify the means?

      No, this goes some of the way to making up for the means - still positive. But it does not justify the means.

    8. Re:Er by JeremyGL · · Score: 0, Troll

      What, the article that doesn't clarify but just blindly states "$750 million" everywhere ?

      Perhaps you should read more articles and you might discover that a quote that Bill is "giving" $X million can be used by a journalist to cover anything from :-

      Bill is actually giving nothing at all (in common sense terms)

      to

      Bill is giving $X million in cold hard cash

      Welcome to the real world of sloppy journalism

      Jeremy

    9. Re:Er by essreenim · · Score: 2, Funny
      IMO it's not Bill that's evil but his company.Its the system not the Gates!

    10. Re:Er by rbarreira · · Score: 2, Informative
      Well, in the article I see:

      The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (news - web sites) said the money would go to the Geneva-based Global Alliance for Vaccination and Immunisation (GAVI), a partner of the World Health Organisation.

      "GAVI will use the funds announced today to support national immunization programs in 72 of the worlds poorest countries," he said in a statement. "Supporting childrens immunization is undoubtedly the best investment weve ever made."

      Gates also appealed to other donors to plug the gap in financing vaccination programmes for children in developing countries.

      That's enough for me...
      --

      The AACS key is NOT 0xF606EEFD628B1CA427BEA93A9CA9773F
    11. Re:Er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Idiotic anti-business flameboy here. Nothing to see here.

      Outside of politics, it is impossible in a free market to make money without FULFILLING peoples needs. People spout anti-business shit like 'pro-corporate' and other nonsense, but the face is the public LIKES the businesses you bash so ignorantly.

      Bled the world dry? People _VOLUNTARILY_ buy microsoft products. Monopolised? So I guess Mac,Linux, BSD, OS/2 etc just didnt/doesn't exist?

      Gates has donated much money over the years, despite your maligning his character. I am sure YOU are someone we need to look up to.

      Please wake up. Free markets are just that, free. No one stops you from being a better Microsoft except YOU.

      Grow up.

    12. Re:Er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nope, they are poor mofo

    13. Re:Er by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Good point. Bill Gates is a rather generous person. I remember reading on an interview that he explains to his children that because he has so much money more then he could possibly use he donates it to help out outer people. But by having hundreds of billions. the 800 million in donations are just a drop in the bucket. thats less then 1 percent. That is like me donation $100 to charity.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    14. Re:Er by SupremeSpod · · Score: 0

      Why doesn't he give them the full $750 million in one lump? That would do them a lot more good than drip-feeding the cash!

    15. The Linux community has already donated millions of man-hours to develop and support Linux, and has effectively given the world both a very good operating system and digital Freedom. How much more generous do they need to be?

      --
      You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    16. Re:Er by rikkards · · Score: 1

      It's money.

      His foundation has donated money before but I don't think it was this much (something like $10 million for Aids awareness in Africa)

    17. Re:Er by rikkards · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When someone's child dies of a disease that could easily been avoided the last thing he would be concerned with is what OS he should be running.

      Priorities in generosity are wrong. I think health is probably more important than computers.
      Once these countries have dealt with disease, food, debt, etc then what OS they have becomes a bit more of an issue.

      Plus most third world countries couldn't give two shits about stealing software from another country.

    18. Re:Er by Captain+Nitpick · · Score: 2, Informative
      But by having hundreds of billions. the 800 million in donations are just a drop in the bucket. thats less then 1 percent. That is like me donation $100 to charity.

      Bill Gates's net worth is currently estimated to be around $30 billion. This single donation is about 2.5% of his net worth.

      --
      But then again, I could be wrong.
    19. Re:Er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Wrong, for all the same reasons throwing $50 billion at the tsunami disaster in a lump sum wouldn't be productive.

    20. Re:Er by BlackHawk-666 · · Score: 1

      That's less than 1% more than nothing. Would you rather he just burnt the money to warm his mansion? Those children benefit, regardless of what people think of Bill and his business practises (me, I'm not a fan of either) but his generous actions are speaking volumes to me about how compassion can come from the most unlikely of sources. Gripe all you want about the percentages, but until you match his donations you aren't on the moral high ground.

      --
      All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
    21. Re:Er by shreevatsa · · Score: 1

      That is like me donation $100 to charity.
      Well, how often do you donate $100 to charity?
      Okay, maybe you do, but most people do not donate to charity even what they are perfectly capable of. This is what makes Bill Gates donation significant, that he is donating at all.
      I guess for Bill, unlike most people, the excuse "I'm not rich enough to donate to charity" just doesn't hold ;)

    22. Re:Er by tomhudson · · Score: 0
      I'm sure that governments world-wide could save over $750M over the next 10 years by switching to linux, and they could direct any cost savings into developing their own health-care infrastructure, which would be a permanent benefit.
      William Gates is an honorable man who has done more for the poor and underprivileged than any other human being living today.
      WTF, Ballmer posting anonymously on /.? STFU, monkey-boy.
    23. Re:Er by Khazunga · · Score: 1
      Priorities in generosity are wrong. I think health is probably more important than computers. Once these countries have dealt with disease, food, debt, etc then what OS they have becomes a bit more of an issue.
      While I do agree that countries dealing with famine won't give a rat's ass about technology, it's important to understand that only (more) advanced technology can support raising worldwide living standards to western levels. You could pledge worldwide XIX century resources to solving current African problems, and it would be insufficient. So, priorities may not be 100% correct, but technology development should be the topmost priority. Undoubtedly.
      --
      If at first you don't succeed, skydiving is not for you
    24. Re:Er by govtcheez · · Score: 1

      What are you talking about? Gates has always been a huge charity donor.

      http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/2003-11-21-big -gates-charity-total_x.htm

    25. Re:Er by Platinum+Dragon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It is probably the wording of the story that will cause this.

      If I had mod points, I'd mod you up.

      If we could moderate stories, I would have voted this one down. The act itself is worthy of praise, especially contrasted with Gates' business tactics. The submitter had no reason to insert those last two statements except to provoke negative comments. The "Linux Community" will have a helluva time being able to donate $750 million to people who desperately need some form of necessity, because many (most? almost all?) members of that community don't have anything close to the available cash or equivalents that Gates has at his fingertips.

      "Do the ends justify the means?" Fuck no, and shame on the submitter for even turning this into a dicksize contest and inserting controversy where none should be needed. Gates' generosity does not justify his company's monopolistic tactics aimed at wiping out healthy competition (as a believer in the free market might say). I can donate $25 towards the purchase of necessary vaccines, and that in itself is a good act. Does the amount of money involved make the means any more or less justifiable? What is the metric for justifying the means?

      --

      Someday, you're going to die. Get over it.
    26. Re:Er by ajs318 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Some of us think that health is more important than "intellectual property". If it wasn't for the big patent-wielding pharmaceutical companies charging whatever they like for life-saving drugs and vaccines, do you suppose the cost that the WHO has to bear would be any less?

      If only it was as easy to steal chemical formulas as it is to steal software .....

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    27. Re:Er by ChickenAintDone · · Score: 1

      Isn't he rich? That sounds pretty evil to me...

    28. Re:Er by nhorman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How much is Linux worth? Whats the aggregate value of the problems that have been solved in this world using Linux? How many economies has Linux stimulated? $750 is a fantastic donation, and a great thing to do, but giving money is not the only form of charity. I think you'll find the most generous donations (and the one people often find hardest to make) are those of time, and effort, not money.

    29. When someone's child dies of a disease that could easily been avoided the last thing he would be concerned with is what OS he should be running.

      -1 Shortsighted. The world is run by computer, and has been for quite some time now. It'd be nice if you could really say you own your computer and are free to use it, rather than being granted license to use it as some non-governmental entity sees fit. Some people actually value their freedom and don't want it to hang from the thread of some corporation's good will.

      As well, the functionality enabled by Linux enables you to do so much more than curing diseases. You can use Linux in medical applications. It's not a vaccine, but it's still a tool which can be used to advance science and knowledge.

      Priorities in generosity are wrong. I think health is probably more important than computers.

      Uh, the second sentence contradicts the first.

      --
      You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    30. Re:Er by ThaReetLad · · Score: 1

      but the value of his charity is $27 Billion. Not so long ago Bill was worth nearly $75B, but he lost some and gave away around half.

      --
      You can't win Darth. If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine
    31. Re:Er by idlake · · Score: 0

      While i dont use MS products Bill Gates is a very generous person compared to many other billionaires,

      If you believe (as I and many other do) that Gates got his billions through questionable and at times illegal business practices, he is being generous with other people's money.

      and an article ofhis generosity should not be turned into a flame war.

      You seem to imply that any criticism of the man or his behavior is a "flame war". I disagree: a rational analysis of the man's behavior is perfectly appropriate, and the position that his donation should not be interpreted as "generosity" is a valid and rational position, even if you disagree with it.

      Furthermore, I think it's naive to think that this donation wasn't carefully timed and analyzed by Gates's advisers in terms of tax and PR consequences. And you have to keep in mind that a large part of the cost of this donation will be paid for by tax payers anyway. These points suggest that, even if you think that Gates got his wealth legitimately, there are strong utilitarian components to his donation.

    32. Re:Er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
      I think it is obviously great that he does things like this with his foundation. But I recall reading an article that showed as a percentage of wealth his philathropy is the lowest of the top 100 on the Forbes rich list (but I could be completely wrong in my memory so take my statements for what they are worth - nothing :P).

    33. Re:Er by atriusofbricia · · Score: 0
      Bill Gates's net worth is currently estimated to be around $30 billion. This single donation is about 2.5% of his net worth.

      That's true, but on the other hand we're talking $750 million USD over the next ten years working out to $75 million USD per year. Something tells me that's less than he makes in interest/dividends per year. It's a nice gesture. But, when one scales this seemingly large amount against the funds available, it's more like me donating $100.00 as someone else already said.

      Nice, but not a big deal really.

      On a vaguely related note, when I was in the Navy I gave around 10% of my income to various causes through the CFC. Can I get a front page story on slashdot now? Hmmmm?

      --
      I was raised on the command line, bitch

      "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    34. Re:Er by Richard+W.M.+Jones · · Score: 1

      well it is bill gates that donated the money, not the microsoft windows community.

      Mr. Gates's wealth comes about because he owns a large share of a company which repeatedly abused its illegal monopoly position.

      It's really a tax on business, except in this case the taxes raised go not to a government, but to a private company. Now it's nice that a small amount of this money goes to a very worthy cause, but it'd be a lot nicer if the tax wasn't there in the first place. That tax money could instead be spent creating more wealth for everyone around the world.

      Rich.

    35. Re:Er by Conor+Turton · · Score: 1
      As well, the functionality enabled by Linux enables you to do so much more than curing diseases. You can use Linux in medical applications. It's not a vaccine, but it's still a tool which can be used to advance science and knowledge.

      Excellent. So whilst the latest Linux cluster is coming up with a cure for cancer, several million people will have died in the meantime because they didn't geta simple vaccination.

      Man, you need to get your head out of your arse and take a look at the real world.

      --
      Conor "You're not married,you haven't got a girlfriend and you've never seen Star Trek? Good Lord!" - Patrick Stewart
    36. Re:Er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed, the submitter is a dick. Let's just leave it at that.

    37. Re:Er by Lifereaper0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wow, just because $750M seems like nothing, how many people that have that much money would donate it. Despite popular opinion, Bill gates is not the only person with a lot of money in the world.

    38. Re:Er by Amiga+Trombone · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What are you talking about? Gates has always been a huge charity donor.

      I always find it humorous when rich people are lauded for giving away their money, and damned for earning it in the first place.

      In the process of earning his money, Gates' licensing DOS and it's descendants to all comers created a standard hardware platform for personal computers, thereby forcing hardware vendors to compete on price and innovation. This in turn spurred rapid technical innovation and price reductions, making computers affordable enough that nearly everyone could own one. This in turn facilitated the growth of ancillary hardware, software, and tech support industries, providing thousands, if not millions, of people a living. The propagation of personal computers in turn allowed for the explosive growth of the internet, which in turn created a demand for broadband service, thereby triggering a revolution in the communications industry as well.

      And you could go on all day listing the scientific advancements and economic opportunities made possible by the availability of cheap computing power.

      Bill Gates may have given $10 million for AIDS awareness in Africa, but for all that, how much of an impact has that made on AIDS? Damn little, as far as I can see.

      Ironically, while the wealthy are damned for earning their money and lauded for giving it away, Gates, like most of the filthy rich capitalists, did more for the "Good of Society" and the advancement of humanity in the process of earning his money than he will ever conceivably be able to do by giving it away.

    39. Re:Er by Frenetic_Alphabet · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well Said!

      There are two issues here.

      The first being that Bill Gates is donating a sizeable amount of money to charity and that is wonderful and very kind. Regardless of all the people that hate Bill Gates, donating money to a charity is still a very noble thing to do, you have to at least admit that.

      Secondly there's the asinine comment about whether or not the Linux community can match his generosity...I don't think you can even compare the two considering the differences between them. One is a major multi-national company and the other is a large group of people working on a more or less free product that doesn't generate mass amounts of revenue. Now why did the OP have to go and fuck up a story with a positive spin by making it into a bitter competition and finger pointing fiasco?

      --
      I reject your reality and substitute my own
    40. Re:Er by Asphalt · · Score: 1
      Okay, maybe you do, but most people do not donate to charity even what they are perfectly capable of.

      Actually, when people are paying darn close to 50% of their income in taxes every year, they are already "contributing to charity" on a supreme scale.

      Also (as someone who worked for a charity), I can tell you that there really are scant few that don't simply take your money and use it for their own internal purposes ... income, salary, etc. Most of the time that you "donate" money, it does not go where you think it does.

      Is this the case for all of them? No. But unfortunately for about 90% of them, it is.

      So, don't throw money at things with nice names just to make yourself feel good. Really think it out ... who will this help, how EXACTLY will it help, at what point do they helpees get the money or services? Have you ever known anyone that was helped by an organization that you just donated your car to? You'll be hard pressed to find one.

      Chances are you can do more good with $100 than a organization with overhead. Go buy 10 subway sandwiches, and give them to the folks sleeping in the street. Your $100 will have been MUCH more helpful than had you writen a check to a "charity" that may or may not send $10 to someone somewhere after they pay their employees, marketing, and other costs.

      That being said, regardless of how much Bill Gates is worth, millions of dollars is millions of dollars. He didn't have to give it. He could have bought 70 houses instead. All this hand wringing over what percantage it was is silly. The man gave a large some of money to someplace he things will do some good. Let's hope he researched the charity well, and he is right.

      You have to tip your hat.

    41. You're the name-calling idiot, you stupid ass-licking unclefucker.

      I'm not attempting to devalue the vaccinations. I'm pointing out that the Linux community is more than $750,000,000 generous. You're the one who's too thickheaded to comprehend that the two are not mutually exclusive.

      If you desperately need a vaccination, chances are you'll value a vaccination more than you'll value Linux. If you don't, then you're going to find Linux far more useful for far more tasks than some vaccine for some disease you don't have and aren't at risk of contracting.

      The utility of Linux vs. the utility of a vaccine isn't in question, however. It's a simple matter of how generous the gift of $750,000,000 worth of medical aid is compared to the gift of a Free OS which has been built out of countless man-hours of donated and uncompensated labor.

      Finally, the fact that Linux was given to the world without engaging in anticompetitive practices, without embracing and extending technology standards, without smashing promising young companies engaged in developing useful technologies, and I think Linux is clearly the more generous gift to humanity, as well as the more useful.

      --
      You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    42. Re:Er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      http://www.it-director.com/article.php?articleid=8 888

      Read this article and then complain about his donations...

      You guys need to do some research before commenting, really.

      "The newspaper reports a study conducted by the The Chronicle of Philanthropy which claims that Bill Gates, for instance, has reduced his donations to the charity sector by more than $3 billion. Last year he was reported to have given $2 billion to charities through the Belinda and Bill gates Foundation. In 2000 he gave more than $5 billion."

      How is that for donations? Still not enough?

    43. Re:Er by peter_garner · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hmmm, this is the kind of stunt that politicians pull just before an election.. He does know that Dubya's back in doesn't he ? No wait .. he's probably still waiting for his Media Center to finish booting...

    44. Re:Er by sunking2 · · Score: 1

      So where's the donation? You've just reenforced the idea that the majority of linux users are so because it's free and they are cheap bastards, not because it's more reliable or better. Take half the money they save from not buying windows and put it towards charity. That might actually change the world in some way.

      Until then, give Bill some credit, or consider your MS purchases charity. There are probably some charity orgs out there that have a lower use per dollar ratio to an actual charitable use than each sale of an MS product.

    45. Re:Er by fireboy1919 · · Score: 1

      I would go further and say that many of the contributions of free software advocates are more of a sacrifice than Bill Gate's $750 million.

      They give up the opportunity to make as much money as the might in the closed world, they give up their code, and they give up the time they could have spent doing something selfish.

      Think of it this way: Bill Gates has a net worth of somewhere around 29.5 billion. By this figure, he has given up just over 2.5% of his wealth. Big sacrifice there, especially since 2.5% of his wealth probably buys more than he could ever possibly want, monitarily speaking. And how long would he have to have spent on that to make it happen? About long enough to sign a check. For $750 million, any agency would be more than happy to carry out the details, and they probably did.

      Consider what that would take in opportunity cost for a developer. To simplify, I'll give you an example.

      Consider a developer with a net worth of $100000. Assume said developer earned $50 an hour at a job. How much time would it take to make the same percentage of investment into his project in opportunity cost?

      Just under 50 hours. I doubt that there are many developers who have even spent only half that. .

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
    46. Re:Er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If there's a patent on it, the chemical formula is published as a part of the patent. That's the whole point of the patent system -- to encourage people to disclose new technology in order to get it to the public.

    47. Re:Er by Marthisdil · · Score: 0

      If we could moderate stories, I would have voted this one down. The act itself is worthy of praise, especially contrasted with Gates' business tactics. The submitter had no reason to insert those last two statements except to provoke negative comments. The "Linux Community" will have a helluva time being able to donate $750 million to people who desperately need some form of necessity, because many (most? almost all?) members of that community don't have anything close to the available cash or equivalents that Gates has at his fingertips.

      But why would you have modded it down? I'm sure you wouldn't have cared if it were a Linux story bashing MS - there's been tons of those on the /. frontpage, yet I haven't seen you decry any of them the same way you did this story. Funny that...

    48. Re:Er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was just working on my taxes, so I can say that I have just over $6000US in charitable donations. It's way short of 1Billion, but is a not insubstantial part of my anual income. so I don't feel too bad. I'm afraid I don't have any open source code contributions this year. If you count those, the OS community has FAR outstripped the 1 billion mark

    49. Re:Er by r_j_howell · · Score: 1

      Yup, I'd give it -1 Flamebait.
      Kudos to the Gates Foundation for what they contribute to the world.
      Likewise, Kudos to the OS community for what they contribute to the world.

    50. Re:Er by mgpeter · · Score: 1

      I am sorry I didn't hear you, you had your nose so far up Bill G...... You give Bill Gates WWWWAAAAAYYYY to much credit.

      Mark 12:41-44 And Jesus sat over against the treasury, and beheld how the people cast money into the treasury: and many that were rich cast in much. And there came a certain poor widow, and she threw in two mites, which make a farthing. And he called unto him his disciples, and saith unto them, Verily I say unto you, That this poor widow hath cast more in, than all they which have cast into the treasury: For all they did cast in of their abundance; but she of her want did cast in all that she had, even all her living.

    51. Re:Er by OreoCookie · · Score: 0

      A) They can't charge "whatever they want". If they could a Tylenol would cost a billion dollars. B) How much is staying alive worth to you?

    52. Re:Er by Bigmilt8 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Get overyourself. Yur statement only proves that the "linux community" is a bunch of self-serving idiots.

    53. Re:Er by Paco04101 · · Score: 1

      Most of us are using the money saved to support our local merchants.

    54. Re:Er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If only it was as easy to steal chemical formulas as it is to steal software .....

      It's not really difficult to replicate drugs. Start from looking at what's written on the bottle (Contains...) and in the patent application. Continue in a lab with gas chomatographs and other goodies if you need.

      Then you'll need to manufacture the drug which is well understood problem with lots of big and small companies around the world having experience in this field.

      Then you can not sell this drug legally...

    55. Re:Er by tomhudson · · Score: 1
      Bullshit.

      1. Retraining cost == 1-time expense
      2. More apps moving to web portals == 0 retraining costs
      3. Retraining costs < lost downtime due to viruses, malware, etc
      4. Recurring licensing fees > cost of switching
      5. You forgot retraining for moving between different releases of OS, office stuite, etc...
      6. How much time/money was lost turning of "Clippy"? Coping with bad patches? Testing patches because they break things?
      Now, let's get back on-topic:

      This is not altruistic. Gates and Microsoft get several things out of this:

      1. publicity
      2. good-will for microsoft
      3. tax breaks
      In other words, this "donation" is being subsidized by your tax dollars (tax break), and will help extend the borg's reach.
    56. Re:Er by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Your post ignores the subject of SEVERAL lawsuits in which microsoft was convicted and punished, including licensing shenanegans which have to this day given hundreds of useless copies of windows to linux users who got it with their new computer.

      Please wake up. This is a long debated discussion topic which has more facets than the hope diamond, and your childish simplification only serves to damage your own completely tangental arguement.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    57. Re:Er by Paco04101 · · Score: 1

      Yes, but - as someone already mentioned - how much of this was "Software worth X million", i.e. 50,000 copies of Office XP with a sticker price of $999 each...

    58. Re:Er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bill Gates has a net worth of somewhere around 29.5 billion. By this figure, he has given up just over 2.5% of his wealth.

      I agree with you except for the fact that you forgot about the tax deduction. I'm sure Gates is in a very high tax bracket, so the 2.5% is probably more like 1.25%.

    59. Re:Er by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      No, he's donating windows XP disks to inject into children.

      "AH! MY VEINS! PLEASE STOP! I CAN'T SEE!"

      --
      It's been a long time.
    60. Re:Er by B3ryllium · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is not Microsoft.

    61. Re:Er by tarius8105 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's true, but on the other hand we're talking $750 million USD over the next ten years working out to $75 million USD per year. Something tells me that's less than he makes in interest/dividends per year. It's a nice gesture. But, when one scales this seemingly large amount against the funds available, it's more like me donating $100.00 as someone else already said. Nice, but not a big deal really. On a vaguely related note, when I was in the Navy I gave around 10% of my income to various causes through the CFC. Can I get a front page story on slashdot now? Hmmmm?

      First off, you have a warped view on this perspective. One man donating 100 dollars does not even remotely compare to one man donating 750 million dollars. Yes it is a big deal since kids are dying in 3rd world countries where their parents cant even afford to pay for them to see a doctor, let alone get vacinations. That 750 million can help a lot of kids, where as your puny 100 dollars wouldnt be able to vacinate one kid.

      One person did something really great and donated a large sum of money,that doesnt involve selling his product down the people he donating to, and everyone finds something wrong with it.

    62. Re:Er by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      A. Tylenol is para-acetyl aminophenol, paracetamol for short. Its patent expired a long time ago. Now, thanks to competition and market forces, a dose of generic paracetamol can be had for a penny. I believe it would be more instructive to compare the cost just before and just after the patent expired.

      B. See under "National Insurance Contributions" on my payslip.

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    63. Re:Er by Platinum+Dragon · · Score: 1

      But why would you have modded it down?

      Because the snarky comment at the end was a blatant piece of flamebait which cheapened the act that is the supposed subject of the posting. It was completely unnecessary, meant to provoke the kind of negative reaction that some posters have unfortunately expressed, playing a pointless game of scoreboard or "but he's richer!" and getting caught up in someone else's little game of worthiness.

      I'm sure you wouldn't have cared if it were a Linux story bashing MS - there's been tons of those on the /. frontpage, yet I haven't seen you decry any of them the same way you did this story.

      That's because I'm not in front of the computer 24/7, ready to comment on Slashdot's increasingly poor postings on a regular basis. Holy crap, I have a life away from the computer--shock and surprise. Less of that computer time has been spent at Slashdot due to the increasingly poor quality of articles being posted, many of which seem little better than press releases for various products or blatant attempts to stoke controversy for no necessary reason, perhaps to increase ad hits. The blatant Linux advocacy and knee-jerk bashing of anything else has gotten on my nerves--and I'm a FOSS-using anarchist freak! I just can't stand having a viewpoint metaphorically bashed over my head over and over. I blocked michael's postings for this reason, set another site as my homepage, and visit /. less often than I used to.

      Normally, a trollicious comment like yours wouldn't even merit comment, but in this particular case, I can't allow your accusations to stand unchallenged.

      --

      Someday, you're going to die. Get over it.
    64. Re:Er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "I'm pointing out that the Linux community is more than $750,000,000 generous."

      Give me a break. If all the contributions to the main Linux build done by the Linux community was billed at $60/hr and the overall cost was $750,000,000, that would be 12,500,000 hours. Given that Linux is just a Unix clone, I can only conclude that Linux developers must be the slowest programmers on the planet. Or maybe you're an idiot instead.

    65. Re:Er by canfirman · · Score: 1

      Amen. Well said. If I had mod points, I'd mod you up, even though you're already at +5. :)

      --
      It is not our abilities that show what we truly are... it is our choices.
    66. Re:Er by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1
      You misunderstand. There's nothing wrong with this and it is in fact a great thing. However, I'm just asking for perspective. Yes, it is three quarters of a billion dollars. But, we're talking about a man with over 30 billion. We're also talking about a donation over several years. All good, but not the Second Coming.

      That's all I'm saying. And as far as the comparison goes, I'm just trying to draw scale. The amounts don't matter as much as the relative scale.

      It's great that he's done this, and it's a lot of money. I'm glad that at least he, unlike a lot of rich people, is doing something good with his money. But, we're not talking about 3 billion all at once. This is a reasonable donation for a person with this amount of money. There is always that concept of tithing. If one wants go down that line, then one with that much money should donate around $300 million or so. I wouldn't be surprised to find that if you added it all up, this and other donations, it comes to something around that number.

      So please, don't assume I'm saying this is a bad thing when all I'm doing is pointing out the relative scale of the situation.

      The last part of my comment was a way of pointing out that if this were anyone besides BG, it wouldn't have even been a story on here. Even with this amount of money.

      --
      I was raised on the command line, bitch

      "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    67. Re:Er by jfelix1010 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Umm, it is trivial to "steal" the formulas to patented drugs. The drug companies are required to submit these in the patent app, as well as to the FDA during the approval process. None of this is secret or classified data. Anyone with the proper production equipment could bootleg a patented drug. Of course, this would be just as illegal as bootlegging software.

      The problem with expensive pharmaceuticals is very complex. These companies must recoup their HUGE R&D investments in both successful and unsuccessful drugs. The real problem is price-fixing in the countries with socialized medicine. The drug companies have to gouge the free-market countries (primarily the US) to make up for the shortfall in profits from the Canadian and European markets. The drug companies go along with it because they are still making more than the marginal costs of production, and something is better than nothing. If they refused to do business with countries that have price controls, these countries would simply allow local companies to bootleg the drugs (remember that the formulae are publicly available) to sell locally. Honestly, I don't know why this isn't a WTO issue. The US consumer is having to subsidize those in Canada and the EU. The alternative is less R&D and fewer new drugs in the pipeline.

      Of course, in a free-market economy with a patent system, the drug companies are essentially free to charge anything they wish while the drugs are under patent. They will (and should) choose a price that maximizes profits, and this will be a higer price than what would be possible under free competition. The difference is referred to as "monopoly rents". As a society, this is the incentive we provide to investors so that they will spend money to research new drugs. Without the patents, there would be essentially no private for-profit investment in pharmaceutical research. So there really is no easy solution to this problem. Maybe the length of the patent can be reduced, but this will make the drugs even more expensive during the duration of the patent.

      One possible solution to the problem is to reduce the regulatory burden that the FDA places on these companies. This would place more of the burden of drug safety on the doctors and consumers. If the costs of getting a new drug to market are lower, then a shorter patent period would be acceptible since there will be less fixed cost that must be recouped. The obvious downside to this is that it is possible that drugs with serious side-effects will be more likely to make it to market. This is a trade-off, and we as a soceity must decide just how much "safety" we are willing to pay for. But simply villifying the drug companies solves nothing. I'm sure that they do some bad things in the pursuit of profits, but that doesn't change the reality of the situation. We would have these problems even if these companies were perfectly ethical.

    68. Re:Er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen brother, and how many poor children has the Open Source community helped to educate that could never have afforded an MS solution? People give in their own ways.

    69. Re:Er by deeznutsclan · · Score: 1, Funny

      They could probably save another $750M by switching to GEICO.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, post on Slashdot about it.
    70. Re:Er by rikkards · · Score: 1

      You are right Technology development is priority but what OS they are running will not dig wells, improve healthcare, upgrade their infrastructure (ok maybe the last a bit but you get my point)

    71. Re:Er by Jamesie · · Score: 0

      Where do you think a linux user will get $37.50 from?

    72. Re:Er by rikkards · · Score: 1

      The drug companies go along with it because they are still making more than the marginal costs of production, and something is better than nothing.

      id software did the same thing with Doom (according to John Romero). They made a deal with the Asian pirate crowd to give them $1 for every game they sold. Figured they may as well get something out of it than nothing.

    73. Re:Er by Omniscientist · · Score: 1

      Please mod parent up, this is not flamebait. If anything the story summary itself was flamebait.

    74. Re:Er by kismet666 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Some of you think $750M is all the foundation has done? Take a look at the facts before scoffing at the Gates Foundation. The current endowment is $27B. It has given away about $7.5B since its inception. Those are BILLIONS. How many of you have given away more than a third of your net worth?

      http://gatesfoundation.org/MediaCenter/FactSheet/d efault.htm

      Gripe about his business tactics all you want, but how can any rational person with a brain bigger than a pea criticize the Gates for their generousity? They'll have a bigger impact on global health than the UN this century. Probably more than any national government.

    75. Re:Er by rikkards · · Score: 1

      My point was go to the deepest darkest depths of Rwanda, Sudan, Afghanistan and ask them how much of an impact Linux has on their lives. I think they would rather have clean water and medicine than the clear conscience of running a free OS. It's all about relevance.

      Granted in the future, any third world country that needs to build up their technological infrastructure is going to be blessed by the existance of the penguin but until they can get the high mortality rates in check, Billy's donation is more relevant.

    76. Re:Er by jfelix1010 · · Score: 1

      Tylenol is a bad example because its patent has been expired for a long time. However, if it were under patent, the company still wouldn't charge "a billion dollars". They could (from a legal standpoint, anyway), but how many people would be willing and/or able to pony up that much? Even if it were a life-saving drug, the number of people that have the disease that it treats and also can afford to pay that much would be VERY small. The drug companies will try to find a price that maximizes profits. This will be much lower that "a billion dollars", but it will also be higher (possibly much higher) than the marginal cost of production plus overhead (a proxy for the price under free competition).

    77. Re:Er by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      Check out their history of lobbying - using promises of donations as levers to access governments and lobby for Microsoft.

    78. Re:Er by iamacat · · Score: 1

      In the process of earning his money, Gates' licensing DOS and it's descendants to all comers created a standard hardware platform for personal computers, thereby forcing hardware vendors to compete on price and innovation.

      The reason IBM-compatible PCs really took off is that the original one was made from off-the-shelf parts and small companies could build their own without a chip manufacturing facility. In the other words, because a monopoly made a mistake that allowed small companies to compete.

      The OS wasn't very important that days, on computers with 16K of RAM. A lot of games and I would imagine other programs were self-booting and didn't require an OS at all. Still Microsoft played a part in progress by reselling one they bought for $50K to IBM.

      But that was way before Bill Gates made $40B, $750M or probably $1M. And ever since then his company was a hindrance to progress. By the time people upgraded their PCs to $640K of RAM, it was possible and desirable to run an OS with a graphical UI and task switching. If Microsoft licensed something like GEM and distributed it with every copy of DOS back then, PCs would become useful for business and personal productivity applications much earlier than they did. But they just stuck with what they had on a 16K RAM machine. It was perhaps not a monopoly power yet, just laziness characteristic of a company that to this days is trying to milk the most money out of poorly written software that happens to come with every IBM-compatible PC. And things just went downhill from then.

      I think Bill Gates and most other very rich people were initially productive by being catalysts of progress made in some area. But since then, most have become a hindrance to what they themselves started by keeping others from contributing and diverting money that could be used more productively by society. Really toothy anti-trust laws, punitive taxes for getting insane amounts of money in a short time and other measures would be a big help.

    79. Re:Er by HanzoSpam · · Score: 1

      Verily I say unto you, That this poor widow hath cast more in, than all they which have cast into the treasury: For all they did cast in of their abundance; but she of her want did cast in all that she had, even all her living.

      Yeah? Maybe you should ask Jesus how much those 2 mites actually bought.

      2 cents still buys only 2 cents worth of goods, and a million $$ still buys a million $$ worth of goods, regardless of the relative wealth of the giver.

      --

      Progressivism: Parasites helping parasites to help themselves - to other people's stuff.
    80. Re:Er by professor+seagull · · Score: 0

      `Gates and Microsoft` don't tell me something else comes to mind when you think of bill gates, especially for the general public if they hear this on the media, microsoft will get recognition from it by the way, A != B, thanks for that Score:2, Insightful comment

    81. Depends on how you want to calculate it. If you're talking "at cost" then maybe you're right. If on the other hand, you could somehow consolidate all Linux development, human resource assets, and IP assets under one company, the value of that company would be far in excess of $750,000,000.

      To put it still another way, if Gates announced tomorrow that henceforth MS Windows is now available under the GPL, that news would completely dwarf today's announcement by several orders of magnitude.

      It's obvious that the value of the Gates Foundation's donation is fractional to the value of Microsoft, since the donation *orignated from* MS's revenue.

      Arguably, Linux is more valuable than Windows, because Linux is Free and Windows is IP-encumbered. Granted, Microsoft's value as a company is soley derived from its OS division, but
      let's not forget that Linux isn't the whole of the OSS community, either, so the article's call for the "Linux community" to be as generous isn't quite straight on, either.

      In any event, Linux + FOSS is still far and away more useful than a single-application medicine such as a vaccine, rivaling if not exceeding Microsoft in value. In conclusion, calling the FOSS community's generosity into question over Gates's donation is ludicrous. FOSS *is* generosity.

      --
      You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    82. Re:Er by B3ryllium · · Score: 1

      It's true, it's true. If they had intended to be altruistic, it would have been called the "megarich foundation" or something not MS related. :)

    83. Re:Er by mother+pussbucket · · Score: 1

      Er, Bill didn't donate anything. The B&M Gates Foundation did.

      You know, that little tax shelter he set up to shield his money from the IRS. After the bad publicity of the MS monopoly trial...

      Or perhaps you'd forgotten all that.

      --
      Yes, it's true. This man has no dick.
    84. Re:Er by Lifereaper0 · · Score: 1

      Every company wants to be a monopoly...few achieve it.

    85. Re:Er by OreoCookie · · Score: 0

      This will be much lower that "a billion dollars", but it will also be higher (possibly much higher) than the marginal cost of production plus overhead (a proxy for the price under free competition).

      In any industry where margins are very high, new companies will enter the market to compete for those margins. The dearth of new pharmacutical companies says that margins are not extreme. The cost of developing a new drug and overcoming the regulatory hurdles to bring it to market: $802 million on average, according to a study by Tufts University. Even then, only three in 10 market drugs produce enough revenues to match or exceed the average costs of research and development.

    86. Re:Er by oldave · · Score: 1

      I'd suggest that the Linux community can't match Bill's bank account, either.

    87. Re:Er by ash*embers · · Score: 1

      Christ once lauded a poor old woman for donating her last penny. The metric then, is "when it hurts".

    88. Re:Er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      c'mon, you dolts - this was funny

    89. Re:Er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Depends on how you want to calculate it. If you're talking "at cost" then maybe you're right. If on the other hand, you could somehow consolidate all Linux development, human resource assets, and IP assets under one company, the value of that company would be far in excess of $750,000,000."

      Well, if the GPL is working as advertised then there's really no difference between the consolidated value and the individual companies value, all the IP is shared.

      Yes, we can argue about "value" in the subjective sense, but in that case we shouldn't attempt to assign a number to it because the number is meaningless. You said greater then $750,000,000 because that's how much Gates donated. If he had donated two, three, four times that amount, you'd do the same to your evaluation as well. Right?

    90. Re:Er by grouch · · Score: 1
      Nice rewrite of history.
      Amiga Trombone said: In the process of earning his money, Gates' licensing DOS and it's descendants to all comers created a standard hardware platform for personal computers, thereby forcing hardware vendors to compete on price and innovation.
      Let's see what the US DoJ was saying about that period in their press release of July 16, 1994 titled MICROSOFT AGREES TO END UNFAIR MONOPOLISTIC PRACTICES
      Microsoft, which makes the MS-DOS and Windows operating systems used in more than 120 million personal computers, was accused of building a barricade of exclusionary and unreasonably restrictive licensing agreements to deny others an opportunity to develop and market competing products.
      Gee, that doesn't quite match the version that makes Bill the great innovator that propelled the market, does it?
      Amiga Trombone said: This in turn facilitated the growth of ancillary hardware, software, and tech support industries, providing thousands, if not millions, of people a living.
      Well, let's see what happened a few years after the above agreement by Microsoft.
      412. Most harmful of all is the message that Microsoft=s actions have conveyed to every enterprise with the potential to innovate in the computer industry. Through its conduct toward Netscape, IBM, Compaq, Intel, and others, Microsoft has demonstrated that it will use its prodigious market power and immense profits to harm any firm that insists on pursuing initiatives that could intensify competition against one of Microsoft=s core products. Microsoft=s past success in hurting such companies and stifling innovation deters investment in technologies and businesses that exhibit the potential to threaten Microsoft. The ultimate result is that some innovations that would truly benefit consumers never occur for the sole reason that they do not coincide with Microsoft=s self-interest.
      That's from Findings of Facts from 1999. An alternate source of the document: Findings of Facts.

      Doesn't exactly sound like MS "facilitated the growth of ancillary hardware, software, and tech support industries", to me. Ok, maybe the support "industries", but that's more revealing of the incompetence of Microsoft (which is why they needed to use illegal tactics to secure their market) rather than the "advancements" you say were made possible by Mr. Gates.

      What advancements never got off the ground because they were precluded from the market by the monopolist? Cheap computing power was already available, as was a standard platform. No one can measure what was lost by the anti-competitive, market destroying actions Microsoft used to prevent being supplanted and replaced by better systems.

    91. Re:Er by tarius8105 · · Score: 1

      So please, don't assume I'm saying this is a bad thing when all I'm doing is pointing out the relative scale of the situation.
      You can not use a relative scale since the cost of the products being sold for this venture do not scale to the donatations of an average person.

      The last part of my comment was a way of pointing out that if this were anyone besides BG, it wouldn't have even been a story on here. Even with this amount of money.

      Yes but considering how everyone speaks negatively on him and his companies business practices, this is a reason he is making the news. Hell look at the icon for the microsoft topics, thats enough right there to prove my point.

    92. Re:Er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bill Gates is not a major multinational company.

      He is a significantly wealthy individual.

  2. fp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    first post

  3. viruses by Bolshoy+Pimpovich · · Score: 4, Funny

    haha... against viruses... har-dee-har-har

    --
    Ehta nyeh IBM, ehta Macintosh!
    1. Re:viruses by MrRTFM · · Score: 0, Troll

      Excatly - this is what people dont realise.

      They aren't donation money - they are donating licenses of the Microsoft Virus Scanning Tool - FREE to any third world country child who wants to download it.

      :)

      --
      You can't expect to wield supreme executive power, just because some watery tart threw a sword at you
    2. Re:viruses by WhatsAProGingrass · · Score: 1

      He needs to make sure these children grow up knowing that the reason they are alive is because of Microsfot, thus securing the future. So this 750 million is a business investment...but really, this is a great thing to do.

      --
      Mark
    3. Re:viruses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      At the risk of sounding like a heartless prick, who is going to feed all these kids who would have otherwise died? Is this donation in 2005 setting up a famine for 2025?

    4. Re:viruses by Mark+of+THE+CITY · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily, there are other factors that limit food production. Also, a higher survival rate results in a growing population until people realize they're more likely to survive and cut back on the number of children they have. Education is critical in being able to comprehend this.

      --
      The clearance system sounds logical. It is not. It is completely arbitrary. -- John Bolton
  4. Microsoft, not Bill by shreevatsa · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity." There cannot be some charity contest between Linux and Windows! Anyway, most of the Linux community's displeasure is with Micro$oft and its activities, not Bill Gates the individual himself

    1. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by crazedmaniac · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Linux community gives 100% up front. Microsoft takes 100% and gives a little - a very little - back. Which is more generous?

    2. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Daengbo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Carnegie, Rockefeller, Mellon, and now Gates... The robber baron syndrome. It helps them psychologically deal with the things they've done to become super-wealthy.

    3. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by shreevatsa · · Score: 3, Insightful

      My point exactly.
      The Linux community is all about charity, every line of code written, every time someone gets an OS for free, is generosity itself.
      On the other hand, this continuous generosity means that they do not have zillions of dollars to publicly give away from time to time.
      But you must admit that what Bill Gates gives to charity is indeed a good thing, and he has made many donations. Maybe a small thing for the richest man, but it's still a significant thing.

    4. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The things is you can convert what MS does into cash for charities like this. You can't convert what linux does into cash to suppost charities like this., or at least it would be difficult.

      Open source and linux is a far greater asset for the richer countries and the poor developing countries, but not for those in poverty.

    5. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Von+Helmet · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Here's what Jesus thinks about that.

    6. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by sydb · · Score: 1

      Ummm... seeing as he cofounded the source of the "Linux community's displeasure", I'd humbly suggest that relevant complaint should be directed at him.

      Who is responsible for hitting the target - the arrow or the archer?

      Anyway, I agree that it is ridiceulous to ask the "Linux community" to match his trust's donation. That community hasn't taxed the majority of computer users for over a decade.

      Let's see. Bill taxes the rich (West) and gives to the poor (3rd World). Does that make him some kind of Robin Hood character?

      Well, I suppose he gets to see himself that way.

      It's hard to attack the man whn he is evidently doing good in the world. But let's remember that people are not usually entirely good or entirely bad, rather they have good attributes which (hopefully) compensate for the bad ones.

      So slashdot, as you were.

      --
      Yours Sincerely, Michael.
    7. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      I totally agree, and I'd like to add that folks should read some of Bill's books. Seriously. He makes a lot of sense (if he wrote them that is, etc.,)

      From the books, you'd think the dude is a free software advocate, speaking against lock-in, among other things, etc. Totally not the `Bill Gates' you know from Microsoft fame.

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    8. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by jacobcaz · · Score: 3, Informative
      • Carnegie, Rockefeller, Mellon, and now Gates... The robber baron syndrome. It helps them psychologically deal with the things they've done to become super-wealthy.
      Actually, these people became super-rich because they know how to give their money to useful causes. Check out books like "The Richest Man in Babylon" by George S. Clason or just about any book by Napoleon Hill (Deepak Chopra is another good one, but some people get turned off because he's not as "western" of a writer).

      You gotta give it to get it brother. And when Carnegie, Rockefeller, Gates, Morgan, etc. give they can give big.

      There ain't nothing wrong with wealth! It's the rentless pursuing of wealth with no other purpose than to build riches that's wrong. Gate's wealth is a by product of his desire for a "computer on every desktop." The wealth is a result of filling a need (and a few predatory practices by the company he founded, I'll admit that). But look at every uber-wealthy person out there and most will fit Gate's M.O. - they were trying to fullfill a vision, the wealth just sorta tagged along.

    9. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by MPHellwig · · Score: 1

      Many 'great' leaders have(somebody else) written books about them.

      Most of that stuff makes sense, but this doesn't mean that they did it the way they ment and that the results are that what they ment.

    10. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      Let's see. Bill taxes the rich (West) and gives to the poor (3rd World). Does that make him some kind of Robin Hood character?

      He more than likely sees himself as a successful business person who would like to think that his profits have gone somewhat to a good purpose.

      Also, I think it would be fair to note that Bill Gates is worth 50 +/- billion dollars...his investments...he doesn't have it all in cash.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    11. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by BlackHawk-666 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Neat, so we all win :-) He gets a cleaner conscience and we get children who aren't dying from polio, rickets, ebola, and all the other dieseases that plague the unfortunate. How could that ever possibly be a bad thing?

      --
      All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
    12. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by idlake · · Score: 0, Troll

      No, we all still lose, because the money Gates is donating didn't come out of thin air, it came out of your and my pockets. And Gates is only donating a tiny fraction of the money he took from us to good causes; the rest sits in his bank accounts and the bank accounts of other early Microsoft employees.

      If you want to help children in need, donate your money and fight Microsoft's monopoly and business practices; in the end, that's far more efficient.

    13. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Carnegie, Rockefeller, Mellon, and now Gates... The robber baron syndrome. It helps them psychologically deal with the things they've done to become super-wealthy.

      You make it sound like the man rapes elderly women and leaves a single rose on their mangled dead bodies. His company took a few ideas from some other huge companies early on, and then used their lead in the industry to keep compitition from growing. At worst the man is guilty of anti-competitive practices. This isn't a James Bond movie. He doesn't have a seceret lab in the side of a volcano. He's said for years that he would give away most of his money.

    14. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by skiman1979 · · Score: 0

      You're comparing apples and oranges. Microsoft isn't donating this money. Bill Gates is donating it personally. Perhaps a better comparison would be Bill Gates versus Linus Torvalds in terms of charity donations. I have no idea what Torvalds donates, but at least it's comparing two individuals instead of an individual to a community of people.

      --
      Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    15. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by OgreChow · · Score: 1

      So I think the suggestion should be that the people who are saving money on Linux should also give back a little portion of that savings.

    16. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by hcdejong · · Score: 1

      And don't forget His opinion on publicizing a gift.

    17. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by LarsWestergren · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, I love Linux, but let's put things in perspective. A lot of people contributing to open source are students, or people who love programming. They are giving something (free time, programming talent) they have a lot of. So this quote from Jesus could be applied to us too.

      This topic ("Well, as a percentage of his total wealth this is nothing") always comes up when Gates charity is discussed. First of all, he can't give away everything he owns at once, much of it (I presume) is tied up in stocks, selling all at once would cause companies and whole markets plummeting.

      Besides, if you look at the total over time, as these people have done, you will see that it does in fact add up to quite a lot over the years. (Assuming, like I have, that the source is reliable).

      * $1 billion over 20 years to establish the Gates Millennium Scholarship Program, which will support promising minority students through college and some kinds of graduate school.
      * $750 million over five years to the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization, which includes the World Health Organization, the Rockefeller Foundation, Unicef, pharmaceutical companies and the World Bank.
      * $350 million over three years to teachers, administrators, school districts and schools to improve America's K-12 education, starting in Washington State.
      * $200 million to the Gates Library Program, which is wiring public libraries in America's poorest communities in an effort to close the "digital divide."
      * $100 million to the Gates Children's Vaccine Program, which will accelerate delivery of lifesaving vaccines to children in the poorest countries of the world.
      * $50 million to the Maternal Mortality Reduction Program, run by the Columbia University School of Public Health.
      * $50 million to the Malaria Vaccine Initiative, to conduct research on promising candidates for a malaria vaccine.
      * $50 million to an international group called the Alliance for the Prevention of Cervical Cancer.
      * $50 million to a fund for global polio eradication, led by the World Health Organization, Unicef, Rotary International and the U.N. Foundation.
      * $40 million to the International Vaccine Institute, a research program based in Seoul, South Korea.
      * $28 million to Unicef for the elimination of maternal and neonatal tetanus.
      * $25 million to the Sequella Global Tuberculosis Foundation.
      * $25 million to the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative, which is creating coalitions of research scientists, pharmaceutical companies and governments in developing countries to look for a safe, effective, widely accessible vaccine against AIDS.

      Oops, that article was from year 2000. According to the BBC, he has now given away $7.1 billion since 1994.

      --

      Being bitter is drinking poison and hoping someone else will die

    18. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by BlackHawk-666 · · Score: 1

      I do fight their monopoly, I'm a dyed in the wool Linux evangelist. Very hot on freedom, personal expression, and the ability to take control of your own hardware. Money is tight for me, despite a decent wage, but I do donate my time. Maybe I'm not directly helping a child in Africa, but I may be helping a person who *is* helping that child. It's a ripple effect.

      --
      All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
    19. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by dextroz · · Score: 0

      Actually, I'd like to think of him as a bit of a Robin Hood, he might swindle companies into expensive contracts, etc... but that's okay - because that is the only way you can make corporates cough up any real dough - just give them no other (practical) choice. Like you said... "the ends justify the means" in this case. In fact, Bill says that all his money, in the end, will go to charity leaving 'only' a million dollars each for his kids.

      --
      Where's my free iPod!? Until then, I'll settle for a kiss...
    20. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by SpartacusJones · · Score: 1

      Reading this made me think of something....Bill Gates has $750 million just laying around....that's $750 million he got from people who buy what he and his company sell....so basically he is redistributing the wealth of the masses by overcharging tham buy at least $750 million. If we wanted to give money to charity, we would...but don't overcharge us so YOU can give our money to charity and make yourself look good!

    21. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by tarius8105 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Linux community gives 100% up front. Microsoft takes 100% and gives a little - a very little - back. Which is more generous?

      As one person said in one of the comments further above. If your kid is dying you're last priority is what operating system you are going to use. Your priority will be to save your child by getting them the medicine they need. You cant really compare the contributions from the linux community to the contributions other organizations make.

    22. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Dysan2k · · Score: 1

      It's a good thing, but remember. It's his WIFE that normally donates to these charities, not him. She's been doing it for years, so at least something fruitful is being done with the money.

      Personally I dunno how much an individual could actually spend in a lifetime on his/herself. Have you ever really thought about how to spend a billion dollars? Outside of jaunts into space and $5M watches, not a whole lot. Not much that really makes much difference, at least. Perhaps I'm just not imaginative enough.

      --
      -What have you contributed lately?
    23. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Bester · · Score: 1

      Very few people die from polio, it's the crippling deformities that make this disease so nasty.

      Rickets is a disease of vitamin D deficiency. I'd like to see you try and vacinate against that. Plenty sun, calcium or phosphate is the trick to preventing this.

      Ebola. To my knowledge there isn't a vaccine for this disease. Though while nasty doesn't tend to spread to far and thus other nasty disease are concentrated on.

      Diseases that should be immunised against:

      • Measels
      • Mumps
      • Rubella
      • Pneumococcal
      • Hep A/B
      • Diptheria

      And those are the ones that I can remember off the top of my head.

      Charles

    24. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Dayflowers · · Score: 1
      It's the rentless pursuing of wealth with no other purpose than to build riches that's wrong.

      Why is it wrong? Its like a sport. Nothing more. Why is it wrong?

      Some people like to collect stamps, other people like to amass large amounts of money. Why is that wrong?

      --
      I am a speak english. Do you not? - Saroto
    25. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahh but after Carnegie, Rockefeller, Gette and now Gates have given all this "charity" we still havent found a cure to any of these diseases. This is a trifling amount and I would assume this was done for tax reasons. He will get it back somehow (the charities promise to spend an equivalent amount on MS products).

    26. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by utlemming · · Score: 1
      "the ends justify the means" in this case.

      Although there is much good done by the Gates Foundation to state that the overall effect of his wealth is good, is a fallacy. Just because he betters the lives of people with his money, doesn't mean that you should overlook the net effect of what bad has been done in the acquisition of that wealth.

      An interesting thing, since people have been quoting Machiavelli is the story of the Medici family. The short of it is, the Medici family, was incrediably wealthy, but was not royalty. Through the spending of wealth, the Medici family was able to become the most powerful family in all of Florance. The family used wealth only to their advantage while at the same time ruthlessly cutting down their oppopenants.

      Since the Machiavelli quote has been brought in, you have to ask the question of what is the purpouse of this donation? Is it being used to enhance the lives of millions, or is it a tax write-off and a publicity?

      My personal opinion on the subject is that we should neither say it is good or bad. In judging whether is something good or bad, you have to have the knowledge of how and why the decision was made. Since we neither have all the information, and we don't know what was the motivation for it, making judgment calls can't be done with any accuracy.

      --
      The views expressed are mine own and do not express the views of my employer.
    27. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by chthon · · Score: 1

      Yep, although I am not a practicing christian (catholic or otherwise), I have read the bible and everytime such a thing is published about The Bill and Melinda Gates Fund, I must think about those passages.

    28. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by slashgreg · · Score: 1

      Actually i'd thank the american tax payer, seeing as this charity is a very handy place for him to 'donate' money, thus claiming nice tax deductions, and still retain control of the money.

      still that said, i can't see the government having spent it this way...

    29. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Jace+of+Fuse! · · Score: 1

      Actually, I could blast right through a Billion Dollars without buying much for myself that I can't already buy.

      I would do it building a business from the ground up, hiring individuals, building a custom fascility in the right place, and then get started on a business that wouldn't even begin to bring in revenue for several years.

      If I were lucky, a billion dollars would be enough.

      --

      "Everything you know is wrong. (And stupid.)"

      Moderation Totals: Wrong=2, Stupid=3, Total=5.
    30. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A free OS is not going to prevent disease...

    31. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by N_Hill · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Help me to understand... Why is it that the vast majority of the /. Crowd possesses this fanatical hatred for anything Microsoft/Bill Gates? Completely irrational. I'm relatively unbiased about technology - Microsoft has its strengths and weaknesses and likewise *nix has its strengths and weaknesses. I accept both and utilize both. If I were to embrace Open Source completely would I have to become as fanatical...? Would it kill you to give Gates credit for working to save the lives of millions of less fortunate people?

    32. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by rben · · Score: 1

      Companies take their lead from top management. Microsoft isn't some rogue corporation going off doing bad things against the wishes of Bill Gates. If that was so, all he'd have to do is fire the managers that did such things, thus setting an example. On the contrary, Microsoft apparently promotes managers who use unethical and illegal tactics to generate additional sales.

      Managers don't go off and use questionable tactics without the full knowledge and support of their superiors. To do otherwise means losing your job and that nice pay check.

      A while back Microsoft changed it's policies on retention of email. They instructed everyone to delete all email as soon as reasonable and never to keep email past thirty days. Ostensibly this was done to save server space, which is probably part of the reason. On the other hand, it also neatly eliminates potentially incriminating evidence that might indicate which managers knew about decisions to use illegal strategies and how far up the chain of command such decisions went.

      Bill Gates isn't solely responsible for the bad behavior at Microsoft. Obviously managers had to be willing to bend and break rules and laws and they bear some of the guilt. The stock holders are also responsible. They sat back and counted their money even as stories about Microsoft's illegal activities were coming out. I haven't heard of any demands by stock holders that Microsoft cease it's monopolistic tactics. Finally, our government bears a large part of the rsponsibility for the current situation and the effect it has on software development. The Bush administration effectively neutered the Justice department's conviction of Microsoft when they told Justice that they couldn't seek to break up the company. As a result, Microsoft got a slap on the wrist and what should have been a ruinous penalty got turned into a marketing opportunity.

      So Yes, it was Bill, and Microsoft, and Stockholders, and the Government, and all of us who have not made it clear to our representatives in government that we won't tolerate this kind of behavior by a U.S. corporation.

      --

      -All that is gold does not glitter - Tolkien
      www.ra

    33. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Oh, shut up. He never forced anyone to buy his products, so if they are being overcharged, it's their own fault.

    34. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by bleckywelcky · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Sure, they aren't dying from polio, rickets, and ebola. But what now? They're still living in poverty and now they're gonna gripe and complain for the next 20 years that we won't give them more hand outs.

      I actually don't consider this a win-win situation. However, if the Gates foundation pledged $750 million to build schools and bring in teachers to educate the ones that DO survive normally, that would be a win-win situation. It's the old give a man a fish / teach a man to fish saying. Vaccinating a whole generation of poverty-stricken 3rd world humans will actually hurt the situation because we'll have a generation with a 80% survival rate instead of the normal 25% (or whatever it is). And they will go on to produce a shitload more poverty-stricken 3rd world humans. Then, where will the Gates foundation be to cough up the $7.5 billion needed to vaccinate that generation ... and the $75 billion to vaccinate the next generation ... and the $750 billion for the generation after that.

      If they learn how to raise their standard of living on their own, they'll be able to support themselves in the future.

    35. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by skinfitz · · Score: 1

      Linux community gives 100% up front.

      Just a pity that 0% of that 100% is documentation really.

    36. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by garaged · · Score: 1

      Because the way it is amassed, please dont make the fool out of you in national tv :-P

      --
      I'm positive, don't belive me look at my karma
    37. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Why is it wrong? Its like a sport. Nothing more. Why is it wrong?

      Some people like to collect stamps, other people like to amass large amounts of money. Why is that wrong?


      Some people like to rape and murder young children. Why is that wrong? Isn't that like a sport?

      Amassing large amounts of money isn't wrong by itself, but money doesn't get amassed by doing nothing. Usually, the actions that a person carries out in order to amass that much money have something wrong with them (not always, but usually it seems).

      The mafia amassed large amounts of money. Was that wrong? Ask all the people they had to knock off, ask all the taxpayers affected by their bribery, etc.

      And finally, while not as extreme as the previous examples, Microsoft amassed large amounts of money. Was it wrong? Well, some of the actions that led to this include illegal use of monopoly power to harm competitors (which means lots of people out of a job. I'm sure they aren't too happy about that), and the success of shoddy products over superior ones, which has caused incalculable losses, both monetary and otherwise, to all the users of those products. How much money is wasted by people and companies having to deal with all the worms and viruses out there? How much larger could our economy be if all these people hadn't wasted money on worms and viruses, or on overpriced MS software? How many more people would be employed, or have better-paying jobs? Just think: if our economy was much stronger and more successful, how much more would get donated to charities and to medical research overall? Probably more than BillG's meager contribution.

    38. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't break your arms patting yourselves on the back.

    39. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is about the attack on the Linux community stated in the above quoted article. I doubt anyone here is going to be anything but flad that people who were in need will not have much of their needs met.

      Secondly, the fact that you embrase Microsoft and Linux does not make you any more "unbiased" than someone who embrases Capitalism and Communism. The fact remains that Communism cannot exist without a defined enemy and as soon as peace sets in, it begins to disappear and a system much more like Capitalism sets in. (I don't mean the kind that we have in the USA, it's a bit different. If you study modern China and it's roots, you'll see what I mean.)

      I know some people are not going to agree with my communism claims, but please make educated comments - not just blind opinions from people who really havn't studied such topics outside of high school.

      (Sorry, about spelling and etc. I'm typing in a hurry.)

    40. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by khayman · · Score: 1

      Worst thing I read so far on slashdot.
      You would actually prefer for more people to die in third world to weed un-deservng ones out.

      What is children survival rate in your country? Are you sure you would be among the 25% you thibk deserve to live?

    41. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah, seriously
      That's why slashdot has gone down hill
      You can't compare a free software kernel to a founder of a software company that makes an OS that happens to be the monopoly for general purpose OS.
      plus, with all the back-stabbing and fraud that Mr. Gates has done for his Microsoft Corporation, you can never justify their existance, even if they do save the lives of a few.

    42. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever really thought about how to spend a billion dollars?

      Two chicks. Two hot chicks. At the same time.

    43. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by BlackHawk-666 · · Score: 1
      And perhaps they should stop building roads in your country to weed out the week people who can't build their own road. Maybe they should stop educating people in your country to weed out the ones too stupid to set their own curriculum and self study - hey, so what if you're five years old, you gotta make it on your own.

      This is not an either / or situation, there are other things which will also improve their standard of living and survival chances, these things are being done now. Meanwhile, you expect them to all be left to die or lie lives as cripples because you don't like the way someones else's money is being spent. You make my enemies list, not because I hate you or anything, but because I really don't need to waste my time reading such poorly thought out postings.

      --
      All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
    44. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by N_Hill · · Score: 1

      What a ridiculous remark! This is what I'm talking about! You even recognize your outlandish remark and then criticize me for making uneducated comments. Your concept of 'educated' falls within the lines your ideologies - anything apart from that is 'uneducated.' What is with some of you guys having to denigrate everyone who disagrees with you?

      This attitude will relegate you to the fringe forever.

      As for the REAL world - I run the I.T of a medium sized college. Using both Microsoft and *nix technologies makes our institution stronger and more robust. Its about realizing strengths and capitalizing on them... Not equating competing technology as 'Satan' or evil incarnate.

    45. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by jonhuang · · Score: 1
      Perhaps gates cause have used the money to set up special camps that could concentrate all the weaker, stupider, immoral, and diseased people in poorer nations into one place and then make them work (if possible) or die (if not).

      Then we could really have some super populations!

      This could probably work in america too!

      Conclusion: I hate you.

    46. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by AviLazar · · Score: 1

      Your reasoning for overcharge seems flawed. You are saying that because Billy has 750 million to give to charity he is overcharging his clients by at least 750 million. So if I donate to charity 1000$, does that mean I overcharged my boss by at least $1000? No that means I have surplus money that I saved and am donating it.

      This is not the first time Bill has given money to charity. I know he has given to AIDs research - and a lot of money. He is doing a great community favor. Give the man props when he is due his props.

      Oh and since everyone has the option of going to get a free os on their computer, whoever decides to pay for Microsoft products should not really complain. If you buy the product - a product that has alternatives - then you are endorsing it.

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    47. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by AviLazar · · Score: 1

      Your example is poor. Raping and murdering is an act that completely hurts other people. Amassing large amounts of money is not an act that completely hurts other people. Otherwise, you would have to say that amassing any amount of money hurts people - and last I heard - my savings account is not really hurting anyone (and yes I have more then just $.02 in the bank).

      Now if you want to say the method of getting that money could be harmful - then yes, there are ways of getting money and hurtnig people (i.e. robbing a bank, or in your example the mafia). But the act of amassing money, in and of itself, is not harmful.

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    48. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah they should give 100% back too and move back in time to Soviet Russia.

    49. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot the triple win, a monster tax write-off for Microsoft.

    50. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 1

      There is no vaccine for Ebola, and there can't be one for Rickets, which is due to Vitamin D deficiency (cure for this, stop being such wusses and GO OUTSIDE INTO THE SUN - unless you live somewhere too dark, in which case take a vitamin)

      --
      Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
    51. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is NOT an irrational hatred, it's a rational dislike and mistrust based on years and years of microsoft's, and in particular, bill gates' behavior.

      Why is this such a hard concept to grasp?

    52. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Nicholas+Evans · · Score: 1
      If they learn how to raise their standard of living on their own, they'll be able to support themselves in the future.
      And if they're all dead? How do they raise the standard of living then?
    53. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Now if you want to say the method of getting that money could be harmful

      Um, that's kinda what I said.

      Your example is poor. Raping and murdering is an act that completely hurts other people. Amassing large amounts of money is not an act that completely hurts other people.

      It does, if that actions taken to amass the money hurt people. In the case of MS, there's lots of destroyed companies, ruined careers, and unemployed people in their wake. On top of that, add all the negative effects to the economy of both their monopoly status, and the cost of dealing with their shoddy software and its viruses and worms.

      Any time you have something hampering the economy, people will get hurt. They'll be out of work, or underemployed. Ask anyone who lived through the Great Depression if the poor economy hurt them. It might not be quite the same as outright rape and murder, but it affects a much larger number of people. Of course, we're not in a horrible depression now, but the economy is not great either, and if MS weren't around, or had been behaving properly and legally all along, there's no telling how much better things would be.

      Otherwise, you would have to say that amassing any amount of money hurts people - and last I heard - my savings account is not really hurting anyone (and yes I have more then just $.02 in the bank).

      This is actually incorrect. Amassing wealth and doing nothing with it hurts the economy. Saving money takes it out of circulation (to an extent; banks loan money that you save, but this isn't the same level of circulation as spending the money), which reduces the size of the economy. Of course, you can't tell everyone to spend all their money and save nothing, because that's a recipe for disaster, but the other extreme is harmful too; saving too much and never risking any of it in investments prevents any real progress from being made.

      So yes, just amassing money actually is harmful. For an exteme example, imagine that everyone decided to withdraw all their money from their bank accounts, and cash in all their stocks and bonds, and save their money as cash under their mattresses. They would only spend money on absolute essentials. What would happen to the economy? It would collapse, plain and simple. Then millions would be out of work and starving. I would call that harmful.

    54. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by GlassHeart · · Score: 1
      Let me remind you that a good number of these third world nations are poor today partly because the wealthier nations invaded, colonized, pillaged, or otherwise exploited them for decades or even centuries. Many of these countries are overpopulated in relation to their resources partly because the rich countries are hogging them. Consider that they only reason they live in overpopulated countries (and thus deserve death in your book) is because they were born there, and rich countries won't allow them to just move in. Oh, and way to go referring to humans as a "shitload". What have you done to deserve life?

      Biologically, these children probably fought off more diseases to reach age 5 than you have to reach age 20 or 30, assuming you grew up in the first world. Odds are they are more resilient to disease than you are... so perhaps it is you who should think of stepping off the planet?

    55. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      we'll have a generation with a 80% survival rate instead of the normal 25% (or whatever it is).

      And you're trying to argue that this is a bad thing? Disgusting.

    56. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More like his example is retarded. I stopped reading at that point.

    57. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      Of course, this grand gesture is really nothing more than the minimum required by law to keep Gates' billions sheltered from taxes. A cynical person would suggest that this particular vehicle just allows major drug companies to sell their drugs to Gates & M foundation at full price, whereas otherwise they would have to discount. A cynical person would suggest that Gates isn't paying for the vaccines, the US taxpayer is.

      Generosity? No, I don't see it here. I don't see anything beyond the legal minimum he is required to do, and I have my doubts about the chosen vehicle. Why couldn't the money be invested in building drug industries in the target countries? That would impress me. This doesn't.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    58. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by MoxFulder · · Score: 1

      I agree. I don't like Microsoft's products very much, and I like their licensing and "compatibility" strategies even less...

      But Bill Gates's charitable efforts are pretty awesome. Hard to disagree with anything there. He's doing a lot of good things with his money.

    59. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, so everything you say is true, so what? You can send food to an area plagued year after year by famine and make yourself feel good about yourself or you can get those people to leave an area that is obviously uninhabitable or overpopulated. Look at the hell-hole that Haiti has become. They've literally denuded the island.

      The parent posting makes a very insightful but unpopular point, the fact that these societies aren't self-sustaining and overpopulation will create even more misery. If you increase their likelyhood of living then you'd better be ready for the mess you'll create further down the road.

      There are two forms of evil, that by despots and that by the benevolent.

    60. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by GlassHeart · · Score: 1
      Ok, so everything you say is true, so what?

      So what? How about treating the very serious issue of poverty and overpopulation with a bit more compassion than mowing the front lawn, for a start? How about not referring to humans whose pitiful conditions today probably provided for your comfort through sins of your forefathers as a "shitload"?

      You can send food to an area plagued year after year by famine and make yourself feel good about yourself or you can get those people to leave an area that is obviously uninhabitable or overpopulated.

      Where did I say that all we should do is to keep the poor barely alive? You will note that the post I was responding to proposed that the Gates funding be diverted (with the specific intention of letting the "weak" die off) instead to the education of those who survive. Do I have to explain that opposing this "genetic engineering" does not mean that I think education or relocation efforts should not be funded?

    61. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      "Very few people die from polio, it's the crippling deformities that make this disease so nasty"

      Sure, few people die from this disease. In fact it is the complete destruction of the muscular and nervous support of their respiratory systems that kills them. Or it is the resurfacing of the same symptoms that they experienced during the active portion of the disease (when they are older and weaker) that kills them. Of course, not being able to breathe and drowning in your own fluids is NOT polio, so technically you are right. However, there is nothing more disheartening than watching a loved one slowly die over the course of a decade or more, not able to breathe on their own, not able to get out of bed, and constantly tormented by physiologically induced anxiety.

      I wonder why is it that you do not think that polio should be immunized against? The vaccine is easily administered and quite safe.

      Just so you know, my father could have easily died at a young age due to polio. If it were not for iron-lungs and the somewhat advanced medicine of the USA I would probably never have been born. Unfortunately, I do not think that many developing countries have medical facilities available that are comparable even to ours in the 1950's.

      Trying to discount the suffering that polio causes seems unbelievably callous to me. Since you have probably not had first hand experience with it like I have I can excuse this as the ignorance of the uninformed. It is hard to remain objective, though, when I hear my father say that he wishes that he had died a few years ago when he was in the hospital, rather than suffer a continuation of the the pain and suffering that has been the hallmark of his lifetime.

      I think that if you had been around someone who had a relatively bad case of polio you might see things differently. In an effort to let you understand some of what it is like I will ask you a question I ask myself sometimes when I think about my dad. What is worse: a disease that kills someone or one that makes you dispise being alive?

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    62. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by flacco · · Score: 1
      If your kid is dying you're last priority is what operating system you are going to use. Your priority will be to save your child by getting them the medicine they need.

      i wonder how much money the medical community has wasted on shitty, overpriced software because of the Microsoft monopoly. i'll bet it's more than $750M

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    63. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might consider taking a course on basic economics before opening your uninformed mouth.

    64. Re:Microsoft, not Bill by bleckywelcky · · Score: 1

      Wow, you really are near-sighted aren't you? You can't get over your ignorance to see that just vaccinating a bunch of children isn't going to fix the nation's problems. Please, tell me, what is next after they vaccinate the children? There is no infrastructure, so they can't go to school, they can't get a job, and they've lost most of their farming and agriculture skills because of food handouts we've given them in the past. What now? They're running around with nothing to do but fight with each other wait for more handouts. Exactly how is this the right first step to be taking? Please, enlighten me to how this will solve all of their problems.

  5. This is great. by TooTechForYou · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Regardless on weather you like Microsoft or not, you have to admit this is great. But about the Linux community matching, maybe the same percentage of thier profits would be possible. The truth is however, that these are two completely diffrent situations.

    --
    -- Nic
    1. Re:This is great. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "Regardless on weather you like Microsoft"

      Yes, the weather is nice at Microsoft.

    2. Re:This is great. by TigrOoOo · · Score: 0

      I have a grudge against the company, as I personally do not like their tactics or schemes, but as a person (as in only the person, not the businessman), I have noting against Bill Gates and family. On the contrary, his act is extremely generous, and admirable. Well done BGates, signed: Linux fan.

    3. Re:This is great. by TooTechForYou · · Score: 1

      Give me a break, it's early.

      --
      -- Nic
    4. Re:This is great. by arivanov · · Score: 1

      Off the top of my head. These are approximate prices and they are likely to vary per market up to several times. They are also one-shot prices so if you are running a campaign and buying bulk you may get better pricing (not by much for some of the vaccines).

      Standard course of childhood vaccinations is above 200$ as per US prices. Under standard I mean MMR, VZV, Polio, TB, that cough thing, Diphteritis, the strain of the meningococcus that has a vaccine for it and a few minor items. If you add the tropical ones like Cholera, Yellow Fever, etc you are going to add 100-200 more.

      The developed countries have vaccination programs already so we should be looking only at the ones who need it and nearly all of them are tropical. So 750 million by 400 makes around 2 million. That is less then the children in 2-3 African countries. Even if we manage to get a 10 times volume discount we are still looking at less then half of Central Africa.

      Typical billigatus foundation PR exercise. Same as the Indian fight AIDS campaign and a few others. I guess some people never change.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    5. Re:This is great. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If your education system is good enough, you will not have to think about the differences between weather and whether, the correct thing will come naturally to you, whether it's early or late.

    6. Re:This is great. by govtcheez · · Score: 1

      Jesus, this is pathetic. You're complaining that he's only donating enough to vaccinate every kid in 2-3 countries? What the fuck is wrong with you?

    7. Re:This is great. by unixbugs · · Score: 0

      Just goes to show how well the money donated to education was actually spent.

      --
      You are about to give someone a piece of your mind, something which you can ill afford...
    8. Re:This is great. by arivanov · · Score: 2, Interesting

      1. There is no point in vaccinating only sections of the population. A few years later the disease is back. There are precedents where it is worse then before. 1960-es Asia strains of smallpox were infecting people who have been vaccinated with some of the vaccine varieties so they had to be revaccinated with the new generation of vaccines.

      2. There is a precedent where the industrialised countries pooled all of their resources through the WHO and eradicated a disease. Smallpox. The money involved if converted to modern prices was more than the billigatus grand gesture and it was not a piecemeal one-off PR exercise. The eradication of smallpox involved several new vaccine strains, blanket vaccinations of entire countries, maintaining vaccination programmes and missions for 10+ years in a country. It was a coordinated effort that lasted nearly 20 years. And succeeded.

      3. There are a number of projects like the smallpox one that can be completed with under 500 million. Eradication of polio is a prime example. There are a few others. Burning 750 millions for PR purposes does not strike me like something particularly usefull compared to giving 75 million to any of these projects. This of course will mean that the Billigatus will have to assume that someone else will actually decide how the money is to be used which is something his foundation has so far disallowed.

      I can continue ad naseum but this is yet another billigatus PR exercise. In fact most of the efforts nowdays are like this. Noone wants to give money to something that will run for 20 years or more but may solve the problem once and for all.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    9. Re:This is great. by p0rnking · · Score: 1

      So what are you trying to say? That if he can't pay the full bill, then he shouldn't pay for any of it?
      And for this to be some "typical billigatus foundation PR excercise" is kind of expensive don't you think (especially when you include everything else that his foundation has donated)?

    10. Re:This is great. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Then I guess it's pointless to give food to starving people in countries as well? Sponsor a child? etc, etc.

      Bill Gates gives money to many foundations every year, and this is one that just so happens to be making news. I'm sorry you're jealous he has 750 million to give but shut the hell up about this being a PR exercise.

      Given the fact that this is Bill Gates, someone much smarter than you'll ever be, I'm sure he knows exactly where his money is going.

    11. Re:This is great. by SirTwitchALot · · Score: 1

      Perhaps it's a PR exercise, or perhaps it's an attempt to raise public awareness. Someone famous donates some large amount to some charity, other people hear about the charity, and donate as well. Just because his money may not vaccinate every child out there, doesn't mean that the amount of residual money brought in won't be able to foot the bill. Already there are comments about the Linux community matching this amount. I say let's match the amount, but not because we want to one-up Billy, but because we want to do something good for the children of the world.

      --
      Go away, or I will replace you with a very small shell script.
    12. Re:This is great. by pigwin32 · · Score: 1

      The people making money out of this are the drug companies producing the vaccines. Plus a quick google will reveal there is a considerable body of evidence that suggests vaccination is not nearly as safe or effective as the medical fraternity and drug manufacturers would have you believe. Vaccines in general are not subject to the stringent testing required of other drugs.

    13. Re:This is great. by arivanov · · Score: 1

      Depends which disease and which vaccine are you talking about. Many are known to be ineffective, but are used for the exact reason that their massive use decreases the pool of disease carriers. As a result despite the fact that 20% of the vaccinated are still vulnerable (that is for VZV), it is still used because the massive vaccination decreases the chance that people in the 20% will get it.

      An important note - you actually have to perform a continuous vaccination campaign. Sometimes for 10s of years for it to have an effect. Not a one-off 750million PR exercise.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
  6. Bill Gates, the Robin Hood of modern times by Kman_xth · · Score: 1

    steals from the rich, donates to the poor

    1. Re:Bill Gates, the Robin Hood of modern times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you mean "steals from everybody, becomes rich himself, then donates to the poor".

    2. Re:Bill Gates, the Robin Hood of modern times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yeah, lets protect the poor from disease and viruses, but we can't fucking write a OS that can deal with them.

      Anyway Bill Gates is not a robin hood. His actions only demonstrate the immoral high price of vaccinations that all people should have access to, because people it is the decent thing to do, it is the right thing to do.

    3. Re:Bill Gates, the Robin Hood of modern times by BohKnower · · Score: 1

      This means that Bill Gates is not Satan? Damn Linux Zealots ;)

  7. How Nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Very nice of them.

    Article submission is a complete troll however. Seriously, can't the editors screen somwhat better?

    1. Re:How Nice by Ithika · · Score: 1
      The article submission is not a troll, it's a prompt for a discussion. This is, after all, a discussion forum. These are responses to the discussion. Yours was a response. The fact that it missed the point entirely is somewhat unfortunate, so let me rephrase:
      • Considering the ethical nature of the Free software movement, etc., is this justification for running the Free Software Foundation, Mozilla Foundation, and others, as charitable organisation?
      • Is it more effective to make money in a more ruthless fashion (ie, like a business) and use that money to promote F/OSS more effectively? Think how much progress would be made if the Firefox NYT advert was the rule and not the exception!
      • Or is it just that the nature of the beast encourages time-rich rather money-rich contributors to donate to the cause?
      It wasn't a troll. It was a question too subtle for you to pick up on.
  8. Flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The Linux community will match it when they have as much money as Gates. Not many people or companies have $750Mil to give.

    Is it possible to mod a news article as flamebait?

    1. Re:Flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Is it possible to mod a news article as flamebait?
      ...Or just fucking stupid.

      Talk about living in a dream world. Maybe if their was an open medical research group that could built and produce affordable vaccines, then it might be possible.

    2. Re:Flamebait by thegrassyknowl · · Score: 0, Redundant

      The amount of money spent on (overpriced?) Windows and it's associated guff (Office, Visio, M$ Project, Exchange Server, etc, etc, etc) combined with the loss of productivity that everyone experiences daily when either their desktop or the Windows server crashes could add up to a lot more than $750M.

      Of course it's not like companies that are saving money by going for cheaper (not necessarily Linux, or even free) options are going to donate all their savings to help those less fortunate, so let's be thankful that BillyG is making such large donations (of which there have been a few that I remember reading about), for whatever reason he is making them.

      --
      I drink to make other people interesting!
    3. Re:Flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are a lot of people in the community. If a lot each give a little then you still have a lot.

    4. Re:Flamebait by EraserMouseMan · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      "...mod a news article as flamebait?" Come on you hating /.ers. The guy's giving 750 mil to help children. Sheesh! Besides if you put together IBM, Sun and RedHat I'm sure you could come up with 750mil to give over 10 years and it wouldn't be a drop in the bucket compared to their profits on the open source industry.

    5. Re:Flamebait by vettemph · · Score: 1

      Every Linux install leaves you with $200 or more to spend on something meaningful instead of giving it to Bill. For instance, I gave $250 for tsunami relief this year and I volunteer for the American Heart Association. I also donated to groklaw and the firefox ad. Just because I'm a linux user doesn't mean I'm always cheap.
      -vettemph

      P.S. Who is bill buying with this money? Is it going to one of the big pharmaceuticals that lobby for closed source solutions? :)

      --
      The government which is strong enough to protect you from everything is strong enough to take everything from you.
    6. Re:Flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This anonymous member of the Linux community donates $2900/year. That's 10% of his/her net income.

      So it'll take a quarter of a million like this one to match Bill Gates. I like to think there are that many. Are there? I have no idea.

    7. Re:Flamebait by El+Cabri · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      The Linux community is fighting for more sensible intelectual property laws, which would make life-saving drugs much more accessible to developing countries than money would.

      This is disgusting. How much of that money will go directly back into big pharma ? How much stock of big pharma companies does Gates hold, directly or indirectly ? Is this legal in the first place since the money is coming from his foundation (presumably tax-free ?)

    8. Re:Flamebait by brunson · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Let's do some math...

      Bill is worth about 50 billion.
      Let's say he needs a billion dollars per year to live on (hey, a guy has to eat, right), that leaves 49, so 750 million represents 1.53% of his disposable wealth.

      I've got about $1500 in the bank, after living expenses I have about $8,500 a year to do with what I will. So the $250 I gave for Tsunami relief represents 2.5% of my discretionary income.

      So, I'm twice as generous as Bill Gates. Nice.

      --
      09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0
      Jesus loves you, I think you suck
    9. Re:Flamebait by boinger · · Score: 1

      Think of it in percentage of total net worth.

      In that case, he's donating somewhere around .2% per year. That's not much.

      (this math has been brought to you by Huge Assumptions and Egregious Extrapolations in the name of Laziness)

      --
      Send your friends messages of love at fuck-you.org
    10. Re:Flamebait by darco · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think the part that he is referring to is the line that aid "Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity". That line is most certainly flamebait.

      Bill Gates has been very successful, and he wants to spread it around to good causes. Nothing wrong with that. It's almost expected from someone in his position. It's really silly to somehow pit his generosity against the linux/open-source/free-software community. The two have nothing to do with each other.

      One could easily argue that the value to society of open-source and free-software exceed $750M by several times, perhaps more. Saying that Bill Gates is more generous than the open-source/free-software community is misguided and pointless. The two situations are incomparable.

      I think it is great that Bill Gates is doing this. But is this article flamebait? Most certainly, if only for the line mentioned above.

      --
      — darco
    11. Re:Flamebait by darco · · Score: 5, Informative

      Jesus christ, the guy gives 3/4 of a billion dollars to help children around the world get vaccinations, and all you can do is make accusations?

      You, sir, are a true hater.

      --
      — darco
    12. Re:Flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "So, I'm twice as generous as Bill Gates. Nice."

      Great, so let's examine your business practices in detail and discuss them on Slashdot to determine if the "ends justify the means" in your case.

    13. Re:Flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmm I would bet this guy is a cubicle slave - which means he doesn't have any 'business practices' - he is just a tool for the man.

    14. Re:Flamebait by Frobozz0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You can't compare money in the bank to someone's worth. You should see what Gates has in the bank and then consider that for the basis of your calculations. It's vastly shy of $50B. In fact, goin on this premise you should consider your investments including life insurance, and equity in a home and/or major equipment.

      I've never thought Gates was a saint-- but giving $750m to charity is good for everyone.

      --
      "Politicians find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the people."
    15. Re:Flamebait by codemachine · · Score: 1

      To be fair, Bill's assets probably aren't quite as liquid as yours (ie. he couldn't just cash out that 50 billion).

      But it is interesting to put it in perspective.

    16. Re:Flamebait by ravee · · Score: 1

      It is not whether a person has 750 million $$ to give or not that is important. But the mind to contribute his mite for the welfare of the poor and the needy whether he contributes just $1 or $millions that is important. And gate's willingness to contribute a part of his wealth for a noble cause is really significant here.

      Why don't we see a Oracle CEO or Apple CEO donate anything ? Even they make lots of money.

      ravee
      --
      http://linuxhelp.blogspot.com
      http:/ /veg-recipes.blogspot.com
      http://thoughts2005.blo gspot.com

      --
      Linux Help
      for all things on Linux
    17. Re:Flamebait by ThousandStars · · Score: 1
      According to Forbes, in 2003, Gates was worth $40.7B. So you're off by 20% right there. Since then he's given away more money and I don't believe the value of his stock has climbed any. This site puts that value closer to $30B. I can't vouch for the accuracy of it because I don't feel like doing the math. Keep in mind, too, that these figures represent wealth, which couldn't possibly be accessed all at once without decreasing the value of what's left, because so much of his money is tied up in MS stock. So we can assume that he's donating a larger portion of what he has than is indicated by your post. Furthermore, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has about $27B in assets -- which means Gates has already given away quite a bit of cash.

      This isn't trying to denigrate your contribution to charity or Gates'. It is, though, trying to demonstrate that, even on a relative scale, you're not necessary donating as much as you think you are. "So what?" the reader may ask -- and that's the deeper point. How much you give relative to Gates doesn't matter. If people wouldn't turn charity into a wang-measuring competition, I think the world might be at least a marginally better place.

    18. Re:Flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which brings up an interesting question. Why didn't he donate money for tsunami relief? It's more urgent and fashionable than vaccination.

      I guess that, as the OP mentioned, viruses must be close to his heart, or something...

    19. Re:Flamebait by EnronHaliburton2004 · · Score: 1

      In that case, he's donating somewhere around .2% per year. That's not much.

      How much of your net worth do you donate every year?

      Note that the the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation donates to many causes. In 2004, the foundation donated nearly $8 billion.

      http://www.gatesfoundation.org/Grants/default.ht m

    20. Re:Flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People who post on the internet how much they donated to charity are complete twats.

    21. Re:Flamebait by EnronHaliburton2004 · · Score: 1

      This is disgusting.

      So are you saying that the Gates Foundation shouldn't make a $750 Million donation? What purpose would that serve? You'd end up with millions of unvaccinated children, and the Gates Foundation would end up with more money.

    22. Re:Flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd go further and say that the majority of Linux users give to the betterment of mankind nearly every day, donating 100% of their efforts to mankind, not stealing from everyone and giving back to a few newsworthy ones.
      Who has done more for mankind, someone who works and gives in everything he does, on a daily basis, or one who doesn't give a single dollar until he starts losing an antitrust lawsuit, then gives millions?

    23. Re:Flamebait by at_slashdot · · Score: 1

      If each one of us save $500 for Windows and the crap that you have to install on it and use Linux than we'll be able to buy vaccine for all the cildren in the world.

      --
      "It is our choices, Harry, that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities." -- Prof. Dumbledore
    24. Re:Flamebait by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      You, sir, are a true anti-intellectual.

      Seriously. El Cabri makes an excellent point about the harm that draconian intellectual property laws do to the third world. Some have even gone so far as to argue that propping up those laws is Gates' primary reason for making these donations. After all, if need trumps legal agreement when it comes to lifesaving medicines, why not when it comes to critical software?

      But no, you don't want to think at all beyond "Bill Gates donated money to a good cause! Let's worship!" Because you label anyone who wants to think outside your narrow framework a "hater", I think you're being anti-intellectual. The fact that you couldn't come up with a decent word like "misanthrope" only confirms it.

      I don't know how much merit these accusations have, but I think they're worthy of discussion.

      --

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

    25. Re:Flamebait by wandernotlost · · Score: 1
      If people wouldn't turn charity into a wang-measuring competition, I think the world might be at least a marginally better place.

      I welcome the charity based wang measure-off. Much better than, say, using car size and/or inefficiency as a projection of wang dimensions.

    26. Re:Flamebait by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      Not to diminish Gates' legitimate charity, but was any of that in software?

      I can see it now, hundreds crates of unsold copies of Windows 2.0 are arriving in Indonesia as we speak. MS writes off a billion dollars on its 2005 taxes.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    27. Re:Flamebait by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1
      According to Forbes, in 2003, Gates was worth $40.7B. So you're off by 20% right there.

      The reason he's "only" worth 40B is because he already gave billions to his foundation. And now the foundation is giving that away.

    28. Re:Flamebait by science_gone_bad · · Score: 1

      2 historical points here:
      1) The gift is coming from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, not Bill himself. The foundation is an independent organization run by Bill's parents so it's them we need to thank not Bill.

      2) Bill had never given ANY of his $$ away (unlike the rest of the M$ originals) UNTIL the DOJ started with the Monopoly proceedings against M$.

      So while I applaud the foundation's work, Bill's part of it was an attempt to shield his $$ from collection by the Feds should the monopoly proceedings have gone the way that most /.'rs hoped.

      Actually most good works are still being done by the independent organizations set up by the robber barons of the 19th century. The barons themselves very rarely gave $$ away willingly. The initial foundation seed money was given set up by the barons for similar reasons as Bill, and it is mostly because they fought to remain independent that they still exist today. Doing their works from the interest off the seed money and further donations.

      my $0.02

      --
      "I never get lost because everybody tells me where to go"
    29. Re:Flamebait by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      With all my debts I think the carities owe me.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    30. Re:Flamebait by darco · · Score: 1

      What frustrates me is that he took action to help people, and you criticize him for it. Whether is is worthy praise or not, I don't really give a shit. It's pretty obvious that you aren't impressed, and that's fine--I respect that.

      What I give a shit about is when someone does a good thing and the first words out of someone else's mouth make it seem like he just shouldn't have bothered. Not that it wasn't enough or that he could do more, but that he was trying to do something illegal to begin with. "He couldn't possibly be trying to help people, he must be trying to screw us over somehow!"

      Why can't it just be taken at face value? He gave $750 to helps kids get vaccinated around the world. Not impressed? Shrug, and move on.

      --
      — darco
    31. Re:Flamebait by antiMStroll · · Score: 1
      Perspective please. Start here:

      http://www.gatesfoundation.org/nr/public/media/ann ualreports/annualreport03/flash/Gates_AR-2003.html

      Navigate to Financial ... Financial Statements. The Foundation made (repeat: made ) two and a half billion dollars in 2003 alone. Look under projects and you'll see plenty of initaitives to get Microsoft product into libraries and schools. This doesn't begin to touch on the tax benefits, and its questionable the Foundation would exist without them. Much of what the Foundation does is in its own 'enlightened self-interest', not a bad thing in itself but please don't position it as a personal or selfless sacrifice on the part of the Gates. It simply isn't true.

    32. Re:Flamebait by EnronHaliburton2004 · · Score: 1

      MS writes off a billion dollars on its 2005 taxes.

      Microsoft is a different entity from the Gates Foundation. There is certainly a relationship between the two, but the relationship is limited.

      MS has no need to dump old software onto the Gates Foundation-- they want people using WinXP anyways, MS offers a substantial discount to nonprofit organizations, they can already write off unsold copies of Windows 2.0 as a loss (I think...). If MS tried to dump old software onto the Gates Foundation, some watchdog groups would have a field day.

    33. Re:Flamebait by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I realize that. I just found the idea that there are cartons of Windows 2.0 packages mouldering in some warehouse somewhere quite amusing.

      I remember Windows 2 (well, 2.1 anyway). It was butt-ugly. Even worse than that Playskool theme XP ships with.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    34. Re:Flamebait by EnronHaliburton2004 · · Score: 1

      The foundation is an independent organization run by Bill's parents so it's them we need to thank not Bill.

      Well, you do need to thank Bill also, since he donated a substantial chunk of change to one of the foundations-which-merged-to-become-the-Gates-found ation.

      And Gates is involved with where the money goes.

      He's still a filthy billionaire, but is more generous then most other billionaires.

      Truth is, just about every Nonprofit organization started with a grant from a filthy-rich person, or at least started with a grant from a Foundation which was founded by a filthy-rich person.

    35. Re:Flamebait by darco · · Score: 1

      damnit, I'm not saying that it is "personal or selfless sacrifice on the part of the Gates" or anything like that, and I'm starting to get pissed off that people are characterizing it that way.

      Making me out to be some kind of pro-microsoft pro-gates fanatic is ridiculous! I don't use windows!

      What I'm saying is quite simple: DON'T BASH PEOPLE FOR DOING GOOD THINGS. Nothing more. Nothing less.

      --
      — darco
    36. Re:Flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Give me a break - you can't look at how much he gives as a proportion of what he owns, for the simple fact that he owns so much.

      If I had 10 billion dollars and gave away 5 billion, I would still have 5 billion -more than I could ever spend in my lifetime. It doesn't matter if I gave away 50% of my wealth, since I would still have about 1000 - 2000 times as much money as most people earn in their entire lifetimes.

      Plus, he didn't give 750 million. His charity foundation did. There is a difference - even if he put most/some of that money in there to begin with.

    37. Re:Flamebait by antiMStroll · · Score: 1

      I not saying any such thing. What I am saying is giving credit for an action so obviously tainted with self-interest is misplaced. Good effects are not synonymous with good acts. Even the Mafia gives to charity.

    38. Re:Flamebait by vettemph · · Score: 1

      Bill Was giving $750M over ten years, thats 0.153% of 'this years' income. You are 20 times more generous than bill gates and you don't even have an agenda! On the other hand, this $750M is just one of Gates grants. Once it's all said and done maybe you are three times as generous.

      --
      The government which is strong enough to protect you from everything is strong enough to take everything from you.
    39. Re:Flamebait by darco · · Score: 1

      If the Mafia gave to charity, I would not attack them explicitly for giving to charity. I might attack them for their illegal activities, but the charity bit wouldn't be a part of it.

      I'm not giving credit to anyone. I'm saying you shouldn't outright attack someone just because they are doing a good thing, even in enlightened self interest.

      It doesn't make Microsoft good. I just want people to have a more coherent argument than "anything Microsoft does is bad, so this must be bad too. Quick! somebody find the evil! It has got to be in there somewhere!".

      You seem to have a better grasp of things than the original comment I was replying to. I'm only replying now because you continue to mischaracterize what I am saying.

      Unlike most people on slashdot, I use Linux every day. I am an avid open source advocate. I am not a cog of the Microsoft machine. I just don't think it helps the free-software cause to attack donations that Bill (directly or indirectly) makes. I'm not asking ANYONE to give him credit, nor do I want them to give him credit.

      --
      — darco
    40. Re:Flamebait by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      I think "if you disagree, just shrug and move on" is also an anti-intellectual position. It strikes me as being a way of silencing debate.

      I don't mind giving Bill Gates credit where credit is due. But I find a story like this to be a fascinating starting point for a detailed discussion about the effects of IP law on third world nations. If Gates is trying to do something wonderful for the world (and I don't doubt that he is), he's still in the unenviable position of serving two masters.

      --

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

    41. Re:Flamebait by darco · · Score: 1

      If you want to take what I said out of context to label me an anti-intellectual, go right ahead--I can't stop you. I'm getting kinda tired of explaining myself over and over again anyway.

      But the second paragraph I found interesting.

      If Gates is trying to do something wonderful for the world (and I don't doubt that he is), he's still in the unenviable position of serving two masters.

      I'm not quite sure what two masters you are referring to. Care to elaborate?

      --
      — darco
  9. Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity.

    How can we? We don't sell anything.

    However, we can provide these children with a free open-source operating
    system that runs will on older machines, and comes with thousands of applications,
    tutorials and how-to's.

    1. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      I can't wait to see the look on some fly-covered African's face when we give him an OS and he has to edit a config file in order to get flash animations of food working on his box... we provide.

    2. Re:Matching the generosity? by blastedtokyo · · Score: 4, Informative
      No you can't, the child's dead before they might possibly be productive (let alone afford) a computer.

      Because if the child's not vaccinated, there's a good chance they'll be one of the 10 million who die every year before the age of 5 (source: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews /TPStory/LAC/20050125/VACCINE25/TPInternational/Eu rope).

    3. Re:Matching the generosity? by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "Mommy I'm starving... and thirsty. Also the malaria is really starting to kick in bad, where is all the kindness when we need it.?"

      "Well honey, we don't have any medicine, food or safe drinking water. But good news, you can now browse the internet without any risk of your personal information being stolen thanks to a great man named linus and his band of merry men!"

      "But mommy, we don't have a computer, or electricity."

      "Don't worry sweety. I'm sure as soon as we can safely browse the world wide web, all your troubles will go away."

    4. Re:Matching the generosity? by jb.hl.com · · Score: 4, Insightful
      However, we can provide these children with a free open-source operating
      system that runs will on older machines, and comes with thousands of applications,
      tutorials and how-to's.


      Except THAT ISN'T WHAT THEY NEED OR WANT.

      They need food water and vaccines, how fucking Stallman-compliant your operating system is way down the list of priorities.
      --
      By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
    5. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
      "Mommy I'm starving... and thirsty. Also the malaria is really starting to kick in bad, where is all the kindness when we need it.?"

      "Well honey, we don't have any medicine, food or safe drinking water, because the filthy rich countries and their shitty capitalistic drug and biotech companies, who only care about shareholders wont gives us access to cheap generic medicines, or let us keep our seeds for replanting.

      "But mommy, how can they do this?"

      "Because they put pressure on the WTO, World Bank, IMF and the UN, using monetary, military and political muscle to get their own way."

    6. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Here sweety, have some of this malaria drug which was developed on a Linux cluster.

    7. Re:Matching the generosity? by madprof · · Score: 1

      A good reply to the OP.
      Gates isn't quite as much of a shitbag that some people wish to make him out to be. He's made money out of all of us, and out of plenty of people in the developing world too, but he's putting such a tremendous amount back in to the developing world in areas where the money really is needed that you have to admire that in him.

    8. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, because it would have been IMPOSSIBLE to develop on a Solaris cluster or a Cray. Gimme a break.

    9. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My point was that we're doing something to make the world a better place. While this may not help the starving and sick, it may be helpful to others where they have food but are lacking on other areas, like IT.

    10. Re:Matching the generosity? by VanillaCoke420 · · Score: 1

      This is not flamebait... just thought you would like to know.

    11. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Right, because it would have been IMPOSSIBLE to do 'x' without money from 'y'. Give ME a break.

      By your logic we should be dismissing Bill Gates' donation since vaccinations could just as easily be done with money from Steve Jobs.

    12. Re:Matching the generosity? by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, Linux sure can help vaccinate kids...

      Why does everything have to be a competition between the Windows world and the Linux world? Bill Gates donated 750 million. Good for him. It's not some sort of "Windows rocks!" statement from him. I'd imagine that he just wants to do something good with all that money. Maybe he figures that when he goes, it isn't going with him.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    13. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Touché.

    14. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I've probably spearheaded giving away more computer equipment to schools than anybody else on the planet. But I've had to come to the inevitable conclusion that the problem is not one that technology can hope to solve. What's wrong with education cannot be fixed with technology. No amount of technology will make a dent. It's a political problem. The problems are sociopolitical. The problems are unions."

      - Steve Jobs, WIRED interview, 1996

      http://www.wired.com/wired/archive//4.02/jobs.ht ml ?topic=(none)&topic_set=wiredpeople

    15. Re:Matching the generosity? by Antonymous+Flower · · Score: 1

      Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity.

      Easy. When these kids are well and grown they will use Linux and its apps to get free .RIAA and .MPAA files. :D

    16. Re:Matching the generosity? by ticklish2day · · Score: 1

      If the source code was open source|freely available, the Linux community would be glad to fix any bugs arising within the human body... how dare you ask us for $$$?

    17. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, Bill Gates' donations are going to make life more difficult there? The places are already overcrowded from overfucking. With more people surviving past 5, .. damn, it's gonna get ugly fast.

    18. Re:Matching the generosity? by duffahtolla · · Score: 1
      It's too much like Micheal Jackson visiting a childrens hospital after being charged as a pedophile.

      Yeah it's nice, buts its a PR stunt to improve his image none the less. How many donations to the needy did MS do when it was the darling of the press and loved by all as a shining example of American capitalism?

      The more negative the image, the more he donates. It's standard operating procedure for any large company.

      Check for yourself US vs MS timeline, MS vs Bad PR

      I am glad he did it. But it does not change my opinion of him, because I know WHY he did it.

    19. Re:Matching the generosity? by skiman1979 · · Score: 1

      Flaimbait? How is it flamebait to point out that linux (or any other software for that matter) is not going to help save starving children? Although it is a good operating system, Linux isn't the answer to everything.

      --
      Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    20. Re:Matching the generosity? by skiman1979 · · Score: 1

      I'd mod you up if I could.

      Besides the fact that Gates is the Chairman and Chief Software Architect at Microsoft, what does Bill's donation have anything to do with Microsoft? If this were Donald Trump, or some other billionaire, would everyone be complaining? This has nothing to do with Microsoft people.

      --
      Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    21. Re:Matching the generosity? by madprof · · Score: 1

      Well I hope we continue to persecute him then. it can only be a good thing for everybody (apart from his bank) if he gives away massive amounts of his fortune to help the world's neediest people.
      That's a pragmatic view - there's no moral spin that I am trying to overlay. it really is a beneficial thing for him to give away loads of cash.

    22. Re:Matching the generosity? by aeroelastic · · Score: 1

      Your'e dead right. Also, any charitable donations count as a tax write off. Although this might be out of the goodness of his heart, it's not like he doesn't get anything back. Big companies do this all the time.

      It's not even from his personal bank account anyway, it's from The Bill and Melinda Gates foundation. Which I'm sure does lots of good, and saves Bill Gates loads of taxes in the process.

      --
      "It doesn't take a rocket scientist" -I guess I should leave then
    23. Re:Matching the generosity? by The+Slashdot+Guy · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      "Mommy I'm starving... and thirsty. Also the malaria is really starting to kick in bad, where is all the kindness when we need it.?"

      "Well honey, here's a big heaping plate of shut-the-fuck-up and a can of quit-your-god-damn-whining to wash it down with.

    24. Re:Matching the generosity? by Wordsmith · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Who says they don't need both? They need many, many things.

      They need medicine, food and shelter to keep them healthy.
      They need education to empower them, and help them lead productive lives.
      They need community and family support systems to keep them emotionally stable in the face of tragedy and poverty.
      They need economic aid to give them the boost needed to apply their skills and education.

      And, if all these things work the way we'd idealistically hope, they'll eventually be living lives of higher quality, protected from disease and the elements in reasonable ways. And at some point, they might have enough money and use for a computer (or some other less PCish technology that also depends on code somewhere down the line) ... and freely available, freely redisrtibutable, freely examiniable, freely modifiable software is better than the alternative. Especially since it goes hand-in-hand with the uber-democratic principals of free speech and the marketplace of ideas.

    25. Re:Matching the generosity? by Patoski · · Score: 1
      However, we can provide these children with a free open-source operating
      system that runs will on older machines, and comes with thousands of applications,
      tutorials and how-to's.

      Except THAT ISN'T WHAT THEY NEED OR WANT.

      They need food water and vaccines, how fucking Stallman-compliant your operating system is way down the list of priorities.


      The aid agencies which are responsible for distributing the aid certainly do though. Keeping costs down enables more "food, water and vaccines" to reach the people who need it.

      Also, having a viable (but inexpensive) technology infrastructure enables governments and people to better prepare for and react to disasters such as locust plagues, tsunamis, famine etc.
      --
      G. Washington on Government "it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master."
    26. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try sitting in the bush for a month, and then tell me you're not longing for a box to hack on.

    27. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The places are already overcrowded from overfucking.

      Mod parent up! There's a semen of thruth.

    28. Re:Matching the generosity? by kanotspell · · Score: 1, Informative

      Modded insightful?!? Come on folks learn to recognize a joke.

    29. Re:Matching the generosity? by wondafucka · · Score: 1
      They need food water and vaccines, how fucking Stallman-compliant your operating system is way down the list of priorities.

      Yes, many aspects of open sourced computing are wasted on the world's needy.

      There will be a time in the next half century, however, when open sourced education will take off, and a single computer will help educate a village.

    30. Re:Matching the generosity? by andrew71 · · Score: 0


      Compare this to windows's revenues and see if it does not match $750M.

      --
      13-4=54/6
    31. Re:Matching the generosity? by xtracto · · Score: 0

      "Give a man a fish; you have fed him for today. Teach a man to fish; and you have fed him for a lifetime"--Author unknown

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    32. Re:Matching the generosity? by cain · · Score: 1

      "Make a man a fire, and you warm him for a night. Set a man on fire, and you warm him for a lifetime." -- Author unknown.

    33. Re:Matching the generosity? by bcattwoo · · Score: 1
      "I've probably spearheaded giving away more computer equipment to schools than anybody else on the planet. But I've had to come to the inevitable conclusion that the problem is not one that technology can hope to solve. What's wrong with education cannot be fixed with technology. No amount of technology will make a dent. It's a political problem. The problems are sociopolitical. The problems are unions." - Steve Jobs, WIRED interview, 1996

      What? Every slashdotter knows that computers all by themselves can provide clean drinking water, cure malaria, stimulate crippled economies, while giving your mouth a clean minty feeling. They can also teach children better than any human teacher and even if that child only learns how to use the computer itself, he will be well-prepared for a job that will eventually be shipped overseas. This "Steve Jobs" guy doesn't know crap.

    34. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now that Bill has vaccinated them they will live to get thoes computers. Realy, why would we re-vaccinate them?

    35. Re:Matching the generosity? by bcattwoo · · Score: 1
      First off in regards to the big tax write off, it's not like he is saving any more money in taxes than he is giving away. A tax deduction is not the same thing as a tax credit. With like $30 billion in assets it is hard to see why he would give a flip about taxes anyways, but then again seem people can never have enough.

      Your second paragraph seems to contradict itself. If it isn't from his personal account then how is he saving loads of taxes? If he donated the money to start the foundation, why does it matter if this donation comes from the foundation or his "personal" account anyway?

    36. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Give a man a linux box, frusterate him until he installs Windows. Teach a man linux, give him a lifetime of ridicule and abstinence.

    37. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      However, free open-source operating systems with many free applications are helping the governments in developping countries to save a lot of money. This money that otherwise would be used to buy software is now being used in public health, education, and many other social programs. That makes a big difference!

    38. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except THAT ISN'T WHAT THEY NEED OR WANT.


      You seem to have missed the poster's point.

      The poster wasn't trying to say that the free OS contribution has the same immediate value to polio-ridden children as medical care. No one would claim that, because it is stupid.

      The poster was simply pointing out that the open source community was ALSO making a free and useful contribution...and one which ultimately can provide some benefit to children as well as adults.

      There are many noble causes in the world...each of which meet different needs and serve different purposes....it is silly to expect any person or group to champion them all.

    39. Re:Matching the generosity? by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      "How can we? We don't sell anything"

      What happened to the argument about selling services and support? What happened to the argument that progammers can still make a decent living developing OSS/free software?

      If those arguments are valid, there should be a lot of money around.

    40. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the ...? Someone can't recognize a joke when they see it and the post gets moderated "insightful"? Mod this post down, please.

    41. Re:Matching the generosity? by brunson · · Score: 1

      Right, the public which have been overcharged for their software are clearly not intelligent enough to decide what to do with money they would have saved by not buying crappy monopolistic software. Bill should decide for them.

      That's exactly why I want the government to tax me higher, because I couldn't possibly be trusted to properly invest for my retirement or donate to charities of my choice. I'd just stupidly give it to the dying people in Africa or Indonesia, then what would the urban welfare kids use to buy their Nikes and Ludakris albums?

      --
      09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0
      Jesus loves you, I think you suck
    42. Re:Matching the generosity? by heathm · · Score: 1

      Give a man a fish, feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish, feed him for life.

      The point is, Linux lowers the barrier to entry for third-world countries to get involved with technology. Poorer countries can use Linux to start improving their technological base and hopefully, in turn, improve their economies. This way, in the future, the children don't need a wealthy man to give them money for vaccinations because they'll have the money to pay for it themselves.

      True, right now children in most poor countries could care less about Linux but, long-term, Linux can help them solve the problem permenantly. Obviously it's going to take more than Linux for an economic turn-around but Linux certainly helps.

      Is what Bill Gates is doing a good thing. Of course. I hate his business practices and his arrogance but I have to admit, he's a real philanthropist outside of computer technology. When Bill Gates dies he's only leaving 0.02% of his fortune to his children and the rest is going to charities. I find that very commendable.

    43. Re:Matching the generosity? by Total_Wimp · · Score: 1

      No you can't, the child's dead before they might possibly be productive (let alone afford) a computer.

      This is like saying the doctor is more important than the teacher. In some respects, this is correct. You can't teach a dead child. But in other respects this is dead wrong. A child that grows up and has no way to make a living is going to be a drain on resources that would otherwise, well, go toward treating sick children.

      Any way you look at it, both are very respectable proffesions. Any way you look at it, the world would be pretty bad off without one or the other.

      Any way you look at it, the open source community is making a MASSIVE contribution in monitary value to the children of the world and they deserve to have that contribution treated with respect.... Just like Bill Gates deserves respect for his very generous contributions.

      TW

    44. Re:Matching the generosity? by freemacmini · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. Software enables the people in the third world to participate in the global economy. This enables them to buy food, water and vaccines.

    45. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i just wonder.. wich OS powered the cluster of cimpujters used to develop some of the latest version of the vaccines ? And how many more children will be able to recieved the shots because the price per shots is lower ?
      think about that. everyone contribute, just as their capabilities (financial or intellectual) permits them...

    46. Re:Matching the generosity? by argmanah · · Score: 1
      Except THAT ISN'T WHAT THEY NEED OR WANT.

      They need food water and vaccines, how fucking Stallman-compliant your operating system is way down the list of priorities.


      How did the parent troll post above get modded 5 insightful?

      There are millions of children in the world who need food and vaccines. There are also millions of children in the world who have food and vaccines but need a decent education. There are also adults who have food, vaccines, and an education who are suffering from terminal diseases of all kinds, from AIDS to cancer.

      The fact that Bill Gates donated $750 mil to vaccinations is commendable. However, remember that the original submitter of the article was challenging the open source community to match Gates' genorosity. The original poster was simply defending that stance that the open source community does already contribute to society in their own way.

      It is very narrow minded to think that just because there is a very worthy cause in feeding and vaccinating children, that all other causes such as education and cancer research is automatically worthless.
      --
      Overrated Moderation: This posts sucks... because.
    47. Re:Matching the generosity? by Torham · · Score: 1

      Most of GE Healthcare's latest generation X-Ray and Surgical navagation equipment run on GNU/Linux. Sure they could have just written the software for Windows and included this price in the cost of the machine, but I hate to see the doctors face when the system has a BSOD in the middle of an operation. :)

    48. Re:Matching the generosity? by jonhuang · · Score: 1
      Here sweety, have some of this malaria drug which was developed on a Linux cluster. Here sweety, Bill gates has given:

      $43 million to genetically re-engineer bacteria to grow a cheaper malaria drug.

      115 million in 2001 to set up malaria research foundations

      $168 million in 2003 for malaria research. Not to say that the linux cluster was not a noble thing, but gates may have even paid for it.

    49. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spoken like the true communist that it seems everyone in the Linux community truly is.

    50. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spoken like the true retarded kid that everyone who posts like you truly is.

    51. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spoken like the $undesirable_personage that everyone in $group_you_belong_to is!

      $clever_sig

    52. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know if it originated with Terry Pratchett, but he did use it in one of his books. Might've been Mort.

    53. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Inexpenive computers can go miles to managing the logistics necessary to get the world's children the food and water (and even vaccinations) they need. OSS is intrinsic to solving the problems of the world. Until Bill releases open documentation of the .DOC format, he can kiss my open-source ass.

    54. Re:Matching the generosity? by shiftless · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's right, it's the fault of those damned "greedy corporations", and those loathsome wealthy first world nations. How dare we, given the same starting resources as everyone else, build a civilization full of people who can take care of themselves and technology to help in that regard? It's just not fair! Excuse me while I go suck on my mama's tit and cry in the corner about how unfair life is.

    55. Re:Matching the generosity? by fbjon · · Score: 1
      "... but the man that burns twice as bright, burns only half as long."

      Moral: Burn slowly, starting from toes.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    56. Re:Matching the generosity? by spectecjr · · Score: 1

      "Make a man a fire, and you warm him for a night. Set a man on fire, and you warm him for a lifetime." -- Author unknown

      Actually, Author is Terry Pratchett on that one.

      --
      Coming soon - pyrogyra
    57. Re:Matching the generosity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More like: "Mommy I'm starving... and thirsty!" "Shut up. I'm making you 28 more brothers and sisters." "But Mommy, we don't have enough food as it is!" "I said shut UP! It's my right to make as many children as I want. Fuck-em if they can't take a little starvation and AIDS."

  10. Bahh by rbarreira · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity

    Someone mod this -1 Troll...
    --

    The AACS key is NOT 0xF606EEFD628B1CA427BEA93A9CA9773F
    1. Re:Bahh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I mod points could I would....

    2. Re:Bahh by bwalling · · Score: 1

      Someone mod this -1 Troll...

      Actually, that would be a good idea. We could have actual data on what types of articles people wanted to see, instead of just scattered comments like this one. It shouldn't be that difficult to implement, because it's not that different from a poll.

    3. Re:Bahh by rbarreira · · Score: 1

      Yep, that would be a good idea, but I don't think they would implement it... They would think of "bad image", although I would think it would be the opposite - those sucky articles make slashdot look like shit.

      BTW, as someone else as already pointed out here, the submitter of this story is a known troll

      --

      The AACS key is NOT 0xF606EEFD628B1CA427BEA93A9CA9773F
    4. Re:Bahh by May+Kasahara · · Score: 1

      Oh don't worry. I noticed that the submitter of this story used his (unmunged) email address. If my experience is anything to go by, his inbox should be filling up with Nigerian spam in no time. Wouldn't be surprised to see it fill with flames as well, in this case :P

    5. Re:Bahh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah that's a good idea, fill it with what he wants.

      Judging by what has been posted so far, go ahead and prove him correct by doing that.

  11. Matching generosity by tod_miller · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Well, about 1/7 of the worlds population would have to give a dollar. Only counting working people, that goes way up.

    Just think, to amass this much 'generosity' how much the world must have already paid to him (including developing countries).

    Money fades, Linux stays forever. Of course, if everyone who uses Linux were to donate the cost of a winXP home license to a needy cause, that would be sensational.

    Good pulicity for them though. In other news SCO donate free 'SCOnix' (?) licenses to hungry children.

    --
    #hostfile 0.0.0.0 primidi.com 0.0.0.0 www.primidi.com 0.0.0.0 radio.weblogs.com
    1. Re:Matching generosity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As usual, the SlashDot community has no good answer to this obvious act of generosity. Most of you are so busy bashing Gates and Microsoft, that you refuse to see through all that towards all the good MS (sometimes) does. Well done Mr. Gates!

    2. Re:Matching generosity by Welsh+Dwarf · · Score: 1

      OT, but I thought the Fortune cookie for this page was appropriete ;-).

      If you want to know what god thinks of money, just look at the people he gave it to. -- Dorthy Parker

      That said, back to the story, this is cool, and it will really help people.

      OTOH Let's see if the Linux community can donate (7.10^6/50.10^9) of their welth.

      For those too lazy to do the math, out of 20000 (an average annual salery where I live) that comes to 2.8.....

      --
      Ask 8 slackers a question, get 10 awnsers (a citation, but I can't remember from who)
    3. Re:Matching generosity by Finuvir · · Score: 1
      Of course, if everyone who uses Linux were to donate the cost of a winXP home license to a needy cause, that would be sensational.

      I would if Dell hadn't forced me to give it to Bill Gates first. I guess some of that $750M is mine then.

      --
      Why is anything anything?
    4. Re:Matching generosity by l3v1 · · Score: 1

      Of course, if everyone who uses Linux were to donate the cost of a winXP home license to a needy cause, that would be sensational.

      Woo, woo, stop right there. So those who drop their cash to MS are saved (badly formulated, you get the point), those who don't donate to those in need ? Quite disturbed thinking you got, indeed. Instead, let those who drop their cash to MS take it to donations and use Linux instead, how would you like that one ? I guess not much.

      It's good to see those who have Everest-high piles of cash spend a bit to the well-being of those in need. Be it Gates, or anybody else, it's good.

      Alas, saying things like Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity. is just plain stupid. No, moron. No, retarded. Well, takea pick and double it.

      --
      I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
    5. Re:Matching generosity by tod_miller · · Score: 1

      I didn't make a point in saying that linux users should donate, I was saying the costs taken from mom and pop for microsoft are far more than people would donate.

      Microsoft gave a tiny (well gates puts his name on all the benevolent work) splice of its money to charity, which was a huge ammount.

      I donated a tiny slice of mine, which probably paid for the stamps to send the thank you letter to Bill.

      Thanks Bill.

      --
      #hostfile 0.0.0.0 primidi.com 0.0.0.0 www.primidi.com 0.0.0.0 radio.weblogs.com
  12. Gates' Hidden Agenda: do the math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    $750 Million = about 375 million vaccinations = about 300 million living adults in 14 - 18 years = at least an additional 250 million Windows XP-2020 licenses. At $400 USD each that's $10 BILLION.

    This outperforms Microsoft stock even. Genius.

  13. Number of users by aking137 · · Score: 1

    The original poster says:

    "...Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity."

    But as there aren't quite as many Linux users as there are Windows users out there, it'd only be fair to expect us to raise an amount proportional to the $750M raised by the Windows users.

  14. This is part of his plan by brian0918 · · Score: 2, Funny

    This is just the beginning of his campaign to create a more secure human being, which will eventually include various bug fixes, tracking chips, emotion inhibitors, and one bionic extendo-grab arm.

    1. Re:This is part of his plan by the_pooh_experience · · Score: 1

      It will never work if he keeps insisting on giving human beings administrative privileges by default! Can you imagine his gall!

      Forgive me... it is early. I have to go renice my sarcasm process.

  15. wow.. that's alot of money by furtivefelon · · Score: 1

    linux community? It's ganna take a lonnng time for any normal individual to cough up 750 million dollors. However, we'll look to big linux distributors for the answers :D

  16. Much of the work... by The+Fanta+Menace · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...done by free software developers is charity, anyway. It might not be vaccinating kids, but at least they'll be able to afford a free OS when they don't die of whatever would have killed them before Mr Gates came along.

    --
    -- Even if a god did exist, why the fsck should I worship it?
    1. Re:Much of the work... by mjh · · Score: 1

      Excellent point! We should be able to quantify the donation that free operating system developers have already made to those same kids by counting the number of them that use a free OS. Multiply that number times the cost of a Win XP license and that's how much has already been donated.

      But, of course, that number is really small in comparison to how much free OS developers have donated to the world in general. For every million users of a free operating system, that's a $100 million donation.

      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    2. Re:Much of the work... by black+mariah · · Score: 0

      That's the most retarded bit of self-serving circular reasoning bullshit I've ever read in my entire goddamned life.

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
  17. Small Percentage by Mr.Dippy · · Score: 0, Troll

    Okay let's say Bill is worth 50 billion dollars on paper. 750 million is something like 1.5% of his total worth? Is this a huge amount for him? It would be like if I had a hundred bucks and I gave the homeless guy on the street a $1.50

    --


    -Dipster
    1. Re:Small Percentage by fishfinger · · Score: 1

      I concur with this completely. It's easy to be 'generous' when you have more money than you can spend!

    2. Re:Small Percentage by Bertie · · Score: 1

      Only less so, because when you've got countless billions in the bank, you've got more money than you could ever possibly need, so if you give it away you really won't miss it at all. If you've only got a small amount of money, and you give the same proportion away, you might feel the pinch.

      Let's face it, when you get to Gates levels of wealth, it's just numbers. The only reasonable thing to do is put it to some practical use for the good of humanity, whether that's eradicating disease, building libraries or whatever. I commend him for this, but I really don't see what else he could spend it on, anyway.

    3. Re:Small Percentage by Mr_Silver · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Okay let's say Bill is worth 50 billion dollars on paper. 750 million is something like 1.5% of his total worth?

      Given that there are plenty of weathly people who give nothing to charity, anything Bill gives is better than that - whatever the percentage.

      Is this a huge amount for him? It would be like if I had a hundred bucks and I gave the homeless guy on the street a $1.50

      Unless you live in your parents basement and own nothing, I very much doubt you are worth only $100.

      Your post makes it sound like you don't think that his 750 million is particulary generious. Given that he didn't have to make the donation and could have easily kept the money for himself (benefiting no-one but him), I would say you're wrong.

      --
      Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
    4. Re:Small Percentage by millwall · · Score: 5, Insightful

      First of all, I'm quite sure that 750 million is more than 1.5% of his total assets.

      Second of all, even if it's only 1.5% of his assets, it's a good thing, how many of you have donated 1.5%?

      Why don't we all try to donate 1.5% of our assets instead of whining about the poster's flamebait.

    5. Re:Small Percentage by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but I bet Bill gets a much more meaningful tax deduction from his $750M than you would from your $1.50...

    6. Re:Small Percentage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It would be like if I had a hundred bucks and I gave the homeless guy on the street a $1.50

      It wouldn't be like that at all. The reason being that $100 doesn't get you much, so you have a reasonable use for all of it.

      $50bn, on the other hand, is too much for anybody to be able to spend in a lifetime. Gates could live an extravagant life for decades to come, and he won't have even got through 1% of his money.

      Gates could probably give $45bn without it having any impact whatsoever on his life. But he's given less than $1bn. Don't look a gift horse in the mouth and all that, but get it in perspective.

    7. Re:Small Percentage by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      Considering the average american gives somthing on the order of 53 dollars per year (including givings through taxes). Thats about a dollar a week. Average person pulling in a decent job probably makes 35,000 a year. That is .015% per year. Bill is doing his share.

    8. Re:Small Percentage by pyota · · Score: 1

      i must say it is really pathetic how you people find it within you to completely overlook what an immense humanitarian acheivement thie gates foundation is. it goes a long way to alleving poverty, disease and other horrors. if you are in need of someone to despise, start with with your politicians who have long been killing and torturing in order to make their evil way in the world. bill gates, after all, is only a businessman.

    9. Re:Small Percentage by scrub76 · · Score: 2, Informative
      This is a ridiculous statement. And one that is categorically wrong. The fact of the matter is that the Gates Foundation is doing an enormous amount of good work *and donating huge amounts of money in the process*. In the four years since it was established, the Gates Foundation has established a $27 Billion endowment. The 750m is only the most recent announcement. You could make a reasonable case that the Gates Foundation's impact on public health may eventually rival that of the World Health Organization's.

      It is all well and good to say that "if I had that sort of money, I'd donate huge amounts of it too", but he is actually doing it. If you are an American (or Canadian, or Western European, or reading /. pretty much anywhere), then you likely *are* affluant consiering that a full half the world's population lives on less than $2 per day (http://www.globalissues.org/TradeRelated/Poverty. asp). And we (as affluant societies) could and should do more to help close this gap.

    10. Re:Small Percentage by Jugalator · · Score: 1

      Okay let's say Bill is worth 50 billion dollars on paper. 750 million is something like 1.5% of his total worth? Is this a huge amount for him? It would be like if I had a hundred bucks and I gave the homeless guy on the street a $1.50

      How much of your total worth do you use to donate?

      I think it sounds like a pretty normal amont.

      1.5% of my total worth would be much more than I donated for the Tsunami victims recently.

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    11. Re:Small Percentage by batemanm · · Score: 0
      Given that there are plenty of weathly people who give nothing to charity, anything Bill gives is better than that - whatever the percentage.

      This is true

      Unless you live in your parents basement and own nothing, I very much doubt you are worth only $100.

      He was making a point using number which were easy to calculate. I very much doubt he is worth $100 as well.

      Given that he didn't have to make the donation and could have easily kept the money for himself (benefiting no-one but him), I would say you're wrong.

      I doubt if he kept the money that it would have benefiting him in any way. The guy is worth around 50 billion (according to the grandpartent). After this donation he is still worth over 49 billion that is still a massive amount of money and it is unlikey that at some point in the future he will be down to his last 750 million in order to really need the money he just donated. He does get something from this donation he get publicity and good will. I think donating the money has done more for him than if he just kept it (not to belittle the donation I think it is a good thing). Come one even people on slashdot are now saying that he isn't all bad, next there is going to be flying pigs and a large order placed from hell for central heating.

    12. Re:Small Percentage by geldfuss · · Score: 1

      Actually, if all you had was $100 to your name, and you gave $1.50 of that to the homeless guy on the street, that'd strike me as pretty generous on your part, having only $100 to your name.

    13. Re:Small Percentage by HungSoLow · · Score: 0
      Ok, a more reasonable estimate:

      I'm a student and I have around 20,000 in assets.. 1.5% of 20K is 300 bucks... that doesn't seem like I would be leaving myself in a lurch if I donated that money. In fact, I've spent maybe 200 last summer sponsoring people in charity events (marathon's, etc..) and I donate my time for free tutoring math, which is more-or-less the equivalent of billy putting out his chunk of change. The thing that's worse, there are people with a much worse financial situation than I am in and do a lot more than I do ... but these people don't make the news.

    14. Re:Small Percentage by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      Okay let's say Bill is worth 50 billion dollars on paper.

      "On paper" means he doesn't actually have $50bn sat in the bank. I have to wonder quite how much of his total worth is tied up in shares (especially of MS), and quite what it would do to the share price(s) if he tried to sell them all at once.

      Just because you're worth X on paper doesn't mean you can quickly and easily get your hands on that money. That's not to say that he doesn't have a staggering amount of cash at his disposal, just that you're using the wrong figure.

    15. Re:Small Percentage by VanillaCoke420 · · Score: 1

      So how much of your savings do you donate? More than 1.5%, I guess?

    16. Re:Small Percentage by Malfourmed · · Score: 2, Informative
      Okay let's say Bill is worth 50 billion dollars on paper. 750 million is something like 1.5% of his total worth? Is this a huge amount for him?

      Let's put it this way. One individual (via a Foundation, granted) donated considerably more to charity than the entire US government committed in aid for the recent tsunami disaster. Also more than the entire US population gave in private donations for that same disaster.
    17. Re:Small Percentage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Giving away such an amount of money is generous, no doubt. But the comparisons I have seen do not match. Having 100 bucks and giving away 1.5 is not as having 50 Billion and giving away .75.

      You must take account the proportions. The more money you have the less it hurts to give away a bigger percentage of it. Things in this world have prices. There are very few things with very high prices. There are even fewer things with high prices that can satisfy. The more money you have the less you can do with it to satisfy yourself more.

      50 Billion : .75 Billion can not be set in comparison to 100 : 1.5 the way it is stated here.

    18. Re:Small Percentage by thatjavaguy · · Score: 1

      Why should Gates give it all away now?

      No-one gives away their whole fortune in a single go. What would it achieve?

      Far better to give big donations when they are needed.

    19. Re:Small Percentage by JPelorat · · Score: 1

      Again, that $750 million was not stuffed into mattresses or piled in a huge Scrooge McDuck vault for him to swim in.

      Whether cash in the bank or value of stock, it is being invested and used to create jobs and grow businesses, create new products and services, fund the infrastructure we use every day.

      Bill Gates' money benefits an enormously large number of people, just not directly coins-in-the-pocket style. That didn't change when he donated it to this cause.

      --
      Hokey statistics and ancient misconceptions are no match for a good thought in your head, kid!
    20. Re:Small Percentage by I+Be+Hatin' · · Score: 0, Troll
      "On paper" means he doesn't actually have $50bn sat in the bank. I have to wonder quite how much of his total worth is tied up in shares (especially of MS), and quite what it would do to the share price(s) if he tried to sell them all at once.

      Why does he have to sell the shares? Most likely, he's giving the donations in the form of stock... the added benefit is that he can deduct the full value of the donation from his taxes without having to pay the capital gains tax on the appreciation.

      --
      I know god exists. I read it on the internet, so it must be true.
    21. Re:Small Percentage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I only have 1 asset, so tell me how do I donate 1.5% of my PC :)

    22. Re:Small Percentage by gnalre · · Score: 1

      I don't think you appreciate why he is doing it. Very rich people, i.e ones with more money than they can possible spend in there life time. get to the point when they start thinking about how history will see them.

      By donating large amounts of money to charity they hope to rewrite the history books so future generations will see them as philanthropists. Its the only thing their money has not boughtthem(and until immortality comes on the market in a pill form, it is the only way to achieve it) rather than the ruthless buisness men they really were. Look up Carnegie, Rockerfeller, Getty.

      The truth is altruistic people do not become multi billionaires. They do not suddenly have a mid life conversion to nice people. They still look at the world in terms of profit and loss.

      If this was'nt the case it would not be the Gates foundation, it would be the third world foundation or anonymous donations to the red cross.

      When you judge these things you should not look at the botom line, but at the whole history. If someone robs a bank of 10 million, but gives 5 millionj to charity does that make him a better person?

      --
      Choose your allies carefully, it is highly unlikely you will be held accountable for the actions of your enemies
    23. Re:Small Percentage by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      This $750 million is on top of his existing annual charity donations which already total a commitment of about twice that. Plus a considerable amount of his wealth (in terms of MS stock) belongs to his foundation.

      Compare this with other multi millionaires.

    24. Re:Small Percentage by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      Looks as though someone else been reading Mark 12:42-44 .....

      Of course, Bill Gates does not deserve most of this money in the first place. The whole concept on which Microsoft was founded stinks, and the correct response to this (in)famous document should have been a dragging into the nearest toilet followed by a thorough beating. What can't be owned can't be stolen.

      Gates and co. might actually have earned a little respect from me if they had bought out the patent rights on a few life-saving drugs {is this another crazy concept, or what? ..... they have the right idea in Cuba ..... the Cuban NHS is empowered to synthesise any life-saving drug, and patent encumbrances be damned, on the basis that saving a human life is more important than earning royalty fees for some fatcat corporation} and turned them over to the Public Domain. Or maybe bribed the Roman Catholic Church to install a woman Pope {who would naturally approve of birth control and the ordination of women into lower orders of the Priesthood, and hopefully seek a reunification with the Church of England reversing the Bull[s**t] of Pope Leo XIII in 1896}. That would have been a worthy gesture.

      Really, this is no different than some ordinary working-class person buying a copy of the Big Issue.

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    25. Re:Small Percentage by sig226 · · Score: 0

      I remember an interview with Bill a long time ago,
      when he was only worth billion or so. When ask what
      he would do with his money when he died , he said donate almost
      all of it to charity, with only a few million left
      to relatives. He felt money should be earned.

      This was before he was married, his wife seems to
      have gotten him to open up the wallet before he
      dies.
      Tom

    26. Re:Small Percentage by dr.badass · · Score: 1

      Okay let's say Bill is worth 50 billion dollars on paper. 750 million is something like 1.5% of his total worth?

      You're ignoring the huge amount of money and resources donated by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation in the past. In fact, this $750 million is in additon to another $750 million they pledged in 1999 to the same organization.

      But what's another $12.5 million for immunization in India, or $43 million for antimilarial drugs here and there. After all, it's just a drop in the bucket to Bill Gates -- he would donate more if he weren't so greedy and evil, right? They set up that Foundation as a tax dodge, and certainly not as a way of making sure that money gets directed at the right groups doing the right things, and not people just looking for a handout. No, there's definitely no need to make sure the money gets spent making a difference and not pissed away by NGO bureaucracy. You can just "donate" and forget about it, like you do with that $1.50 to the guy in the street who's just going to go buy some Wild Irish Rose and hit you up for another $1.50 tomorrow.

      Yeah, I'm kind of annoyed at the way Slashdotters seem to have reacted to this news.

      --
      Don't become a regular here -- you will become retarded.
    27. Re:Small Percentage by LtOcelot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The truest measure of generosity is not what a person is willing to give, but what he retains for himself. Though Bill Gates donates millions of dollars, he retains the standard of living of a billionaire. His generosity is less than that of a middle-class man dropping a dollar in a Salvation army kettle, which in turn is less than that of a homeless man doing the same with his last dollar. It is certainly worthy of respect, but no more than these.

    28. Re:Small Percentage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      It's easy to donate when it does not affect your quality of life, it's a lot harder to donate when you take food out of your mouth to feed the needy.


      The actions of Mr. Gates have ensured his wellbeing. His sharing does not inconveniance him one bit.


      With that being said, Mr. gates would not have this much excess cash without over charging for his product. While most can afford his product, little effort has been made to help those who cannot. Sometimes people were sent to the unemployment lines to ensure he gets his cash.


      Fine he gives some away. How does that help those whose lives he has destroyed? At least the Linux community allows all to benefit from there own actions.

    29. Re:Small Percentage by apoupc · · Score: 1

      You DO realizes he donates ALL the time, right? Your math is faulty.

      If I had 50 Billion and I donated 500 Mil for Aids, 500 Mil for Cancer, 500 Mil for the homeless, 500 Mil for Education for children, 750 Mil for people that are starving, and 750 Mil for this... would you complain and only look at the ONE donation I made?

    30. Re:Small Percentage by dustman · · Score: 1

      Why don't we all try to donate 1.5% of our assets instead of whining about the poster's flamebait.

      Can I donate 1.5% of my net worth instead? It'd be a quick way to make a hundred bucks or so : )

    31. Re:Small Percentage by fusionpit · · Score: 0

      People also seem to forget that a majority of his Net Worth is held-up in stocks. He just can't go an cash in $3,000,000,000 in stocks without the market being greatly afffected.

    32. Re:Small Percentage by Rurouni+Joe · · Score: 1

      Some info for comparison

      did you know the average american gives over 2% of thir income to charity. pretty good considering the government gives less than 1 percent

      http://www.catalogueforphilanthropy.org/cfp/db/g en erosity.php?year=2004

    33. Re:Small Percentage by realdpk · · Score: 1

      It simply does not scale like that, not into the millions of dollars. It would be irresponsible of Gates to give away all of his money to one charity, and all at once. A charity that would get that much money instantly could quickly turn in to a Red Cross behemoth where you never know what's happening with the money (except that a large bulk of it is going into the pockets of the executives). Nobody wants that.

    34. Re:Small Percentage by sosume · · Score: 1

      So do you really think that there are many countries that donate over 1% of their budget to the third world? The UN directive is 0.7 percent per year and only a hand full of coutries comply to that directive.. notibly not the 'richest' country in the world.

    35. Re:Small Percentage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well. Lets see just exactly how generous that is.

      750 million over the next ten years

      We'll go with the 1.5% of total worth.

      So, lets say you're pretty rich with a car and a house; a total worth of around $100,000.00 (yes, the house and car are paid off!)

      At 1.5% thats a donation of $1500.00 or, $150.00 per year, or $12.50 to that tramp each month.

      Yes, 750 million is a large amount of money. There is no denying that. Is it generous? When taken comparitivly as I have shown above, it isn't overly generous, no. Many of us pay much more than that. For example, I pay over $25 per month to charity.

      Take also the example of a Mormon who gives 10% back to their church.

    36. Re:Small Percentage by REggert · · Score: 1

      Last I checked, my net worth was somewhere around -$20,000 (mostly due to student loans). 1.5% of that is -$300. Hell, I'll even go one up and donate 2%! Now who's the generous one, Mr. Gates?

      --

      cp /dev/zero ~/signature.txt

    37. Re:Small Percentage by witte · · Score: 1

      If Bill Gates donates Mega$$$, everytime unsavory pictures of him are making waves on the net, we know what to do, don't we ? :)

    38. Re:Small Percentage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your post makes it sound like you don't think that his 750 million is particulary generious. Given that he didn't have to make the donation and could have easily kept the money for himself (benefiting no-one but him), I would say you're wrong.

      That's a bit like calling somebody a pacifist because they beat you up - hey, you've got no right to complain, they could easily have killed you, but they chose not to!

    39. Re:Small Percentage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Last I checked, my net worth was somewhere around -$20,000 (mostly due to student loans). 1.5% of that is -$300. Hell, I'll even go one up and donate 2%! Now who's the generous one, Mr. Gates?


      Yeah, yeah, but Bill Gates actually did it. I bet you are just talk, and didn't really donate -$400, did you?

    40. Re:Small Percentage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And this is hardly the first money he's donating...he gave $2 Billion in 1999 (here) and his foundation is funded to the tune of $24 billion (here) ...I don't think all that money was from him personally, but otoh the $2 billion wasn't his only prior donation either.

      I'm no fan of his business practices, but let's give the man his due. (And as international corporations go, there are a lot worse around.)

    41. Re:Small Percentage by pittuck · · Score: 1

      Ok, perhaps some of you should look at your lives long and hard. 1.5% of a average salary of £20 000 is £300 per year. What if everyony put 1.5% of their salary into charity? UK GBP is about £1,200,000million. 1.5% of which is £18,000,000,000. £18billion! from the UK alone. Now pls tell me, if MS had not been invented and u lot had not made him rich would u have collectivly made such a large donation? Its sad that someones good will can be undermined in this way. He had no pressure to do this but he did, we should be greatfull, follow suit and set our machines to dual boot.

    42. Re:Small Percentage by dajak · · Score: 1

      Why don't we all try to donate 1.5% of our assets instead of whining about the poster's flamebait.

      Why don't we to donate everything we own in surplus of $500,000? There is no point in anyone owning more than that.

      Anyway, my net worth is negative due to student loans and the recent purchase of a house. Still I donate money to people who own nothing and therefore have more assets than I do. Isn't that odd?

      What about comparing incomes? There is a wealth of psychological research proving that the utility of your first $50,000 of income is much higher than the utility of your second $50,000 of income.

      I am pretty sure Bill Gates doesn't have to deny himself anything because he gave away 1.5% of his assets this year.

    43. Re:Small Percentage by Vellmont · · Score: 1

      Except Gates has pleged to give away the vast majority of his fortune. As another poster said you don't give away all the money at once to one cause. The world is a complex place and is constantly changing. Better to put money in the places where its used most efficiently for the most gain.

      --
      AccountKiller
    44. Re:Small Percentage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I had 50 Billion

      If you had $50bn, I would consider you to be greedy. No matter how much you had already given to charity.

      The fact is that you and your family can live like royalty for your entire lives on much, much less than $1bn. If you hang on to anything more than $1bn, you're being greedy since the surplus really can't affect your life in any meaningful way - you keep it for the sake of being rich, not to do anything with it.

      It's a fucked up world where some people are starving to death with nowhere to call home, and other people live in mansions with more money than they know what to do with, and get called generous.

      How much money is "too much"? Dunno. I just used $1bn above as a placeholder. Put whatever value you like there, any reasonable person would put it far, far below the amount of money Bill Gates has.

      So yes, even though Bill Gates has given billions to charity, I still consider him to be greedy. Because he holds onto tens of billions more without any need for it, when that money could make a tremendous difference in millions of lives.

      According to Oxfam, $20 feeds a family in Ethiopia for six months. According to the CIA World Factbook, Ethiopia has a population of about 67 million.

      Bill Gates has so much money, he could feed the entire population of Ethiopia for years without it affecting his lifestyle in the slightest, and he chooses not to. Still think he's generous?

    45. Re:Small Percentage by Fepple · · Score: 1

      I'll donate 1.5% of my assets to anyone here - first come first served. So who's willing to take this $340 debt to HSBC off me? :) If there is a worthy recipient out there I might consider giving more (you lucky devil) But seriously good on bill, raising the profile of a very worthy charity.

    46. Re:Small Percentage by xtracto · · Score: 0

      I totally agree with you, for the love of god people, it does not matter how much money does this person has, what only matters is that he is making a really BIG donation.
      Now it would be interesting to make some research about the Forbes Top 10 and see how many of these men donate as much (and as often) as Mr. Gates.
      I specially liked this Warren Buffett information.
      At the end, this chairty is going to get to the people who does not have anything, not even a computer. Yes, we do not like the monopolyzing tactics M$ uses to eat us but, you should know, there is something more there OUTSIDE your monitor, really! and yep, there is people who does not have something to eat, or medicine to cure their illness.
      I can only say, BRAVO BILL!!

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    47. Re:Small Percentage by phiwum · · Score: 1

      One individual (via a Foundation, granted) donated considerably more to charity than the entire US government committed in aid for the recent tsunami disaster.

      Is this true? Last I heard, the U.S. government pledged $350 million in relief aid (though at first they spoke of $35 million).

      Did any individual pledge more than $350 million?

      --
      Phiwum's law: anyone that names an obvious law after himself and then puts it in his own sig is just pathetic.
    48. Re:Small Percentage by gobbo · · Score: 1
      Also more than the entire US population gave in private donations for that same disaster.

      O vaunted noble baron, we bow before thee! Thy generosity is like the Sun!

      At one point (about 5 years ago), Bill(zebub) had a net worth equivalent to the net worth of the poorest half of the USA. I gave $50 out of a net surplus of about $300 last month.

      Don't forget where that money he has came from: our pockets (either directly, through MS tax, or indirectly, through the costs of all the companies and agencies we buy goods and services from). In a sense, I'm giving twice, since Bill took more than his fair share. I'm not being anti-capitalist here, just anti-feudalist--to the extent that capitalists like Bill(zebub) and the Rockefellers retain the traces of feudalism they purport to replace.

    49. Re:Small Percentage by Little+Brother · · Score: 1
      After all, 100% of women are pro choice.


      And political scrambling over whether a woman can serve as an intermediate between you and your imaganiary friend in the sky is SO more important than saving millions of children's lives.


      The drug companies together make more than gates does, they don't want to start a trend of free drugs and are probably unbribable.


      Gates may be an asshat in the computer industry, but his genorosity to charity is well beyond what I see from anyone else on the planet. He could be spending that 750M on really expensive hookers or buying more lobbyists, but he isn't. He has saved more people than you will probably SEE in yourlifetime (not counting on TV).


      Want to point it out when MS engages in illegal and immoral practices, go ahead.

      Want to talk about what a dick Bill Gates is to others in the industry, go ahead.

      Want to talk about the fact that MS makes a crappy OS, go ahead.


      But unless you have donated anything close to him, in either total dollars or precent of total income, shut the fuck up about his charitable donations unless you want to praise him. (Or at least mention that his saving millions of lives at least partialy mitigates the fact that he is overcharging for a computer operating system and driving competitors out of buisness.


      Yes, this is a flame. A flame, in this case is warrented.

      --

      Little Brother, watching the watchers

    50. Re:Small Percentage by Allegro · · Score: 1

      Because donating 1.5% of my assets puts me in the poor house?

      I'm sorry, but there's nothing spectacular about one of the world's richest men donating money. It's nice that he did it, but it's night like the guy is sacrificing.

      --
      Don't let the lusers get you down.
    51. Re:Small Percentage by toonworld · · Score: 1

      For someone who makes 50k a year, 1.5% is roughly 750$.

      So who has donated 750+ dollars to charitable donations in the past year?

      There are a lot of people who would spend that money on computer upgrades or spending money on a vacation...

      An article reads that the 10 richest billionaire could end world poverty (http://www.undp.org/teams/english/facts.htm)

      Gates might have non-ethical business practices, but at least HE is doing his part!

      --
      It's not the destination that matters, but rather the journey.
    52. Re:Small Percentage by photon_chac · · Score: 1

      'Insigtful'? Use your brains , moders!
      Think about it! He's got 50 billion, if he gave up 90% he would still have 5 billion and live a happy life. What about you having 10,000 and giving up 90% of it? Hey, you couldn't even afford to rent a house .

      --
      KOS-MOS
    53. Re:Small Percentage by ajs318 · · Score: 1
      After all, 100% of women are pro choice.
      So would men be, probably, if they were subject to be eaten by a parasite from the inside out. Pregnancy and childbirth can destroy a woman's life {sometimes literally}.

      OK, a woman Pope is a bit off-topic. But it would hardly be a bad thing and might do a lot of good, if she made the church less male.

      But I can't believe that Gates can't afford to licence even one drug patent that might save even more lives. I just think he doesn't want to, because he still believes deep down that information should have Masters. For that reason I hate him; and as long as he continues to show that he believes that, nothing he does can ever redeem him in my sight.
      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    54. Re:Small Percentage by Nikker · · Score: 1

      I agree, but what BillG is also gaining here is general public. Thats what the OP was jerking himself on, Bill has just dropped $1.50 this shows other ways in which he is benificial to our society. By doing this Bill buys insurance against people swaying their opinion quickly to another alternative given the chance.

      Granted in the grand scheme of things if the Linux community was to come up with a comparible offer then it would give people a reason to switch because it shows the nature and character of OSS which would make the public curious and more comfortable with the concept of OSS.

      But as I digress the fact /. is obviously pulling some propaganda out of its ass to look for money rather than making an intelligent statement, this post will be modded down to oblivion and OP will be flamed for months to come any way.

      IMHO if they were really smart they would take the role of leaders get IBM, HP, OSDN to chip a couple of mill in to the bucket and I bet most of the lowly coders could probably make another mill or two and that is called progress. Not taking a penny out of your pocket and expecting the working class to make up your share is the same reason you arent getting a penny from me

      --
      A loop, by its nature, continues. If that didn't make sense, start reading this sentence again.
    55. Re:Small Percentage by ThePepe · · Score: 1

      Actually, 1.5% is quite the overestimation. By using $50 billion as your starting figure I assume you are referring to Microsoft's net worth. According to Forbes thier net worth is more like 40.7 billion, though that information may be a couple of years old.

      Anyway, 750,000 of 40.7 billion is roughly 0.00001843%. My own net worth (small considering I dont own my own home and my car is from 96) is somewhere around $50,000. Using that same math I would have to donate just over 92 cents to match Mr. Gate's percentage contribution.

      Having said all that $750,000,000.00 is still an amazing contribution. I just feel its important to keep everything in perspective

    56. Re:Small Percentage by REggert · · Score: 1

      I tried, but the person taking my call just hung up on me for some reason. They really need to improve their customer service if they want people to send them donations.

      --

      cp /dev/zero ~/signature.txt

    57. Re:Small Percentage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's nothing to keep in perspective, are you all retarded?

      The 750Mil is a single one of his _many_ donations. He's given billions upon billions of dollars and will give many more before he dies.

      Get a clue, people, your idiotic sophistry and bad math aren't fooling anyone. Find a real villain to hate.

    58. Re:Small Percentage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless you live in your parents basement and own nothing, I very much doubt you are worth only $100.

      If you don't live in your parent's basement you likely have a mortgage on a house or rent an apartment. The mortgage gives you a negative net worth, while the rent leaves you at $0. The same goes for a loan or lease for a vehicle.

      So, if you don't live in your parent's basement, you probably have a negative net worth.

    59. Re:Small Percentage by rly2000 · · Score: 1

      Comparing apples and oranges.

      The last dollar that I earn is worth a LOT more to me than the last dollar the Bill Gates earns.

    60. Re:Small Percentage by SharkJumper · · Score: 1

      I've seen this type of reasoning posted all over this story, and I can't disagree more strongly.

      What is with this masochistic tendency to claim that giving isn't generous unless it is detrimental to oneself? We're lambasting the man for not putting himself in the poorhouse, now? What purpose would that serve? It would just mean that he would eliminate his ability to give more, later.

      You yourself obviously haven't followed through on the vows of poverty you're so quick to enforce on others, or you wouldn't be typing away on your pretty little keyboard and posting through your swanky broadband connection. How many vaccinations would your ISP bill provide?

      Geez! Hypocrites! Believe it or not, generosity is still generosity if you don't break the bank. In fact, it is good stewardship of your money to maintain enough to fuel future contribution to society. This is also the immature thinking that leads to the idea that I can't take pleasure or pride in my giving. Wrong again!

      Remember, inflicting financial damage on oneself does not make a contribution more generous, and taking pleasure in the act of giving does not make it less so.

      SharkJumper

    61. Re:Small Percentage by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      The point is, that when most average people donate money to charity, they have to give something up.

      Nobody is suggesting that it is morally wrong to eat anything more expensive than oatmeal, or live in anything bigger than a shed, or to own a car.

      However, the fact is that I need to sacrifice less to give $100 to charity than somebody who makes 1/10th my income has to sacrifice to give $10 to charity. It just doesn't scale linearly.

      Somebody who makes 10 times my income can consequently give far more than a 10X increase without giving up much.

      Somebody with a billion dollars in the bank can pretty much give away everything beyond that and still have more money than they could figure out how to spend. Gates just doesn't have enough time in a day to spend that kind of money on himself, or even on anybody that he personally knows. The extra money is essentially worthless to him.

      Don't get me wrong - donations to charity are great. However, when you have that much money you aren't making the same kind of tradeoffs that a normal person makes.

      As far as keeping enough to guarantee future contribution to society goes - how much is that?

      I don't have even $100k in the bank. Does that mean that I'm unable to contribute to society? Did Bill Gates contribute nothing to society until he had billions of dollars? Arguably he has his money because he DID contribute to society before then.

    62. Re:Small Percentage by FunkSoulBrother · · Score: 1

      Good god man.. gain some perspective.

      If the man DID feed all of Ethiopia for years, I submit that you'd be on Slashdot whining about how he could have tossed in Eritrea at no extra burden to himself.

    63. Re:Small Percentage by scrub76 · · Score: 1
      Perhaps, but I don't think altruism and wealth are mutually exclusive. As for the rationale for setting up the Gates Foundation, I think that it had a lot to do with Gates's belief that he could accomplish more and do it better than the existing institutions. I read an article a few years ago that described key differences between GF and other charities. It boiled down to accountability -- the GF competitively funds business plans and *requires* grantees to meet milestones to qualify for continued funding. This approach leads to increased accountability and reduced waste....and I think the preliminary evidence suggests that its working (www.gatesfoundation.org).

      I don't think your analogy works. Gates didn't rob anyone. People elect to buy his products. Unfair competition? Perhaps, but he wouldn't have made his billions without the support of consumers.

    64. Re:Small Percentage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Second of all, even if it's only 1.5% of his assets, it's a good thing, how many of you have donated 1.5%?

      Why don't we all try to donate 1.5% of our assets instead of whining about the poster's flamebait.

      Pick a church and tithe. A lot of people give 10% of their income when 10% HURTS. An average middle-class family which tithes 10% gives up a LOT. Try it. Pick a charity of your choice and give 10% per year.

      Gates could give 90% of his fortune away and he would still be a rich, rich man.

    65. Re:Small Percentage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the man DID feed all of Ethiopia for years, I submit that you'd be on Slashdot whining about how he could have tossed in Eritrea at no extra burden to himself.

      If he still had more than $1bn, yes, I would. Did you not read my post, or were you too stupid to understand my very clear point? There is no reason to keep more than $1bn beyond sheer greed. Hoarding money that could save lives for the sake of mere greed is unacceptable, inhumane behaviour.

    66. Re:Small Percentage by Little+Brother · · Score: 1
      So would men be, probably, if they were subject to be eaten by a parasite from the inside out. Pregnancy and childbirth can destroy a woman's life {sometimes literally}.

      Um, that was sarcasm, there are a sizable number of pro-life women. True there are also a great number of pro-choice women, and the maintaining of legal abortions is a femminist platform, but to say every woman would be pro choice to stereotype as assudadably as saying that every man would be against pornography control laws. I wasn't making a value judgement on abortion, but I will now.

      I am offended by your insinuation that if I had been born with different chromosomes that I would have a different moral stance than I do now. I am offended by your insinuation that I think only as benifits me. I have my moral standards on many topics and it is often an inconvenience to myself.

      I have been a vegitarian for over ten years, and I do NOT force people whom I'm visiting to make allowances for this, if all that is being cooked is meat, I just don't eat. I do not beleive in premarital sex and am thus a virgin at the age of 23, and NOT for lack of oppertunity either. I have a record of considering others before myself, indeed it might be one of my biggest problems (I'm easily taken advantage of). Your insinuation that the only reason I'm pro-life is because it can't inconvenience me is wrong, offensive and frankly ridiculous. Oh, to forstall the usual argument I get next, no I was NOT brought up like this, these morals I came to on my own. I am not a member of a church that holds similar positions. I don't get my values from a party platform. (In spite of this rant I am mostly liberal.) I am strongly in favour of other forms of birth control (condoms, the pill, (even the day-after pill) spermicides, and sterilization surgeries. In spite of the strength of my convictions I am not inflexible. I support stem-cell research (come on guys, there's a difference between a few days old embryo barly beyond zygote stage and a second trimester fetus with arms, legs, and brain activity.)

      I also would support a woman pope, in general, as I would a woman president, in general. (I wouldn't support C. Rice for either position, though.)

      --

      Little Brother, watching the watchers

    67. Re:Small Percentage by toonworld · · Score: 1

      who taught you math???

      750 000 000 (750 million) devided by 40 000 000 000 (40 billion) * 100 = 1.875%

      Stop being a fucktard a get a clue!!

      --
      It's not the destination that matters, but rather the journey.
    68. Re:Small Percentage by ThePepe · · Score: 1

      There's no need to blame the people that taught me math. I'm sure they tried their best. I assume all blame.

      Note to self: When bitching about other people's math I should watch my zeros.

      Clue: Received
      Fucktard Status: Confirmed

    69. Re:Small Percentage by ThreeToe · · Score: 1

      I'm surprised at how many responses I've read that make the relative-value argument: "$750 million is only 1.5% of his net worth. I donate three times that much compared to my net worth of $1000, therefore Gates' donation isn't really that significant."

      This notion that relative dollar amounts are somehow important is so broken, it's sad. Go back to econ class, folks. Your $45 donation doesn't make a dent; Gates has the power to target his $750 million just right. He's far more likely to hit the bull's-eye.

    70. Re:Small Percentage by toonworld · · Score: 1

      Ok if I could mod you, I would give you Karma because that one made me laugh! ;-)

      --
      It's not the destination that matters, but rather the journey.
    71. Re:Small Percentage by Lulu+of+the+Lotus-Ea · · Score: 1

      Gates donation certainly *is* a good thing. The money given for schools to "buy" Windows machines is far more self-interested. But vaccines are unambiguously good.

      Yeah, all of Gates' money is ill-gotten; but given that context, giving it to vaccines for poor people is a lot better than just buying another zillion dollar house.

      The percentage *is* certainly less than *I* give, however. My total assets are... well, the US$165k house that I now own outright (I paid a lot less than that for it, but I have reason to think it could sell for around that). I guess you could throw in my car, which might be worth $6k used. Really reaching, a few old computers and other items might be worth a few thousand more.

      So 1.5% is around $2.5k. I gave $3k to Doctors without Borders in 2004 (another $500 to EFF; and maybe $750 in-kind to the local survival center--homeless support and the like).

      I suspect that few thousand affects my standard of living more than the $750M does Gates'. But then, the people who benefit from my few thousand have so much less than I do--even with some medicines I bought--that it's pettty to make the former comparison. I'm comfortable enough.

    72. Re:Small Percentage by Malfourmed · · Score: 1
      Don't forget where that money he has came from: our pockets (either directly, through MS tax, or indirectly, through the costs of all the companies and agencies we buy goods and services from). In a sense, I'm giving twice since Bill took more than his fair share.

      To claim credit for a donation made by an individual because you chose to buy that individual's company's product is.... interesting logic.
    73. Re:Small Percentage by mesterha · · Score: 1

      Why don't we all try to donate 1.5% of our assets instead of whining about the poster's flamebait.

      The utility of money is not linear. He has more money then he can spend in a lifetime. He has to do something with that money. Many foundations are formed because the rich would rather control how there money is spent than give it to the government in estate tax (There's Bush screwing us again.) I on the other hand have to worry about retirement...

      --

      Chris Mesterharm
    74. Re:Small Percentage by t482 · · Score: 1

      Not to mention he can save 750 Million in taxes.

  18. "Steals from the rich" by kmmatthews · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Yeah, too bad the money will be used to buy our (American) drugs at our ridiculous prices. That money could go so much further if the vaccinations were purchased in other countries.

    --
    feh. stuff.
    1. Re:"Steals from the rich" by JudeanPeople'sFront · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The big pharmaceutical companies have to profit, that's the whole purpose behind those "save the African children" campaigns. Providing their villages with clean water will cost less than vaccinating them and it will help the fight against epidemic diseases more. Sanitation eradicated such diseases in Europe BEFORE large scale vaccinations were made.

    2. Re:"Steals from the rich" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Providing their villages with clean water will cost less than vaccinating them and it will help the fight against epidemic diseases more. Sanitation eradicated such diseases in Europe BEFORE large scale vaccinations were made.
      RTFA: they're vaccinating against diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, hepatitis B, influenza type B, and yellow fever. All the clean water in the world won't protect you from these: but a one=off shot, plus herd immunity from widespread vaccination, will protect you for lide from them.
      Clean water and sanitation will protect against cholera, typhoid and infantile diarrhea, none of which appear on the vaccine list. There aren't any good vaccines against these, as they do their evil work in the gut, partially sheltered from the immune cells of the circulatory system.

      Vaccines are cheap (many are generic or supplied at cost prices): plumbing and sewage works are expensive. I suppose smallpox eradication, and the ongoing polio eradication programme are just ploys to steal from the third world poor?

    3. Re:"Steals from the rich" by daimou · · Score: 1

      The clean water will help prevent future epidemics, but its useless to vaccinate and not cure. First let's cure those that are sick and THEN lets prevent them from getting sick again.

    4. Re:"Steals from the rich" by SupremeTaco · · Score: 1

      This sounds like the old "Give a man a fish. ." routine, but I have to agree. If the money is spent teaching the people how to live cleaner, and how to build infrastructure, the effects would seem to last a bit longer. I'm not a "policy" kind of guy, and this isn't MY money being given (except for that copy of Win 95 I bought back in the day . .), but it's just my .02

      --
      You have a constitutionally protected right to be wrong, and I the right to ignore you.
    5. Re:"Steals from the rich" by TheSync · · Score: 1

      US prices for generic drugs (which most of these will be) are less than the prices for generic drugs in most other developed countries because of the highly competitive and relatively less-regulated pharma market in the US.

      It is only drugs under patent control that pharma companies sell for more in the US (and they do it because the US is rich, and they can do that with their temporary monopoly, granted by the government).

    6. Re:"Steals from the rich" by virtualXTC · · Score: 1
      Having worked in Pharma for quite some time, I can safely say Africa is by no mean revenue generator for large drug companies. Most manufactures supply drugs to these countries at a loss because the FDA puts a tremendous amount of pressure for "ethical" pricing and distribution. The FDA has a lot of power in that it decides which drugs to "fast track" and which to "study more closely". It can take a VERY long time to bring a drug to market, all the while, that amount of time a company has left on patent of the drug that was submitted is slowly eroding. The FDA submission process is a well-known and documented bottleneck. It is so effective in persuading drug companies that in 2001 the cost of medicine supplied to Africa was 1-10% of the cost of the product in the US.

      We are the richest country in the world, hence we are the ones holding the burden of most drug development. Granted, I agree that things are becoming disproportional with regard to what other countries of similar statue to the US pay for drugs and vaccines, and a lot of it is based on drug company profits, but the price of drugs that are sent to African nations is not part of the problem. Most US drug makers would love if conditions in Africa were cleaned up so they wouldn't have to worry about "ethical pricing" any more. Even if the drugs were made by a generic company (which would likely compromise quality), the overall cost of treatment of something like AIDS wouldn't change signifigantly.

    7. Re:"Steals from the rich" by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

      At least the proffits of American drug companies are used to finance research into more drugs.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    8. Re:"Steals from the rich" by kmmatthews · · Score: 1
      Finance more research?

      I agree that some minor portion of it might go to that, but surely the lions share goes to publicity and advertising. If I recall correctly, Prozac alone has been the subject of over $1B of advertisements.

      --
      feh. stuff.
  19. The Linux Community? by Noryungi · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Well, maybe the "Linux Community" can't match that kind of donation, but I'd like to point out the obvious:

    1. Mr Gates is the head of a company that sells software for a profit, while the 'Linux Community' often gives its software for free to all comers over the Internet. That's one big difference.
    2. I don't think Mr Gates will have any money problems if he ever gets sick. While Patrick Volkerding -- the maintainer of Slackware, the oldest surviving Linux distribution out there -- who has been sick for several months, is asking people to buy Slackware version 10.1 to help him pay his medical bills...


    The difference? One of them is someone who can afford to make such a generous donation, while the other is still making his software available for free over the Internet. That makes that last remark pretty insensitive and gratuitous, IMHO.

    I know which one I admire the most. But, heck, that's a personal view.
    --
    The right to offend is far more important than the right not to be offended. (Rowan Atkinson)
    1. Re:The Linux Community? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree--the one who saves 350 million lives in one fell swoop, is much more admirable than the one who begs for charity to save his own.

    2. Re:The Linux Community? by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 0, Troll

      Ever try to eat an OS distro? Ever try to warm your family by having a secure firewall? The linux community is offering a product less than 10% of the world's population can appreciate. And less than a fraction of 1% actually does appreciate. Not exactly a great contribution to the world's well being.

    3. Re:The Linux Community? by ScentCone · · Score: 1, Troll

      The difference? One of them is someone who can afford to make such a generous donation, while the other is still making his software available for free over the Internet.

      The other difference is that a very loud (and slashdot-powered) portion of "the Linux Community" takes every opportunity to malign Gates personally, decry his success, and claim that MS shouldn't exist. Discussing whether or Gates is generous isn't the issue - his foundation shells out much, much more than the amount in this particular gift, and has been doing so for years and years - rather, it's whether or not his rabid (philosphical) opponents are generous enough (intellectually) to conceed that he's not actually The Devil, or Hitler, or any of the other evil icons to which they compare him.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    4. Re:The Linux Community? by princeofweasels · · Score: 1

      Assuming that the linux community is say 10 million, then thats about and an average contribution of $75 dollars to match that contribution. I have no idea how much the average person donates, but the people I know typically donate more then $750 per year.

    5. Re:The Linux Community? by bogado · · Score: 1

      Are those genorous offers backed up by tax incentives? If they are, then a part of this offer is being payed by you (or by the american people, just in case you're not american).

      Here in Brasil, lot's of large enterprises do a lot of investment in culture and other things. The money invested become, some times in their integral part (100%), tax discounts. This means that in the end, there was no expense at all, but the company get's their logo in movies, theater plays, dancing spectacles and etc.

      But who payed for that? Tax money.

      --
      []'s Victor Bogado da Silva Lins

      ^[:wq

    6. Re:The Linux Community? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      What you seem to forget is that this money is not coming out of Bill's pockets. It's the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (notice the capital F in Foundation).
      That's a big difference. Money comes into the Foundation from primarily Bill, but there are also several public and private donors as well. Foundations such as these are big tax write-offs. What Bill did is create the Foundation and in essence transfered a portion of his extreme wealth tax-free to a charity. From there, when the Foundation gives a huge chunk of money to other charities/organizations, all it did was make it look like he was a charitable dude, when it was only set up as a tax shelter in the first place. Despite his "humanitarianism" he's still scum.

    7. Re:The Linux Community? by Vellmont · · Score: 2, Insightful


      Mr Gates is the head of a company that sells software for a profit, while the 'Linux Community' often gives its software for free to all comers over the Internet. That's one big difference.

      I'm not sure I really understand what you're even saying. Is there something wrong with selling software, and something inherently good about giving it away for free? Get a little perspective. It's just bits, not food, medicine, clothing, or shelter. The linux community doesn't help the poor, cure disease or feed the hungry, it only produces software. That's fine, but don't overstate the righteousness of free software.

      I don't think Mr Gates will have any money problems if he ever gets sick. While Patrick Volkerding -- the maintainer of Slackware, the oldest surviving Linux distribution out there -- who has been sick for several months, is asking people to buy Slackware version 10.1 to help him pay his medical bills...

      What does Volkerding have to do with Gates giving money for vaccinations? (that is other than being a completely manipulative "look at the poor sick guy, now look at big evil rich Bill Gates").

      That makes that last remark pretty insensitive and gratuitous, IMHO.

      Oh quit your over-sensitive blubbering. No one asked Volkerding specifically to contribute. The comment in the article was simply a call to compete with Gates in giving. While it's silly that the "linux community" has to compete with Gates at _everything_ (what next, Gates is good at darts and someone in the "linux community" has to challenge him?). But it's not an insentive remark at all (that is until you start manipulating the situation by throwing in totally irrelevant sympathetic sick people).

      --
      AccountKiller
    8. Re:The Linux Community? by Fnkmaster · · Score: 1

      The linux community doesn't help the poor, cure disease or feed the hungry, it only produces software. That's fine, but don't overstate the righteousness of free software.

      Well what exactly does Bill Gates do? Microsoft "only produces software" as well. They are just good at converting that software from bits to dollars, which have lined Mr. Gates' pockets. The Linux community chooses to give away their software as part of a community effort instead of trying to maximize personal wealth with it.

      This means that by definition the Linux community doesn't have as much money to give away to do other good works like vaccinating children. Of course, all that money Microsoft made from the bits had to come from somewhere, namely other people's pockets. And those people now have less money to use on a discretionary basis for other things, including good works like vaccinating children.

      I am not a rabid Linux zealot, nor a rabid Microsoft hater. The Free/Open Source software communities don't see software as something to convert into maximal dollars all the time. I think this is fine, and we don't need to belittle them for not having grossly wrenched as much money as possible from people's hands which they can now "generously" give back to causes supporting the poor in the third world.

    9. Re:The Linux Community? by VanillaCoke420 · · Score: 1

      How can he not get medical care? Where does he live? Don't they have hospitals open for the public there?

    10. Re:The Linux Community? by ScentCone · · Score: 2, Informative

      Are those genorous offers backed up by tax incentives

      In a word, no. If a person has millions sitting in the bank, he's already paid taxes on it (as income). While it's sitting there, he's earning interest on it, and pays taxes on that, too.

      When some of that money is taken out of the picture, and used to fund a foundation (like the Gates Foundation), it's money that has already been taxed. There are times when money that's donated into something charitable includes a tax deduction... but not for the amount of the donation. Instead, the only taxes you avoid are the taxes that would have been on that money had it not been donated. So, if you earn a thousand dollars, and the tax rate is 25%, you pay $25 in taxes. But if you give half of that money to certain types of charities, you avoid paying taxes on that part of the money... in that case, $12.50. There is no case in which the $500 dollars that was donated is somehow being paid by other tax payers. We're talkig about money that wouldn't have existed (to be taxed or otherwise) unless the person that created that value had done what they had done to earn it. It's a question of if they give up that money (and can no longer use it for themselves, or invest it in businesses, etc) should they pay additional taxes on it or not. In most cases, where the charity can be shown not to be corrupt, etc., those taxes are waived. That's not the same as charging other taxpayers for something out of the blue - it's a matter of having less revenue for the government in exchange for something that government agrees is a good idea, but could not itself find revenue to accomplish.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    11. Re:The Linux Community? by Vellmont · · Score: 3, Insightful


      I think this is fine, and we don't need to belittle them for not having grossly wrenched as much money as possible from people's hands which they can now "generously" give back to causes supporting the poor in the third world.


      Belittle? Who's belittling anyone? Stating that free software isn't some grand altruistic venture isn't belittling. "grossly wrenched as much money as possible?" This is software, not food or medicine. While Microsoft has a lot of highly questionable anti-competitive products, they're hardly pharmaceutical companies trying to enforce patents in 3rd world countries for AIDS drugs. (An example of an industry with little morals and high greed).

      As far as Gate's generosity, he could easily have horded all his money like most billionaires do. No one is forcing him to give it all away. Heard any stories about Richard Bramson of Virgin giving away billions of dollars? How about Larry Ellison of Oracle? I sure haven't.

      --
      AccountKiller
    12. Re:The Linux Community? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Larry is saving up to buy a bigger boat.

    13. Re:The Linux Community? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      He wasn't asking for donations or help other than for people to purchase Slackware 10.1 which made this story all the more sad. What a humble man to go through the tribulations he is and still care about the community if he were to pass away!

    14. Re:The Linux Community? by Dutchmaan · · Score: 1

      I think the whole point you're missing is that no one is really saying that it's wrong to sell software, nor is it wrong to give it away for free for the benefit of society... The point is that the comment about the Linux community somehow matching Gates contribution is somewhat unfair... The Linux community is ALREADY contributing to the good of society and doesn't have the means to do it twice over. The only difference is that Gates has just transferred some of the wealth that was acquired by MS from the people who bought the products and giving it to third world children, giving himself a healthy dose of glorification in the process.

      I have no doubt that this is a relatively good thing, but it also feels like a PR stunt regardless of his actual motives.

      Just my 2 cents.

    15. Re:The Linux Community? by karakal · · Score: 1

      And why is this post a troll post??? Maybe, because the poster is right???? Oh God, you all suck...

    16. Re:The Linux Community? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get a little perspective.
      It seems you are missing the same.

      It's just bits, not food, medicine, clothing, or shelter.

      Go and know at least the meeing of digital divide.

      Take recent Tsunamie, do you know how much of fund came through the bits?

      If you are dared, then give everything to your offspring except those bits.

      Try to know the meaning of selling.

    17. Re:The Linux Community? by Vellmont · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Apples, oranges. The linux community doesn't have to compete with Bill Gates in giving. This isn't a war against Bill Gates.

      The Linux community is ALREADY contributing to the good of society and doesn't have the means to do it twice over.

      It doesn't have anything to do with this discussion, but I'm really tired of this attitude. How does your average Joe benefit from linux? Maybe some lower costs to web hosting? A bit more secure servers? Less vendor lock in? Big deal.. Walmart saves consumers money, but no one argues this somehow benefits society. Don't get me wrong, I think free software benefits me greatly. But I'm a computer professional and software developer. Free tools allow me much greater control over the services I can offer, the software I can develop, etc. Wonderfull, but that's not really a benefit to the society as a whole.

      --
      AccountKiller
    18. Re:The Linux Community? by Kinniken · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure I really understand what you're even saying. Is there something wrong with selling software, and something inherently good about giving it away for free? Get a little perspective. It's just bits, not food, medicine, clothing, or shelter. The linux community doesn't help the poor, cure disease or feed the hungry, it only produces software. That's fine, but don't overstate the righteousness of free software.

      The point was not (well, not mainly ;-) ) that it is morally superior to give software rather than sell it, but that one activity earns you money and the other don't - and it's a tad easier giving millions of dollars to charity when you became wealthy making money from software rather than when you spent your time working for free.
      Calling for a non-profit community to match not so much the generosity as the financial power of the richest man alive is a troll, quite independently of the morality of both in the first place.

      --
      What do you know about World Politic? Find out in this quiz
    19. Re:The Linux Community? by Vellmont · · Score: 1


      Go and know at least the meeing of digital divide.

      And what does that have to do with Linux? If you can't afford $400 for the hardware, an extra $99 for the software isn't going to break the bank. Then there's the monthly costs of internet access... The "free as in beer" aspect of linux isn't really all its cracked up to be.

      Take recent Tsunamie, do you know how much of fund came through the bits?

      And this is all somehow the result of Linux? If the charities in question used linux servers, does that somehow mean linux is responsible for people giving to tsunami relief?

      --
      AccountKiller
    20. Re:The Linux Community? by Vellmont · · Score: 1

      I think that was part of the point, but I also think there's this mythos of how free software is somehow saving the world. It's saving some people some money, and freeing them from the will of software company X, but saving the world it is not.

      --
      AccountKiller
    21. Re:The Linux Community? by bwy · · Score: 1

      I don't think Mr Gates will have any money problems if he ever gets sick.

      The beauty of "selling" software (or anything else) is that it enables not just Bill Gates to have money, but also for tens of thousands of people who work for him to have jobs, salaries, health insurance, etc. Without people selling things and doing business, we'd all be sitting around wondering how to pay our medical bills or vaccinate our children. I, for one, am pleased to offer my services to my employer for a paycheck and in return, use part of that paycheck to puchase goods and services from others, enabling their employers to provide them with paychecks.

    22. Re:The Linux Community? by j-turkey · · Score: 1
      Are those genorous offers backed up by tax incentives?

      Not if he pays the AMT...and he probably does. Even if it could have been written off, I wouldn't consider it taxpayer money...the foundation would have still sank $750 million into it.

      Slashdotters don't like his software, business model, and/or his company's predatory business practices...so we discredit his generous donations? (Then try to back it up, saying that we're more generous becuase we may or may not contribute code to GNU/Linux). Hmmm...I think that there's a word or phrase for people like that.

      --

      -Turkey

    23. Re:The Linux Community? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This type of thinking has no business on ./ so get back to work while I flame you. Oh, got to go mom just finished ironing my clothes for school today.

    24. Re:The Linux Community? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure I really understand what you're even saying. Is there something wrong with selling software, and something inherently good about giving it away for free? Get a little perspective.

      Oh how I love this sort of thing. Is there something inherently good about giving away software for free? Of course there is! It's an extraordinarily generous act that allows lots of people who would never have been able to use your software at all to use it.

      Is there something inherently good about spending 7 years at Medical school and then volunteering at a free Clinic? Of course there is!
      Is there something inherently good about spending 5 years at Law School and then volunteering for a Public Law Centre? Of course there is!
      Is there something inherently bad about charging for these same skills? Of course not!
      If you're examining the worth of a person, do those charitable acts weigh in their favour? Of course they do!
      Are there other factors to be taken in to consideration? Of course there are!
      Is Bill Gates an incarnation of Satan for selling software? No.
      Are Microsoft's business practices illegal? Probably.
      Should they be punished for that? Yes.
      Is Bill Gates less of a worthy human being for having previously engaged in illegal business practices? Well, your call.
      Should he be admired for donating money to an important cause such as child vaccinations? Of course!
      Can we respect a man for his good acts and dislike him for his bad ones? Of course!

      As someone who's been on both sides of the volunteerism/massive commercial success front it's pretty amusing to read the enormous non-think that goes on in these discussions, but suffice it to say that the really important thing is to be able to distinguish between good and bad acts, and really how much effort does that take?

    25. Re:The Linux Community? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You, sir, are a dumbass.

    26. Re:The Linux Community? by Vellmont · · Score: 1

      So anything given away for free is necessarily good? You mention medical help and legal help, services normally very expensive and widely needed. Software is relatively cheap, and not really a dire need. What makes it so good to give it away for free?

      --
      AccountKiller
    27. Re:The Linux Community? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To me, it works like this: how many people has MS fucked over? Out of those people, how much less can they contribute to the needs of the poor due to MS's actions?

      And those people getting cheaper computers through the actions of the Linux community, how much more can those people contribute to the needs of the poor?

      There is something to be said about giving to charities. There is even more when what you are giving was acquired through disreputable means.

      Paul fucking over Peter to give charity to Mary is pretty questionable in my book.

      Makes me think of government welfare programs.

    28. Re:The Linux Community? by bogado · · Score: 1

      I don't discredit the donation. I'm just stating that it could have some incentive. And even though the tax money dosen't come out of the goverment money, the goverment gets less money and in the end it have to tax other people more.

      My original post was written as a question, since I know that this is a common pratice here in Brasil, but I do not know what are the laws in the USA and how this would affect the donation and the tax he would have to pay.

      --
      []'s Victor Bogado da Silva Lins

      ^[:wq

    29. Re:The Linux Community? by black+mariah · · Score: 0

      And you're a pathetic loser. Pieces of shit like you make me want to vomit blood all over the place. If you're so fucking cynical, do us a favor and kill yourself. You obviously have no reason to live so just go ahead and end it all. Won't you think of the children?

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
    30. Re:The Linux Community? by j-turkey · · Score: 1
      My original post was written as a question, since I know that this is a common pratice here in Brasil, but I do not know what are the laws in the USA and how this would affect the donation and the tax he would have to pay.

      Yeah, some people can get away with that in the US, but people as wealthy as Bill Gates have to pay the AMT, which does not allow for unfair write-offs like you mention.

      The end of my response wasn't so much directed to you, but to nearly the entirety of the discussion where these Linux zealots act like F/OSS makes their poo smell good...and everything that Bill Gates does is an evil extension of Microsoft (or all of the good that he may do is just a feeble attempt to cover for his wrongdoings). You probably didn't deserve that, but shame on the rest of them.

      --

      -Turkey

    31. Re:The Linux Community? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      For some perspective on this: the wealthiest 5% of Americans pay over 55% of the taxes that the US collects from its citizens. 50% of US citizens, taken as a group, pay only 4% of the taxes. The remaining 41% of the taxes are paid by the upper middle class. 35% of the people in the country (that's 70 million people) pay no federal taxes at all. Wealthy people like Bill Gates pay all of the taxes that those people would be paying if they were charged the same tax rate as everyone else. Now, when Bill Gates donates hundreds of millions of dollars (all going overseas, I might add!) to a worthy cause, don't assume that some poor lower-income guy is somehow getting stuck with paying for something. Rather, people like Gates are stuck paying for almost all of everything, almost all of the time... and he still has enough to spread around, and good for him if he does it wisely.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    32. Re:The Linux Community? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people have no use for software, and from my experience, most who do can afford to pay for it.

    33. Re:The Linux Community? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who's the pathetic loser? Looking at your account, you've made 1,706 posts. There's 1 strike.

      Out of your last 24 posts, 21 have a score of 0, 2 have -1, Flamebait, and 1 actually got a +1, Insightful. Strike two.

      Without informing anybody why you think the previous AC is an idiot but should just kill him/herself, it goes to show you that you're the cynical angry idiot who should kill himself. Someone that bitter on slashdot of all places. It boggles the mind. Oh yeah, strike three.

      You're out, loser.

    34. Re:The Linux Community? by merdark · · Score: 1

      The point was not (well, not mainly ;-) ) that it is morally superior to give software rather than sell it, but that one activity earns you money and the other don't - and it's a tad easier giving millions of dollars to charity when you became wealthy making money from software rather than when you spent your time working for free.
      Calling for a non-profit community to match not so much the generosity as the financial power of the richest man alive is a troll, quite independently of the morality of both in the first place.


      I think this was the whole point of that little quip about seeing if the Linux community can match the donation. One of the biggest criticisims of GPL'ed software is that it is difficult to make money from it.

      Every time this comes up, there are thousands of posts screaming "FUD" and claiming that you CAN make money on free software, and therefore haveing everything be free software won't in fact put 99% of programmers out of jobs.

      Now all of a sudden the open source community CAN'T make money, and are "non-profit". That seems a little contradictory with previous claims.

      It may be a troll or whatever you want to call it, but that comment does bring up a good point. Not that the slashdot community will ever admit it.

    35. Re:The Linux Community? by ThousandStars · · Score: 1
      So, if you earn a thousand dollars, and the tax rate is 25%, you pay $25 in taxes.

      I take it the "IANAA" (accountant and "IANAM" (mathematician) are implied.

    36. Re:The Linux Community? by Dutchmaan · · Score: 1

      It doesn't have anything to do with this discussion, but I'm really tired of this attitude. How does your average Joe benefit from linux? Maybe some lower costs to web hosting? A bit more secure servers? Less vendor lock in? Big deal.. Walmart saves consumers money, but no one argues this somehow benefits society.

      Yeah Walmart saves you money at the *expense* of other people. Walmart passes savings on to you by taking advantages of desperaition of others... The Linux community offers themselves freely to benefit the whole. THAT's the difference and why Walmart is hated and Linux is not...and yes.. Linux does contribute to society because of the things you mentioned, not because it's anything special but because it's offered freely...

      To put it a different way... say some people volunteer to paint houses for low income people and do a damn good job at it... You're point of view seems to be, "Hey! The guy that charges me a few thousand dollars to paint my house never gets any sort of recognition, and he does the same thing those volunteers do!"

    37. Re:The Linux Community? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      See, I pay so much in taxes that it has damaged my brain. I saw that mistake after I had submitted, and forgot to preview, like an idiot. The one place that your typos shouldn't involve numbers is here on slashdot. Oops.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    38. Re:The Linux Community? by bogado · · Score: 1

      Well I heard that Bush has made some changes that made richer people pay less and poorer pay more (then they were paying before). The percentages that you are stating, if they are true (I'm not saying you're lying, wait I'll explain latter), are what you would expect.

      Here in Brasil, we have the oposite, most of the taxes are payed by the middle class. Richer people do not pay (due to tax-fraud or tax-reliefs), poorer people (a large chunk of the population) don't have money or jobs. So they go into the "informal economy" that is not official and for that reason is not taxed.

      If are talking about interprises the tax are not payed by the enterprise it self, the tax is passed to prices of the services and goods, so the consumer end up paying the tax (inside the price of the gas, tv, or repair). This explains why there is price inflation when taxes go up.

      So in fact, the richer don't pay much tax simply because they have the power re-route this taxes to the prices of the goods their enterprises offer. Don't you agree?

      --
      []'s Victor Bogado da Silva Lins

      ^[:wq

    39. Re:The Linux Community? by spasmatik · · Score: 1

      How is the parent a troll? DOn't liek to hear the truth? These comments are really unbeleivable. Can you name another person who has donated $27 Billion to charity? THis is jsut one single donation yet everyone is talking about 1.5%. Who cares if it's 1000th of a percent, it will have way more impact than if I or any of you donated 100% of our salaries for the next 20 years. This is about the greater good served not the rightousness of Bill Gates. comparing linux to $750 million dollar donation to charity is laughable.

    40. Re:The Linux Community? by freemacmini · · Score: 1

      " Stating that free software isn't some grand altruistic venture isn't belittling. "

      Who says it's not a grand altruistic venture? You? Thousands of people working for free to provide software for billions isn't altruistic enough for you?

      "This is software, not food or medicine."

      And this is the 21st century. Software the 21st century equavalent of a plow and a horse.

      "While Microsoft has a lot of highly questionable anti-competitive products, they're hardly pharmaceutical companies trying to enforce patents in 3rd world countries for AIDS drugs."

      What a ringing endorsement. Microsoft is not as evil as the most evil corporations.

      "As far as Gate's generosity, he could easily have horded all his money like most billionaires do"

      What a ringing endorsement. Bill Gates could be more evil if he wanted to!.

      "No one is forcing him to give it all away. "

      He isn't giving much. I gave a 100 dollars to the tsunami relief fund, that's a higher percentage of my salary then Bill Gates. Last year I have thousands of dollars to charities, expressed as a percentage of my salary that makes me 100 times better then Gates. Gates can give away 99% of his salary and still live like a king on a couple of billion dollars.

      "Heard any stories about Richard Bramson of Virgin giving away billions of dollars?"

      I don't know about billions but yes I have heard of it. TO be fair you have look because he does not make press releases when he gives away money becuase he is not trying to rehabilitate his reputation as an evil bastard. Oh and he doesn't have as money as Gates either. Ted Turner also doesn't have as money as gates but he gave away a billion dollars and tons of land. Unlike gates he is not simply giving stock either, he is giving actual money and land.

    41. Re:The Linux Community? by Glog · · Score: 1

      I read the first lines of your message and I was like: "You have never filed taxes, have you?" Please repeat after me: ALL CHARITABLE DONATIONS ARE TAX-FREE! PERIOD.

    42. Re:The Linux Community? by freemacmini · · Score: 1

      Teach a man to fish and he will eat for a lifetime.

    43. Re:The Linux Community? by Vellmont · · Score: 1

      You sir, have completely bought into consumerism. Low prices are a public good? More stuff to own?


      To put it a different way... say some people volunteer to paint houses for low income people and do a damn good job at it... You're point of view seems to be, "Hey! The guy that charges me a few thousand dollars to paint my house never gets any sort of recognition, and he does the same thing those volunteers do!"

      No, my point of view is simply that software just doesn't rank up there as a big public need. You also miss-represent free software. It isn't some kind of arrangement to help the poor, it just produces free software. If that's what you want, great, but don't get too full of yourself that free software is like free soup kitchens and shelters.

      --
      AccountKiller
    44. Re:The Linux Community? by ScentCone · · Score: 2, Informative

      ALL CHARITABLE DONATIONS ARE TAX-FREE! PERIOD.

      Hope you never get audited! That's simply not true. Only donations to 501(c)(3) and similarly chartered entities are deductable. That's why you can't just donate to a local kid's club and assume that it's deductable. Otherwise, any two people could get together, call themselves a charity, take your money (which you would write off as a deduction), and they'd have income that would be outside of the 501 review process. There's a reason charities have to be registered as such - corruption among fake or non-reporting entities is rampant, otherwise.

      and I was like: "You have never filed taxes, have you?"

      Were you like that, or did you actually say that out loud. I always wonder what people mean when they're "like" something.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    45. Re:The Linux Community? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Well I heard that Bush has made some changes that made richer people pay less and poorer pay more

      Bush proposed tax cuts, but has no authority to actually make them happen. That has to be done by the elected representatives, in a majority. He can then choose to sign that new rule and make it official. He did, in this case - but it's important to know that all people who pay taxes had their taxes reduced. Because rich people pay so much more taxes than everyone else, the number of dollars less they pay is of course higher - because they already pay hugely more every year than everyone else. But the recent tax chance reduced the taxes for all people that actually pay taxes. Please remember that 70 million people already are paying no taxes anyway... you can't lower taxes below $0.00. Everyone else, everyone, got their taxes reduced in that new regulation.

      So in fact, the richer don't pay much tax simply because they have the power re-route this taxes to the prices of the goods their enterprises offer. Don't you agree?

      Actually, I do not agree. Corporate taxes (those that are paid by businesses) are another matter. So far, we've been talking about personal taxes (say, the money that Bill Gates personally has to pay, as opposed to the money that Microsoft has to pay). Companies certainly have to pay huge taxes as well. If a company finds that they are being taxed severely, of course they will raise their prices so that they can earn the profit that their investors demand (or else, the investors will just take their money somewhere else). This is exactly why lowering taxes on businesses helps to keep inflation under control. Even better, with lower taxes and inflation, you end up with healthier, growing businesses that employ more people and can afford to better compensate those people. It's a delicate balance, but the U.S. has been doing fairly well in that regard over the last few years. Considering the huge blow that 9/11 was to our economy, the fact that jobs are being added and that interest rates and inflation remain low is pretty amazing.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    46. Re:The Linux Community? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      And why is this post a troll post??? Maybe, because the poster is right????

      In my best Elvis voice: Thank you, thank you very much.

      I'd like to think that modding that post as troll was a fluke, but the anti-MS agenda here on slashdot is so pervasive, and so transparently adolescent and routinely uninformed, that it really should come as no surprise. What surprises me is that you noticed! What a breath of fresh air. I hate to think how many genuine trolls you have to read to find the babies that are thrown out with the bathwater.

      Do I think that MS is perfect? No. Do I make a living in and around their products? To a certain extent. Do I think that Linux is cool? Sure. Do I think that modding down a valid observation, especially when it responds to a post that's dripping with not-very-subtle condemnation of MS for being successful, is childish? Yes.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    47. Re:The Linux Community? by Dutchmaan · · Score: 1

      YOU sir have bought into consumerism.. YOU were the one who exhaulted WalMart.

      I'll agree that software doesn't rank as a public need.. but a public service YES..

      If that's what you want, great, but don't get too full of yourself that free software is like free soup kitchens and shelters.

      I'm sorry you've come to that assumption. It's completely wrong, but hey.. you're welcome to your own opinions. You've also completely missed my point as I believe we are discussing two completely different things... and before you start speaking about people getting too full of themselves, you should look in the mirror first... Personally speaking you sound a little arrogant.. as I probably do to you... and since we both are probably speaking from completely different viewpoints about completely different things while refusing to listen to the other person, I really don't see any reason to continue this thread...

    48. Re:The Linux Community? by spasmatik · · Score: 1

      Ok, the linux community are the users correct? If its the contributors only we are talking about they are hardly relevant as most of you people do NOT contribute to linux. How is using free software helping society enough to compare it to Gates foundation donating $27 billion in its history? I am confused. Could someone make it clear to me?

    49. Re:The Linux Community? by geomon · · Score: 1

      The beauty of "selling" software (or anything else) is that it enables not just Bill Gates to have money, but also for tens of thousands of people who work for him to have jobs, salaries, health insurance, etc.

      And the beauty of producing software for free distribution is that no matter what your income level, if you can get to a computer, you have the potential to increase your knowledge and productivity. That increases the wealth of your community and rasies the standard of living for all of your neighbors.

      Purchasing software ships money out of your community and enriches individuals who actively seek to keep you from using freely distributed software.

      Yes, there is a difference between Gates' generosity and his impact on globalized information.

      --
      "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    50. Re:The Linux Community? by DaFallus · · Score: 1

      He isn't giving much. I gave a 100 dollars to the tsunami relief fund, that's a higher percentage of my salary then Bill Gates. Last year I have thousands of dollars to charities, expressed as a percentage of my salary that makes me 100 times better then Gates. Gates can give away 99% of his salary and still live like a king on a couple of billion dollars.

      "The foundation's grants have provided funds for underrepresented minority college scholarships, AIDS prevention, diseases that strike mainly in the third world, and other causes. The Foundation currently provides 90% of the world budget for the attempted eradication of poliomyelitis, the World Health Organization having 'moved on' to other diseases. In June 1999, Gates and his wife donated US$5 billion to their foundation, the largest single donation ever by living individuals. He has donated more than 100 million dollars to help children suffering from AIDS." All from wikipedia

      So because Gates doesn't give away 99% of his savings, he isn't giving much? I don't see you giving up every dime you have and living on the street. I mean, you can always give more, but belittling a man's attempts to help others because "he can always do more" is pathetic.

      --
      No one cares what your captcha was

      Houston TX, USA
    51. Re:The Linux Community? by bwy · · Score: 1

      Personally, I prefer buying food, medical care for my kids, going out to eat, going to Disney World, living in a decent house, driving a decent car, owning an iBook, etc. much more than I prefer spending all my time building things for free to give to people I don't know or think about.

      If you for some reason think your neighbor has a God-given right to own an operating system yet think he can't afford $100 for XP Home, consider this, originally from: (http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,132956,00.htm l

      The following are facts about persons defined as "poor" by the Census Bureau, taken from various government reports:

      -- Forty-six percent of all poor households own their own homes. The average home owned by persons classified as poor by the Census Bureau is a three-bedroom house with one-and-a-half baths, a garage, and porch or patio.

      -- Seventy-six percent of poor households have air conditioning. By contrast, 30 years ago, only 36 percent of the entire U.S. population enjoyed air conditioning.

      -- Only 6 percent of poor households are overcrowded. More than two-thirds have more than two rooms per person.

      -- The average poor American has more living space than the average individual living in Paris, London, Vienna, Athens and other European cities. (These comparisons are to the average citizens in foreign countries, not to those classified as poor.)

      -- Nearly three-quarters of poor households own a car; 30 percent own two or more cars.

      -- Ninety-seven percent of poor households have a color television. Over half own two or more color televisions.

      -- Seventy-eight percent have a VCR or DVD player; 62 percent have cable or satellite TV reception.

      -- Seventy-three percent own a microwave oven, more than half have a stereo, and a third have an automatic dishwasher.

    52. Re:The Linux Community? by Vellmont · · Score: 1


      YOU sir have bought into consumerism.. YOU were the one who exhaulted WalMart.


      Umm.. no. Read the part where I said no one buys into Walmart helping society.

      I'm sorry you've come to that assumption. It's completely wrong, but hey.. you're welcome to your own opinions.

      Hmm.. how could I _possibly_ come to that conclusion with statements like:

      The Linux community is ALREADY contributing to the good of society

      and

      To put it a different way... say some people volunteer to paint houses for low income people and do a damn good job at it...

      So free software is a public good, and is like people painting houses for low income people. I just don't know where that idea came from at all!

      Personally speaking you sound a little arrogant..

      Possibly. Not that I really care. I'm sick and tired of the hippy-dippy belief among a small percentage of the OSS community that free software is going to save the world and that by writing code you're "doing good". Many "artists" think that art is going to save the world. I bet many poets think the same thing. People tend to overstate the importance of their own talents in the world and forget all we really need is health (mental and physical), food, and shelter. Anything over that is just bonus.

      --
      AccountKiller
    53. Re:The Linux Community? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody's saying there's anything wrong with charging for software. I'm pleased to earn my living doing something else and writing software for free, now certain people seem to have a real problem with that!

    54. Re:The Linux Community? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Personally, I prefer buying food, medical care for my kids, going out to eat, going to Disney World, living in a decent house, driving a decent car, owning an iBook, etc. much more than I prefer spending all my time building things for free to give to people I don't know or think about.

      None of which you'll be able to do when your job is outsourced, welcome to the third world moron!

    55. Re:The Linux Community? by geomon · · Score: 1

      Personally, I prefer buying food, medical care for my kids, going out to eat, going to Disney World, living in a decent house, driving a decent car, owning an iBook, etc. much more than I prefer spending all my time building things for free to give to people I don't know or think about.

      So when asked "Am I My Brother's Keeper?", you answered with a resounding "Fuck NO!".

      Congratulations.

      If you for some reason think your neighbor has a God-given right to own an operating system yet think he can't afford $100 for XP Home,

      Actually, I don't believe that my neighbor has any "God-given" rights because I don't believe in god. That point notwithstanding, the remaining crapflood in the rest of your post does not apply to the folks I was referring to: the world's poor.

      --
      "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    56. Re:The Linux Community? by Dutchmaan · · Score: 1

      Dude.. get a life beyond money, people are more than just a resource.

      10 to 1 says your a small business owner... or management of some sort.

    57. Re:The Linux Community? by bwy · · Score: 1

      So when asked "Am I My Brother's Keeper?", you answered with a resounding "Fuck NO!".

      Depends if you're talking about my real brother or not. As an example, I don't consider you my brother.

      Congratulations.

      Thanks.

    58. Re:The Linux Community? by geomon · · Score: 1

      Depends if you're talking about my real brother or not.

      It is true that charity begins at home, but in your case it stops there as well.

      As an example, I don't consider you my brother.

      I give thanks to the IPU for that fact.

      I've noticed that your reply is missing those entertaining Fox News factoids regarding the wealth of the poor *in the world*.

      --
      "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    59. Re:The Linux Community? by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1
      In many ways you are right. And to be honest, a lot of people just take OSS and give nothing back. I know they can, but it's like the old fable about everyone putting something into the soup.

      I've said it to friends of mine - give $5 to Mozilla or OpenOffice.org - look how much they are improving your life, and it's far more than $5.

      I'd love to say here "well, if people have OSS, they may be spending the difference on charitable donations", but I don't believe that. They'll just buy more crap instead. You have given me an idea though - to give a portion of my saving using OpenOffice.org from my company to a charity each year.

      All that said, there may well be benefits for countries trying to get out of poverty. They do need software to run their governments, and maybe if they can save some money on software, or maybe run things better with it, they can serve their people better. Also, if they, instead of paying for a foreign company to look after something, get a local guy to tweak it, that improves their local skills, and therefore, the local economy.

      The biggest gain of free software is a global one though. It may help people have more access to technology, including in the west. It may help children get better educated, and have a better understanding of the world.

    60. Re:The Linux Community? by freemacmini · · Score: 1

      "So because Gates doesn't give away 99% of his savings, he isn't giving much? "

      No he isn't giving much because he isn't giving a measurable percentage of his income.

      "I don't see you giving up every dime you have and living on the street. "

      If I give away 99% of my money I would be living on the street. If Bill gates gave away 99% of his money he would still have hundreds of millions of dollars. DO you see the difference?

      "I mean, you can always give more, but belittling a man's attempts to help others because "he can always do more" is pathetic."

      Nonsense. He can make a real difference in the world if he wants to. Why does he need 50 billion dollars? what is he going to do with that. I say it's his DUTY to end hunger or illiteracy in the world. He can do that and still fly his plane to france for dinner at a reastaurant he bought that day.

    61. Re:The Linux Community? by bwy · · Score: 1

      I've noticed that your reply is missing those entertaining Fox News factoids regarding the wealth of the poor *in the world*.

      Now, why would I have included those when your comment was:

      That increases the wealth of your community and rasies the standard of living for all of your neighbors.

      From dictionary.com, community is defined as "A group of people living in the same locality and under the same government." Therefore, facts on poverty in Zaire would be quite irrelavant to your point.

    62. Re:The Linux Community? by geomon · · Score: 1

      A group of people living in the same locality...

      Are you living somewhere other than Earth? ...and under the same government.

      Then why does the US refer to Mexico and Canada as neighbors?

      We don't live under the same government.

      Therefore, facts on poverty in Zaire would be quite irrelavant to your point.

      You are incapable of drawing the conclusion that my point is irrelevant because you shown in all of your posts that you can't comprehend my point.

      Everyone else, however, understands my point quite well.

      --
      "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    63. Re:The Linux Community? by spectecjr · · Score: 1

      Who says it's not a grand altruistic venture? You? Thousands of people working for free to provide software for billions isn't altruistic enough for you?

      If it was altruistic, it would be licensed under BSD, not GPL.

      End of story.

      --
      Coming soon - pyrogyra
    64. Re:The Linux Community? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Were you like that, or did you actually say that out loud. I always wonder what people mean when they're "like" something.

      I can help you out there. While it is seen as incorrect, what the pedants seem to forget is that saying/writing "and I was like..." comes from spoken conversation.

      Spoken conversation differs from purely written language because it also contains large amounts of information contained in body language, tone, facial expression, gestures etc.

      In spoken conversation, when somebody says "I was like..." they are, in that moment, usually re-enacting to some extent how they behaved in the past. The listener experiences not only the current conversation, but a sketch of what the past moment was like, encapsulated in (admittedy amateurish) acting.

      People generally realise this, and it has progressed to a form of short-hand to automatically make the listener (or reader!) interpret the past experience being related using their own sense of empathy.

      For example, in the OP's post, you can automatically FEEL the condescension/disbelief/possible contempt coming from their statement. While you might get this from a rewritten sentence, I think the use of "like" enriches the statement.

      So, I hoped I helped in explaining why people instinctively do this, even if it isn't gramatically "correct". It helps to remember that language is not just written or spoken in a monotone - it is experienced, it is contextual, and most of all it is collaborative. Now, if you want I can explain why emoticons are used in informal written documents :)

    65. Re:The Linux Community? by Vellmont · · Score: 1

      Wrong and wrong. I manage no one but myself and I'm actually quite poor. I care little about money. Sorry, but all your assumptions are dead wrong.

      --
      AccountKiller
    66. Re:The Linux Community? by Vellmont · · Score: 1

      Wow, I've never heard such an ivory tower explanation of the use of "and I was like". I guess if you use complicated enough language you can make anything sound like it's brilliant prose.

      Personally to my ears such phrases have always sounded to me like 16 year old high school talk. The same for the use of the word "retarded" for situations, events, etc. i.e. "that is SOO retarded!". Hey, if you want to sound like you're an uneducated high school kid, go right ahead and use phrases like that. Maybe sometimes that's appropriate.

      --
      AccountKiller
    67. Re:The Linux Community? by Glog · · Score: 1

      Hmm, you do have a point there - when I said that all of them are deductible I meant donations to chartered charity organizations. I do know that giving five bucks to the bum on the corner is not a claimable deduction. Not being an accountant I lack the terminology :P As for the saying the thing outloud - no, I didn't, I just thought it "outloud" in my brain :D Cheers!

    68. Re:The Linux Community? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Not being an accountant

      Whew!

      As for the saying the thing outloud - no, I didn't, I just thought it "outloud" in my brain

      I knew that. I just can't resist giving people a hard time about the "like" usage. Too often younger kids rely on it in conversation, and slip into a re-enactment of what they're trying to convey, rather than articulating something more abstractly. I worry that we're truly raising a generation that actually won't be able to think in the abstract or mentally summarize something without "going to the video" in their minds, and so I fight the good fight, even here on slashdot. I'm like, "I don't like that! Don't be all, so... like, you know what I mean?"

      Thanks for taking the poke in good spirits.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    69. Re:The Linux Community? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Actually, some 10 years ago, The Washington Post's science page treated this issue substantially. It landed on the science page because it was handled from a linguistic perspective, and slightly from a cultural studies/observations perspective.

      The author of the article essentially praised teenagers for adopting a consistently framed multi-use paradigm. The qualitative "like," the associative "like," and so on.

      What was missing from the article, I thought, was any thoughts about the degree to which the users of the qualitative "like" (the re-enactors you mention) are losing their ability to abstractly, and contextually frame what it is that they're retelling. At some level they know that the event was important enough to remember and to convey to the listener, and contextually they know that it's vital to their conversation... but their inability (or laziness) in regards to being able to abstractly describe things is worrisome. Not because it's lazy to give a shrug, roll your eyes, or any of the other in-person communication techniques that save a thousand words, but because using such techniques almost to the exclusion, ever, of more precise communication hurts them later. Nuanced speech, sprinkled with a wider vocabulary, isn't just a pleasant artform - it permits more effective communication about complex topics, and can cut to the heart of matter without relying on as much interpretation by the audience.

      Instead of:

      "He was like..." (and re-enacts talking on a cell phone)

      "And I was like, 'no WAY'" (and re-enacts waving to get somebody's attention)

      We just rarely hear, "I know he saw me, but he walked right by as if I wasn't even there. I'm guessing he was preoccupied."

      Now, I don't expect people to talk out loud the way they'd write, and there's nothing worse than written dialog that sounds stilted (um, see above!). But somewhere in between there's a level of spoken discourse that suggests that the speaker thinks back on events in a more-than-TiVo way - and that usually suggests critical thinking skills, and a more stimulated brain in general. Parents and teachers that don't challenge kids to get past the "like"/re-enact aren't doing them any favors.

      Thanks for being the anthropologist in this case though - your obervations on the usage are dead on, but I'm more curious about whether or not you consider its rampant use among the young to be symptomatic of anything larger. You're like, "see?" and I'm like, "huh!" and everyone else reading this is no doubt like, "whatEVER!"

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    70. Re:The Linux Community? by Glog · · Score: 1

      Like I do, dude! Well, first off, I am not that young any more :D Second, English is not my first language, yet I know I speak and write better than the average native.

  20. And $0 for anything really important by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These rich bastards are always doing things to be able to pat themselves on the backs, but when it comes to repairing the real damage they've done in the world, for which they should feel guilty, they do nothing. So, no, he will give $0 toward employing more American workers in the USA and continues to prefer cheaper foreignors, and no he will continue to ruin the future of software with his software patents and concomitant legal-bribery for politicians. And oh, he will also give $0 to help save the US democracy which has been repeated attacked by the Bush Crime Family with its rigging of elections, but he supports Bush and prefers a rigged democracy because it's better for business (http://www.votecobb.org).

    1. Re:And $0 for anything really important by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's right. With these corporate executive types the giving is all just a show. They want to pretend to be civilized humane people while their corporate lawyers undermine your govt and screw you over personally without your knowing it.

  21. Is samzenpus michael's replacement? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Between this and the "new keyboard" story, it looks like michael has an apprentice. With blatant trolling like "Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity" right in the heading, it's no wonder people are begging to be allowed to moderate the stories themselves.

  22. My box by BladeMelbourne · · Score: 3, Funny
    I would like him to pay for my Windows installation at work to be vaccinated from virus infections.

    Will someone please think of the computers?
    Oh wait, that should beWill someone please think of the children?

    1. Re:My box by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      if you have viruses in your box then I suggest you use some protection.

  23. Generosity by vladd_rom · · Score: 1

    >> Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity.

    It already did. Several times.

    Think of all those "donations" that happen implicitly every time a poor guy in a 3rd world country uses a legal Linux box instead of commiting piracy.

    This is kind of "give me all your money and I'll donate 5% to charity!" compared to "I don't want any money from you".

    1. Re:Generosity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Think of all those "donations" that happen implicitly every time a poor guy in a 3rd world country uses a legal Linux box instead of commiting piracy.

      Yes, I see homeless people in the streets every day warming their hands on their Athlons, thanking the Linux community for providing them with a free OS to run their cpu's at max speed and generate maximum warmth. Starvation and disease wants to be free!

  24. This isn't what we meant... by jdduke · · Score: 1

    ...when we said MS should do something about viruses.

  25. Bill Gates does lots of good by egyber · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I am friends with the daughter of the head of the Gates Foundation... Bill has told her (my friend) that his goal is to give as much as possible of his money to charity. He actually really cares about the world and his foundation and its work is proof of his commitment.

    Many may disagree with Microsoft's practices but Bill Gates is extremely committed to the world.

    1. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by KontinMonet · · Score: 0, Troll

      What percentage of Sir Billy's income/wealth goes to charity? What percentage of income/wealth of the average (presumably working) charity-giving Joe goes to charity? Let's see who wins the pissing contest on that basis.

      --
      Did he inhale?
    2. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would be too if I had his amount of cash.

    3. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget that taxes are a form of Charity. I mean how else would some of the lazy folks out there get fed and housed without the Government giving them your hard earned dollars.

    4. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by Gob+Blesh+It · · Score: 1

      I doubt Bill Gates sees saving the lives of millions as a "pissing contest." How sad that you evidently do.

    5. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I am friends with the daughter of the head of the Gates Foundation

      Quick!! marry her now!!!

      Then you can start corrupting her and siphon off money to your offshore account and in 5 years time you'll be living it large in the Caymans.

    6. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a load of horse shit.

      A capitalist bent on world domination at the expense of governments and consumers and Freedom itself has a big hearts?!

      More likely a big ego, and a lot of repressed guilt!

    7. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by Secrity · · Score: 0, Troll

      Moderation -1 100% Bullshit My bullshit detector just went off the scale.

    8. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by robvs68 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Of course it is great that Bill set up the Gates Foundation to help some of the less fortunate in the world. This indicates that he has some heart. However, it does not necessarily indicate that he cares as much as some may think.

      Consider this:
      Bill's a smart guy and therefore knows that the US government is going to take half of his net worth when he dies. So if he is worth $50B at death, the government gets ~$25B. Realizing this, Bill decides that he'd rather give that money to someone else (ie: the less fortunate in the world). So he creates the Gates Foundation to start siphoning off large chunks of his personal fortune. Let's say, for example, that he ends up giving 80% of his net worth to charity. That's $40B given the assumption above, leaving $5B for the government and $5B for his family.

      Under this scenario Bill's family gets a much smaller piece of the $50B pie, but he probably doesn't feel too guilty about leaving his family a paltry $5B, especially since he is dictating where his money goes, not the government.

    9. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also bear in mind that the Gates foundation employs his parents. So by giving to the Gates foundation he gives to his family anyway.

    10. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bill gates has said repeatedly that he plans on giving all of his money away before he dies, minus a small trust for his daughter

    11. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by unixbugs · · Score: 0

      How about giving it to the Open Source community so we can replace Crapware 2010 XP PRO v5.595z Post-Millenium Pre-Eon Server Station Media Edition with something that people can learn from instead of dump money into.

      Aside from my views, it is truly sad, in reading posts regarding where monies would otherwise go if not spent on microsoft, that people would use thier 'discretion' on the same old bullshit like fancy clothes, pointless music, and of course the obligatory yin-yang coffee tables.

      --
      You are about to give someone a piece of your mind, something which you can ill afford...
    12. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by mutterc · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I've had this sort of thing used as an argument against my particular vision of capitalist dystopia.

      I believe that, in a world populated by increase-profits-by-any-means companies, and frictionless free trade, because of "tragedy of the commons", that the entire world's standard of living will drop to the lowest level they are today, and stay there forever. (I also believe, because of "prisoner's dilemma", that it's impossible to buck the trend, because if your company acts in a socially responsible manner, it will have its lunch eaten by some company that doesn't).

      However, once wealth gets concentrated to a small number of individuals, individual ethics come into play. The Gates Foundation is an indication that it's possible for an individual person to act in a socially-responsible way (as opposed to corporations, who must not.) It's a counterbalancing force to corporate evil - one that actually stands a chance of mitigating its effects.

    13. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by Peldor · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As the mega-rich go, Bill is easily the most charitable. Compare the Walton family (collectively worth more than Bill) and you'll find some real tight-fisted bastards (who've probably crushed 100 times the number of small businesses as Microsoft).

    14. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by mapmaker · · Score: 1
      his goal is to give as much as possible of his money to charity.

      That would be all of it, wouldn't it? Seems to me that he's given away a lot less than all of it.

    15. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by karnal · · Score: 1

      What percentage of Sir Billy's income/wealth goes to charity? What percentage of income/wealth of the average (presumably working) charity-giving Joe goes to charity? Let's see who wins the pissing contest on that basis.

      Jesus, you guys really don't get this do you? Givin g money, no matter who the giver is, is NOT a pissing contest. This is a good deed by a good foundation and all you idiots here in slashdot land say "OOOO! He could have given MORE!!!"

      But what pisses me off the most is that about half of the posts here somehow associate Bill's foundation giving money to a good cause to be evil because Microsoft was what produced Bill's riches in the first place. Who cares....

      I'm sick of typing now.

      --
      Karnal
    16. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by Yaruar · · Score: 1

      From interviews i've seen in the past Bill intends to leave a few million + houses etc to his children and wife in his will, the rest of his personal assets will go to the foundation. In real terms it seems like he is commiting well over 99 percent of his assets to charity in the long run.

      --
      Working for the (other) man
    17. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by caudron · · Score: 1

      Bill Gates is the head of a company that, under his watch and (according to evidence entered into record) by his direct order, used illegal means to gain its profits. This is a matter of fact as proved in both European and US courts.

      Bill Gates' money was ill-gotten, and now I'm supposed to smile and act pleased that he is choosing to give back a small portion of the money he stole from us in the first place? No thanks.

      I am not so lost to the ideological that I can't appreciate the good that money will do, and were I the charity he was giving to, I'd take it with a smile, but let's never, EVER forget that he's just giving us back the money he stole in the first place.

      No, he willfully broke the law repeatedly to get that money, and even if the governments refuse to punish him for it, I will not give him a moral free-ride. Dammit, he SHOULD be giving that money back to the world! He gets no pat on the back from me for doing what he ought to do in the first place.

      Go ahead and mod me down for my cynicism, but I can't sit back and let people pretend that this is generousity. A generous theif is still a theif.

      --
      -Tom
    18. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by Dominatus · · Score: 1

      No idea how the world works, do you?

      If Gates gave all his money away he'd have no capital to continue making money. Therefore, the chairty he provides would be done. One shot, the world gets a lot of money, and then its over. If, instead, he gives *some* of his money, while retaining capital to make more money, he is able to donate throughout the course of his entire life.

    19. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by EEgopher · · Score: 1

      Jim-Bob and John-Boy were such helpful lads, helping to water the horses, and whatnot. I find this "tight-fisted" accusation absurd.

      --
      hi, I like pancakes -.-- -.-- --..
    20. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by freemacmini · · Score: 1

      Good to know Bill Gates is not the MOST evil person in the world. That's one competition he is not intent on winning. He seems perfectly happy to be in the top 10.

    21. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

      --As the mega-rich go, Bill is easily the most charitable. Compare the Walton family (collectively worth more than Bill) and you'll find some real tight-fisted bastards (who've probably crushed 100 times the number of small businesses as Microsoft).--

      I wonder how much John Boy Walton makes? Is it more than Grandpa?

    22. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by ThousandStars · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I can't believe tripe like this gets modded informative. Fact of the matter is, Gates has so much money that he can't live any better lifestyle than he does now. Still, he doesn't have to do anything with his money -- he could keep until he dies, let the government take some -- if the death tax is even around then -- and leave a huge pile of cash for his family. (Assuming, of course, that MS is still as big as it is today in, say, ~35 years -- and there's no guarantee of that.)

      So he doesn't have to give anything away. It isn't a matter of him being smart or dumb; it's a matter of him being compassionate. Much as I dislike MS's business practices, I have to laud Gates for his philanthropic effortts.

    23. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ooh, he supposedly (none of these cases is finished) broke some big "monopoly laws". Wow, what an evil man. Doing what he wants with his own intellectual property! Evil!

      He did not steal any money, people gave it to him. People chose to give it to him. A bunch of greedy lawyers acting as lackeys for small companies with no business skills does not mean Gates stole anything.

      Applying antitrust laws to intellectual property is a joke. They only make sense when applied to physically limited products - oil, water, power, air, you name it. The entire legal proceedin against Microsoft is a joke.

      Your rhetoric is really pathetic. Mod you down? These Slashdot assholes love your kind of mindless hatred. Who are you kidding trying to paint yourself as the lone Microsoft/BG cynic?

      Really - your outrage makes me laugh a little, but it's also sad.

    24. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by Yusaku+Godai · · Score: 1

      While I'm sure that may be partially the case, I don't see how there's anything wrong with it.

      While I'm for giving taxes, I wouldn't doubt it for a second that the foundation could spend that kind of money far better than the U.S. gubment.

      As for leaving little for his family, Bill Gates himself has said that he doesn't intend to leave a massive inheritance for his kids, as he wants them to make it on their own. I mean, I wouldn't be surprised if they still got a few million, but not so much that they just get intellectually lazy.

    25. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by ad0gg · · Score: 1
      Yawn. He's smart man with smart tax accountants. There's no way he'll ever payout half his money in taxes. He could easily setup a living trust or other tax shelters. Gates has even stated that he's only leaving his children up to $10 million a piece(if they graduate from college). His dad Gates SR, is big pusher of estate taxes.

      Gates SR on Estate Taxes
      Another article on gates and estate taxes

      --

      Have you ever been to a turkish prison?

    26. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by jonhuang · · Score: 1

      ..or he could invest $1 billion into getting the estate tax removed. Or into emigrating to russia, and having the russian governemnt declare the "no tax for gates law." Instead he plans on donating almost all of it, and leaving his children small (relatively) inheritances. Good for him. Good for gates. Good for the world.

    27. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by GoofyBoy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >So if he is worth $50B at death, the government gets ~$25B.

      And that would leave ~25B for his family.

      > for example, that he ends up giving 80% of his net worth to charity. That's $40B given the assumption above, leaving $5B for the government and $5B for his family.

      So he does it one way his family gets ~25B, he does it the other way they get ~5B. How does this justify his foundation?

      > especially since he is dictating where his money goes, not the government.

      Thats called being smart, its called estate planning and you don't need to give the money away to charity to do this. If you had that much money, it would be irresponsible to just leave it to the government.

      --
      The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    28. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by robvs68 · · Score: 1

      I can't believe tripe like this gets modded informative...[skip]...It isn't a matter of him being smart or dumb; it's a matter of him being compassionate.

      Tripe? The post to which you refer says, Of course it is great that Bill set up the Gates Foundation to help some of the less fortunate in the world. This indicates that he has some heart. It then speculates from a cynic's perspective about addition motivations Bill may have for giving lots of money to charity. It does not assert that Bill IS a certain way, it merely speculates that Bill MAY BE a certain way.

      Unless you know Bill Gates very well and on a personal basis, you can not say for sure if the cynical view is wrong.

    29. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by The_Quinn · · Score: 1
      Just goes to show, that even if a perfectly honest person, who feels an unearned guilt for having earned his money, and who feels guilty for his success, will never be met by anything other than scorn and condemnation. (He didnt sacrifice enough, he didnt suffer so he has not cleanse the sin of his success in life.)

      We should learn to admire the successful at life, and save our contempt for those who do not choose to make the most out of their own lives.

    30. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Many may disagree with Microsoft's practices but Bill Gates is extremely committed to the world.

      Read Burmese Days by George Orwell.

      The bigger the sin, the bigger the shrine.

    31. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. Most of you slash-dotters talk like you know everything about Microsoft and Bill Gates. The bottom line is he's a successful businessman, basically just like all other businessmen. He does what it takes for his company to make money. Whether you agree with it or not, THAT'S WHAT ALL BUSINESSMEN DO!!! You all are just baggin' on him because for some reason you've decided that you don't like Windows. You have to admit that Windows has turned into a pretty good operating system. Certainly as good as some of the Linux distros out there. Sure, it has its downfalls but so does every other OS. If it was truely crap, no one would want it.

      You guys need to pull your heads out of your butts . Gates' $750M will go a lot further to help those in need than your measly $20 anyday. Give him a little credit.

    32. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1
      So, my objection to this line of thinking is that people start thinking that the end justifies the means when it clearly does not.

      If people get the idea that it's OK to horde disgusting amounts of money by breaking the law (ie, violate the will of the people) over and over again as long as you give it away at the end, then we're all fucked. That way lies madness. Let me explain.

      Quite clearly this money did not appear out of nowhere. It was generated by everyone working in Western economies, and Gates acquired so much by thoroughly immoral and unethical means.

      It would have been trivial for that cash to have been collected by an actual tax of say $300 on computers that went to the government or to some third party foundation, which would have arguably generated similar or greater levels of wealth, as most of Microsofts income comes from sales of Windows and Office which are preloaded. Then the $50 billion+ dollars could have been distributed according to the will of the people, as opposed to the pretty much arbitrary will of Bill Gates.

      As Peldor astutely points out, there are plenty of billionaires who give far less than Gates, which itself re-inforces the point that Gates is not a saint for giving that money away because it wasn't his money to begin with. For every one with his level of wealth, there are ten more who give nearly nothing.

      If you are applauding Gates' generosity right now, consider this: would you be equally enthusiastic if in future all preloaded Linux computers came with a computer-tax of $300 which was sent directly to a foundation controlled by publically elected and accountable individuals? Would you praise this scheme? Or would you consider it un-american or a violation of your right to choose which charities you support?

      Really there's no difference at all. Gates got his money through unethical means, and nothing he does now can make that OK. If it did, we'd be living in an anarchy.

    33. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by donnz · · Score: 1

      Very thoughtless dig in the article summary. Actually the community can do more (and as a whole probably donate huge amounts of $$s) through their opposition to the use of patents. The drugs industry is one of the biggest abusers of the patent system and much (very welcome) US / Gates aid goes into sustaining those monopoies. In other words it could and should go much further.

      --
      -- Free software on every PC on every desk
    34. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by lightknight · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Who cares what percentage. At the end of the day, 1% of Bill's wealth is enough to treat a million people, whereas 100% is enough to treat 5. Get off your soap box, and realize this is about the victims, and helping them out (which requires $, not %).

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    35. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If you had that much money, it would be irresponsible to just leave it to the government.

      Excuse me, WTF?

      The ONLY reason he has that much money is because the government has given him and his company HUGE breaks. They have bent over backwards for his company, as they do with other large companies. Check out how much taxes Microsoft pays, sometime - you might be surprised.

      Basically, he damn well owes this money back to the government so that is might be used to help the general taxpayer.

      Oops - I forgot. You're almost certainly American, and from the sounds of it a Randian and a Libertarian. Big, evil government taking your hard-earned money is a bad thing. If only taxes were lower, rich people everywhere would create a paradise out of private charity...

      Give me a break.

    36. Re:Bill Gates does lots of good by Hellkitten · · Score: 1

      Gates got his money through unethical means, and nothing he does now can make that OK

      But an admission of guilt, and then returning the money, would go a long way

      --
      - We are the slashdot. Resistance is futile. Prepare to be moderated -
  26. We did by suso · · Score: 1

    Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity.

    We did, we made an operating system that doesn't result in you taking an angle grinder to your computer.

    1. Re:We did by neverutterwhen · · Score: 1

      Actually I had to.

      But, seriously, the only person suggesting that the linux community should match this amount of money is the moron who wrote the article. Most other people can agree that Bill Gates is doing a good thing and probably couldn't care less whether you approve of it or not.

      Microsoft and bill gates may be irritating but they're not evil.

      --
      My appreciation of Douglas Adams is far deeper than yours.
  27. Linux community already donates by scsirob · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There's many Linux clusters hard at work calculating new drugs and new treatments against illnesses.

    Linux doesn't cost money, it costs effort. Linux also doesn't donate money, the community donates effort.

    --
    To Terminate, or not to Terminate, that's the question - SCSIROB
    1. Re:Linux community already donates by mjh · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Linux doesn't cost money, it costs effort. Linux also doesn't donate money, the community donates effort.
      True, but you can quantify that effort by comparing it to the cost of the next most expensive substitute. Generally the cost of a windows license is around $100. So by using a free OS, someone has saved $100, which is equivalent of Bill selling them XP and giving them $100. So for every 1 million users of a free OS, the community has donated the equivalent of $100 million.
      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    2. Re:Linux community already donates by daikokatana · · Score: 5, Insightful
      So for every 1 million users of a free OS, the community has donated the equivalent of $100 million.

      By stating this, you automatically assume that each and every one of those users WILL donate that $100 to whatever charity cause. I guess the numbers that donate will be "a bit" lower.

      While I'm not Bill Gates' biggest fan, I still applaude his example. It's easy to say that, because he is so rich, it's easy for him to donate a lot of money. But you still have to do it.

      Most people I know would never donate that (or any) amount of money, no matter how rich they were. And to be honest, nor would I.

      --
      http://jcsnippets.atspace.com/ - a collection of Java & C# snippets
    3. Re:Linux community already donates by tdemark · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's easy to say that, because he is so rich, it's easy for him to donate a lot of money.

      Let's put this in perspective...

      If Bill Gates had a net worth of $40k, he just pledged to give $60 per year to this charity.

      Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity.

      Based on above, I'd be willing to wager that, proportionally and on average, Slashdot users beat his generosity.

      - Tony

    4. Re:Linux community already donates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity.

      Since I don't charge $300.00 a copy (Windows XP Pro) for my linux distro, I don't have the funds to match Bill's donation.
    5. Re:Linux community already donates by 3terrabyte · · Score: 2, Interesting
      "Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity."

      Yea, what a lame statement. As far as I'm concerned, the Linux community's generosity is unsurpassed in it's offering of a free, robust, and safe O/S.

      --

      Why are there only 19 people folding@home for slashdot?

    6. Re:Linux community already donates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      very well said.... Linux allows charitable organisations to run a free os which reduces their bills allowing them to spend more on what matters eg research staff

    7. Re:Linux community already donates by daveashcroft · · Score: 1, Troll

      tell that the the kids dying of malaria in sub-saharan africa. im sure a free operating system would get them all giddy with excitement.

      Not.

    8. Re:Linux community already donates by tehshen · · Score: 1

      I run Folding@Home whenever I can. It is for a worthwhile cause, so does that count?

      --
      Guy asked me for a quarter for a cup of coffee. So I bit him.
    9. Re:Linux community already donates by daveashcroft · · Score: 0, Troll

      typical....you make a fair point and some pre-pubescent mod without an idea of whats important in the world mods me troll! ha. Gotta love slashdot

    10. Re:Linux community already donates by jebell · · Score: 1
      Let's put this in perspective... If Bill Gates had a net worth of $40k, he just pledged to give $60 per year to this charity.

      That's not really a good comparison. The huge figures we see for Gates' net worth is largely due to the enormous amount of Microsoft stock he has. If he were to suddenly sell all that stock, he still wouldn't have as much as it's "worth" today, because such an enormous sell-off would drive the price for MS stock way, way down.

      Don't get me wrong, he's loaded. His base salary is probably under $1 million per year, no doubt with lots of bonuses over the years and other benefits, he's probably a billionaire even without counting his MS stock as part of the equation. In fact, I think after MS went public, he sold off a good portion of his holdings, so he's probably got pretty good cash reserves.

      --
      This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
    11. Re:Linux community already donates by ThaReetLad · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'll take your wager.

      Read up on the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation. You will see that Bill has given $27 Billion of his $50 Billion fortune for the charity to manage. IIRC they are having a really tough time giving it away because it earns more interest than it can donate in a co-ordinated fashion.

      What ever you think of the guys software and business practices, it is hard to argue that he is an evil man in the face of his generosity.

      --
      You can't win Darth. If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine
    12. Re:Linux community already donates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Its sad really. Some of you have such a rediculious hatred that you can't see the simple good in people. You may not like everything the man has done, but he has donated billions to help kids all over the world. Why cheapen that? He coudl horde it all, but instead he takes what he has and does good with it. What in the world could possibly be bad about that. The biggest problems in the world are not the rich guys that give a portion of what they have, its the people that insist they have to little to give any and then cut down those that do help.

    13. Re:Linux community already donates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'd have to look at it in proportion. Forbes.com lists him as having 40,7 billion dollars in 2003. That's roughly 1,8 % of his net worth.

      can you afford to donate 2 % of your net worth?

    14. Re:Linux community already donates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      im sure a free operating system would get them all giddy with excitement.

      You are a troll for that.

      Surely you must have known that the statement "Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity" in the story was seen as a unnecessary jab. I have never understood the logic behind baiting someone (an action that often depletes goodwill) into being generous.

      A lot of the audience took offense at that parting shot. When I read it, the first thing that came to mind was: TROLL!!!You were obviously oblivious to the impact the initial remark would have.

      Bottom line, you had it coming. A lot of slashdot readers are well aware of what's going on in third world countries.

      you make a fair point and some pre-pubescent mod without an idea of whats important in the world mods me troll!

      Take notes! It's not just what you say, it's how you say it.

    15. Re:Linux community already donates by cluckshot · · Score: 2, Informative

      A pirate is still a pirate when he gives money to charity. Bill Gates is worth so much because he defrauded his stockholders in not paying proper returns on investment early on. Bill Gates is a thief because he stole the intellectual property of others. Bill Gates is a Brigand because he used his power to crush those who dared compete in his market. The fact that he gives to charity now is mostly to avoid the taxes on the remainder he claims for himself. Those who know US Tax Code know well what he is doing. He is laying his hands on a fortune and actually preventing the US Government from getting the taxes due on it.

      I know that the Microsoft Defenders will some how accuse or mod this down. But the facts will remain. Bill Gates has practically destroyed the Software Engineering Business. His practices have locked so many doors to any development that programmers were forced to declare war on him by using Linux etc., just to keep the industry running.

      I love the claims about Microsoft and Innovation. Had I not owned Compel software and others I might not know that Power Point was stolen etc. If I had not known about Java being stolen or HTML and XML being captured and the Public License abused by having the processes built in violation of the standards to make them proprietary etc I might have other view. For Bill Gates who was sharing software others wrote to come up and then accuse them from startup of stealing his work etc to now be contributing to Charity and seeing this being excuse to avoid looking at him for who and what he is ... Is horrid!

      But if you look at what the foundation is giving and what it is doing the results are even more awful. His contrabutions are definitely strategically made and for purposes which I think if someone reads the list will be all to obvious. I don't need to say it here. Look it up and follow the footprints. Just don't be fooled by the open stated purposes. Remember that there are powerful people and political purposes behind the money.

      --
      Never Politically Correct ~ I prefer the facts If you don't like what I say, get a life, or comment yourself.
    16. Re:Linux community already donates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Charitable trusts are extremely useful tax shelters, especially for those who don't plan on leaving the bulk of their wealth to children.

      They also buy the goodwill of saps like you, who think that this evil miser must not be such a bad guy after all, regardless of the number of lives he's ruined over the years.

    17. Re:Linux community already donates by elambi · · Score: 1

      I'd be willing to take your wager. You have to remember that this is not the only charity that Mr. Gates' foundation donates money to.

      --
      Sig, we don't need no stinking Sig!
    18. Re:Linux community already donates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You had me up until the final paragraph, when you suddely diverged into tinfoil hat territory.

    19. Re:Linux community already donates by Haydn+Fenton · · Score: 1

      I don't see WHY Linux should have to match this kind of generosity. Microsoft's business practices are, lets be honest, unethical and at times even below the law. Microsoft buy out competition, apply for patents on any ridiculously simple technology (OK, I know that the patent system is a 'get a patent or lose out' kind of thing, but still), malform O/S code to only work on Windows and then charge for it (Java, for example), stuff their own apps into the OS so no other companies stand much of a chance (e.g. WMP, IE - look at how much work has gone into Firefox and how much better it is, yet its been out for over a year and hasnt got a quarter of the usage IE has). Microsoft get rich from all kinds of this stuff. Whats $750,000,000 to Gates? Pocket change..

      Clearly I don't like MS's business practices, but I'll give Gates that it's a pretty good thing of him to do. Linux shouldn't have to give this kind of money away because they don't get anything like the amount of money Gates does.
      Gates may look like a good guy when he does things like this (just as Allen does), but he'll always put business before generosity.

    20. Re:Linux community already donates by Bellyflop · · Score: 1

      Bill Gates is worth so much because he defrauded his stockholders in not paying proper returns on investment early on.

      That's a pretty serious allegation. Care to back it up? I've never seen a shareholder certificate with a "proper returns" clause in it.

    21. Re:Linux community already donates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well said.

      I wish this 'community' would get its collective head out of it's ass once in a while and realise there are many more important things the world needs apart from some free OS/software.

      I wish the population /. would grow up generally!

    22. Re:Linux community already donates by Sj0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      DAmn straight. By demoninzing Gates in all situations, even donating money to save children, slashdotters/anti microsofters just prove that they're just as stubborn and stupid as many companies, like the member companies of the RIAA and MPAA or SCO, who get under *OUR* skin.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    23. Re:Linux community already donates by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      You can make a good point and still be a troll. Tone is a non-trivial part of writing.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    24. Re:Linux community already donates by RockClimb · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually your numbers are just a little off. He is donating $750M over the next 10 years which comes out to $75M per year. That would be 0.18% of his net worth. Now, I'm betting he makes better than that in interest and dividends per year. So this is a tax shelter for him, nothing more, nothing less. It just happens to be a tax shelter that a some good will come out of.

      People are missing that because of the large amount of money. For someone making say $50K a year this would amount to $90 per year. Don't get me wrong, I am glad to see some good coming out of the money.

      Having said that, I donated more than yesterday, and I don't even make $50K a year.

    25. Re:Linux community already donates by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      And bitching about moderation is mature and oh-so level headed, eh? Replying to a complaint about a said moderation to complain about how juvinille the community is, very grown up.

      By the way, half his sentences were nearly gibberish thanks to basic grammar mistakes. If I don't know everything about grammar, then the parent knows next to nothing(Meaning: I don't have perfect spelling and grammar, but at least I've tried on a basic level). It was only "well said" if you give up on any reasonable standards in determining what is well said, and change the meaning to simply mean "I agree".

      --
      It's been a long time.
    26. Re:Linux community already donates by rednip · · Score: 2, Insightful
      As the AC right above me points out, it is a charitable trust. That Charitable Trust was funded with Microsoft stock, in a similar manner as the Milton Hershey School Trust, which now is worth around $5 billion dollars.

      The 'nice' thing about a Charitable Trust, is that you can give your vast sums money to charity, but maintain control over the stock of the company you founded. People said many mean things about Carnegie in his day (most of it was fair), but he's remembered today mostly for his charitable giving (Carnegie Hall, et al).

      The man who dies rich dies disgraced. - Andrew Carnegie
      --
      The force that blew the Big Bang continues to accelerate.
    27. Re:Linux community already donates by westlake · · Score: 1
      There's many Linux clusters hard at work calculating new drugs and new treatments against illnesses. Linux doesn't cost money, it costs effort. Linux also doesn't donate money, the community donates effort.

      Do we assume then, that all these clusters run on free-as-in-beer, off-the-shelf, Linux distros, with no maintenance costs and all volunteer system administration and staffing?

    28. Re:Linux community already donates by B3ryllium · · Score: 1

      I heard that the Gates Foundation currently has about 27 billion, net worth. They just donated three quarters of a billion. That's not even close to your $40K->$60 assumption, it's more like $27K->$750. Times one million. There's a bit of a difference. Few people living on $27K (depending on living expenses) can justify donating $750 ... and for the Gates Foundation, it's hardly chump change either.

      Now, if there was a Ballmer Foundation, talk about "chump" change ... :)

    29. Re:Linux community already donates by Hrothgar+The+Great · · Score: 4, Insightful

      God, people like you make me want to puke. Your unabashed cynicism, backed up by NOT ONE single reference, but rather a horrid, confusing mess of paranoia and hatred, is like someone punching me in the throat repeatedly every time I read it.

      I have a hard time believing that even someone as mind fuckingly insane as YOU can honestly believe that, because you dislike Microsoft Windows, donating money to VACCINATING CHILDREN is somehow ALSO BAD. Good lord, you are a disgusting caricature.

    30. Re:Linux community already donates by rincebrain · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The poster above, regardless of his Tinfoil Hat Rating, is not arguing that he hates Windows and so everything Gates ever did is bad.

      He is arguing that there may be an ulterior motive behind what is done with the money.

      By all means, praise Gates for donating money...but in doing so, do not forget the golden maxim: "What could he have accomplished by doing this?"

      Admittedly, that strays into Tinfoil Hat territory as well. Look at it this way: you argue that the poster was claiming that what Gates did was bad because of one thing (Windows). I argue that you're claiming that what Gates does is good because of one thing (donating to charity).

      People enjoy saying "Actions speak louder than words," but that is a logical fallacy. If I were to commit tax fraud for forty years, and then donate half of the money I possessed as a result of it (which would be a considerable sum) to charity, that would be seen as good. If people knew that I had stolen money from the government (regardless of whether the taxes are right, fair, just, et al.) to do so, they would decry me in the streets.

      Just because one does something good does not mean that one is a good person. Keep that in mind.

      --
      It's only an insult if it's not true.
    31. Re:Linux community already donates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Our" skin? Why do you put yourself down by putting yourself in the same catagory as the majority of the idiots who read this site?

    32. Re:Linux community already donates by ThaReetLad · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Unless he's Robin Hood. OK ok, I'm not seriously comparing Bill Gates to Robin Hood, but it's not too far off the mark. Like it or not, you, me and the US government are all rich, and the people Bill G is giving his money to are genuinely poor. As I understand it, when Bill dies virtually all his money will go to charity. OK his children will never have to worry about cash, but neither will be loaded.

      I'm not going to argue that he doesn't do bad stuff, but that's what capitalism is all about . Do whatever you can get away with(if you read Marx you see that's the kind of thing which he said would bring down capitalism eventually). If you don't like it, go move to Cuba.

      As it happens I don't agree with you about Microsoft destryoying software engineering. I should make clear that I have my MSDN subscription paid for by my employer, but Microsoft really look after their 3rd party developers, because they know that they can make windows stronger by helping and encouraging software development. Some of the Microsoft visual tools are leaps and bounds ahead of their competitors, and their new technology is cool too. OK Avalon is clearly an attempt to lock out firefox, but what do you expect?

      --
      You can't win Darth. If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine
    33. Re:Linux community already donates by alw53 · · Score: 2, Funny


      And he gave it to them because he had a hard time spending it on himself. God knows he tried.

    34. Re:Linux community already donates by a_karbon_devel_005 · · Score: 1

      Ok, not to "demonize" Bill but what ELSE would you do with 50 BILLION DOLLARS? Lets think about it. Even if you gave away 48 BILLION, you'd still have 2 BILLION DOLLARS in fortune, which is more than enough for an entire generation to live on comfortably and more money than 99.999...% of the world will ever have.

      The FOUNDATION can't even spend it fast enough, how could he do anything else?? We're talking BILLIONS of dollars in PERSONAL FORTUNE, and he's given away maybe half. Wow. I'm super impressed.

    35. Re:Linux community already donates by alw53 · · Score: 1

      Exactly, it's not a question of ratios of dollars but of utility, and the 2nd billion has a lot less utility than the 1st. Eventually the use with the most utility to Bill is to give it away for good publicity and warm fuzzies.

    36. Re:Linux community already donates by cosinezero · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Wow, this guy gives away half his hard-earned personal worth, and you're still mocking him.

    37. Re:Linux community already donates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, I can EASILY argue that he is an evil man. Remember all those generous donations to schools, etc. from his foundation (tax writeoffs). Funny how you don't hear much about the software audits of OTHER schools, isn't it? Threatening fines, legal action etc. if the schools don't PAY UP! Immediately! Tens of thousands of dollars from school budgets. Yeah, Bill and his foundation are really doing great things all right.

    38. Re:Linux community already donates by ThaReetLad · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The question is motive. What is Bill Gates' motive for making all his money? Well, given he's giving a lot of his money away, it would seem money is not his motive now, although it may have been in the past. Perhaps he has a vision of having his product, his baby, on every PC in the world. What software geek wouldn't want that?
      Perhaps he just has a duty to the shareholders? In fact he did, in law have the responsibility to make as much money for his shareholders as he possibly could. Thats just the nature of capitalism so what are you going to do? If Microsoft is evil, it is because it has been the perfect embodyment of a successful corporation. It has crushed it's competitors, sailed close to the wind legally, but never been seriously harmed by it's mistakes, and it makes a fortune. If anyone is to blame for Microsofts evilness it is the US goverment and the constitution.

      --
      You can't win Darth. If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine
    39. Re:Linux community already donates by Omniscientist · · Score: 1

      He definitely may still be a pirate, and I agree with you that he is donating money to only avoid taxes. However, even though his reasoning for donating (if what your saying is true) is poor, he is still doing a good thing. This is really not a thing to argue about. If someone is donating to charity to benefit their own asses, they are still donating to charity. It's still a good thing.

    40. Re:Linux community already donates by PeelBoy · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't call that unsurpassed which means "not capable of being improved on"

      It's nice, but not unsurpassed.

    41. Re:Linux community already donates by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity.

      I'm sadly troubled to think that in order to give $750M to children that I must first become a global class bad guy.

    42. Re:Linux community already donates by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      The point was that Gates gave away about half of his money after keeping a nice nest-egg for himself (say $1 billion). Just about everybody reading this post has done that (that is, they've given at least nothing).

      It is kind of like saying how somebody who makes $60k per year who gave $1000 to Tsunami relief did a lot of good, when talking to a bunch of people making minimum wage (about $12k per year). If you just compare relative income, it would seem like somebody making $12k could give $200 with a similar level of pain - but in reality that is NOT the case. Most likely somebody making $12k can barely pay the rent - and probably is in debt besides. They don't even have $200 truly to their name...

      Don't get me wrong - it is nice to see an occassional rich person do something big for charity. However, Bill Gates could spend 95% of his wealth on charity and not drop his standard of living even the tiniest amount (seriously - how many billions of dollars can a person actually spend in a lifetime without literally hiring people to burn it?). If I give ANYTHING to charity I sacrifice the ability to eat out once or maybe buy some computer parts, or save up some money that I know I'll need for retirement.

      That is why progressive tax systems are so popular - those with huge amounts of wealth can afford to carry a disproportionate share of the tax burden...

    43. Re:Linux community already donates by KillerDeathRobot · · Score: 1

      Were the schools pirating MS software?

      --
      Thinkin' Lincoln - a web comic of presidential proportions
    44. Re:Linux community already donates by jadavis · · Score: 1

      Or, you could tell those kids dying in Africa that they should be happy a robin doesn't lay eggs that are too fragile, because that's exactly what the tradeoff was when DDT was banned. DDT was effective at killing misquitos which carry malaria, but now, misquitos aren't being controlled and millions more people are dying as a result.

      --
      Social scientists are inspired by theories; scientists are humbled by facts.
    45. Re:Linux community already donates by Rei · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yeah... but that doesn't change the fact that this wasn't, proportionally, that huge of a contribution. For example, there was almost a mocking "see if you can match this!" tone in the introduction to the article.

      In 1999, the average US charitable donation was around 2400$. Lets say it's around 2800$ now. I've seen an estimate that there are more than 12 million Linux users worldwide, and it was a bit dated; lets say, then, that there are 5 million Linux users in the US. On average, then, we can expect Linux users to donate 14 billion dollars per year to charity - easily ousting Bill.

      Not that what he's doing with his money is a bad thing, mind you. I'm glad to see that he's not just spending it on frivolous things.

      --
      People said I was dumb, but I proved them.
    46. Re:Linux community already donates by cosinezero · · Score: 1

      Yes, yes, yes, I get the economics behind it... what I don't get is why the personal attack. Like MS or not, the Gates family has been rather philanthropic - ESPECIALLY compared to others. I mean, where's steve jobs or paul allen or that oracle nitwit's money going to? Space programs for millionaires? And all this "linux community already donates" bullshit - find me a single ethiopian that would take open source operating systems over a steak, and I'll be happy to concede my point. There's money and profitability (even ethically) in the microsoft way, and the figurehead of the movement has been foremost in the world for charitable donations... and yet /.'s gotta trash the man. Only /. could make $29B in charitable donations into a negative. You're all jealous you didn't do it first.

    47. Re:Linux community already donates by snipersock · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the American dream to become rich and powerful.

    48. Re:Linux community already donates by yoder · · Score: 1

      "What ever you think of the guys software and business practices, it is hard to argue that he is an evil man in the face of his generosity."

      He may be generous now, but how did he get to this point? Carnegie built a shit load of libraries across the country (I grew up in one), but he was not what you could call a "good person". He just got old, saw that he had ensured himself an express route to hell, and saw this as an attempt at redemption. Maybe Bill was the same way. He reached a certain point in his life, saw that maybe he had not been a very "good person" and is trying to make amends so when he kicks it he goes to that hi-tech mansion in the sky and not to "The Other Place".

      --
      "In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act!" -- George Orwell (Eric Arthur Blair)
    49. Re:Linux community already donates by cosinezero · · Score: 1

      So there's no windows clusters doing the same? I think you'd be surprised. I've never seen a linux cluster in a laboratory, but I sure do see a lot of windows boxes there.

    50. Re:Linux community already donates by mjh · · Score: 1
      By stating this, you automatically assume that each and every one of those users WILL donate that $100 to whatever charity cause. I guess the numbers that donate will be "a bit" lower.
      No I'm not assuming this. I'm assuming that the value of an OS is $100. When Bill Gates gives $100 to someone and forces them to pay for their OS, they have exactly the same amount as if Linus Torvalds gives them their OS for free and lets them keep their $100.
      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    51. Re:Linux community already donates by SphericalCrusher · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Linux doesn't compete with Microsoft Windows through money, therefore they aren't rich enough to just give that amount of money (or anything close) away. But yeah, as scsirob mentioned, Linux powers clusters that calculate drugs and treatments against those illnesses... AND those clusters are stable. It's kinda like giving someone money for Christmas or giving them a gift. Everyone knows that the gift always means more, becuase they will probably only spend money on things always not relating to what they need and want most. Not saying that will happen this time, but it just makes you think.

      --
      "Instant gratification takes too long." - Carrie Fisher
    52. Re:Linux community already donates by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Because I'm a man of the people. :P

      --
      It's been a long time.
    53. Re:Linux community already donates by cosinezero · · Score: 1

      Worse still, the charitable-donation-bashers seem to get modded up. Makes me ill...

    54. Re:Linux community already donates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $0 does not beat anything Bill has donated, so no, Slashdot users dont come close

    55. Re:Linux community already donates by carlos_benj · · Score: 1

      Well, given he's giving a lot of his money away, it would seem money is not his motive now, although it may have been in the past.

      It could still be a motivating factor - a way of keeping score. That way it doesn't really matter what you do with it once you get it, it's the getting it that's the thrill of the game.

      Don't remember if it was a Rockefeller or J. P. Getty or who was asked how much money it would take to satisfy them. I do remember the answer though. "Just one more dollar."

      --

      --

      As a matter of fact, I am a lawyer. But I play an actor on TV.

    56. Re:Linux community already donates by slasher999 · · Score: 1

      According to Yahoo!, Bill's salary is $903,000 per year. Steve Ballmer makes a bit more at $909,000 per year.

    57. Re:Linux community already donates by xSauronx · · Score: 1

      as far as im concerned, comparing one immensely rich man who donates billions to charity to thousands (perhaps millions?) of people who favor a particular OS and that it should be freely availalbe is a bit silly.

      --
      By and large, language is a tool for concealing the truth. -- George Carlin
    58. Re:Linux community already donates by mspohr · · Score: 1

      Actually, Bill is following the well worn path of earlier robber barrons. Andrew Carnegie and Rockefeller were ruthless monopolists and exploiters of workers in their day. They each established foundations to spread good works and improve their image. (After all, you can't take it with you.) I do applaud the good that Bill is doing with his surplus billions but I don't know about his motivations.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    59. Re:Linux community already donates by Red+Alastor · · Score: 1
      So for every 1 million users of a free OS, the community has donated the equivalent of $100 million.

      And if they use Linux, they don't get viruses hence no need for the vaccine in the first place ;-)

      --
      Slashdot anagrams to "Sad Sloth"
    60. Re:Linux community already donates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the linux community is more likely to molest millions of children than to vaccinate them.

    61. Re:Linux community already donates by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      You could argue that open source software makes steak cheaper for everyone. It also makes drugs cheaper for everyone, and genetically-modified food, etc...

      I'm happy that Gates gave away some of his excessive wealth. It will at least do some good this way. On the other hand, I won't belittle people like Linus Torvalds just because he didn't make billions of dollars. If Gates didn't charge so much for windows, many people and companies would have hundreds of billions of dollars in cash that they gave to MS, and some of that money would be donated. Granted, it wouldn't get Gates' face in the papers that way.

      Lots of people give sacrificially to causes all the time. Most never receive any recognition for it at all, and this isn't a bad thing.

      You're all jealous you didn't do it first.

      Well, I might not be first, but I'll stand up to be number two! I'll donate 100% of all wealth I receive after the first $25 billion. Just think of what all that money will do for the starving poor of the world!

      And yes, I donate fairly frequently to various needy groups. And no, I don't want a medal for it...

    62. Re:Linux community already donates by GoCoGi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Donating money to VACCINATING CHILDREN is not bad. It is good, very good. I think that most of the "fuckingly insane" people, just want to warn about thinking that Bill Gates is good, because he did something good.
      You don't automatically become good when you give $10 of your stolen $1000 to charity.

    63. Re:Linux community already donates by User8201 · · Score: 1

      He gets tax writeoffs...

    64. Re:Linux community already donates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Or, you could tell those kids dying in Africa that they should be happy a robin doesn't lay eggs that are too fragile, because that's exactly what the tradeoff was when DDT was banned

      How about all the fucking birds, because it was pretty equal about it. Let's see how well you control insects when you've killed all the birds off. People like you who would pave the earth for a fucking dollar dare to get self-righteous?

    65. Re:Linux community already donates by cosinezero · · Score: 1

      "If Gates didn't charge so much for windows, many people and companies would have hundreds of billions of dollars in cash that they gave to MS, and some of that money would be donated."

      -->Not likely. Remember that Gates makes most of his money off corporate use.

      And what one doesn't spend on windows, a company would spend on linux - remember that linux is not taking over the corporate IT market because of training costs and other costs that comes with linux over windows. The costs that /. linux-fanatics hate to admit exist but are huge concerns for business IT decisions.

      So no, I don't think that linux made a single steak cheaper for anyone. However, I can easily make the argument that the windows revolution, ethical or no, has dramatically reduced costs and increased profitability of many companies.

      Now, if you're going to argue that increased profit == more money to charity, the least you can do is consider money made due to windows role in business, vs money made due to linux... call me back when you realize how lopsided that argument gets.

    66. Re:Linux community already donates by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      Perhaps Gates simply has a giant inferiority complex, and wants to prove to his former Harvard friends that he is not the dumbest of them, with limited creativity and overblown ambitions.

      Gates for all his life tried to "look smart" -- glasses, bad haircut, speaking about trivial things using big words. As if he wanted to be Steve Jobs but couldn't.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    67. Re:Linux community already donates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it is nice that they'll die of starvation instead of disease.

    68. Re:Linux community already donates by ThaReetLad · · Score: 1

      Perhaps, but its a misguided and silly attempt if it is. Anyone who believes in heaven really ought to get their heads around there being no way in which God can be bribed into thinking you are good, and also that no matter how "good" you are compared to other people, that's not the standard your going to be judged on. Indeed the Bible tells us that no one can get to heaven by their own works, because you can't be better than good, and therefore there's no way to make up for what you've already done.

      Sorry Bill. (By the way, that also applies to everyone else, including those accusing Bill of being evil)

      --
      You can't win Darth. If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine
    69. Re:Linux community already donates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Preserving the lives of our Third World enemies/competitors is hardly a wise investment. Todays cute tyke is tomorrows Muslim. May pandemics kill more of them, Inshallah!

    70. Re:Linux community already donates by EvilSporkMan · · Score: 1

      Just a minor point: the costs associated with Linux are RE-training costs; i.e. you've spent money training your employees on Windows already. Once everyone uses Linux anyway (wink wink), those costs will disappear.

      --
      -insert a witty something-
    71. Re:Linux community already donates by dwh97007 · · Score: 1

      If Bill Gates had a net worth of $40k, he just pledged to give $60 per year to this charity.,

      Yes, that would be to "this" charity.

      But when you look at the totals that he gives, he far surpasses the 50% of his income that he is allowed to write off. He and Melinda are the only people that I know that currently do this.

      In fact, if you compare the amount of money that he has given to the Gates Foundation (including the entire recent one time dividend) to his current paper net worth, it is approaching parity.

      I believe that his stated goal is to leave only a couple hundred million to his kids. Yeah, that isn't much of a hardship, but point out another current billionare that comes close

    72. Re:Linux community already donates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Here's the thing, the way for a guy like Gates to make donations is to donate the stock. He can claim the value of the stock as a deduction-basically it costs him more like $150 Million to donate $750 Million _if_ he wanted to liquidate Microsoft Stock anyhow.


      That said, I think what Gates is doing is "nice" but I'd like to see something that shows some serious vision and imagination.



    73. Re:Linux community already donates by dwh97007 · · Score: 1

      Yeah he gets tax writeoffs. Only up to 50% of his income.

      That means that he can write off a few hundred million a year. How about doing some quick math and see how much ahead that puts him.

    74. Re:Linux community already donates by cosinezero · · Score: 1

      Fair enough, but that's much more of an -if-, not a when. Companies don't like to shift their entire corporation to an unknown risk when there's a clear and present solution staring them in the face.

    75. Re:Linux community already donates by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1

      Charitable trusts are extremely useful tax shelters

      Yeah, so? The money still goes to charity. Is it so bad that the federal govn't gives tax breaks to people who give charitably? Just what exactly is your complaint?

      You sound like the brother of Henry Reardon in "Atlas Shrugged", a begger for charitable causes who wants to be a chooser too; somebody for whom no amount of charity will ever suffice.

      They also buy the goodwill of saps like you, who think that this evil miser must not be such a bad guy after all, regardless of the number of lives he's ruined over the years.

      Lives he's ruined? Microsoft more or less jumpstarted the PC industry as we know it today. If you work in IT, very likely you owe some part of your job's existence to Big Mean Bill.

      MSFT has shitty business practices, occasionally shady legal moves, and godawful software, and Bill Gates himself can be a schmuck once in a while (see his comments about Linux users being "communists").

      But that doesn't mean the company's impact on the industry hasn't been enormously-positive... Heck, these are largely the reasons people work on OSS. Were it not for crappy MSFT products, and (at the time) overpriced Unix offerings, we might not have Linux and many of the apps/libs surrounding it. In that regard, MSFT's "badness" is offset by the competition of OSS's "goodness" -- OSS is, IMO, simply a natural response by the free market against the practices of MSFT.

      On the whole, MSFT has been rather beneficial: for the IT industry, for charitable purposes, and for getting powerful computing technology in ever-more hands which might not have been able to afford it otherwise...

    76. Re:Linux community already donates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And in MS's case they gave the gift: vaccinations for children. It's not like the kids are going to go spend this money on candy and toys.

      Really it's like the difference between giving someone a gift for Christmas that has everything you need, or giving someone a gift for Christmas that requires more stuff (and you don't give the additional stuff and know the person doesn't have it). A great typical example would be something that runs on batteries w/o the batteries (great, not I have to go and buy batteries) or a pet (great, now I have an obligation to take care of this thing) or an extension to a larger set (eg a Lego Mindstorm's extension w/o the original Lego Mindstorm kit).

      Giving children Linux for free is a great charitable contribution, except for the kids who are getting these vaccines can't do anything with it. First they need a computer, then they need steady electricity, and finally they need their hunger to go away so they can concentrate - and this is after they've gotten their vacinations so at least they're not sick!

      Sure someone else can use it to figure out the vaccine to make, but this still doesn't help the sick that actually need the vaccine. Someone needs to come along and pay for it to be manufactured in large quantities and delivered to the kids.

      So Linux is great for them, but where are the batteries?

      All of this is silly anyway. There should be no expectation that "Linux" will donate $750mil because "Linux" doesn't have $750mil. Whatever it means for "Linux" to donate money in the first place. If someone can figure out how to make that happen I want to know the secret so my source code can donate money to me.

    77. Re:Linux community already donates by jadavis · · Score: 1

      Robins eat misquitos? I had no idea...

      You give absolutely no evidence to your claim that the bird population in Africa would be in jeapordy. Also, it's not much consolation to the millions of people who die from malaria.

      It would be nice if people actually stated the tradeoffs of all these environmental policies. I bet a lot more people would go along with the policies if they felt they could trust the environmentalists to weigh costs, but tragically nobody can.

      I could easily turn your statement around and say that you are being self-righteous about birds at the cost of millions of people.

      --
      Social scientists are inspired by theories; scientists are humbled by facts.
    78. Re:Linux community already donates by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      Your Linux thing makes no sense -- there are huge numbers of Windows USERS that you are not factoring in. You should only consider Linus. Bill : Linux :: Windows : Linux. Kind of. But still, what Bill did is great. Don't deny that. Would you rather have him NOT donate the money?

    79. Re:Linux community already donates by nametaken · · Score: 1


      In similar news, "UK will match Gates vaccines cash" Article here

    80. Re:Linux community already donates by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      remember that linux is not taking over the corporate IT market because of training costs and other costs that comes with linux over windows

      Uh, linux is already slowly taking over the corporate IT department for servers. And that is a chunk of change - ever see the cost for a windows server product, and for all the associated client licenses? You don't need either when you replace one of those boxes with linux, and even if you pay for a supported linux distro it is still cheaper with many fringe benefits.

      Linux is already making stuff cheaper. It just isn't installed on every secretary's desk. One day it may be.

      The fact is that MS is a convicted monopolist, so it is the position of a variety of court systems that MS overcharged for windows. MS made the "we give people better value" argument time and time again in those cases, and it just doesn't seem like the courts are buying it...

    81. Re:Linux community already donates by SpiderMcFly · · Score: 1

      While I have never been a fan of Microsoft products, primarily because they are poorly tested before release, slamming Bill for his actions both in business and personal are ridiculous. Yes, his business practices have not always been ethical, but in comparison to other corporate executive antics (ENRON), he isn't the Antichrist people make him out to be. Bill and Melinda donate more to charity than the entire movie industry combined, yet we praise them for their paltry gifts to tsunami releif and AIDS charities. Why must we all focus on the negative rather than praising the positive? I think Bill and Melinda are shining examples of what the richest 1% of the world SHOULD be doing with their money - not wasting it all on fancy cars, virgin hair extensions, and plastic surgery ad infinitum. I am anti-Microsoft, but certainly not anti-Gates. Go wild Bill!

      --
      Hail to the King, Baby.
    82. Re:Linux community already donates by cosinezero · · Score: 1

      (A) "slowly taking over" the market is not and will never be dominating the corporate IT market. While perhaps for mail servers linux has potential, enterprise application servers running 2000 or 2003 are rolling out by truckloads in corporate IT. (B) Paying a linux admin the extra $10-25k a year more than makes up for the disparate cost for server licenses. Client licenses are eaten up by the cost of the client - training and downtime (due to inadequate understanding) differences for each person that uses it. Linux is -not- currently a major player in the corporate world, and certainly not over the past decade has it been anywhere near the cash cow that windows has been both for microsoft - but especially for it's customers.

    83. Re:Linux community already donates by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Uh, who said anything about running linux on the clients? You can run windows on the clients, but not have to pay a client license on the server.

      With windows as a server you pay three times.

      1. $100/workstation
      2. $$$$/server (I'm not sure what retail is, but it is a LOT more)
      3. A fee per client that will connect to the server beyond five. This fee gets smaller as you add more and more, but it is a big chunk of the total cost.

      If you deploy linux on a server you get rid of both #2 and #3 (but not #1). Samba doesn't limit the number of incoming connections simply because people will more employees can afford to pay more for the server...

    84. Re:Linux community already donates by cosinezero · · Score: 1

      Retail for a server license isn't that much...

      Fee for client depends on usage. With an internet server license (such as for a web server or web application server) there is no fee per seat.

      And to reiterate there's these costs with linux;

      (1) Training - Everyone must be retrained on an OS that is not only not as intuitive as windows, but is not as standardized. Secretaries must learn new apps, new hotkeys, etc. This will take years for a majority of the end-users (some of which who are just now becoming comfortable with the fact that they have a computer on their desk) and the closer you get to the people doing the money making work for the company, the further you get from IT-trained people who couldn't care less about switching to a new OS.
      (2) Support - while you must pay support for windows networks, the support is drastically higher to pay trained linux specialists, and a high percentage of windows users can fix their own problems.
      (3) Applications - Sure, the peoplesoft/oracle merger may aid the top end of the corporate market switch to linux, but let's face it; StarOffice is -not- microsoft office. Anyone who thinks it is has never seen a sales staff work a 72 hour shift on a single powerpoint presentation. Nor have they really seen a truly useful .xls spreadsheet.

      Per person, this adds up to huge savings in the microsoft world - not just monetarily, but in time. Sure, the linux servers may have a week longer uptime... but the 20 sales users that rely on that data that they can't figure out how to merge into staroffice don't give a shit.

    85. Re:Linux community already donates by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Again - none of these costs apply if you're just running linux on servers.

      Also - none of these costs would exist if linux started gaining market share. The reason that people need retraining on linux is because they weren't taught it in school/college/previous job/home/etc. If linux does take off (for whatever reason), then all these issues will apply to trying to switch back to windows after a decade.

      In any case, linux is becoming more and more popular in the corporate datacenter. Even those win 2K3 app servers tend to run on vmware on linux.

      Don't get me wrong - I'm not trying to sponsor some kind of linux desktop migration at work. Although, if I were on the MS negotiating team I'd certainly be studying it. However, recently when there was talk of utilizing vmware, I did mention the linux option, since that is becoming mainstream and has the potential to increase performance and reduce downtime (no need to reboot all the virtual PCs simulaneously twice a month).

  28. Let's see if the Linux community, etc. by ettlz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Vaccinating children worldwide can only be a good thing. Indeed, Microsoft pumps a lot of money into various charitable causes --- again, only a good thing.

    But what does this have to do with the Linux community? Microsoft's raison d'etre is profit, and given the amount it makes, it has a social obligation. In this way, it fulfils it. The Linux community is driven by the product itself, not sales figures. "Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity" is not only irrelevant, it verges on being not very nice.

    1. Re:Let's see if the Linux community, etc. by Idarubicin · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Indeed, Microsoft pumps a lot of money into various charitable causes --- again, only a good thing.

      Strictly speaking--in this case at least--the money is being donated by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, not by Microsoft. To be fair, Microsoft does make charitable contributions to buy goodwill and strategic advertising placement (oops, slipped into bitter cynicism there) but this isn't one of those occasions.

      The Gates Foundation exists to assuage any guilt Bill has about pillaging the marketplace, as well as to attempt to adjust his legacy. Like Rockefeller, he'd rather be immortalized as a philanthropist than as a robber baron.

      That said, I'm glad that somebody is stepping up on this one. Immunization is one of the single most effective steps that can be taken in public health, both in terms of effect on lives and in terms of cost-effectiveness. I find it very disturbing that basic immunizations aren't available to everyone, if for no other reason than because it will make life better for the rest of us.

      The United States government missed out on a great public relations opportunity. If it spent on public health--immunizations and clean water--what it spent to invade Iraq, it could have bought the goodwill of literally billions of people.

      --
      ~Idarubicin
    2. Re:Let's see if the Linux community, etc. by ettlz · · Score: 1

      OK, I (somewhat inaccurately) used the terms Microsoft and Gates Foundation interchangeably (since the funds of the latter would not exist without the former).

    3. Re:Let's see if the Linux community, etc. by fzammett · · Score: 1

      What's good for the goose, you know the rest.

      "Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity" is not only irrelevant, it verges on being not very nice."

      Oh, gee, sorry your delicate sensibilities were offended. Why is it we can see 10 stories a day bashing MS (even if just in the form of some stupid comment by the news poster) and no one is botherd, but one semi-mean comment about Linux and the OSS community and your ticked about it?

      If the OSS community has such a think skin that "Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity" bothers you, you have much bigger problems than actually being offended.

      --
      If a pion (n-) collides with a proton in the woods & noone is there to hear it, does lamdba decay into the source pa
    4. Re:Let's see if the Linux community, etc. by jridley · · Score: 1

      I alone donate infinitely more money per year to hunger relief and other programs than I make on my open software efforts.
      I'm a very minor author, with 3 projects released. I've made $0, and I donate a couple thousand a year to world relief of some sort or another.

      So add $2000/$0 to the total so far for the open source community. I think if you take it as a percentage of earnings, the open source community will do quite well.

    5. Re:Let's see if the Linux community, etc. by kuzb · · Score: 2, Informative

      Microsoft doesn't have a social obligation to do *anything*. If Microsoft (the corporate entity) decides to donate to a charity, fine. There is a tax based reward system in place to make it more enticing to to that, but it doesn't make them obligated.

      Of course, this has nothing to do with Microsoft. This has to do with Bill Gates. RTFA.

      --
      BeauHD. Worst editor since kdawson.
  29. When I'm worth 30 billion... by gnalre · · Score: 1

    When I'm worth 30 billion, I will also donate 750 million to my pet charity.

    Dammit I will donate 20 billion. I know I will only have 10 billion to keep me in food and shelter, but that is the kind of generous guy I would be...

    Also I won't even claim my tax perks from it...

    --
    Choose your allies carefully, it is highly unlikely you will be held accountable for the actions of your enemies
    1. Re:When I'm worth 30 billion... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe he plans to keep less than that stated in your plan...

    2. Re:When I'm worth 30 billion... by gnalre · · Score: 1

      Well I'm not going to be outdone.

      Therefore I plan to keep only 1 million. How about that for generosity!

      Of course I hope by then to have my massive house, yachts, etc. And of course as head of a global corporation I thinks its unlikely I will short of dinner invitations or travel requests or hotels etc, but hey a million does not go as far as it used to

      --
      Choose your allies carefully, it is highly unlikely you will be held accountable for the actions of your enemies
  30. Rubbish by FunWithHeadlines · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Of course the ends don't justify the means in this case, yet nevertheless this is a good thing the Gates Foundation is doing. It's not an All or Nothing proposition. Gates can be a convicted monopolist who does awful things in the business world while simultaneously spending his money on humanitarian things. Doesn't justify his business crimes. Hey, look at Andrew Carnegie. Similar to Gates in the business world, but he spent his money on lots of good things such as libraries.

    If a gangster throws a block party for his neighbors, it doesn't justify all the people he killed in his work. It's still a nice party, and he's still a gangster.

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

      So tell me, will the vaccines be made in the country they are used in? No? Then stop keeping the countries in the stone age by "charity".

    2. Re:Rubbish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gates is not a "convicted monopolist". Where do you people get this shit?

      Is there some kind of "Slashbot: A Guide to Slashdot Alternate Reality" I can buy to understand your little world?

    3. Re:Rubbish by jonhuang · · Score: 1

      So what you're saying is that you don't want him to give the $750 million to save children's lives?

    4. Re:Rubbish by FunWithHeadlines · · Score: 2, Interesting
      "Is there some kind of "Slashbot: A Guide to Slashdot Alternate Reality" I can buy to understand your little world?"

      Sure, it's called the court system of the United States. That's where Judge Jackson found Microsoft to be an illegal monopoly. This got appealed, and in the appeal process Judge Jackson's remedies got thrown out, but the Findings of Facts that proved Microsoft was an illegal monopoly was upheld in the appeal. Thus two courts reviewed the matter, and they both found Microsoft guilty of illegal monopoly practices. That's why I say they are a "convicted monopolist," and only those living in alternate reality universes think otherwise.

    5. Re:Rubbish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting. So how much was Gates charged and what jail term is he facing?

      Oh, wait. You're just wrong. Nevermind.

    6. Re:Rubbish by livewirevoodoo · · Score: 1

      says the AC

      --
      If its stupid but it works, its not stupid.
    7. Re:Rubbish by FunWithHeadlines · · Score: 1

      Didn't you read what I wrote? The punishment part was the part that got tossed, but the conviction remained intact.

  31. Re:PC competition for the I-Mini MAC? by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 1

    Get her a mac and stop whining.

    We moaned and bitched and complained about wanting something like this, now we got it, and your STILL complaining?

    --
    liqbase :: faster than paper
  32. The ends never justify the means by 1010011010 · · Score: 1, Flamebait


    So he's spending his monopoly money for the children. Thank God someone's finally thinking of the children.

    The ends justify the means only if you have a corrupt morality. If you commit a crime, but use the proceeds in some "altruistic" way, is the crime then excusable?

    The Robber Barons of old used charity to improve their image. Rockefeller, for instance, handing out shiny new dimes to children.

    --
    Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
    1. Re:The ends never justify the means by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are no gods, so there's no point in thanking them.

      Dear God, thank you for not existing and being merely a figment of a bunch of escapist humans' imaginations. If only you existed, it would let them off the hook so conveniently for all their misdeeds.

    2. Re:The ends never justify the means by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or Bush handing out a $300 tax refund in 2001 in exchange for votes.

  33. No, of course not by artifex2004 · · Score: 1

    To say the end justifies the means is to assume that his business practices, many disagree with were done, with this end in mind. Have you seen any evidence of this?

    Bill Gates is a capitalist. He's also a philanthropist. They're not mutually exclusive; in fact, some claim it's the "rich man's burden" to help society when they can. But they're also not inextricably entertwined, either. Why do people persist in judging one by the other?

  34. hmm by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 1

    four guesses:

    1) he feels bad for ripping of so many people and forcing thousands of people out of work
    2) he wants tax breaks
    3) he wants people to like him, and he can spare 750m for that cause (like when mr burns does in the simpsons, except mr burns throws pennies off a bridge)
    4) he's a good man, except in business

    personally, i wouldn't go for 4

    1. Re:hmm by ChTh · · Score: 1

      > personally, i wouldn't go for 4

      Because you've met him and know a lot about what he is like apart from what you know about what he is like in business?

    2. Re:hmm by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 1

      Because i wouldn't trust anybody who wears a borg outfit, in a photoshoot for slashdot.

  35. I'll see you that OS and raise yu one office suite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity."

    I think the Linux community has already exceeded his generosity. They've created a free OS and scads of free software, thus (potentially) enabling the developing world to boostrap their economies long after Bill's vaccine and money have gone.

  36. What ELSE... by Anoraknid+the+Sartor · · Score: 1

    What ELSE can a super rich man do with his money?

    And since he got it by rather dubious business practices in the first place, I can't say I am terribly impressed.

    As for the Linux jibe - the existance of Linux ensures that when those kids grow up they won't have to buy overpriced buggy software to generate more dodgy profits for a character like Bill G...

    --
    Find Japanese addresses in English on Google Maps Japan: http://diddlefinger.com/
    1. Re:What ELSE... by batemanm · · Score: 1
      As for the Linux jibe - the existance of Linux ensures that when those kids grow up they won't have to buy overpriced buggy software to generate more dodgy profits for a character like Bill G...

      When those kids grow up they are probably going to have bigger problems than thier choice of operating system.

    2. Re:What ELSE... by Anoraknid+the+Sartor · · Score: 1

      Seen the percentage of a coomputer's cost the OS accounts for?

      When they grow up, the fact they have access to a computer at ALL will be - directly or indirectly - because of free (beer and speech) OS's...

      Far too many slashdotters are impressed at the way a scoundrel disposes of his ill gotten gains.

      BTW... Nothing of importance DID happen on July the 4th. It was on the 2nd that the real action happened.

      Which - by the by - means we Brits celebrate "thanksgiving" two days late...

      --
      Find Japanese addresses in English on Google Maps Japan: http://diddlefinger.com/
    3. Re:What ELSE... by batemanm · · Score: 1
      Seen the percentage of a coomputer's cost the OS accounts for?

      Which depends on the price of the computer. So using a percentage is meaningless an absolute cost makes more sense even then different operating systems on different platforms even if you take Windows as the operating system you are talking about. It has been reported that each vendor pays a different price for Windows from Microsoft and they aren't allowed to disclose that price. So oddly enough no I haven't and whatever number it is it will only be right in a small number of cases.

      Far too many slashdotters are impressed at the way a scoundrel disposes of his ill gotten gains.

      I've already stated elsewhere that giving the money away has probably had more benefits to Bill Gates than if he had kept it. When they say you can't buy that kind of publicity they are wrong it just cost $750 million.

      BTW... Nothing of importance DID happen on July the 4th. It was on the 2nd that the real action happened.

      So you agree with George III then?

      Which - by the by - means we Brits celebrate "thanksgiving" two days late...

      Since when did we Brits celebrate thanksgiving late or otherwise and what has that got to do with the US independence day? The former being the fourth Thursday in November and the latter being the 4th of July.

    4. Re:What ELSE... by Anoraknid+the+Sartor · · Score: 1

      Well, yes, of course it depends on the price of the computer. Specifically on the price of computers available to people likely to benefit from the Gates initiative.... Which is fairly low, one would assume... You want to quibble that we don't have an EXACT price? Go ahead! Next you will be declining to believe in "night" on the gounds that it is insufficiently quantitatively demarcated from "day"....

      Windows pricing: we have a rough lower figure from what has leaked out about the various hobbled versions on sale, or planned to be, in Thailand and the like...

      As for agreeing with George the 3rd - yes - the 4th was a damp squid... You do KNOW your history, don't you? The fact you responded with a question wasn't designed to mask your ignorance, was it? And no - having a quick, desperate google (your immediate plan I assume) doesn't really count as "knowledge..." George the 3rd wasn't actually a BAD King, if you take the reign as a whole.

      With regards to "thanksgiving", I have always thought Adam Smith was right - the centre of political power would have followed the centre of economic power to the US and England would have become the colony. We were well shot of them. Blair may be a mandacious clown - but would you REALLY want to be ruled ("governed" no longer seems appropriate....) by Bush? We have a lot to be thankful for.

      Which is why I, and many other Brits, celebrate "thanksgiving" on July the 4th... The fact that YOU don't I just put down to ignorance.

      Of which you demonstrate more with your every post...

      Do continue...

      Your move.

      --
      Find Japanese addresses in English on Google Maps Japan: http://diddlefinger.com/
    5. Re:What ELSE... by batemanm · · Score: 1
      Specifically on the price of computers available to people likely to benefit from the Gates initiative....

      How does that relate to your question of 'Seen the percentage of a coomputer's cost the OS accounts for?' You are now altering the question to suit your needs. Anyway just make your point it will be easier for both of us in the long run.

      You want to quibble that we don't have an EXACT price? Go ahead!

      How do you get a percentage that means anything without a price? We have a varying price for the hardware and a varying price for the OS. Numbers coming from that are going to be a little suspect. Your question concerning the percentage assumes we have a reasonable reliable price from what you have subsequently said we don't, at which point the question starts to make less sense therefore it should have been phrased as a different question. Which was my point.

      As for agreeing with George the 3rd - yes - the 4th was a damp squid...

      So you do agree.

      The fact you responded with a question wasn't designed to mask your ignorance, was it?

      No it was designed to point out that you were agreeing.

      And no - having a quick, desperate google (your immediate plan I assume) doesn't really count as "knowledge..."

      You are assuming things based on your own experience and expectations. We both said the same thing in different ways checking up on it doesn't come into it. We apprently both agree.

      Which is why I, and many other Brits, celebrate "thanksgiving" on July the 4th...

      I have never met (or heard of) a single person from the UK who celebrates "thanksgiving". You are the first. Everyone has things that annoy them and express that annoyance in various ways. Feel free to tell me more about it (via email if you prefer). My sig is meant to point out that the world is not US centric and other views exist which is something that sometimes gets forgotten on slashdot.

      The fact that YOU don't I just put down to ignorance.

      Yours or mine? If you want to discuss issues that relate to this article fine if you want to trade insults find someone else.

      I still haven't manage to find the point of what you were trying to say. Make your point and the discussion can move on.

    6. Re:What ELSE... by Anoraknid+the+Sartor · · Score: 1

      Your latest thrashing around hasn't really added very much, alas...

      You do rather give the impression of someone stumbling around in bright daylight complaining loudly about the dark.

      There isn't much point repeating the 'point' about os/hardware costs likely to be encountered by the group under discussion for you since it is expressed with more than enough clarity already.

      Go back to the begining of the thread, read it carefully, and if you are lucky, the walls of darkness will fall.

      Or perhaps not. Perhaps you will continue to trumpet the fact you have "missed it" made - with - as far as I can see - something approaching pride...

      It really isn't very hard you know...

      --
      Find Japanese addresses in English on Google Maps Japan: http://diddlefinger.com/
  37. Re:Yeah! We can! by shawng · · Score: 0
    Sure thing! We can refuse to procreate. Less children = less sickness worldwide.

    Good point! I suppose we should just kill everyone in the world and then no one will ever be sick again.

  38. real changes will be made by changing the society by kinsoa · · Score: 1

    give XX billion of dollars doesn't matter, if the capitalism structure stay in place.

    Gates give less than 4% of his fortune, it's not really a lot, and on the other hand he continue to say that open-source advocacy are communists, refering to old social structures and ignoring the open society concept.

    the solution of the worldwide problems is in sharing the ressources, not by driopping some peanuts.

    (sorry for my bad english)

  39. Backing this up with contraception? by CdXiminez · · Score: 1

    I'm glad a lot more children will live to a higher age. However, should this not be backed-up by a contraception-campaign as well? Population pressure is a big cause for the spreading of disease and ecological disturbance.

  40. Fish by femto · · Score: 1
    Mr Gates is handing out fish, while the Linux Community is teaching people to fish.

    Handing out fish is a commendable act.

    1. Re:Fish by lewp · · Score: 1

      Look, I can't stand Bill Gates and like Linux just like a good little Slashbot, but this "Linux does so much more for the world because it's free" bullshit is ridiculous.

      If I'm some starving kid in Africa with people dropping like flies all around me from diseases we haven't even heard of I want medicine, not a [Ff]ree OS.

      --
      Game... blouses.
    2. Re:Fish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a place for both kinds of help. Monetary donations can provide once off medicines in the short term. In kind donations (such as Linux) can help provide nations with the means to make their own medicines, solving the problem permanently.

    3. Re:Fish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen!

    4. Re:Fish by femto · · Score: 1
      Where did not standing Bill Gates come into it? Those are your words, not mine.

      I'm quite willing to give Mr Gates credit (as I did) for his generous act. My point (in response to the question posed in the article) is that Mr Gates is not the only generous person in this world and that there are other forms of donation than a chunk of money.

    5. Re:Fish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Teach them to make medicine. This is just feeding the pharma-giants.

  41. penguinistas, get your machetes out by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

    " I've seen horrors...horrors that you've seen. But you have no right to call
    me a murderer. You have a right to kill me. You have a right to do that...But
    you have no right to judge me. It's impossible for words to describe what is
    necessary to those who do not know what horror means.
    Horror. Horror has a face...And you must make a friend of horror. Horror and
    moral terror are your friends. If they are not then they are enemies to be feared. They are truly enemies. I remember when I was with Special Forces...Seems a thousand centuries ago...We went into a camp to innoculate the children.
    We left the camp after we had innoculated the children for Polio, and this old
    man came running after us and he was crying. He couldn't see. We went
    back there and they had come and hacked off every innoculated arm. There
    they were in a pile...A pile of little arms. And I remember...I...I...I cried...
    I wept like some grandmother. I wanted to tear my teeth out. I didn't know what I wanted to do. And I want to remember it. I never want to forget it. I never want to forget. And then I realized...like I was shot...Like I was shot with a
    diamond...a diamond bullet right through my forehead...And I thought:
    My God...the genius of that. The genius. The will to do that. Perfect,
    genuine, complete, crystalline, pure. And then I realized they were
    stronger than we. Because they could stand that these were not
    monsters...These were men...trained cadres...these men who fought with
    their hearts, who had families, who had children, who were filled with
    love...but they had the strength...the strength...to do that. If I had ten
    divisions of those men our troubles here would be over very quickly. You
    have to have men who are moral...and at the same time who are able to
    utilize their primordal instincts to kill without feeling...without passion...
    without judgement...without judgement. Because it's judgement that
    defeats us. "

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
    1. Re:penguinistas, get your machetes out by arivanov · · Score: 1

      Not funny.

      Unless the machete is to take your head off.

      You truly deserve it.

      Anyway, on subject. Who cares about yet another piece of PR shit. Using the American vaccine pricing 750 million will just about vaccinate 1-2 central African countries with the standard kids vaccines + essential tropical ones. Once. It is a drop in the ocean. Even if the vaccines are priced sanely it is still a drop in the ocean. It will take the vaccines to be priced at manufacturing cost and manufactured in the 3rd world for this money to be barely enough to vaccinate just central Africa leaving central American and Asian kids to die.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    2. Re:penguinistas, get your machetes out by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I deserve to be killed for quoting a movie, that's pretty rational!

      --
      There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
    3. Re:penguinistas, get your machetes out by golgotha007 · · Score: 1

      from the fantastic film, Apoclaypse Now.

      Marlon Brando is an amazing actor in the way he delivers the above text.

  42. The Linux community has ALREADY "matched this...." by TrueJim · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    The Linux community has ALREADY "matched this generosity." Rather than charge money in exchange for software and then give some small fraction of that money back as charitable donations, the Linux community lets people keep all their money in the first place. That's more efficient, and I think a lot more generous, than charging for the software in the first place.

    Free software is also going to help the third world develop more quickly than it would under a purely proprietary model, so there's an extra kicker that'll help the next generation too, not just this generation. "Teach a man to fish..." and all that, ya' know?

    --
    I hope that after I die the one word people use to describe me is "resurrected."
  43. Gate's only regret... by brian0918 · · Score: 1

    Gate's dying regret is going to be, "I could have done more."

  44. Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Much maligned for his business practices, is this proof that sometimes the ends justify the means?

    What kind of idiot logic is this? For all we know, if Microsoft hadn't been so abusive, a competitor would have made all the money and donated even more to charity.

    I'm not saying that this isn't good of him, but it doesn't excuse crippling the computer industry. The ends most certainly do not justify the means.

  45. mod story... by PsiPsiStar · · Score: 0, Redundant

    -1 Flamebait.

    --

    ___
    It's the end of my comment as I know it and I feel fine.
  46. A simple test... by B747SP · · Score: 1
    Go to your local GP (General Practitioner). Ask him or her... "Do you have your children vaccinated?".

    A bit of research on the subject of vaccination is pretty eye opening actually. Turns out, vaccination != immunisation. A lot of the 'scientific' evidence that supports the "vaccination == immunisation" myth gives wonderful stats that show disease rates dropping dramatically at approx the same time as vaccination was introduced, but completely ignores other data, like the general improvement of public hygeine, the introduction of running water, the recognition that things like washing hands and sterilising surgical instruments are good.

    Now a lot of the stuff I've read that claims that vaccination != immunisation and/or vaccination is bad has been written by total crackpots with not a single ounce of actual scientific or academic validity, but at the same time, some of it is valid. A close look, as I've said, at a lot of the 'proof' that vaccination is good is also fatally flawed.

    It's a really difficult psychological situation. There's plenty of scientific evidence to show that vaccination is bad. But since the day we grokked what was going on around us, we've been told that vaccination is good, necessary, and that people who don't vaccinate their kids are nutbags. It's really tough, when you become a parent, to decide which way to go.

    Which brings me full circle. After your GP/Doctor answers that question honestly (and in the negative), ask them why.

    --
    I find your ideas intriguing and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.
    1. Re:A simple test... by rich_r · · Score: 1

      Links? Honestly, what you're saying is counter to everything I've learnt and, as far as I can tell, verging on tin-foil hat territory.
      But then, I'm only speaking as someone who doesn't have to worry about smallpox...

    2. Re:A simple test... by Mant · · Score: 1

      I've heard of some problems, with some vaccinations, but you can't lump all vaccinations together. Some vaccines are more effective than others (some shots need boosters later in life), some disease change rapidly (flu shots won't protect you for long), some have different levels of risk.

      OTOH if you are going to argue thing like, say, smallpox vaccine didn't have a massive effect then you better produce some evidence from somewhere.

  47. Trustworthy? by groupthink · · Score: 0

    His generosity not withstanding... this guy is single handedly responsible for creating the most hospitable environment for viruses we've ever seen. (caugh, Windows, caugh IE). Should we really be trusting him with vaccinations?

  48. I used to contribute to Unicef by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    until I realized that the worst thing you could do is decrease child mortality without changing the conditions that require having large families, e.g. poverty mostly. If you don't do that then you end up with a huge populations of mostly young, poor, unemployed people. A recipe for social unrest.

  49. Code value by stm2 · · Score: 1

    Let's add all the open/free sofware value "donated" to hospital, schools and public libraries worldwide to see how is giving away more.

    --
    DNA in your Linux: DNALinux
  50. Ends justify the means? by StringBlade · · Score: 1
    I highly doubt it was Bill Gates' Master Plan(TM) to build up Microsoft and trample other smaller companies like Netscape into the ground just so he could donate to charity like an insane philanthropist.

    In short, no - Microsoft's corporate actions are not justified just as most abusive monopolist's actions are not justified. However, it is very generous of him and his wife to donate such a large share for their excess wealth to charities. But don't kid yourself, it's not like he's going to have to sell his 300,000 acre mansion and live in a normal three bedroom house because he's given so much of his money away.

    Bill and Melinda are fine people. Bill is an incredibly shrewd businessman and Microsoft can be ruthless. Please don't confuse the issue for the sake of boiling people's blood and getting a reaction.

    --
    ...and that's the way the cookie crumbles.
  51. gg bill by Stanneh · · Score: 0

    am not a big bill fan to be honest but i do admire his generosity to charitys he is a great donator. but this £750 million biz just make me cringe at how much drug companies charge to supply medicine to the children. and i thaught micro$oft was the route to all evil.

    --
    I Predict A Riot
  52. Free software helps the developing world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...and the potential worth of that help is greater than $750 million.

    My guess is the reason for Bill's philanthropy is the same as for (nearly) all rich people -- he sees that he cannot take it with him, and he wants to do something to have the rest of mankind remember him fondly when he is gone. Carnegie and Rockefeller did the same thing.

    1. Re:Free software helps the developing world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, please. $750M in vaccines saves the lives, potentially, of 300 million people. Now show me the free software project that might save 300 million lives.

    2. Re:Free software helps the developing world by richieb · · Score: 1
      While I cannot point to a particular project, Linux is used in other countries to conduct medical research that may not be profitable enough. Here is one example I found after a quick google: Brazilian Journal of Medical Science

      Utimately, such research has the potential for saving a lot more lives, but giving tools to smart people who do not live in the rich countries.

      --
      ...richie - It is a good day to code.
    3. Re:Free software helps the developing world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, please. $750M in vaccines saves the lives, potentially, of 300 million people. Now show me the free software project that might save 300 million lives

      $750 million for 300 million people works out to $2.50 per person. Yeah, I can show how free software is worth at least that much.

      It's the whole "Give a man a fish/Teach a man to fish" thing. Vaccinations will help save lives in the short term, but free software has the potential to help create livelihoods. Unless you think it's somehow more moral to give charity than it is to give a job, it has the potential to do more good in the long run.

    4. Re:Free software helps the developing world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's nice in the long run. But holy shit dude, you do realize that--for want of malaria, tuberculosis and hepatitis vaccines--for 10 million children a year, there is no long run?

      I mean, it's great that free software (and all its positive externalities) will be there for them if they make it to productive adulthood. But free software does nothing for people who die in childhood, or their families burdened with taking care of them, or their societies burdened with maintaining order in such a grim situation.

    5. Re:Free software helps the developing world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You think vacines will reduce their improverished families' burdens how?

    6. Re:Free software helps the developing world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By helping them build a stable economy with (1) employment opportunities and (2) reasons to invest and save capital. It wouldn't take long at all if steps were taken to stem these epidemics.

  53. Perspective? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why does the linux community has to do that ?

    Mr Gates is very rich and can afford it. I'm quit sure that if you make a sum of all charity donations made by people in the linux community you will still have a nice sum.

    Djeezes. Perspective please ?

  54. Ummm. by Skiron · · Score: 1

    Call me a cynic, but there is always an ulteria motive involved in moves like this, as seen from past donations made from the fund.

  55. Wow by TheVidiot · · Score: 1

    MSAV is back! In needle form!

  56. Sure we can match Bill Gates generosity by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 1
    Let's see the Linux community match that generosity

    Sure we can. There is an estimate that the cost of the software on a typical Linux distribution disk is $4 billion (i.e. 4x10^9). Which we're giving away for free (as in gratis) in most cases.

    If that's not generous, I don't know what is.

    --
    Stefan Axelsson
    1. Re:Sure we can match Bill Gates generosity by soulhuntre · · Score: 1

      "There is an estimate that the cost of the software on a typical Linux distribution disk is $4 billion"

      References? I would LOVE to see how someone hacked up that number.

      Welcome to GNU/Reality

      --
      --> Fight tyranny and repression.... read /. at -1!
    2. Re:Sure we can match Bill Gates generosity by Conor+Turton · · Score: 1
      Let's see the Linux community match that generosity

      Sure we can. There is an estimate that the cost of the software on a typical Linux distribution disk is $4 billion (i.e. 4x10^9). Which we're giving away for free (as in gratis) in most cases.

      SEE? Linux DOES make you stupid. Tell me how that translates into real available medical aid?

      --
      Conor "You're not married,you haven't got a girlfriend and you've never seen Star Trek? Good Lord!" - Patrick Stewart
    3. Re:Sure we can match Bill Gates generosity by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 1
      References? I would LOVE to see how someone hacked up that number.

      There's Eric Greens among others. In any case I take it you're questioning that anybody could come up with a number? Myself I don't see how not. We know how much time it takes to write certain types of software (more or less) and as time equals money, you'd easily arrive within an order of magnitude at least. In my day job as a requirements bureacrat I do this sort of thing all the time. Every major corporation does.

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
    4. Re:Sure we can match Bill Gates generosity by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 1
      SEE? Linux DOES make you stupid. Tell me how that translates into real available medical aid?

      That's relatively easy. Bill Gates doesn't actually print money. He makes it selling software to people. If he choses to give some of that away to people doing medical work (note that Bill Gates himself won't vaccinate a single person) it isn't his money, but money that came from society. If said society could get said software without spending money on it, that money could be spent elsewhere, on medical aid for example. The case if of course trivial in the instance where a hospital or aid organisation uses Linux instead of an OS that cost money. If you want a direct link between medical aid and the flow of money in society, it's taxation you're after, not Bill Gates.

      You'll want to read up on the "broken window fallacy" (try Wikipedia) as it's related.

      See, that wasn't so hard. Even you should be able to understand it.

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
    5. Re:Sure we can match Bill Gates generosity by soulhuntre · · Score: 1

      There's Eric Greens among others

      Eric has made the same set of mistakes others do...

      1) The assumption that *a* linux CD is worth the cost of all its development

      2) that all of that work was by people who had any market value at all (most of it isn't)

      3) that the cost of all that work would have been what he is guessing at - when there is no real way to track the work

      In other words, he took all the time he thinks a bunch of people of varying skills and marketability, assigned it the hourly rate of the most expensive professional he could find and then did some math.

      Welcome to economics by GNU/voodoo

      --
      --> Fight tyranny and repression.... read /. at -1!
    6. Re:Sure we can match Bill Gates generosity by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 1
      1) The assumption that *a* linux CD is worth the cost of all its development

      No, that's not it. The total value of all donated software can be calculated from each CD, by estimating the work that went into it. It's not the cost of each CD. We're operating at near zero marginal cost, remember?

      Look, I know what for example HP-UP cost, and how much certain upgrades to it would have cost (unfortunately I'm not allowed to tell you). The figures mentioned here aren't all that off from that data point and other data points I have from my other job. This leads me to belive that we're not that far off from a true value. I don't think that these figures are cases of "We've intercepted narcotics worth x million on the street" or "Copyright infringement are costing us y billon per year." And it's not that difficult to track the work in the sense that we don't care, we're saying that if we had to produce this software commercially it would cost about this many hours (at about this average hourly rate).

      But if you have any better breakdown of hours etc, I'd love to see it.

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
  57. I wonder if... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He has shares in the companies producing these vaccines.

  58. chriskzoo5 by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This story looks like both a troll and flamebait, and it gets me to wondering about the submitter. What a shocker. He's a known troll.

    1. Re:chriskzoo5 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because the truth shocks you doesn't mean it is a troll. You people are a bunch of greedy little morons that are jealous of his success, are stingy, and don't care about anyone but yourselves.

      It still is a valid point, everyone here is lambasting Gates for his charity donations, and instead of putting their money where their mouth is, they are whining about it and weaseling their way out of donating.

      Yeah, developing countries don't need to cure diseases, hunger, and other problems, need free software to develop! It isn't like they can't pirate Windows and software like those of us in developed countries, and a starving child has soooo much use for computers/software.

      So I guess from this article people can now assume that the "Linux community" are a bunch of bastards who don't give a shit about the suffering of others and have nothing better to do then bash Gates and argue why they shouldn't donate anything.

    2. Re:chriskzoo5 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I tried sending the loser an email and got an undeliverable error.

    3. Re:chriskzoo5 by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1
      Just because the truth shocks you doesn't mean it is a troll.

      If that's what you think, maybe you're not a troll. Maybe you just don't think clearly. It's not that Gates is donating an enormous amount of money. In fact, he has donated more money than any other human in the history of the world. That part is wonderful. The part that's a troll is this: is this proof that sometimes the ends justify the means? Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity.

    4. Re:chriskzoo5 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cool, thanks for pointing out that user - his comments are among the more intelligent around this place full of whiny, self-righteous, parent-funded, fuzzy-headed, liberal losers.

  59. Cool. by humberthumbert · · Score: 1


    Good that he's helping a much needed cause. Don't diss Gates for helping because this sure beats letting the money rot in a bank somewhere.

    Also, it's not about how much you give, it's about how much you can afford to give. Remember the widow's mite. Those who give, despite being needy themselves, are really something.

  60. Greedy plan! by af_robot · · Score: 1

    Gates secret business plan:
    1. Spend $750M to vaccinate children
    2. ??????
    3. Profit!!!

    1. Re:Greedy plan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      stupid... this is getting old...

  61. credit where credit is due by MC68000 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I am not exactly a fan of Microsoft, but come on. The knee-jerk anti Microsoft tilt of /. is amazing. I can see it now. There will be some post rated funny talking about how little Gates has spent to vaccinate Windows PCs against viruses, and it will completely trivialize what is being done here. I can't understand how anyone could come up with any negative aspect of this $750 million gift. Does an orphan in Guatemala care about how terrible Windows is? At least give the guy credit where credit is due.

    --
    E = m c^3 Don't drink and derive E = m c^3
    1. Re:credit where credit is due by LarsWestergren · · Score: 1

      Well said.

      As others have pointed out, the submitter of this news is a well known troll, and the "Let's see if the Linux community can match this" is an obvious flamebait.

      Some people fell for it. The people patting themselves on the back about how by giving away an OS for free is more valuable are pretty offensive. As the parent poster said, what does a starving child care about Open Source? Besides, how many of you who include yourself in the "Linux community" have even contributed to Open Source?

      If we drop the politics for a second, you can really contribute by giving to SOS Children's villages. For a small fee each month, you can sponsor an individual orphan, or a whole village. They are given food, medicine, education. It's not much per month. I just joined, and I'm currently unemployed.

      --

      Being bitter is drinking poison and hoping someone else will die

    2. Re:credit where credit is due by dollargonzo · · Score: 1

      this is all well and good, but as has been mentioned previously in other threads, linux will have a greater long term effect on developing 3rd world countries than $750m right now. free software reduces the countries' dependence on larger nations, helps develops critical technological infrastructure, and allows people to learn the skills they need to get jobs in later generations.

      --
      BSD is for people who love UNIX. Linux is for those who hate Microsoft.
  62. As I am a Meaning Nazi... by GbrDead · · Score: 1

    Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity.
    We have already given much more. And it's not just a Linux community, you know.

  63. Handouts vs Economic growth. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The linux community donates code, while not much in itself, helps struggling countries build up their infrastructure cheaply and legally.

    This in turn helps get countries and areas up to a point were they do not need hand outs to support themselves, which is infinately better then just simply handing out vaccines.

    Not knocking vaccines or anything, but it's economic growth and democracy/freedome that would save lives hell of a lot more then just UN-provided hand outs.

    Now if the small part that the Linux community plays in this sort of deal is worth more then 75 million dollars per year for ten years, I don't know.

    It's good that Bill is helping out though. After all when you have 10 billion dollars handing out some of it to helping children aviod some diseases is a great thing.

    Might make people like Bill so much that Poland would let the whole unfortunate thing with patents slide in MS's favor.

  64. apt auto added slashdot message by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this was at the bottom of the page when I was reading the story

    "If you want to know what god thinks of money, just look at the people he gave it to. -- Dorthy Parker"

  65. Proof? by HogynCymraeg · · Score: 1
    is this proof that sometimes the ends justify the means?
    If I steal your car, use it as a taxi, then give a small percentage of my profits to a good cause, then does it justify my stealing your car? Not at all. I'm still a thief who should be banged up for it.
  66. It's a shame... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Too bad the Global Alliance for Vaccination and Immunisation is run by Ken Lay.

  67. At the whim of the individual by johnny6vasquez · · Score: 1


    The problem I have with wealthy philanthropists is that regardless of the reasons for their generosity, be it a tax-write off or a genuine out-of-the-blue heartfelt donation, the donation is subject purely to the mercy of one very rich individual.

    I would rather see the same level of funding coming from a democratically represented government in which a greater number of people have a say.

    Why should a charity make or break it on the say of one man? I would prefer to have a vote in the distribution of that wealth through the representation I enjoy in the democratic system, instead of seeing such an obscene amount of money in the hands of one man.

    Good for him for his choices of charities so far but the potential for abuse is frightening.

    1. Re:At the whim of the individual by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 1

      Another short-sighted and flawed vision. First, it's his money, rightfully so. He earned it fair and square, until a democratic capitalist society.

      What you are preaching is NOTHING short of communism.

      Second, there's the issue of incentive. Yes capitalism can lead to few individuals with an insane amount of wealth, but what are the upsides? You promote and encourage innovation and competition, which lead to a much better society for ALL.

      Communism, which you're preaching, does away with incentives. Look at all of the wonderful innovations of this century. How much of it came from communist countries? People are born selfish. Nothing, I mean NOTHING can ever change that, short of a gun to the head. Communism will never work.

      Oh and btw, when you say "democratically represented government", it ain't just you that counts. The people have voted, and the overwhelming majority (at least in the U.S.) support capitalism.

      --

      eTrade SUCKS
    2. Re:At the whim of the individual by soulhuntre · · Score: 1

      What you are preaching is NOTHING short of communism.

      Basically, thats /. in a nutshell, those most won;t admit it.

      Many on /. demand that no one be able to own something that is valuable (intellectual property) and that the rrsults of their work be free to all.

      Additionally, they demand the right to take froma nyone anything they want to have but don;t wish to pay for... music, movies, media. If a /.'er wants it, he considers it his moral right to aquire it by any means he sees fit.

      Generally pro-taxes, anti-rich and anti-corporation the run of the mill /. poster is pretty much a supporter of the communist ideal - that is as long as it is letting them have the instant gratification of downloading Blade 3.

      --
      --> Fight tyranny and repression.... read /. at -1!
    3. Re:At the whim of the individual by johnny6vasquez · · Score: 1


      I'm all for capitalism as long as the rules of the game are followed.

      Bill Gates accrued his immense fortune by using illegal monopoly tactics to unfairly destroy the companies that shared his target market. If he hadn't done that, the capital would have been distributed more among the companies that had proven their worth on the fair market, and the decision to donate would have been shared among many more individuals.

      The government should have at least had a large portion of his money as settlements for the illegal business practices performed by his company.

      I also think that he should have been taxed a lot more. I'd rather see an emphasis on smaller businesses rather than big monoculture software giants.

      Like I said before, I'm all for the way he chose to spend his money. My point is that I don't think he should have that much money to begin with. A lot of it should have been paid in taxes and fines for the illegal damage he did to his competition.

      By taxation the capital's disposal at least has some checks and balances in place, rather than the whim of one individual. Same with it being at the disposal of many smaller businesses and corporations rather than in one huge illegally aquired pile of funds.

    4. Re:At the whim of the individual by jim_v2000 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You know, a lot of people think it's so terrible that MS crushed it's competition, but I don't think it's so bad. Especially for the consumer. It's nice to have most of the computer software written for one OS. If I want to go buy a piece of software, I can be pretty much sure that if I'm running Windows that I will be able to run that software. Compare this to the videogame industry. If I wanted to play any video game I wanted, I would have to buy a PSX, PSX2, GameCube, XBox, Gameboy, SNES, Sega, etc etc etc. I'm not say that that should change, but I'm just pointing out that having an OS that an overwhelming majority of people use can be good.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    5. Re:At the whim of the individual by johnny6vasquez · · Score: 1

      While I'm no communist, I'm also not one to back down from a badly stated comment like that. So bear with my while I play devil's advocate here.

      Communism, which you're preaching, does away with incentives. Look at all of the wonderful innovations of this century. How much of it came from communist countries?

      • The Russian space program
      • Modernizing and arming their country in time to crush the Nazis
      • Being able to sustain a nuclear stand off for forty years with the USA
      • Some of the best film, art, poetry and literature came of the Soviet Union.

      To say that the communists lack invention and will simply shows your ignorance. I wouldn't have wanted to live there or be a communist, but what you said was plain wrong.

      People are born selfish. Nothing, I mean NOTHING can ever change that, short of a gun to the head.

      So does this mean we should then trust one person who doesn't have any checks and balances but has the resources of a small country and a proven track records of shady business practices? You first.

    6. Re:At the whim of the individual by johnny6vasquez · · Score: 1

      Respectfully, I disagree.

      Look at how ravaged by exploits it is and how the majority of people are at a loss with how to deal with it. One vulnerability brings down the whole herd.

      The lack of quality in the windows software is another indication of something wrong in the free market. I mean, under true capitalism, the consumers would have had access to other better choices of Operating Systems, browsers, media players and office software. Instead due to strong-arm monopolistic tactices by Microsoft, computer makers weren't allowed to bundle competing software to Microsoft. I don't think the choice was left to the consumer that way. They were forced to choose what Microsoft dictated, not what was necessarily the best or most popular choice at the time.

    7. Re:At the whim of the individual by leomekenkamp · · Score: 1

      Communism, which you're preaching, does away with incentives. Look at all of the wonderful innovations of this century. How much of it came from communist countries?

      Let's see. Laika? Yuri Gagarin? Sputnik? Mir? The most reliable means of earth-to-orbit transportation ? There are incentives in communism as well as in kapitalism. Kapitalism unfortunately focuses on greed, communism states we should all earn the same. Both are wrong. The right way is in the middle; the strongest shoulders should carry the most weight. The weak are entitled to lead a productive life; they could in the former CCCP. In the kapitalistic US the weak are in fact worse of than their counterparts in the CCCP.

      --
      Wenn ist das Nunstueck git und Slotermeyer? Ja! Beiherhund das Oder die Flipperwaldt gersput.
    8. Re:At the whim of the individual by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to disagree that Microsoft crushed, unfairly might I add, their competition. But I would say one reason so many security flaws are found in Windows is because most people use it and that's where the cash for hackers is. There isn't much point trying to hack Linux...the creators have learned a lot about how to secure an OS by looking at where MS goofed up. Plus, the lack of users doesn't make hacking Linux very lucrative. There's not much info to be harvested/people to be scammed. Also, I don't know if the free market would produce choices of OS's...it seems liek you'd have to have one be the standard..or else you get every company wanting you to run their OS in order to use their other sofware. Unless there was some sort of standard across the board so you'd have universal application support. But then there really wouldn't be much difference in products that average joe user would care about. Why get OS A if OS B does the same thing? Well, B might be more secure than A, but average joe doesn't even know what secure means. Besides, all it takes is good marketing on A's part to sell to average joe. Anyway, I'm not trying to convince anyone of anything...just some thoughts.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    9. Re:At the whim of the individual by ajs318 · · Score: 2, Informative

      If I wanted to play any video game I wanted, I would have to buy a PSX, PSX2, GameCube, XBox, Gameboy, SNES, Sega, etc etc etc ..... I'm just pointing out that having an OS that an overwhelming majority of people use can be good.

      So you think .....

      This is why the C programming language was created, and ultimately why the Portable Operating Systems Interface Extensions standard was created. Basically, if you write a programme in a properly-supported programming language, it ought to be able to be run on any hardware that is physically capable to run it. Obviously if it does hi-res colour graphics it won't run on something which gets its data in and out via a glorified electric typewriter, but hardware with similar capabilities should be able to handle the task.

      The most widely-supported programming language {measured in terms of different architectures on which it will run} is GNU C++ {which by definition includes C; a C programme is a valid C++ programme} and the GNU project has created the autoconf and automake utilities with the aim of making it easy to manage those final "tweaks" which so often are necessary when adapting a programme from one system to another. Anyone who used 8-bit BASIC in the 1980s will remember trying to get a TRS-80 game to run on a Beeb or a Dragon, or an Oric game onto a Spectrum. Or an APPLE-][ programming language on a Beeb.

      Different processors {e.g. 80486, 68020} have different instruction sets; and different machine architectures based on the same processor {Amiga, early Macintosh} use different support chips and different addressing schemas. So binaries for one system are mostly useless to another system. But the source code from which those binaries were generated should compile and run OK on a different system. e.g. if I want to send a character to the printer I have to read the BUSY line on the port; and then if the port is not busy, I have to write the data bits to the port address, then lower and raise the STROBE line. The port is electronically the same in different machines but probably has a different address in memory/IO space. As long as I write my code in such a way as to use #defined constants for the addresses of the data and control ports and the bit values of the STROBE and BUSY lines, then my code will work on any system with a printer port, as long as I know the proper constants.

      Now, I can make my universal printing programme truly universal by first finding out the important values for as many different machine architectures as possible; then writing a script which asks you {or attempts to determine for itself} what kind of system it is running on, and #includes the relevant #define statements for that architecture in the main programme source code before it compiles it. If I did so properly then it Will Just Work. If anybody else invents a new machine architecture that has a printer port sometime in the future, my programme will work with it as soon as someone creates the relevant include data and {maybe} devises a way that a programme can test for sure if or not it is running on this new kind of machine.

      And if every programme was published in the form of source code, and every hardware manufacturer published the full details of the port-addressing schemas of their hardware, then any programme would work on any machine.

      Now my printing thing is tiny but it proves a concept. Look how many kinds of machine are capable of running Linux. Then look how many kinds of machine are capable of running NetBSD.

      Or, turning it around to look from the other end, by deliberately making computers with different instruction sets and different addressing schemas, and by distributing only the binary code and no source code, manufacturers deliberately and cynically are ensuring that a programme for one architecture cannot be run on another architecture

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    10. Re:At the whim of the individual by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 1

      And look at where USSR is today.

      For every innovation you can cite coming out of communism, there are many more that came out of capitalism.

      So does this mean we should then trust one person who doesn't have any checks and balances but has the resources of a small country and a proven track records of shady business practices? You first.

      What do you mean "trust one person"? Bill Gates OWNS his money! You make it sound as if someone crowned him royalty. He EARNED IT it's HIS! He provided a product/service that millions of people found useful, and they paid him for it. It's HIS MONEY! I don't get why some people can't get that through their heads. Why do you or anyone else have claim to what someone else rightfully earned?

      Note, please don't bring in the issue of the M$ monopoly. That has nothing to do with my argument. My argument can be applied to any rich person.

      --

      eTrade SUCKS
    11. Re:At the whim of the individual by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 1

      So your argument is directed at Bill Gates specificaly and not to all rich people? If so, that is an issue for the courts. Until they can get Bill Gates on something, the money is still his. Those are the rules.

      --

      eTrade SUCKS
    12. Re:At the whim of the individual by johnny6vasquez · · Score: 1

      Nope,

      A lot of that money isn't his. It should have been paid in fines or been earned by his competitors had he not cheated.

      The Microsoft monopoly has everything to do with this because without it, Bill Gates would have a lot less money.

      You ask Why do you or anyone else have claim to what someone else rightfully earned?

      Because I feel he didn't rightfully earn it, that's why.

      Maybe you think I'm jealous of his money but that's not it. All I am saying is that for our government to allow people that have cheated capitalism to still rise to the top is not only wrong but also dangerous.

      In my view, capitalism is supposed to allow us a fair chance to work our asses off and combined with a bit of luck and talent, reap the rewards of this hard work. What makes me mad is that there were companies with better products that would have been outperformed Microsoft had Mr. Gates not made these illegal deals.

      Microsoft is making inferior products, stifling innovation and competition, the very things that capitalism is supposed to promote. As a programmer seeking to get ahead by working hard and smart, this worries me. Reading about Palladium and it's ability to shut out all non-microsoft approved programs sends chills down my back. This isn't the kind of marketplace I want to enter, one where I have to buy a license to program approved software to run on a monoculture of Windows approved hardware. Does this sound like free-enterprise to you?

      I don't think we're arguing very different points here you know. I agree with you that people do own the money they earn. If Bill had legitimately earned his money and payed maybe a bit more tax into the system, I would be very happy to admire him for it. But like I said before, I don't think he has done these things.

    13. Re:At the whim of the individual by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      If I had mod privs I'd mod you up +6 informative, heh. I really had no idea how it all worked, I'm no CIS person. I just figured that it was easiest to work with one OS. However, after reading that, I suppose if the bastards would release their source it wouldn't be such a big deal with multiple OS's. Well stated my technically and C++ enlighted friend.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
  68. Linux community? by latroM · · Score: 1

    Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity."

    What is this "linux community". Aren't the people using other kernels included? "Free and/or OSS community/ies" would be more accurate. Unless they mean the Linux developers, which I doubt. Kernels are not important, the idea of free software is.

    1. Re:Linux community? by dJOEK · · Score: 1

      "Free and/or OSS community/ies"

      woops, misread that as 'commies'

      --
      Exercise caution when modding this message up: the author acts like a jerk when his karma is excellent.
  69. Well... by th1ckasabr1ck · · Score: 1
    Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity.

    I doubt if the entire Linux community combined has even SEEN $750 million combined in our lives.

  70. And what will the spend the money on? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And now they can spend all the money on computers with Microsoft Starter Edition and give it straight back to big Billy. Congrats on changing the world.

  71. My donation by ch-chuck · · Score: 1

    Well, at least some fraction of the unused Windows license that automatically came with my new Dell Insiron (The first thing I did was install RHFC3) goes to a good cause. Unfortunately a larger percentage goes to stockholders and board members who threaten, abuse and manipulate hardware vendors to their own advantage still (boot loader? You'll install what we want or no Microsoft licenses for you! Bwahahahaha!!!!)

    --
    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
  72. For all you using this to bash Gates... by Sheetrock · · Score: 5, Insightful
    You make me ill.

    If you need a Free Software example to follow, turn to that of the author of Vim who has used his work to entreat users to donate to the needy in Uganda. But don't piss on a $750 million donation to some of the worst off on this planet; that's really low class and unless you've solved the problem already don't disparage the people who are taking a crack at it.

    --

    Try not. Do or do not, there is no try.
    -- Dr. Spock, stardate 2822-3.




    1. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by X-Phile · · Score: 1

      Agreed. I'm not the biggest Gates fan in the world, and I like to bash Bill just as much as the next guy, but I applaud this donation. Any money that goes towards a childs future is a good investment. I see people dumping on him because he happens to be the richest person on the planet, and he could single-handedly end poverty, blah blah blah. He didn't give $750 Million worth of M$ Software to kids. He didn't give $750 Million worth of computers to kids. He didn't really give them money. He gave children who have nothing in this world, a chance at a real future. He's giving them hope.

      Good job Bill.

      --
      "Well you're not Fiona Apple, and if you're not Fionna Apple, I don't give a rat's ass."
    2. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by Phil1 · · Score: 1
      Try not. Do or do not, there is no try. -- Dr. Spock, stardate 2822.3.

      Shouldn't this sig-quote be attributed to Yoda?

      --
      I'd rather have a bottle in front of me than a frontal lobotomy
    3. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by thedustbustr · · Score: 1
      You make me ill.

      Are you THAT scared of grammar trolls?
      --
      This sig is false.
    4. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by idlake · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But don't piss on a $750 million donation to some of the worst off on this planet;

      The donation is nice. It should make no difference, though, in one's assessment of Gates's character or business practices. Gates remains a modern robber baron, whose business practices have caused economic harm far in excess of what he is donating.

      And you're pretty naive if you think that this move wasn't carefully planned both financially (tax breaks) and with Microsoft's PR department (Gates's popularity/reputation needs a boost).

    5. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shouldn't this sig-quote be attributed to Yoda?

      I think that's the point: it should not be.

    6. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by marcushnk · · Score: 1

      who started it?
      I'm mean, that parting comment was the first stone (apart from being pure flame).
      Remember the "How much is the kernel worth in $$'s" story, well I believe the estimation was in the _Billions_, and that is already in the hands of those that need it.
      Its contrabution alone makes this 750 mill look pitiful.

      Not that I wish to belittle what he's done, 750 million is fantastic, great work.
      But it's nothing compared to what OSS has done/is doing and will do for the world, when it comes to charity.

      --
      "Consider how lucky you are that life has been good to you so far. Alternatively, if life hasn't been good to you so far
    7. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by ClippyHater · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sorry, but that's not an apples-to-apples comparison. When the kernel and Free software in general starts preventing infectious disease, miserable lives, and early death, THEN you'd have an argument.

      $750M saving lives > $750M Free software (by a couple of orders of magnitude, I'd imagine).

    8. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by goldspider · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Guess what? Bill Gates didn't make this contribution to pacify angry Slashbots like yourself.

      You see, the kids who benefit from these vaccines aren't going to give a shit about your pissy little gripes about Gates' business practices. They are going to be grateful; a sentiment I think a lot of Slashbots are incapable of.

      So why not, for once, set aside your consipracy theories about ulterior motives, and acknowledge that Gates did a Good Thing(tm) here?

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    9. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A couple will be greatful. The rest will die over the 10 years the money comes in. Shouldn't $750M be a penny in the fountain for the man who built the largest illegal monopoly on Earth?

    10. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by Anonymous+Custard · · Score: 1

      $750M saving lives > $750M Free software

      That's not apples to apples either...

      But seriously, why do we even need to compare?

      It's really cool that, while everyone's donating to the Tsunami because it's so sensational, Gates has kept his eye on a bigger killer - preventable diseases, gone unprevented because people are so poor they can't afford a $5 vaccination.

      And the Linux community has kept its eye, to a certain extent, on a different problem: technological inequality. If poor nations tried to buy windows, they'd have no money left over for hardware! By providing a versatile OS that can scale to run on systems from the least of hardware to the best of hardware, they give poor countries a slightly better shot at catching up.

      So everyone's trying their best. There's no need to argue who's trying harder.

    11. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by goldspider · · Score: 1

      It isn't for you to decide how generous anyone else should be. Charity, when it is expected or coerced, is just a nice word for slavery.

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    12. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by Twanfox · · Score: 1

      That's kind of funny. Suppose you ruthlessly pursue all manner of business and acquisition of wealth that you can, stealing jobs, contracts, and money that could go to good people with good families. Then, in a fit of generosity, turn around and give just a small portion of that back for something as noble as vaccinations. Well, hell, you've just wiped the slate clean and made yourself into a good guy, especially in the eyes of those you wrong.

      No, I don't think that this donation is going to directly influence anyone that Microsoft put into poverty by it's marketing machine. A selfish-based motivation for a generous contribution still means you're selfish, no matter what you did. Considering the company that Gates lead, what they've done, and what they continue to get away with, I question the motive of the man, even if he personally handed out the money.

      Money is a 'cheap' way to buy favor with people, when you donate it. It doesn't cost you any time other than deciding to, and writing the check. You go on your way, raping and pillaging the proverbial IT landscape, while behind you people worship the fact that some of that ill-gotten gain was "graciously" and "generously" given back, helping you, the less fortunate, ignore their behavior because.. Damn if he isn't such a great guy by returning a pittance for something that was needed.

      Generosity is just a way for many financial "elite" to cover over their past wrongdoings. Were it me, I'd tell'm to take a long walk off a short pier and keep my dignity.

    13. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by goldspider · · Score: 2, Insightful

      After stripping all of the hyperbole from your post, your only real complaint seems to be that Gates has money because he built a successful business.

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    14. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      largest illegal monopoly on Earth?

      If someone robbed a bank and gave you the money, would you use it?

    15. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, you know Linux is used in Medical equipment systems, so indirectly it already is...

      Plus a lot of clustering software and other things out there are used by medical research insitutions to do protein folding and other things.

      So, I'd think again about your statement...

    16. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by JudicatorX · · Score: 1

      All the while, microsoft licensing contracts are leaching money away from charities and other NGO's. Beautiful..... I wonder what more budget such organizations would have if they weren't slaves to microsoft's bottom line. It's hardly a black and white issue as you make it out to be.

      That being said, at least billg is somewhat generous.

      --
      "It is a good divine that follows his own instructions" - Portia, The Merchant of Venice
    17. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For starters I am pleased to see that Gates cares and is atleast willing to help fix some of the worlds problems, i am particularly happy to see him helping children as they are the truly innocent victims of poverty.

      However, lets not get confused here, most posters to this story are biting at flamebait, not because it is Bill Gates (although personally i dont like him)... they are biting simply because the person who posted the original story used it to bash linux users. They didnt say "lets see everyone else match this" .. or "lets see other computer users match this" !. The statement was clearly target at linux users as if we are using the suffering of children as some way of measuring who is better.

      SIMPLY PUT: i dont see what this has to do with windows or linux users being better, i dont see windows users personally donating and i dont see linux users personally donating. This was a kind act by Bill Gates and it deserves to be taken in the spirit it was givin.

    18. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sheetrock, go crawl back under your rock...

      The ONLY reason Bill Gates has $750 million to give away is the licensing fees taken from school/hospital/police/ambulance/fire organizations/individuals, etc., et cetera over the past 20 years or so. All those who support this "magnanimous donation" of Bill are myopic in the extreme. This $750 million came from the people. Bill just gets to hoard it and decide where it goes.

    19. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by Twanfox · · Score: 1

      Not really. It's that people are praising him for doing something good, just because he's donating money for a good cause, ignoring the fact that his company, proven to abuse a monopoly position illegally, is quite literally amoral when it comes to operating as a business.

      Big whup.

      He does one small redeaming act that takes a minor fragment of his time, while he spends the rest of it helping to run a company that continues to attempt borderline illegal acts to remain "successful". That does not make him a saint. It makes his motives questionable, having already proven himself an expert at manipulating the system.

      I give praise to someone who gets a whole ton of money through moral business practices, and donates to charities. Such people are few and far between.

    20. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      STFU stupid commie bastard

    21. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. What economic harm? You're making shit up or preaching to a choir who believes this shit on its face.

      What economic harm? You can't just say something and assume anyone but your fellow Linux zealot nerd-kin will believe you.

      And Gates has been a philanthropist pretty much since he's been rich. You assholes keep trying to make this look like some kind of PR ploy of the day.

      The O.P. is correct, you people are fucking sickening in your pathological hatred of a man who's done more for this planet than you or 100 of your descendants will ever do.

    22. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by philipgar · · Score: 1

      Wow what a load of flame bait. Apparently in the socialist paradise known as slashdot its bad for a company to work to make money.

      I'd argue that Gates has done more good for the world through his software company then through the money he has and will give out. Sure you'll see the shoddy products and things that don't work right, but he's done far more then make giant piles of money.

      I may not be a big fan of his products (in fact I am writing this on my ibook and my desktop runs linux) or of his business practices, but I show that through the usage of my checkbook by not buying his products.

      What Microsoft has done is dumbed down computers so that they're useable by the average person. We may hate it, but its a fact of life. He's created an enterprise that people can understand. The software isn't perfect, but for most people it gets the job done. He's created "standards" albeit closed standards that work for business. No longer do people need to find ways to open up a document written up in word perfects or wordstar or whatever and try to get it to work in word.

      Sure the softwares not perfect, and it may not be the best software available. But the value percieved by most people is that it is. Companies aren't forced to pay for microsoft office, they choose to because they feel its a valid expenditure of their money. They're in it to make money.

      You decry his selfish actions. Selfish actions are what make the world run. People don't go about doing something because they want to help the world. They might do something to help the world because they want to help it, but its a selfish action. They want to do it, they want it for their own satisfaction (even if its anonymous as is sometimes the case).

      As for companies plowed under by microsofts prowess. sure its heartless, but it happens. what about the companies that were making small niche products and then bought out by microsoft. I'm sure the owners of those businesses were laughing all the way to the bank. Sure people were hurt by it, but is it inherently bad? The assembly line caused hundreds of thousands of people to lose their jobs. no longer does it take 1000s of man hours to build a car. On the other hand now most every family (in the us) has one or 2 cars in their driveway. As well as a million other gadgets.

      People were put out of jobs by microsoft. Now most every family in this country has a computer on their desk. The operating system on it may not be very stable or the best, but microsoft enabled it.

      If you want to condemn microsofts business practices personally, thats your own business. .. don't buy or use their products. To call them evil for being "selfish" well I guess we're all evil. I'm proud to act in my own self interest. Any other motivation is just stupid and illogical.

      Phil

    23. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by idlake · · Score: 1

      Guess what? Bill Gates didn't make this contribution to pacify angry Slashbots like yourself.

      Of course, Gates did it to pacify angry Slashbots like myself. As well as lots of other critics.

      You see, the kids who benefit from these vaccines aren't going to give a shit about your pissy little gripes about Gates' business practices.

      The kids who benefit from those vaccines would benefit even more if the US would live up to its commitments on foreign aid, rather than the peanut handouts that some semi-legal business tycoons occasionally deign to hand out for their pet causes in order to make themselves feel good. After living up to its commitments, then we can talk about "charity".

      So why not, for once, set aside your consipracy theories about ulterior motives, and acknowledge that Gates did a Good Thing(tm) here?

      Gates is doing a "Good Thing here", but it doesn't even come close to making up for the financial harm that he has caused.

      And, more generally, donations like Gates are a poor excuse for the harm that the US and Europe are causing in developing nations.

    24. Re:For all you using this to bash Gates... by idlake · · Score: 1

      Wow what a load of flame bait. Apparently in the socialist paradise known as slashdot its bad for a company to work to make money.

      Microsoft has been convicted multiple times in a court of law of monopolistic business practices. It is clear that they have made a large chunk of their money by illegal means, and chances are they wouldn't even be around without their monopolistic practices. The only reason they haven't been punished more harshly so far and been prosecuted on more of their misdeeds is because doing so is legally tricky and takes a lot of time, money, and political support.

      The operating system on it may not be very stable or the best, but microsoft enabled it.

      That's a rewriting of history. Microsoft killed numerous companies that actually had decent usable products at the time and replaced it with the piece of shit that Windows was. Microsoft is only now barely reaching the level of functionality, stability, and usability that other companies and products had decades ago.

      What Microsoft has done is dumbed down computers so that they're useable by the average person. We may hate it

      No, what we "hate" is that Microsoft has been so slow at achieving this, and whatever progress Microsoft has made on it has largely been by driving other companies out of business and pilfering their ideas. Even today, most of Microsoft's products are either bought by them or copied from competitors.

      I'm proud to act in my own self interest. Any other motivation is just stupid and illogical.

      Then you are a sociopath.

  73. Sunday School by TooTechForYou · · Score: 1

    I rember hearing a story in Sunday school once that is quite simular to this. There were all these noblemen donating tons of money to the church. A poor woman walks by and gives about two cents. While the noblemen scoff at her because of her "megar" donation. The priest then points out that it was thier donation that was "megar" because they only gave a little of what they have, while she gave all of what they have. My point is, yes Bill Gates gave a great donation. However, it is still only a small part of his money.

    --
    -- Nic
    1. Re:Sunday School by gg3po · · Score: 1

      Actually this is straight out of the new testament. I give you Mark 12:41-44 (NIV translation)...

      Jesus sat down opposite the place where the offerings were put and watched the crowd putting their money into the temple treasury. Many rich people threw in large amounts. But a poor widow came and put in two very small copper coins,worth only a fraction of a penny.

      Calling his disciples to him, Jesus said, "I tell you the truth, this poor widow has put more into the treasury than all the others. They all gave out of their wealth; but she, out of her poverty, put in everything-all she had to live on."

      Now let's take this and apply it to the current situation... Bill Gates would obviously equate to the "many rich people" mentioned above, but to me, the legions of humble, nameless contributors to FOSS projects (many of whom come from underdeveloped nations) have much in common with the poor widow, who gives more *of themselves*, because they give of *all that they have* -- their valuable time and talents, instead of heaps of money

      I leave you with a section of Matthew 6:2...

      "So when you give to the needy, do not announce it with trumpets, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and on the streets, to be honored by men..."

      I know there are many atheists out there, but the Bible has some real jems.

      --
      ---
    2. Re:Sunday School by TooTechForYou · · Score: 1

      You said what I was trying to in a much better way. I am one of those atheists by the way, I can still reconize a jem though ;)

      --
      -- Nic
  74. $750million, yes, but not in green by jtwJGuevara · · Score: 1

    One could argue that the open source software community is already philanthropic enough by offering an extremely high but unknown amount (in dollars, mind you) software free to anyone who has the hardware to run it on.

    I don't want to contrast this with donating money to vaccinate children, which is an extremely grateful endeavor. But to _hint_ that the Linux/OSS community isn't philanthropic because they do not donate cash is quite asinine.

  75. MOD PARENT UP by rbarreira · · Score: 1, Interesting

    And... slashdot editors really suck! Sometimes I don't even understand why this site is so famous... Do you?

    --

    The AACS key is NOT 0xF606EEFD628B1CA427BEA93A9CA9773F
    1. Re:MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wasn't trying to say "Free software == food". I'm not that stupid.

      Should we stop providing something that helps underprivileged russian children learning IT?

      It's not exactly vaccine or food, but aren't we doing something good here?

    2. Re:MOD PARENT UP by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying it's not good, my point was that free Linux is not comparable or even something to seen as competing with Gate's donation. There's no reason to compare the two. It's apples and oranges. (Two different fruits, but both are tasty.)

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    3. Re:MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The site is famous because it had the first mover advantage. It built up a big base, which is then mostly self-perpetuating.

      In the early days they cared. Now, they really don't give a shit and spend 0 minutes checking stories, 5 minutes a day coding, and the rest checking the ad revenue.

      Slashdot has sucked for a long time. Too bad the other sites out there aren't really any better.

    4. Re:MOD PARENT UP by bcattwoo · · Score: 1
      Should we stop providing something that helps underprivileged russian children learning IT? It's not exactly vaccine or food, but aren't we doing something good here?

      You are right. Training the poor and under privileged on IT is truly altruistic. Once they gain some skills, your job can be shipped over there to be done for workers getting a couple dollars a day.

    5. Re:MOD PARENT UP by Tassach · · Score: 1
      Linux isn't the answer to help starving and sick kids in the 3rd world
      No, but it can help, indirectly and in the long term. Having cheap computing resources helps give children a better education, which means more scientists, doctors, and engineers eventually. It gives the existing doctors, scientists, and engineers who don't have a lot of resources to work with the tools they need to help people.

      Computers are tools for organizing and communicating information. They help people work more efficiently and to accomplish more with fewer resources. Free tools don't do anything on their own, but you need them to help yourself. If you give someone a plow, it won't feed them today; but it will allow them to feed themself next year.

      --
      Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
    6. Re:MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Having cheap computing resources helps give children a better education"

      Care to show some research to back that up? Not that I'm not a computer geek or anything, but that is just false assumption.

    7. Re:MOD PARENT UP by Tassach · · Score: 1
      Education requires access to information. Computers give you access to drastically more information for much less money.

      For one example: Printing a physical textbook on dead trees is fairly expensive (several dollars), and it costs more money to physically transport it to the classroom. Burning the same information to a CD-R is two orders of magnitude cheaper (several cents).

      Thanks to initiatives like this one, a poor, remote village school can access the contents of the world's best libraries for about the same cost as a decent set of encyclopedias.

      --
      Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
  76. Ah, Slashdot timing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    quote from the bottom of the page:
    If you want to know what god thinks of money, just look at the people he gave it to. -- Dorthy Parker

    it makes ya thunk

  77. Sure, I'm in! by nativespeaker · · Score: 1

    Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity.

    I think there's some penicillin growing on an old meatloaf in the back of my fridge. The little tykes are more than welcome to help themselves.

  78. The ends never justify the means by keymygrip · · Score: 1

    This is absolutely rediculous. Bill Gates has amassed a fortune on the backs of and at the expense of others. MS business practice has put many others out of business.

    What else are 2 people going to do with that kind of money? At this point being worldwide charitable is no longer a nice thing but is necessary to still call yourself a human being. If they sat on that fortune letting it do nothing I think it puts them at the level of tyrant for holding back.

    Don't get me wrong, it is still a great thing that they do. So congratulations on continuing to realize what a fortunate life you have lived Bill, and using that realization to help those that have not been fortunate at all.

    I still do not approve of how you got there.

  79. This is simply not enough by BristolCream · · Score: 1

    At this level Gates is simply paying lip service to charity. He has over 40 *billion* in the bank. That's enough to end povery the world over... twice!

    It's a start and believe me, I'd never lok a gift hors eint he mouth, but this is akin to me pledging £4.50. Everything is relative.

    1. Re:This is simply not enough by shintaro · · Score: 1

      1.875% of what he's worth(according to you) and half of it he can't even turn into cash.
      You're only worth $240? Please guys cut him some slack. Assuming you are worth $250,000(house, car, cash) this would be akin to you donating $4700. Go try to find one friend of yours in this income range who has donated $4,700 of their money. I know I didn't.

    2. Re:This is simply not enough by geldfuss · · Score: 1

      Think of the millions and billions that governments spend on (for example) the military, space programs, and (more specifically) inauguration balls and other celebrations. You could probably get $40 billion out of the richer governments' budgets fairly easily.

    3. Re:This is simply not enough by BristolCream · · Score: 1

      Fair comment. The 40 billion is his cash in hand though. Including stock we're looking at more like 80-100. Besides which, how much does one man reasonabley need to live on?

    4. Re:This is simply not enough by AKnightCowboy · · Score: 1
      At this level Gates is simply paying lip service to charity. He has over 40 *billion* in the bank. That's enough to end povery the world over... twice!

      You math wizards really amaze me. $40 billion divided amongst 4 billion needy people is $10 each. That's a one time offer, once it's gone it's gone. Can you tell me that $10 will be enough for a poor person to live on the rest of their lives? Of course not. You guys are just like the farktards that were bitching that people weren't giving enough to the tsunami victims. ANYTHING is better than nothing. Stop looking a gift horse in the mouth or the next time people may reconsider donating period.

    5. Re:This is simply not enough by mr_z_beeblebrox · · Score: 1

      You can't only think of how much the money is worth to the person donating. Think of what $750 million is to the amount spent on vaccines for these people annually. Also, think about this...this is in addition to all of his ONGOING CHARITY work. Bill Gates and MS are software overlords yes, but he has proven time and again that he is a noble and charitable soul. Also, remember the study statistically showing that it would be "unproductive for him to stop and pick up a $100 bill" well how productive is it for him to GIVE $750,000,000 and take the time to see to its use?

    6. Re:This is simply not enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's given away much more than this already, and will give away much more in the future.

      It's funny that you think people are stupid enough to believe your retard math. This is a one time donation, he's given many in the past and will give more in the future, numbnuts.

  80. Let's see... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    .....if you can munch on my fat one. Give it up.

  81. I DO think he did this because he feels like it by coolcold · · Score: 0

    remember, Bill is just a person while M$ is a company. He doesn't need to donate 50% from his treasure to say he is generous. He DID help those children out no matter how small a portion from his pocket that is. Also most of his money are in shares which he would have to sell them to get the cash. I wonder how many rich would do the same.

    --
    I am harvesting funny/good quotes. Please help by putting them in your sigs :)
  82. oh noes, by varkman · · Score: 1

    can't a man post news about some rich guy donating money to a good cause without this turning out to be yet another (rolleyes) WINDOWS VS *NIX turf war? And why is everybody linking gates' money-donation to where it came from? It's there, and it's going to charity. Those are the _facts_ . All the rest you're discussing are at most your personal opinions( as widespread as the may be)

  83. Re:PC competition for the I-Mini MAC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a troll repost of this.

  84. This strikes me... by zenmojodaddy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ... as being somewhat similar to so-called 'celebrities' announcing million-dollar donations to charity. The fact that they seem to expect everyone to fall on their knees and worship this display of magnanimity doesn't alter the fact that it is a worthwhile gesture, but any charitable donation should be a matter of private conscience rather than a public show.

    Also, as other posts have pointed out, Gates can comfortably afford the amount that has been pledged. Does that make it somehow more worthwhile than a private individual lending a hand to a stranger, be it through a few quid in a charity box or a few hours of work on a free software project?

  85. Thinking long term by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It gets me how famous people always have to donate to causes that sound really nice at this point in time, but aren't going to make any difference to the world as a whole in the long term.

    Right now, whether we like to admit it or not, we're consuming through the world's resources faster than ever, and heading towards huge problems within the next few decades (things like energy supply, global warming and oil shortages - that stuff is not going to carry on spewing out of the ground forever after all) that we won't be able to ignore any more. No amount of healthcare provided to anyone now is going to do anything to avoid any of that, or the much bigger health problems it's going to cause.

    The last thing the world needs right now is more people, yet all we can think about is how to make as many people as possible alive now, with no regard even to our own future or that of our kids.

    I hope that one day soon people will be more aware of this and will start donating to more worthwhile causes for the long term. Imagine another $750M put into fusion research - that could bring us a big step closer to solving both the massive energy and global warming problems we're going to see more and more of over the coming years.

    I know that sucks, but if you disagree, what do you propose we do about all the kids who'll need vaccinating once clean water, heat, food and transport are scarce because we never did anything to prepare while we were most able to?

  86. how about the value of Linux by yorkpaddy · · Score: 1

    Take the number of linux instalations running. Multiply it by what Microsoft would charge for each of those OS seats. I'm sure it comes out to a large number. When BG donates computers he writes the software off his taxes at full cost.

    --
    "brxref .k.p ,.by xprt. gbe.p.oycmaycbi yd. cby.nci.bj. ru yd. am.pcjab lgxlcj" don'
  87. And this is probably the result of... by brian0918 · · Score: 1

    Melinda probably hid the remote control and told Bill he'd get it back when he made a large donation.

  88. Sherwood Forest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'Robin Hood, Robin Hood, riding through the glen' - or should that be 'Redmond'. The modern day Robin Hood took from the rich, in the form of a Microsoft tax from everyone that can afford a PC, and given it (some of it) to the poor.

    Guess that makes Balmer our new Friar Tuck.

  89. That's not so bad by timlyg · · Score: 0

    Well, at least Bill Gates learns to give back to what he took from the world.

  90. ouch! by JennaNicole · · Score: 1

    That's a pretty loaded story. 1) To bring up the name that is hated by the majority of savvy computer users and 2) to challenge the underdog in a competition of dollars and cents. Bleeding the world, then saving children is an interesting series of moves, Mr. Gates. At least Linux is accessible to the developing countries for a cheaper computing resource so that they can move up economically and never have to worry about starvation and disease again.

  91. That's nothing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I pay both my kids health care and more by choosing open source solutions and not paying M$ licensing fees.

  92. Re:real changes will be made by changing the socie by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 1

    It's HIS MONEY! Do you get it? It's HIS MONEY! What makes people like you think you have the right to rob him, or anybody else of what's rightfully theirs?

    --

    eTrade SUCKS
  93. Generous by Dr.Opveter · · Score: 1

    Of course Bill Gates has a lot more money than he is donating. Many people with a lot of money are not eager to give it away though, even if it's a small share of what they have. I applaude Gates' effort.

    --
    Sample this!
  94. Part of the budget by PeteDotNu · · Score: 0

    I would have thought that part of the Gates foundation budget compromises "buying publicity by helping the needy."

    I expect that this is just another form of advertising.

    "Ah, that Bill Gates is such a nice guy after all. We should buy his operating system because it will make us feel all warm and fuzzy inside."

    --
    My other processor is big-endian.
  95. In other news . . . by barcelona_stony · · Score: 0

    Microsoft stated it would raise prices on it's Windows and Office Suites, bringing in an expected $750 Million Dollars over the next 10 years.

  96. Re:The Linux community has ALREADY "matched this.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Free software is going to help the third world develop more quickly" years down the road, than malaria and hepatitis vaccinations today? How fucking stupid can you be?

  97. Wouldn't know by cybersaga · · Score: 0

    Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity.

    If they could and did, we probably wouldn't know since they probably wouldn't go telling the whole world about their generosity.

  98. Good. But not a justification. by ContractualObligatio · · Score: 1

    Philantropic organisations are good things. This money being made available is a good thing. I don't mean to disparage a charitable foundation - but I can have a go at the founder. The question is, "does the end justify the means" and the answer is very definitely no.

    In terms of what impresses me about people, it's not making a song and dance about how generous you are, particularly if such generosity coincided with the emerging public knowledge of what a calculating bastard you really are. Being a control freak, breaking the law, abusing your power over others to make so much money you're the richest man in the world, and then publicising how much you give away - makes my skin crawl.

    Two things to consider:

    1. The amount of money involved is roughly similar to the fine just set by the EU, and is spread over ten years. You could interpret that as Bill isn't giving away any more money than than he's earned by breaking the law. So it sounds impressive, but could a just be a cost-effective form of PR.

    2. The Open Source movement is clearly never going to have a huge bank account to make such headline grabbing donations. But just think - free software for many IT requirements such as OS, email, office apps, research clusters, communication and access to world news for people living in repressed countries.

    IT is changing the world, and open source makes it possible for many people that wouldn't other otherwise have access. And it makes things cheaper for researchers, hospitals and governments. Either it competes with MS, enabling a hospital trust for example to negotiate better prices, or is simply free should they adopt Linux.

    Open Source is therefore contributing a huge financial boon to the world. And in some cases, saved money means saved lives.

    It's a beautiful thing, no matter the flaws, disputes, arguments and court cases. In comparison, Microsoft is an ugly thing, precisely because of all the flaws, disputes etc... Giving away money doesn't justify things, it's just an easy way for a rich person to try to make amends. If Bill gave up something important, I'd be impressed. Even just a genuine apology for the monopoly thing would be a start (plus corrective actions), and that's free!

  99. Never by goatan · · Score: 1

    The Ends never justify the means, people who belive they do are going to hell.

    --
    Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

  100. I steal 10 bucks... by nagora · · Score: 1
    I keep 7 for me and give 3 to some charity. That makes me a good man, and it makes you a bad person for saying I shouldn't have stolen the 10 bucks in the first place.

    That is the logic here, isn't it: that it doesn't matter who you shit on or how many people's lives you destroy as long as you use some of the money you made in the process to someone even worse off than your victims. I don't buy that any more than I buy the idea that the Free software movement isn't worth $75m per year in benefits to poor countries.

    Gates was born into priviledge, has never had to work a day in his life if he didn't feel like it, and has devoted his professional life to preventing other people from using their talents to make an honest living. He is the reincarnation of all that America was supposed to stand against in the form of old George III. Fuck him and his dirty money. He was a bastard yesterday, and he's still a bastard today.

    Story is bullshit, poster is bullshit, Gates is bullshit.

    TWW

    --
    "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
  101. vaccines? by St.+Arbirix · · Score: 1

    First of all, no. The ends never justify the means. When you find yourself using people not as an end unto themselves, find different means.

    Second of all, I know a girl who been getting hospitalized for months on end ever since she was vaccinated as a child. The vaccine is responsible for destroying her liver, among other things. Vaccines do nasty things to a percentage of the population.

    Third of all, and this applies to all foreign aid (except of course for countries that have been developed thanks to foreign money--current count: 0), when there are mouths to feed, and you feed them, you now have even more mouths to feed. If you think its ok to make a small percentage of the population who receives vaccines so sick (there's no was she would have lived long outside a 1st world country, and she's not being killed naturally, this was purely for the betterment of society as a whole) then why not go whole hog and let the whole lot of them go?

    Anyones who's ever been annoyed at the idea of antivirus companies should cringe at the idea of vaccines. You can write all the code you want to identify and stop a virus, but the vulnerability only goes away when the program gets fixed. Vaccines don't stay in the gene pool. Natural immunity does.

    --
    Direct away from face when opening.
    1. Re:vaccines? by Mant · · Score: 1

      Yes vaccines will have a bad effect on a small percentage of people, some may even die. This is true of any medical procedure, there are risks.

      You have to weigh the risks with the benefits, all the people who you will save, who won't get the disease because they are vaccinated, and all the people they won't pass it onto.

      By you logic we should abandon all medical treatment in third world countries, despite it improving the overall situation, because some people will statistically suffer, maybe die, from it.

      Just because some people will suffer whatever choice you make doesn't make the two choices morally equivilent, when one will lessen suffering overall.

      Not vaccinating people does not lead to widespread natural immunity. Humans didn't vaccinate people for millions of years, and still caught and spread diseases, some of which crippled or killed them.

      The results of vaccines doesn't stay in the gene pool because 'naturally' acquiring immunity doesn't either. Normal immunity is acquired through the human immune systems exposure to a disease (which vaccines mimic), and so developing antibodies. Even if I survive a disease and so become immune, I won't pass it on anyway.

      Actually being naturally immune to a disease from birth does seem to happen to a few people for a few diseases, but is very rare. It certainly hasn't become the norm after millions of years. Unless everyone gets exposed to the disease all the time, plenty of people without the advantage will reproduce, so it won't dominate the gene pool. Plus disease change, it's going to be quicker to have a new vaccine, even if it takes decades or centuries, than wait for people to evolve.

      Vaccines on the other hand work a lot better than anything else. I have no natural immunity to smallpox, but no fear of catching it.

    2. Re:vaccines? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to sound insensitve, but we hav a problem that I think people are overlooking.
      There are over 6 billion people on this planet. We have no idea what the actual balanced carrying capacity of this ecosystem is, but it's estimated to be a lot lower than 6 billion.
      Don't get me wrong, I'd do anything to save my daughter's life, but it is a well known fact that common precautions and cleanliness will quite possibly go just as far to prevent disease spread as vaccines. One is just the easy "quick fix" that we have all grown accustom to.
      I wish, oh how I wish that that money had gone to education about basic cleanliness and "common precautions". Yes there would still be lives lost, but the overall standard of living would go up for all involved. Plus the level of Mecury used in vaccines is bad for the kids, bad for the environment, but good for the rich, as it keeps the pharmacueticals living high on the hog...

      Blah blah blah...my diatribe is now over...

    3. Re:vaccines? by Gerhardius · · Score: 1

      Point by point.

      >The ends never justify the means. When you find yourself using people not as an end unto themselves, find different means.

      1: The ends can justify the means: it all depends upon one's personal philosophy. People are not necessarily an end unto themselves but are agents of societal interaction. There is a social contract and sometimes it makes life a bitch.

      >I know a girl who been getting hospitalized for months on end ever since she was vaccinated as a child. The vaccine is >responsible for destroying her liver, among other things. Vaccines do nasty things to a percentage of the population.

      2: I know of measles clusters, as well as other clusters of preventable (through vaccination) diseases (ie pertussis, mumps) that can be linked directly to groups of parents who decided immunization was bad.

      >this applies to all foreign aid (except of course for countries that have been developed thanks to foreign money--current count: >0),

      3A: Europe and Japan were rebuilt from US aid following WW2. Israel and Taiwan would be non-existent without US $. I am not a fan of many aid programs, but the Marshall plan worked just fine.

      >If you think its ok to make a small percentage of the population who receives vaccines so sick (there's no was she would have >lived long outside a 1st world country, and she's not being killed naturally, this was purely for the betterment of society as a >whole) then why not go whole hog and let the whole lot of them go?

      3B: You are comparing an adverse reaction to complete disregard? Is this some bizarre attempt to apply the Prime Directive? Do you apply this bizarre logic to every aspect of life? Should a person forgo risky, but potentially life saving, surgery because there is a chance he/she will end up dead anyway? Are you opposed to organ donation? Donated organs can get rejected. What about other risks in society? Drawing the line at vaccines based upon your reasoning is completely illogical.

      >Anyones who's ever been annoyed at the idea of antivirus companies should cringe at the idea of vaccines. You can write all >the code you want to identify and stop a virus, but the vulnerability only goes away when the program gets fixed. Vaccines >don't stay in the gene pool. Natural immunity does.

      Comparing computer anti-virus programs to vaccines , and by extension malicious code to disease, is flawed at best. You want natural immunity in a gene pool? Try sickle cell against malaria: immunity @ 75% of the time with a good chance of a crippling disease (sickle cell anemia.) Apparently mother nature accepts that immunity comes with risks. Natural immunity isn't a simple matter either: tetanus has been around in the soil since long before humanity yet for some reason we have never built up resistance.

      It is sad when a medical procedure, like vaccination, causes harm to the patient. It was also sad when kids routinely died from things we can barely remember the names of. Do you recall quarantine signs outside your friend's houses? Ever visited somebody in an iron lung? Remember lockjaw? Whooping cough (pertussis)? Pertussis itself has a death rate of @ .5% and roughly similar incidence of severe neurological damage. The vaccine has a severe reaction rate of @ .001%: does it make more sense to vaccinate or let nature take its course?

    4. Re:vaccines? by St.+Arbirix · · Score: 1

      I'll put it in simpler terms.

      Disease spreads proportionally to the concentration of people. The faster you save them the faster it spreads.

      --
      Direct away from face when opening.
  102. But I'm sure there are some.... by StringBlade · · Score: 1
    who have $750Gil to donate. The trouble is finding a shop nearby with a DONATE item.

    Admittedly, a VERY bad pun.

    --
    ...and that's the way the cookie crumbles.
  103. I'm glad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm glad someone is making a significant worldwide contribution to a worthy cause. This deserves acknowledgement.

    I hope others from the very-wealthy spheres follow, but I will not judge them bad if they don't. Not that they haven't: maybe we should just get more informed about it. :)

  104. Discussion on this topic... by iordonez · · Score: 1

    I have a feeling this is going to be the worst discussion I've ever seen for a story...

  105. Linux = Greed ?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After the unforunate tsunami event in SE Asia, many computer companies changed their webpages and added links to the Red Cross (RC) etc...

    I checked all the major Linux sites... and some other FLOSS sites, both commercial and non-profit.

    There was not a single mention about the disaster nor any logo/link to the RC or others.

    Apple had one, Microsoft, Sun ... and other commercial companies had one reference aswell...

    I wonder why none of the pure Linux companies, did the same thing... is it considered bad business... or is it simply that the OSS community dont give a fuck...

    337[1-4]!!!!

    1. Re:Linux = Greed ?! by northcat · · Score: 1

      Umm, Linux companies don't represent the Linux "community". Linux companies represent Linux companies. And yes, Linux companies are indeed greedy. They try to make money by not doing any work themselves and just selling stuff that's already available for free. The same nature continues when it comes to putting links to charity organisations on their web pages. The hard truth is, Linux companies are worse than Non-Free Software companies.

    2. Re:Linux = Greed ?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or is it simply that the OSS community dont give a fuck..
      They would rather argue about it on slashdot as to why they shouldn't donate because they feel OSS = 10 billion zillion double dollars, and the world should be grateful for that "donation."

      I would suggest that, given the comments posted on slashdot, the slashdot community could donate some of the money they save from all the movies/music/games/software they pirate.

  106. easy! by protomala · · Score: 1

    Contries that use Gnu/Linux or free software, dosen't use so much money on software, so there are more money for thing like vaccines for example. The greatest problem on developing contries isn't the money, but what they do with the money. Brazil have a law that mandates a percentage of all government money must go do health, other areas that dsosen't have this kind of legal protection year over year lose money for paying debts.

  107. Actually, "Robin Hood" is no compliment at all... by Stormwatch · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "[...] I'm after a man whom I want to destroy. He died many centuries ago, but until the last trace of him is wiped out of men's minds, we will not have a decent world to live in."

    "What man?"

    "Robin Hood."

    Rearden looked at him blankly, not understanding.

    "He was the man who robbed the rich and gave to the poor. Well, I'm the man who robs the poor and gives to the rich-or, to be exact, the man who robs the thieving poor and gives back to the productive rich."

    "What in blazes do you mean?"

    "If you remember the stories you've read about me in the newspapers, before they stopped printing them, you know that I have never robbed a private ship and never taken any private property. Nor have I ever robbed a military vessel - because the purpose of a military fleet is to protect from violence the citizens who paid for it, which is the proper function of a government. But I have seized every loot carrier that came within range of my guns, every government relief ship, subsidy ship, loan ship, gift ship, every vessel with a cargo of goods taken by force from some men for the unpaid, unearned benefit of others. I seized the boats that sailed under the flag of the idea which I am fighting: the idea that need is a sacred idol requiring human sacrifices - that the need of some men is the knife of a guillotine hanging over others - that all of us must live with our work, our hopes, our plans, our efforts at the mercy of the moment when that knife will descend upon us - and that the extent of our ability is the extent of our danger, so that success will bring our heads down on the block, while failure will give us the right to pull the cord. This is the horror which Robin Hood immortalized as an ideal of righteousness. It is said that he fought against the looting rulers and returned the loot to those who had been robbed, but that is not the meaning of the legend which has survived. He is remembered, not as a champion of property, but as a champion of need, not as a defender of the robbed, but as a provider of the poor. He is held to be the first man who assumed a halo of virtue by practicing charity with wealth which he did not own, by giving away goods which he had not produced, by making others pay for the luxury of his pity. He is the man who became the symbol of the idea that need, not achievement, is the source of rights, that we don't have to produce, only to want, that the earned does not belong to us, but the unearned does. He became a justification for every mediocrity who, unable to make his own living, has demanded the power to dispose of the property of his betters, by proclaiming his willingness to devote his life to his inferiors at the price of robbing his superiors. It is this foulest of creatures - the double-parasite who lives on the sores of the poor and the blood of the rich - whom men have come to regard as a moral ideal. And this has brought us to a world where the more a man produces, the closer he comes to the loss of all his rights, until, if his ability is great enough, he becomes a rightless creature delivered as prey to any claimant - while in order to be placed above rights, above principles, above morality, placed where anything is permitted to him, even plunder and murder, all a man has to do is to be in need. Do you wonder why the world is collapsing around us? That is what I am fighting, Mr. Rearden. Until men learn that of all human symbols, Robin Hood is the most immoral and the most contemptible, there will be no justice on earth and no way for mankind to survive."

    Rearden listened, feeling numb. But under the numbness, like the first thrust of a seed breaking through, he felt an emotion he could not identify except that it seemed familiar and very distant, like something experienced and renounced long ago.

    ( excerpt from Ayn Rand's "Atlas Shrugged" )

  108. promise by Dayflowers · · Score: 1

    Now if Gates pledged to vaccinate 750million HIMSELF, now THAT would be interesting...

    --
    I am a speak english. Do you not? - Saroto
  109. Why /. editors always trying to make flamewars? by who+got+my+name · · Score: 0

    It is not the first time where /. editors put stupid comments just to ignite the flames. Why? I know, i know "welcome to /.". This is a very good move by Bill Gates, no matter what everyone say. You give what you can. And yes linux community gives what they can, that is cold human time and energy - and we have so few of that. Now go ahead and ompare oranges to apples.

    --
    The only person who is capable of killing my karma, is me, do not even try to help me.
  110. From a long line of generous businessmen... by PsiPsiStar · · Score: 2, Funny

    Al Capone was a wonder of the age. It should be pointed out that Capone was the 'generous' gangster. He actually helped build Cicero and Chicago projects, gave to the needy, helped the elderly, and was great with kids. While he may have consciously did this for improving his image, he did try to be an active member of the community. He liked sports, baseball, boxing, and horse racing. He gave away a lot of his ill-gotten gains, and it was part of the defence for his tax evasion trial. But Capone ultimately went to prison for tax evasion, and died in 1947 from complications arising from syphilis.

    From http://www.btinternet.com/~dreklind/valentine.htm

    --

    ___
    It's the end of my comment as I know it and I feel fine.
    1. Re:From a long line of generous businessmen... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guess he liked to spread his love around too.

    2. Re:From a long line of generous businessmen... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, comparing Gates to a gangster, that is really proving your point and winning you slashbot support!

      Nice to have an news story with lots of posts to post to show to the dark side of the OSS community. You sure write your own anti-OSS material and FUD.

    3. Re:From a long line of generous businessmen... by PsiPsiStar · · Score: 1

      What point are you refering to?

      You make a lot of assumptions, friend.

      My point is that, first and formost, there are reasons that a person gives money away other than simple charity and warmheartedness.

      --

      ___
      It's the end of my comment as I know it and I feel fine.
  111. match - with what ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    weed and pizza ?

  112. This is really, really good. by Council · · Score: 1

    This is really, really good. Preventable disease is high on the list of tremendous world problems that are actually relatively easy to solve, we just don't. I recall some WHO report saying that 3 million people die anually from diseases that can be prevented with a pill or shot that causes next to nothing and wouldn't be hard to get to them with just a little funding. So politics aside, I'm enormously happy to see this.

    --
    xkcd.com - a webcomic of mathematics, love, and language.
  113. The Real Reason behind Gate' Genorosity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    let me let you in on a little secret about Bill and MelindaGates so-called "Foundation." Gate's demi-trillionaire status is basedon a nasty little monopoly-protecting trade treaty called "TRIPS" - theTrade-Related Intellectual Property Rights rules of the World TradeOrganization. TRIPS gives Gates a hammerlock on computer operatingsystems worldwide, legally granting him a monopoly that the RobberBarons of yore could only dream of. But TRIPS, the rule which helpsGates rule, also bars African governments from buying AIDS, malaria andtuberculosis medicine at cheap market prices.

    Example: in June 2000, at the urging of Big Pharma, Bill Clintonthreatened trade sanctions against Argentina for that nation's daring tooffer low-cost drugs to Southern Africa.

    Gates knows darn well that the "intellectual property rights" laws suchas TRIPS - which keep him and Melinda richer than Saddam and the Mafiacombined -- are under attack by Nelson Mandela and front-line doctorstrying to get cheap drugs to the 23 million Africans sick with the AIDSvirus. Gate's brilliant and self-serving solution: he's spending anitsy-bitsy part of his monopoly profits (the $6 billion spent by Gates'foundation is less than 2% of his net worth) to buy some drugs for afraction of the dying. The bully billionaire's "philanthropic"organization is currently working paw-in-claw with the bigpharmaceutical companies in support of the blockade on cheap drugshipments.

    Gates' game is given away by the fact that his Foundation has invested$200 million in the very drug companies stopping the shipment oflow-cost AIDS drugs to Africa.

    Gates says his plan is to reach one million people with medicine by theend of the decade. Another way to read it: he's locking in a tradesystem that will block the delivery of cheap medicine to over 20million.

    The computer magnate's scheme has a powerful ally. "The president couldhave been reading from a script prepared by Mr. Gates," enthuses theTimes' cub reporter, referring to Mr. Bush's AIDS plan offered up thisweek to skeptical Africans. The US press does not understand whyAfricans don't jump for Bush's generous offer. None note that the moneyheld out to the continent's desperate nations has strings attached or,more accurately, chains and manacles. The billions offered are mostlyloans at full interest which may be used only to buy patent drugs at aprice several times that available from other nations. What Africanswant, an end to the devastating tyranny of TRIPS and other trade rules,is dismissed by the Liberator of Baghdad.

    We are all serfs on Microsoft's and Big Pharma's 'intellectualproperty.' If Gates' fake philanthropy eviscerates the movement to freeAfricans from the tyranny of TRIPS, then Bill and Melinda's donationscould have the effect of killing more Africans than then even their PRagents claim they have saved. And for our own Republic, we can onlyhope that when the bully-boy billionaire injects his next wad of lootinto the Bush political campaign, he uses a condom.
    http://www.workingforchange.com/article.c fm?ItemID =15294

  114. US phara sponsoring by jcdr · · Score: 1

    Now M$ is certain that some big US pharma will stay
    away from OSS...

  115. Anti-penguin serum by Nikkodemus · · Score: 1

    just one innoculation will prevent:

    Linuxitis
    Sun scabies
    Delirium Transmeta
    OS Pleurisy
    AMDementia
    Creutzfeldt-Steve Jobs disease (CSJD, human variant)

    ---

    Clinical tests on patients such as Steve Ballmer, have shown occasional spasms of restlessness and dancing, accompanied by involuntary male breast-zone enhancement, research is on-going.

  116. There is no taxation under Communism by Cryofan · · Score: 1

    THe state owns everything under communism. The state pays all salaries. Why would they want to tax anyone if they pay the salaries in the first. You might wanna consider reading something on the subect before making a fool of yourself on Slashdot....

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
    1. Re:There is no taxation under Communism by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      The parent was talking about how the pro-commies in the US are also pro-tax...taking money from the rich and redistributing it to the poor. He wasn't talking about straight communism.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
  117. Excuses, excuses! by RocketRainbow · · Score: 1

    I've looked through all the comments for this story and everyone's discounting Gates' contribution. I can only assume it's because you're all feeling guilty about not even donating a lousy $50 to charity from your birthday money.

    I think Gates won't miss $750 million, so he's decided that he'll donate it to vaccinations. Well, that's logical because if a disease starts in some isolated backwater and nobody's vaccinated, it could easily turn into a nasty pandemic.

    In fact, logically, it makes sense to forego a luxury or two every now and then to make sure that world health is well cared for.

    So, stop making excuses and start making contributions! Consider - if we all dig deep, then maybe Billy will be inspired to donate another couple of billion. But remember, the world is a community, and this silly bickering hurts us all (see the above bit about the pandemic).

    --
    *#*#*#*#*#******* I love peanut butter sandwiches!
    1. Re:Excuses, excuses! by jthayden · · Score: 1
      I can only assume it's because you're all feeling guilty about not even donating a lousy $50 to charity from your birthday money.

      You get $50 in birthday money? Boy you're spoiled, all I got was this lousy t-shirt.

  118. Good for Bill... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...but why should the Linux community feel that it has to "match" Bill's generosity? Don't we help level the playing field so that people in developing nations can use and master the types of tools/skills that they'll need in order to "develop?"

    Bill's gift will help people stay healthy so they can live. The free software community's gift gives them something to live with. Both should be celebrated for what they are.

  119. Quietly steal the billions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ... Loudly donate the millions.

    It's the practice of cut throats, executives and vagabonds the world over to legitimise their ill gotten gains by 'generously' returning a small part of their swag to the needy while quietly keeping the rest for themselves.

    1. Re:Quietly steal the billions... by Paradevil · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Great philosophy. He should just keep it all so that he can laugh and swim in his piles of money.

      What incredible hippie bullshit.

      He made that money, that money was paid to him. It is his money. He can do whatever the hell he wants to with it. If you could make 50 Billion dollars would you pass up that opportunity?

      Did you make this same eye-rolling assertion when Ted Turner took out full-page ads extolling the virutes of him dontating a billion dollars to the UN? Feel free to disagree with the man's company, but for the love of God at least give some credit when some good is done in the world.

    2. Re:Quietly steal the billions... by gobbo · · Score: 1
      He made that money, that money was paid to him. It is his money. He can do whatever the hell he wants to with it. If you could make 50 Billion dollars would you pass up that opportunity?

      You just agreed with the gp, while attempting an ad hominem attack. Well done!

  120. Hmmm.... Is this a good thing? by tonywestonuk · · Score: 1

    3/4 Billion dollars to vacinate millions of people might sound a great idea...... But think of what might be the implications... Firstly, there is already a child mortality rate..... This program will decrease this rate, so more children live... If so, we will need more Food/space to feed them? Will we end up in 10 years or so with mass hunger, with exponentially more people dieing of starvation, or with more and more forrests cut down due to a rapidly increasing population?
    Also, What would be the effect on the Vaccination? Using it this many times, I would imagine that the diseases it protects against may grow immune. So, this would leave us with no vaccinations.... and in 10 years time, us in the western world might end up dead when untreatable plagues run riot....
    Of all the things to help those without, I just think that this idea has not been well thought out.

    1. Re:Hmmm.... Is this a good thing? by vidarh · · Score: 1
      All past experience shows that when the child mortality rate drops the population quickly adapts and the birt rate drops. So while massive vaccination programs in a short timespan MAY cause a short term growth, it is likely to have only minor net impacts on the population size.

      And diseases rarely become immune against vaccinations. Polio and smallpox are now for all practical purposes wiped out thanks to vaccination programs - immunity was never an issue.

      Vaccinations is one of the best ways of helping the developing world for the simple reason that apart from reducing the pain and suffering caused by these deaths, it also helps improve economic conditions: Children are a net drain on resources. Children that die never get a chance to make up for that drain. It may seem cynical to see it that way, but the fact remains that the more you can reduce child mortality rates, the fewer children need be born to produce one adult capable of helping sustain a family and grow the economy.

      So apart from showing compassion, helping reduce child mortality is also a perfectly valid way of improving the developing countries ability to take care of themselves in the longer term.

  121. you've gotta be kidding by idlake · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Much maligned for his business practices, is this proof that sometimes the ends justify the means?

    So, by analogy, if a Mafia boss donates one percent of his ill-gotten gains, that justifies his crimes?

    Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity."

    The Linux community is about public service and cooperation; by creating billions of dollars worth in free software, the Linux community has matched Bill Gates's "generosity" many times over already. And unlike Bill Gates, members of the Linux community paid for it with their own time and money. Bill Gates is just giving back a fraction of the money he stole.

  122. we should be taxing plutocrats more heavily by Cryofan · · Score: 1

    billionaires like gates should be subject to wealth taxes and heavy income taxes. We could use the money to pay for healthcare for all Americans.

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
  123. Vaccine by DOS-5 · · Score: 1

    This is really Microsoft's Anti Virus software initiative

  124. good thing by VanillaCoke420 · · Score: 1

    I am not sure what to say about people who complain about something like this. He donates hundreds of millions to charity, and people try their best to find something wrong with it. How weird could it possibly get?

    1. Re:good thing by leomekenkamp · · Score: 1
      Two simple questions:
      1. How did he make so much money?
      2. What % of his total belongings is he giving away?
      Hint #1: Microsoft is found guilty of abusing monopoly powers, i.e. MS broke the law. Hint #2: He could give away 95% of his total belongings and still would not have to worry about spending too much for the next 500 years.

      --
      Wenn ist das Nunstueck git und Slotermeyer? Ja! Beiherhund das Oder die Flipperwaldt gersput.
  125. Another troll of an article by mattgreen · · Score: 1

    Asking the vague Linux community to match the donation of an extremely wealthy individual is completely asinine. Of course, I see why this article was approved, because it generates more plenty of controversy with its summary line.

  126. Even Worse by w.p.richardson · · Score: 1

    300 million cheap coders for "offshoring" in 15 years. This is Gates' real ulterior motive.

    --

    Curb CO2 emissions: Kill yourself today!

  127. Pump and dump via government matching by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Bill Gates donated the money, not any community unless you consider his wealth as aggregated from a particular community. But actually to be more exact, Bill is calling on governments to match his investment in the purchase of expensive drugs produced by the pharmas he has heavily invested in.

    If Bill weren't pumping his own portfolio and occasionally using such "charity" for coercion, I'd take a less cynical point of view towards his approaches to public health

    --
    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
    1. Re:Pump and dump via government matching by Bellyflop · · Score: 1

      Even if you want to accuse him of pumping his pharma portfolio (which is hard to believe since he's suggesting that pharma's cut their profit which has the opposite effect), he's also heavily pumping the portfolio of his charitable foundation.

  128. How much will he be worth less after this? by houghi · · Score: 1

    He gives 750M over 10 years. That is 75 per year. He probably has a lot more in his back account, so it merely is the interest he gives away. Why not give the 750M in one go and let the people he gives it to handle it?

    Say he has 1.500M in a backaccount and he gets 5% per year, he still will become not poorer.

    Although the amount given is great, I was more moved by a little boy of about 6 years who gave 15EUR towards the Tsunami victims on the Dutch tv show for the victims. For that little boy the 15 EUR must look like a small fortune.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    1. Re:How much will he be worth less after this? by vidarh · · Score: 1
      This is from his foundation, so it doesn't leave him with anything less than he already has. He does regularly donate to his foundation though. However, what should be kept in mind is that he usually donates Microsoft stock.

      This likely has the double advantage for him in that it avoids the very very bad signal effect it would have if he sells massive amounts of Microsoft stock (he does regularly sell, but quite small amounts, which is "business as usual" since most of his fortune is still tied up in Microsoft) and hence avoid having a detrimental effect on the Microsoft shareprice, while at the same time presumably his foundation have been structured so that his donations are tax deductable.

      I don't know HOW beneficial this would be as I don't know US tax regulations in detail, but best case this lets him donate the gross value of the shares without capital gains tax and at the same times deduct the market value of the shares from his taxes.

      No matter the exact mechanics of how much he can save on taxes, it's clear that the potential is there for him to save a lot if he's structured things right, and with a lot less impact on Microsoft than if he just sold enough shares to generate the same equivalent net amount directly.

      I'm not saying that to belittle his donation (no matter how much I dislike him) - it's great that he does spend his money that way. Just pointing out that it's quite likely that this have even less actual effect on his net wealth than people think.

      Instead of focusing on the dollar amount, focus on the fact that he does mostly donate to causes that can relatively universally be seen as good. After all, he could probably have gotten the same benefits from setting up non-profits designed to benefit for instance Microsoft (through "education" initiatives etc.) and donating to that instead.

      As much as I dislike the way he has gotten rich, at least some of it is being put to good use.

  129. Steal from the poor, give a little back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Exactly, well said.

    And then there are the cheap linux machines running in those same impoverished communities, helping them to get on their feet and establish functional economies so they can afford their own drugs.

    By contrast, Gates wants to charge them a month's pay or more for a single copy of windows, and he's adamantly refused to lower prices to suit the country's income levels. Essentially, he's stealing their land, and handing them a few bits of corn that he grows on it.

    It's not generosity to give people back something that's rightfully theirs :(

    1. Re:Steal from the poor, give a little back by PeelBoy · · Score: 1

      I'm not even going to bother reading what you typed because the title is stupid enough as it is.

      If you can afford to buy a MS OS then you're probably not poor.

      I don't see how this is stealing from the poor and giving a little back.

      Honestly it's more like taking from the wealthy and giving to the poor than the other way around.

  130. Why bring Linux into this? by richardneish · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't see how the MS - Linux competition has anything whatsoever to do with Bill and Melissa's charitable work. I'm no fan of Microsoft and I do avoid using MS products wherever possible, but the comparsion here should be with other of the worlds wealthy. How do Larry Ellison's charitable contributions stack up, for example?

    Not everything about Bill Gates is a Microsoft vs Linux issue.

    Personally, I think that my use of free-as-in-beer alternatives to commercial products does increase my charitable donations because I have more disposable income available to me. In theory it means that Bill et al have less available to them to donate to their favourite charity, but I'm not going to lose any sleep over that.

    In case you are wondering what to do with the money you saved from using free software, here are some of my preferred charities. Enjoy:

  131. Rent is paid on a sliding scale by Cryofan · · Score: 1

    According to the Constitution, America is for the people, by the people, and operated for the "general welfare".

    We own this country. If you do business here, we take a cut. If you do really well, we take a really big cut. You don't like it? Tough!

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
  132. Re:Bill Gates, the ANTI-Robin Hood by OwlWhacker · · Score: 1

    I think you'll find that Bill steals from the poor (who are not in the media spotlight) and gives to the poor (who are in the media spotlight).

    I recall how Microsoft ruthlessly audited poor schools a couple of years ago, forcing them to pay out and license all of their machines - and then 'generously' donated money to schools... the ones that didn't fail the audit (of course).

  133. Re:real changes will be made by changing the socie by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

    Not only your English is pretty bad, your ideas are wrong as well. What poor countries NEED is precisely what they do NOT have: capitalism, full-blown capitalism, in both economical and philosophical senses.

  134. Flame-Bait, Pure and Simple. by data1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The very airs the submitter adopts is obviously geared towards riling up a negative response against Gates. I think most slashdotters will realize this and see the donation for what it is - providing help to the less fortunate and not an avenue to decry Gates for not giving 99% of his net worth.

    1. Re:Flame-Bait, Pure and Simple. by jbeamon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The Gates Foundation contributes millions of dollars to charities worldwide already. This is nothing new for Bill, who really does have a humanitarian heart. That his business has been opportunistic to the edge of abusive is irrelevant. That he's a billionaire contributing "only" $750M is irrelevant. "Linux" will not match his dollar amount, period; we'll be lucky if any organized segment of the Linux community even matches his income percentage given to contributions, let alone his dollar amount. Last I heard, he was worth something like $60B. $750M is about 1.25% of his net worth, given to one cause. Kudos to Bill.

      --
      -j
  135. MOD PARENT UP by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

    I mean, please people....it's not flamebait to point out that Linux isn't the answer to help starving and sick kids in the 3rd world. You can't compare a free OS to food/medical care.

    --
    Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
  136. Natural Progression by unlocked · · Score: 0

    After you conqueror or dominate a people/industry it's usually good to placate the masses/consumer with some type of humanitarian aid.

  137. More than a Gigabuck (GNU/Linux matches easily!) by Carl · · Score: 1

    May I simply point out the artciles More than a Gigabuck: Estimating GNU/Linux's Size and Linux Kernel 2.6: It's Worth More! by David A. Wheeler. That last one shows, that just the Linux kernel alone matches this gift easily. Just add up the rest of the GNU system and no individual (or single company) can match this kind of generosity.

  138. Latter-day Robin Hood. by Tsugumi · · Score: 1

    No, really. Consider the evidence, Billy Gates steals from the rich (via punative software licences), gives to the poor. With his trusty Little Steve Ballmer at his side, with the quarterstaff of a dodgy salesforce. Ok, so some SME's & govts might get hurt, but that's just collateral damage considering all the megacorps that are giving cash that gets spent fighting diease and poverty!

  139. Its a bit like taking some ones life and giving .. by crypty · · Score: 1

    them back a day. Gates might be doing this just to be nice but given that his company is so good at gouging everyone including some of the poorer countries in the world it seems like a bit of a joke to me. If his company was not intent on gouging every last penny they could from poorer governments then surely those governments could spend the savings on this and much more. Its not right to criticize such a giving as this, but if you sit back and think about it its really just returning some of what has been taken to begin with. Footnote :: Mr Gates, nice gesture, give more. Remember, you cant take it all with you when you die. Another footnote :: This discussion should never have been about MS v Linux but to put it in perspective, Who here gave money to the Tsunami Victims? Plenty of us, without thinking about it, and we are not sitting on a mountain of cash.

    --
    "Carpe Noctem"
  140. Company, Product, Founder, OSS by Britz · · Score: 1

    1. Microsoft makes a pretty crappy product.
    2. Monopolies lead to crappy products. After Windows 95 (and OS/2) there has been no competition and hence no innovation.
    3. The only "innovation" has been the integration of Windows NT and 9x/ME. It was planned for 1999. Judge for Youself how well it worked.
    4. No GUI innovation. My Grandma can't operate Windows 95 nor XP. If there had been competition there would have been a much, much better product.

    5. If this better product would be on the market would OSS have a competitor? OSS can compete, because Microsoft makes such a crappy product, but this is only because Microsoft has a monopoly in the OS market. Think about it.

    6. In capitalism any company strives for more profits. Gaining a monopoly and using it is part of this strive. Adam Smith himelf wrote that a strong fed has to regulate the market. Don't blame Microsoft. Blame the regulator.

    7. Bill Gates granted most of his money to the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation. I champion free software because I believe a free information society needs free software. I also think Microsoft makes crappy products and I try not to use them because of this and because they are not free.

    Still I don't think Bill Gates is evil in any way. Reasons are stated above.

    1. Re:Company, Product, Founder, OSS by BumbaCLot · · Score: 1

      Your grandma is just not good with computers or you haven't taken the time to show her how to use it. Mine is dead. Thousands of other grandmas can operate Windows. I would hate to use an OS your grandma could use.

  141. Re:The Linux community has ALREADY "matched this.. by TrueJim · · Score: 1

    I don't know. You set the bar pretty high.

    Consistent, ongoing good healthcare requires a strong economic infrastructure. You don't get a strong economic infrastructure via a one-shot injection of funds. As another poster already pointed out, it's the difference between giving a man some fish and teaching a man to fish. In the long run, you make the people of the third world healthier by helping them develop a strong economy, not by sending them a shipload of medicine.

    --
    I hope that after I die the one word people use to describe me is "resurrected."
  142. Nah. by dacap · · Score: 1

    Much maligned for his business practices, is this proof that sometimes the ends justify the means? Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity.

    Nah. This kind of behavior is common among robber barons. Take a look at history. Railroads, steel making, and any number of other areas undergoing incredible change produced the same kind of successful people with exactly the same behavior

    The Linux community has the head count (and they have the resources) to match this sum. It could be done save for one drawback. Our strengths in software development are our weaknesses here - volunteerism and decentralization. No one has yet volunteered to organize the collection and get it into the right hands, whatever "the right hands" means, or if they have they have not yet published their message sufficiently.

    --
    English -- gotta love it! / The engineers refuse to refuse the rocket until the refuse is removed from the launch pad.
  143. TORVALDS GAVE the world an OS for free by cyber_rigger · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Match that one Mr Gates.

    1. Re:TORVALDS GAVE the world an OS for free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He gave an OS _kernel_, the FSF did the rest.

      Not that that isnt enough... I am not trying to belittle his great contribution.

    2. Re:TORVALDS GAVE the world an OS for free by selfsealingstembolt · · Score: 1

      You know that without DOS there would have been no Linux, right? Linus worked on a PC and DOS was the only viable OS. Without an existing OS and compiler you have a very hard time developing anything, except you like writing machine code.

      And I just assume that Linus used an unlizensed copy of MS-DOS, just like we all did back then. Also, I seriosly doubt that the compiler and text editor used by him were legally purchased.

      Also, part of the money and manpower donated to open source projects (and Linux in particular) in the past few years came from the industry (IBM, Sun, ...). They in turn got the money by selling software and services.

      Please stop telling that Linux was developed by a small group of heroic people. It was built using existing commercial tools and the time open source developers worldwide donated. But this time was bought by commercial software as well (how do you think they pay for food, clothing and shelter?).

      So one could say that Linux was developed by a fraction of the money we paid when purchasing our hard- and software for the past 15 years. You could even call it a tax.

      --
      Keep open minded - but not that open your brain falls out...
    3. Re:TORVALDS GAVE the world an OS for free by amorsen · · Score: 1
      Linus worked on a PC and DOS was the only viable OS.

      Minix was viable. Linus used it but found it too poor, which is one of the reasons he made Linux. except you like writing machine code.

      Heh, you're talking about the guy who can tell from hex dumps which instructions caused problems. Also, I seriosly doubt that the compiler and text editor used by him were legally purchased.

      Linus used gcc, of course. And Microemacs, I believe, but I'm less sure of that.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    4. Re:TORVALDS GAVE the world an OS for free by B0mbtruck · · Score: 1

      And I just assume that Linus used an unlizensed copy of MS-DOS, just like we all did back then. Also, I seriosly doubt that the compiler and text editor used by him were legally purchased.

      You assume awfully much here. My 486 came with a licensed copy of DOS and I don't see why L.T. was assumably working on an unlicensed DOS.

      Your other assumption of Please stop telling that Linux was developed by a small group of heroic people. It was built using existing commercial tools and the time open source developers worldwide donated. But this time was bought by commercial software as well (how do you think they pay for food, clothing and shelter?). has two major errors. You assume it was built on commercial tools, but what where these tools built on? I hope you get the depth of teh question. And the second blatantly wrong assumption is that every coder ever who wrote code worked for a "commercial software" developer who paid them. I know of people who work in jobs that aren't even IT related that code and have donated code to FOSS. And lastly, just because they happen to work for a commercial software developer doesn't mean that their code couldn't exist if they worked for, lets say a major energy provider or a automobile plant or ...

      Simply put You assume to much and don't realize you know too little

      B0mbtruck
      All Your Base Belongs Now To Me!

    5. Re:TORVALDS GAVE the world an OS for free by knewman_1971 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I hate to feed the troll, but I just have to.

      Um, ok. So let's assume for the sake of argument that Bill G decided to do just that - give the world an OS for free.

      That OS might just be XP. Are you *SURE* you want that? :)

      Imagine a world where users had a free operating system that actually worked with all of the hardware that the MAINSTREAM users go buy at CompUSA, and did so without needing a freakin' CS degree to configure. Imagine a world where users could actually play the other 99% of the popular games on the market.

      I could go on...but the net result would be that those precious few "Joe Sixpack" users that might consider switching over to your little pet project would take one look at Linux and run, not walk, to the nearest distribution point.

      "So, lemme get this straight...I can't play my games on it, I can't use Word and Outlook on it, and I can't use my hardware without serious headache, if at all. What's your compelling argument again?"

      Of course, most of the world uses the same argument when they look at Linux in a world where its free and Windows costs $149.

      --
      where is the "I feel for ya, but that's some funny ass shit" moderation?
  144. Vaccinate children... by jalet · · Score: 2, Funny

    The children will be vaccinated in the form of free licenses for Microsoft's antispyware and antivirus Software for an amount of 750M US$.

    --
    Votez ecolo : Chiez dans l'urne !
  145. Let Me Guess by donbrock · · Score: 0
    The Bill and Melinda Gates foundation is pledging $750M to vaccinate children worldwide

    I'm sure that it's mostly in Microsoft software.

  146. How can Linux match illegally obtained money? by QuietLagoon · · Score: 1

    Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity. Gates' wealth comes from the exploitation of an illegal monopoly. Does the fact that he is using money obtained via an illegal monopoly for vaccines diminish the crime of the illegal monopoly? I would rather the people whom Gates' exploited decide how they would like their money to be spent. They are, after all, the ones who earned that money, Gates' merely stole it from them.

  147. Re:rob from the poor, give to the poor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And this $750 million, coming from licensing fees from schools, teachers, hospitals, doctors, nurses, technicians, etc., etc.

    I'd say the money is already coming from slashdotters, those who actually will do the vaccinations, labs, etc., if they've ever bought any M$ software.

    I'm NEVER impressed by any "donations" Bill gives. And he'll probably have his accountants/lawyers write it off on his taxes to boot!

    Hell, I'm wondering why only $750 million, and why only to this one specific cause?

  148. Linux users have no money by Legodude522 · · Score: 1

    Linux users are mostly just stoners.

    --
    Because I have low karma, I need pills.
  149. How much would it cost ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To build a small manufacturing plant in order to make medical products. Sell the products to first world countries at the usual grossly inflated prices , and then use the profit to offset the cost of providing free medical products to third world nations and people who live in poverty.

    It would provide jobs and last a lot longer than just handing out 750 mil to a pharmaseutical company.

    Would it still be able to claim charity status.

  150. Humanity by thegnu · · Score: 1

    I think the request for the Linux community to match what Bill Gates has donated is kind of absurd. Because I commit acts of kindness and donate time to worthy causes when I don't have the money.

    Plus, there are plenty of people who think vaccination is really bad for you. While I don't necessarily agree with them, they make some interesting points. So MS-haters can use that as yet another reason to bash him. :-)

    --
    Please stop stalking me, bro.
  151. No matter how much you might hate MS, this is nice by Hackura · · Score: 1

    Microsoft's business prectices might not be the best, hell sometimes they are downright illegal, but this type of thing is heartwarming. Business is business ppl and there are millions of ppl that would cut your throat for a nickel in the business world. I commend Bill for sharing his wealth with those less fortunate.

  152. April 15th... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He's so "generous" because if he doesn't give money to charities, our gov't will just confiscate it and flush it down the never-ending toilet of bureaucracy, where every level will be sure to take their share so that barely any of what is taken in is given to the needy. If he were to give it to a charity that keeps 75% in "administrative purposes", he'd still be helping a helluva lot more needy people than the gov't.

  153. Marketing is not cheap... by innerweb · · Score: 1

    This is a great form of marketing and has been for a long time for corps with an image issue. Mr Gates has an image issue. MS has a bigger image issue. It may be out of the goodness of his heart, as many peoples' hearts turn from stone as they get older, but IIRC, these donations started shortly after consulting a firm about the image problem. Try here, here, and a more positive spin here.

    --
    Freud might say that Intelligent Design is religion's ID.
  154. The Linux community *does* donate by QuietLagoon · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Does the Linux community have $750 million?

    The Linux community does donate to charities around the world. How many not-for-profit organizations use Open Source software? As a rough guess, I'd say that the Open Source community has donated, with their time and the software, an amount far greater than the $750 million that Gate has donated.

    1. Re:The Linux community *does* donate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      gates has contributd almost 27 BILLION to be used by HIS chairty.

  155. Re:The Linux community has ALREADY "matched this.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And how do you help them develop a strong economy? Step one is to help them develop and maintain human capital. This is why the most brilliant social scientists on the planet agree that controlling disease and malnutrition are pretty much the best ways to help the developing world. I'd be surprised to see adoption of open-source software ranked quite that highly.

    You might find these links interesting: one, two.

  156. But governments spend money buying M$ by zeuslinuxzeus · · Score: 0

    But governments spend money buying M$ products instead of aply this money to vaccinate children.

    Bill Gates donates only a small part of money received.

    I prefer my government use linux and free software and spend the money of M$ licenses to vaccinate children.

  157. If Micrsoft would follow Bill's example by klaasb · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Instead of spending millions on stupid elections, they could have better spend it on Bill's children vacination programm.

    It's good to see that there are people out there who don't sit on their fortune, but do something good with it. Way to go Bill. (now please, stop making operating systems and port the other products to OS/X)

    --
    if your pants fit well, it's not only because of the pants ...
  158. It's a tax shelter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most charitably foundations were set up as tax shelters. It's not because some rich guy feels generous to those less rich than he, but because his contributions to the foundations can be deducted from his taxes and in ways that saves him more in taxes than he has spent in contributing to the Foundation. This was all discussed in PERFECTLY LEGAL, a book on how the tax code has been writiten to confort the rich and punish the poor. Before proclaiming how generous Bill Gates is you really need to find out how much he benifits from all this "charity."

  159. its a publicity stunt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    first of all...THIS IS NOT AN _END_, this move is also a "means"

    750 mil over 10 years is chump change for this man and i don't believe that losing that money will do him any harm since its tax deductible and if anyone needs a tax deduction its him.
    granted, its a nice enough gesture but he does not deserve to be patted on the head for it. remember when the democratic party threw hillary clinton a giant convention for donating $10k to some charity?

  160. Aw come one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dont fall for it....

    This is just big bucks PR to get people to go for MS ... LOL I mean... Torvalds hasn't done thing like this (we dont expect to either)

    Just the kind of stuff people with big bucks do to help their image when its low.

  161. come on by Fringex · · Score: 1

    is this proof that sometimes the ends justify the means? Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity. This isn't a big swinging dick contest on who can match who. These people need help. Hell if the Linuz community donated 100,000 dollars people would be still be happy because you had compassion.

  162. whatever by Ender+Ryan · · Score: 0, Troll
    The real question is, how much will donating $750 million hurt Bill Gates. I imagine 99.9% of the Slashdot population would hurt financially more by donating $100.

    I submit that that $750 million would be more useful if it had never been acquired by Mr. Gates.

    --
    Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken - Tyler Durden
  163. Restating the article. by barton · · Score: 1

    I don't think that the original slashdot article was meant to be inflamitory, but as soon as I read it, it pushed my *defense of open source programmers* button. Hard.

    The phraise "Let's see if open source programmers can be as generous" was, I think, urging us to give money go good causes, but on first reading, it came across as "Bill has given a metric buttload of greenbacks, and you guys haven't given anything, ergo you should hate Bill more"... which is bogus.

    We all know that open source programmers *are* generous, after all, the market value of all the software that we write is in the billions, and we gave it all away on the proviso that anyone who wants to modify it has to give away their work as well.

    So. Bill is generous, we're generous... but Bill has seen one thing that I haven't seen posted on Slashdot yet, namely that the vaccenes that he's giving away save a lot of lives. Bill's genious lies in finding a sweet spot, whether it be getting in on the ground floor of the PC revolution or of effectively saving lives without spending billions of dollars. Consider that the number of people who died of the Tsunami has probably already been dominated by preventable disease in Central Africa.

    So... let's restate: This is a friendly game of philanthropy. Bill has made a very wise move. What's your move?

  164. Why in public by RasendeRutje · · Score: 1

    Why do we know he donates? Right, he's working on his image! That's the only reason, he doesn't give crap about the poeple he helps... if he did he could use his power to change things fundamentally.

    --

    If Microsoft was mass, stupidity would be gravity.
  165. Donation via leaving money in user's pockets by Lord+Bilbo · · Score: 1

    Bill Gates hoards Billions (yes with a "B") or dollars by selling his wares, and his users are left with empty pockets.

    Linux users avoid giving to the hoard, so they have the money to pay for their children's vaccinations.

    It sort of sounds like Bill Gates is supporting Socialized medicine via the Microsoft Name.

    Microsoft Socialized Medicine 2035 (Warning: ship dates for this product may slip due to production delays)

    --

    I have a bumber sticker in my cubicle that says

  166. Get off your high horse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think you're misinterpreting some posts, although its hard to know. Its just news, and people are welcomed to comment on it. If you can't tolerate the criticism from your moral high horse then why read Slashdot? Can't you even provide the name of Vim's author? Obviously you don't think as much of him as you say we should.

  167. This isn't the first time. by goldcd · · Score: 1

    In 1999 he gave $5bn to The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation http://www.gatesfoundation.org/ and in an interview around that time in the Washington Post, it was reported that 90% of his assets will be transfered to the foundation on his and his wife's death. That's an awful lot of money and none of it tied to any government or political doctrine. Innoculating children seems a particularly altruistic gesture as well. It's not like building a statue or a museum where there is a reminder of the donation left behind. Vaccinations save lives, but nobody'll ever notice their not catching a disease, or even having the jab. Whatever your personal views of MS and Bill. He's taken a huge pile of cash from rich corporations and individuals and given it to people who need it - just be happy a good thing happened for once.

  168. Gates Foundation by Spl0it · · Score: 1

    Now don't get me wrong, I think the donation is very important and good for everyone involved. I however do remember reading that the Gates Foundation blocked the US Government of selling AIDS drugs to africa at a reduced rate because it could have cost Bill millions if not billions in profits. I remember because I was reading a story about bill donating (I believe 250 or 500million) to help the aids pandemic in Africa. It was then that I noticed a website detailing that if Bill's foundation hadn't blocked the governments attempts to sell drugs at a extremely low price that it would have been 20x or more effective that his donation. This is not a flamebait and I would link to the article but I can't find it anymore. (it was a few years ago).... Anyways, I'm not 100% certain if this is fact or fiction...perhaps someone else can shed some light on this, as I may also be forgetting some of the details.

    --

    No, this is
  169. I think the question is not right... by manon · · Score: 1

    From what I've read about the Gates Foundation, it has little to nothing to do with Gates' company: Microsoft.
    Yes sure, if he wants kids in poor countries to start working with computers and give them software he'll use Microsoft products. A normal thing, as it is his company that makes the stuff.

    Don't forget Gates is a person like you and me with his own life and feelings.
    Maybe more of the rich and famous should share a piece of their money give kids elsewhere a chance.

    As for the question asked. Maybe what we (as the 'Open Source' community) can do is collect older computers, make sure they work and put Linux on them. When all is tesed, we just ship them over to the public schools in the country we live in. If we would do that in out free time, like four hours a week, a lot of kids, parents and teachers would be happy people too.

    --
    42 + 1 = 42
  170. Generous? by Anita+Coney · · Score: 1

    Let's assume that Gates is worth 50 BILLION. Gates gives 750 million. That's only .15% of his worth! For a person making $50,000 a year, that'd be like giving 75 bucks! Yippie!

    --
    If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
    1. Re:Generous? by Anita+Coney · · Score: 1

      Nope, I was a little wrong. Because Gates has more disposable wealth/income than my hypothetical person making 50k, it would actually be MORE generous for that person to donate 75 bucks than for Gates to donate 750 million!

      --
      If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
  171. What about our genoursity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We gave the world linux, a free as in speech and free as in beer (depending on your distro) operating system thats stable and scalable. Is Bill giving enough money to vaccinate everyone in the world? Even so is he going to give it every year for eternity? Seems like we already blew his donation out of the water.

    That said Gates is a very generous person just dont try to downplay our community generousity because one of the richest people in the world is donating some change.

  172. Re:The Linux community has ALREADY "matched this.. by Vellmont · · Score: 1


    In the long run, you make the people of the third world healthier by helping them develop a strong economy, not by sending them a shipload of medicine.

    You're completely right about the first part, but the second part is a means to accomplish devloping a strong economy. The spread of disease has enormous economic costs. It's very hard to develop a strong economy when people are killed, or crippled by disease. Aside from the awfull human costs, someone crippled by childhood polio isn't very productive to the economy (and is in fact probbably a drain). If you can prevent disease in the first place that's a major step to producing a good economy.

    --
    AccountKiller
  173. Parent must be the lLamest comment yet on Slashdot by iBod · · Score: 1

    >> Yeah, lets protect the poor from disease and viruses, but we can't fucking write a OS that can deal with them.

    Aw man! Fucking LAMER comment! I just don't believe you wrote that! Ughhh!

  174. Not true: Much less than $750M. by crazy+blade · · Score: 1

    You should not forget the IRS. Probably, this money is exempt from taxes. In Greece, a person like Gates would probably be in the 40% taxing scale, which means that he would have to give almost half of that amount to the IRS (had he not donated it). So, to him, it's probably more like a donation in the range of $400M (depending on what the US system is).

    Other than that, yes it's always a generous gesture to donate. But donating is giving directly back to society instead of funding your government to do it for you (intermediaries always hold something for themselves).

    --
    To err is human, but to forgive is beyond the scope of the Operating System...
  175. Give this guy a break by Berserker76 · · Score: 1
    http://www.forbes.com/2004/09/23/cz_dw_0923philan_ rl04_print.html

    He has given away 37% of his wealth and that recent dividend he received from Microsoft (some amount over 3 billon), he completely gave to charity (the largest single donation in human history).

    Not only that, I read several years ago that any children he and has wife have will only be given 100 million each, the rest of his wealth will be given to charity.

    You can say a lot things about Bill Gates, but at least give him credit when credit is due. Just look at the Walton's, they have a collectiive wealth of something like 80 billion and have only give 1% of their wealth to charity.

  176. The entire premise of this thread is retarded by betelgeuse68 · · Score: 1

    Including using a borg Gates in light of his philanthropy. It's just plain puerile.

    -M

    PS: Avid LINUX user.

  177. Re:real changes will be made by changing the socie by BlackHawk-666 · · Score: 1

    I think starting with clean water, seeds, vacinations, and education might be a good idea. They can then choose to practise and enjoy capitalism when they're not busy dying of malnutrition or ebola.

    --
    All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
  178. Much more are Spended to PC for Virus, Worms, .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well,

    if all the money and adm costs for prevent and freeing PCs, from Virus, Worms, trojans, etc, goes to Charaty, we could reduce to near 0 the illnes that need vacine

  179. what about my vaccination by burntash · · Score: 1

    wheres the money for my vaccinations bill? my win2k system is ridden with virii and worms.

  180. My Two Cents: Hate MS, but not Mr. Gates. by spottedkangaroo · · Score: 1
    No matter what horrible things you have to say about Micro$shaft and the vile office suite....

    Bill and Melinda Gates should be commended constantly for their philanthropic efforts. They're always giving away cash to people who need it.

    B&MGF r0x0rs! Huzzah!

    (P.S. My xbox runs gentoo.)

    --
    Imagine if you weren't allowed to use roads because a bus company complained about your driving 3 times. --skunkpussy
  181. Because... by Dh2000 · · Score: 1

    If a starving child hasn't produced any nice artwork or cleaned your floor, it's "needs" don't matter. It is a mediocre child, and not worthy of charity or kindness.

    You are morally abligated to let that child die.

    You are a good person, unlike those who would take pity on the suffering.

    1. Re:Because... by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

      Read again; the "Robin Hood morality" is not merely of charity - it is of charity with /stolen/ money.

      By the way, I will not say Bill Gates is some thief* or evil monopolist. If people are too clueless to consider systems other than Windoze, or too cheap to buy a Mac, or if the open-source options are not user-friendly enough, does that make the man a criminal?

      Not saying he's any saint, but he's no satan either.

      * (now, plagiarism is another thing. DR-DOS, anyone?)

    2. Re:Because... by Dh2000 · · Score: 1

      Let's see.. Robin Hood steals from, among others. the Prince and travelers that go through his woods.

      Wouldn't this amount to taxation?

      Don't the rich get rich from taxing the peasants that live on their lands?

      Aren't they stealing money from the poor.. and instead of using it for charity, they use it to buy themselves jewels and all that crap?

      What really is theivery?

      If you think, like Rand, that Robin Hood is actually an evil villain, who in the stories benefits the vast majority of the local population by returning their money (which was stolen by those heavy taxes that the rich so enjoy), then you are a believer in 'law' over 'kindness'.

      Robin Hood is merely a social catalyst, a counter to the excessive taxation.

      Robin Hood, unlike what Rand believed, is not the great evil who propped up the weak, helpless, worthless scum that unhabited the bottom of her dark fantasy.

      He was a hero, an equalizer, and something the rich fear more than death -- the denial of their ability to squeeze every last drop of cash out of your hands and into theirs.

    3. Re:Because... by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

      Yes, Robin Hood is a hero. He fights unelected tyrants who squeeze the people's money with heavy taxation. How can Ayn Rand disagree? But read the excerpt again. Rand (or the character Ragnar Danneskjöld) acknowledges that, but points that the meaning that remains today - what comes to mind when most people think of Robin Hood - is the "steals from the rich and gives to the poor" thing, which is totally different.

    4. Re:Because... by Dasein · · Score: 1

      At least get the history right. Here's a decent chronology.

      --
      You are not a beautiful or unique snowflake -- but you could be if you got off your ass.
  182. I can't get over the fact by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That the headline is showing the compassionate side of Bill Gates, while there is still a picture of him as a Borg there.

    Resistance is futile, Bill will donate more of his wealth and there is nothing we can do about it.

  183. In a word? by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

    No, it is not a good thing that Gates has done that. Vaccinations, while preventing children from getting the disease, can and often does cause hearing and resperatory problems, child arthritis, and a slew of other things - including death.

    Vaccinations such as DTaP contain various chemicals such as aluminum sulfate, formaldehyde, glutaraldehyde, and preservatives such as 2-phenyoxyethanol and polysorbate-80. There are some vaccines which contain tissue from aborted fetuses. Vaccines simply aren't good for your body or mind.

    Now, if there's an epedemic and threat to one's life, it's understandable to offer voluntary vaccinations. But first get the people involved food, shelter, and a clean living environment. $750K is a trivial amount of money, really, if you look at what could be done with it for such a purpose. That doesn't demean the honorability of donating the money, but I do wonder what Gates' motivation is. He doesn't seem like a terribly humanitarian type.

    --
    ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    1. Re:In a word? by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Rubbish. Your argument to avoid vaccinating in order to prevent the 1 in 100,000 (approx.) cases of mortality does not take into account the much higher mortality rate of an epidemic, which is what the vaccine is preventing.

      Yes there are side effects to most vaccines. Yes a lot of people do not tolerate them well. I also agree that some people are permanently injured and even die as a direct result of a vaccine. But I implore you to compare these numbers to the numbers generated when a population is exposed to the disease with no previous imunization. How many young people (under 30 yrs) do you know that have had polio? How many people do you know that have had smallpox? What about diptheria? Whooping cough? These diseases are just about eradicated thanks to aggresive vaccination policies worldwide*.

      I dare you to look up the morbi-mortality statistics for these diseases and compare them to the amount of people injured by the vaccines. Oh yeah, it's really sad when you take it on a case by case basis, and it's your son or daughter that is dying from the vaccine. However when you decide heath policy for a nation you have to work with aggregate figures, not the case by case situation, otherwise you'll never get ANYTHING done.

      End of rant.

      *or their course is much less virulent

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  184. I knew it! by cyriustek · · Score: 1

    Let me get this right...

    The government vaccinates people in order to inject their mind control drug...

    Bill Gates is subsidizing the vaccinations...

    Now I do believe in black helicopters and RFID in my dental work! :)

  185. Linux saves parents of children of ... by Jerry · · Score: 1

    the world BILLIONS of dollars. What would have been spent on Microsoft license fees is now used to feed, clothe and educate their children. So Linux HAS topped Gates miserly $750 million which is only 1.25% of his bank roll.

    --

    Running with Linux for over 20 years!

  186. Slashdot makes me laugh by Disc2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    some guy has donated a HUGE amount of money to charity, and all he get's is

    "it's only loose change to him, I'm not impressed" oh come on, how many of you have honestly donated %1.5 of your assets?
    and
    "the linux community is providing free software for the people in deprived countries, I know which I prefer" yeah, and I'm sure they'll be greatful for the free sopftware when they have terminal illnesses.

    some people really need to grow up. Whatever your feelings on Bill Gates as head of the evil empire, I do not see how you can possibly castigate him for his acts of charity.

    1. Re:Slashdot makes me laugh by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Although I agree with the general point you are trying to make:

      "yeah, and I'm sure they'll be greatful for the free sopftware when they have terminal illnesses."

      None of which can be prevented by vaccines anyway, so this bit doesn't make a lot of sense.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    2. Re:Slashdot makes me laugh by betelgeuse68 · · Score: 1

      I TOTALLY AGREE. Bill Gates is probably the biggest philanthropist that has ever lived. I lived in Seattle for six years where this type of news tended to be more readily reported, even more modest charity. I don't recall Paul Allen doing much. In fact there was a huge controversy several years ago when the a-hole bought a piece of land on an island and then booted a summer camp that had operated for years under the previous owner. A summer camp for inner city youth. It caused quite a stink and frankly says a lot about Paul Allen vs. Bill Gates. The former is an a**hole, plain and simple.

      -M

    3. Re:Slashdot makes me laugh by eluusive · · Score: 1

      I know lot of people that donate 10% of their income on a monthly basis. While this isn't 10% of their assets. Since it is on a monthly basis, this approaches 10% of their total income over their lifetime as time goes on. (If you assume they weren't always doing it.)

    4. Re:Slashdot makes me laugh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mormons have to give 10% of their income to the church. Of course most of them never stop to figure out that for some poor families, 10% of their net income is 75% or more of their spendable income. Some are even dumb enough to give 10% of their gross income.

    5. Re:Slashdot makes me laugh by eluusive · · Score: 1

      Great scam isn't it? I wish I could start a church, I'd be rich.

    6. Re:Slashdot makes me laugh by ergo98 · · Score: 1

      Firstly there is absolutely no question that the donation is a very, very good thing. I think a lot of the outrage is a result of the flamebait submission that did exactly what it was intended to (polarizing camps).

      how many of you have honestly donated %1.5 of your assets?

      People keep comparing "percentage of his wealth to percentage of my wealth". That is an errant comparison. If Bill lost a hypothetical $20 billion dollar bill down the sewer that would have absolutely zero impact on his life - his housing isn't at risk, his vacation homes are fine, and so on - he certainly isn't at risk of being evicted if his dayjob gets offshored. If Joe Average dropped a $100 bill down the drain, that can seriously cause a lifestyle change. Like it or not, you have to admit that Bill has an obscene, impersonal amount of money.

      Secondly this isn't selfless giving - the foundation is rather egotistically named, and it's not like this was quiet anonymous giving just to make an impact: Bill's giving is always very public. If you don't think that this is intended to lever the position of Microsoft (which is in Bill's personal financial best interest, at least in that power "ridiculous amount of money" perspective) then you are terribly naive. "Boy, when I buy a copy of XP Pro I feel like I'm saving children!"

      Thirdly, some would argue that Bill is spending the consumer's money (either directly, or indirectly via higher priced goods and services due to IT software licensing costs). I don't buy this myself, but it is an arguable position. Some people have an arguably valid feeling that Bill is riding the white stallion with buckets of cash that are actually theirs. Standard Oil made a bounty of cash that could be benevolently given a way by "taxing" every single consumer of oil.

    7. Re:Slashdot makes me laugh by spasmatik · · Score: 1

      For one, who cares if its selfless. It's giving.It helps no matter what his intentions.
      Secondly, when people give almost a billion dollars in one shot it's newsworthy.
      This sight is full of drones. Slashdot editors so easily get the reaction they desire with a few little words attached to the story.

    8. Re:Slashdot makes me laugh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "it's only loose change to him, I'm not impressed" oh come on, how many of you have honestly donated %1.5 of your assets?

      A little over 8% of my income this year. Should be somewhere around 12% - 13% next year, as my wife and I have made an effort to increase our giving. If you insist on considering total assets, we're still in the 3% - 4% range, or around 2x as generous as Bill and Melinda. And no, I am not kidding or inflating those numbers. That is what's going down on my tax return this year, and what I anticipate seeing there next year.

      yeah, and I'm sure they'll be greatful for the free sopftware when they have terminal illnesses.

      If you don't spend $500 on software this year, that's $500 you could give to charity. I'm not saying that you will, but it's $500 available to you that you wouldn't have had, otherwise. Multiply that by the number of people using free software as an alternative to commercial solutions, and your not only end up with a large number, but a large annual number (ie, perhaps $100 million per year vs. a one-time contribution of $750 million.)

      So Free software doesn't neccesarily cure disease, or feed the hungry... but it does free up resources that can be used to do those things, and it frees up those resources permanently, so that someone can keep giving to those in need, if they are so inclined.

    9. Re:Slashdot makes me laugh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, scroll back up, Disc2. See that line? To quote: "Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity."

      The responses to this article (as written up) on Slashdot have been appropriate.

    10. Re:Slashdot makes me laugh by Medieval_Thinker · · Score: 1

      While I don't want to belittle 1.5% of net worth donated, there are plenty of people who donate 10% of their income as a tithe to do the work of the church.

      See Luke 21

      '"As he looked up, Jesus saw the rich putting their gifts into the temple treasury. He also saw a poor widow put in two very small copper coins. "I tell you the truth," he said, "this poor widow has put in more than all the others.'

  187. Yay for people doing the right thing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When I heard that Gates had donated such a huge sum to a such a good cause it cheered me up no end.

    If the G8 governments each donated $1bn a piece (in cash, not pledges or debt manouvering) to the same cause then my faith in humanity would be restored a little.

  188. Not to bad by FluffyArmada · · Score: 0

    I don't really have anything against gates personally, I'm not too fond of some of how he runs his company. But it is very generous of him to donate and he probably deserves some hand shakage for it. I just wish he would be more open with his Micrsoft Windows operating system. A lot of its problems could be fixed. a LOT of problems...

    --
    If con is the opposite of pro. Then isn't congress the opposite of progress?
  189. give a man a fish, feed him for a day.. by ryanwarren · · Score: 1

    a very generous gesture indeed to donate that money... but if Al Quaeda donated that money, how would you see it then? Give a man a fish, feed him for a day... Teach a man to fish, feed him for a lifetime. The analogy can go a long way.

  190. Re:Gates Foundation - um, try $5 BIILION+ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds like an urban myth to me, since when does Bill Gates profit from selling AIDS drugs? .... I can't find a thing about it online, for what that's worth. What everyone here seems to be missing is that this is nowhere near the first, or most generous, donation Gates has made to worthy causes. Like the $168 million he gave to fund malaria research in 2003. At the time the entire PLANET only spent $100 million annually on this. Not to mention the more than $5 BILLION Gates and his wife have put into their foundation that exists solely to solve world health problems. BBC Article here Hey, I'm no fan of MS software either, but you can't call this guy cheap when it comes to donating to causes that tend to be ignored by most of the corporate world, particularily ones that solely effect 3rd world countries like malaria.

  191. Re:Actually, "Robin Hood" is no compliment at all. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The more I read from this venomous cunt the less I like her.

  192. When did they develop a Linux vaccine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    NO! Don't eat the posion Apple....

  193. Right... by PeekabooCaribou · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Mod me -1 Flamebait if you must, but this submitter is retarded. The whole article should be modded Flamebait.

    --
    "I'll say it again for the logic-impaired." -- Larry Wall.
  194. How about an ANONYMOUS donation? by OwlWhacker · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The fact is, Bill Gates is associated with Microsoft, and vice-versa. Everybody does it without thinking.

    If Microsoft does something bad, Bill gets flack. If Bill does something good, Microsoft looks good.

    Although the donation was from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, it's still bonus points to Microsoft.

    Back in 2002, Bill Gates, via the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, donated $100 million towards fighting AIDS in India. He did this at a time when Microsoft's conduct was being questioned in the Anti-Trust case, and at a time where he had said "India is of strategic importance".

    Some said that Bill was doing it to 'persuade' India to go with Microsoft (kind of like a guilt trip), and others said that Bill is really just a nice guy. How can we tell?

    I have one question for Bill:

    Next time you donate large amounts of cash, would you do it anonymously? Or would there be no 'benefit' in this?

    1. Re:How about an ANONYMOUS donation? by Fepple · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well how about the publicity his donation raised for the charity and the good work they do?

      Do you think because of this high profile donation that the charity will only receive $750 million more this year? If you had that much money to give, and you found a very good under supported charity would you not want to use the opportunity to raise their profile in the public eye?

    2. Re:How about an ANONYMOUS donation? by cjrichard · · Score: 2, Interesting

      How are you going to know when he does donate anonymously? How do you know that he hasn't donated anonymously in the past?

    3. Re:How about an ANONYMOUS donation? by OwlWhacker · · Score: 1

      Well, if he has/does donate anonymously, that brings up the question:

      Why does he donate anonymously sometimes and not others? There would have to be a reason.

    4. Re:How about an ANONYMOUS donation? by OwlWhacker · · Score: 1

      Bill and Melinda could run a charity anonymously.

      They didn't have to name it the "Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation".

      Think of the publicity Bills donation raised for himself/Microsoft.

      Doesn't it make you feel better for paying out high amounts for Microsoft software? Don't you feel that it's worth putting up with the hassle?

    5. Re:How about an ANONYMOUS donation? by Fepple · · Score: 1

      You've just rehashed your same ideas without answering my questions.

    6. Re:How about an ANONYMOUS donation? by OwlWhacker · · Score: 1

      Apologies if I led you to believe I was against a charity raising its profile. Obviously, having publicity of the donation is great for the charity. I find nothing wrong with this.

      My point is this:

      Surely the charity could have benefitted without people knowing that Bill is associated with it?

      In the current situation, any positive publicity for the charity is also a positive for Bill's image, and also that of Microsoft.

      Microsoft needs positive press to balance the negative press it receives.

    7. Re:How about an ANONYMOUS donation? by cjrichard · · Score: 1

      I would consider the reason to be highlighting the desperate need for vaccination in developing countries. You know, I very much doubt that people would buy Microsoft product on the basis of Bill Gates donating a shedload of money for chairty. I am very impressed with him for being so generous, but I still dislike his products and his attitude to business. Surely on his charity work there is no faulting him - not only is he pledging huge sums of money, he is getting involved with the charities. So let's thank him for this, but keep on pushing for a fairer software market :)

    8. Re:How about an ANONYMOUS donation? by OwlWhacker · · Score: 1

      The fact that he's seen as generous is what bugs me.

      If a man takes excessively from one man, to give to another, do you call him generous? Obviously you would if you ignored the fact that he took from the first man.

      Either way, many people are impressed with him, and see him in a very positive light; it then becomes hard to see him as anything but nice.

      Bill is associated with Microsoft, and if Bill is seen in a positive light, this reflects on his company. How can this fantastic man run an 'evil' company? Whether Bill considers it or not, his deed does reflect well on Microsoft, and Microsoft certainly needs a positive image.

      By giving, it could either be that he's generous, or that he's doing it out of guilt. How are we to know?

      I heard one person, who is neither pro or anti-Microsoft, saying "So he should!", after hearing of his donation.

      If some people feel it's only fair that a man with such wealth should donate a small percentage of it, I'm sure that Bill himself feels this pressure.

      He may be a nice guy; but, judging by his business actions, he's either two-faced, or ignorant of the hurt he's causing. If there's another possible conclusion, I'm open to speculation.

    9. Re:How about an ANONYMOUS donation? by cjrichard · · Score: 1
      What is the alternative? He doesn't give money to charity? Because, I assure you, that will do more hurt to people. Or he could have donated the $750 million anonymously. If I was a shareholder in M$, I would want to know where that three-quarters of a billion went. A lot of people would. If he was to remain secretive in his donations, people might start to speculate and the companies image will be tarnished. Also, people have an interest in where donations from the big companies are going, so that, for example, they can see it is being spent wisely. By giving encouragement to acts of charity, it may lead to more money being donated and a more giving and generous culture. As it stands, people are happy to take cheap, mal-informed shots at Gates just because they, well, don't like the man.

      I do not think it is our place to choose who is worthy enough to donate to charity. If an extremist political group, or a tobacco company pledged money to a charity, they could reasonably decline the money on moral grounds without too many objections. But I am pretty sure that if a group turned down a $750 million dollar donation from M$ (although a very irritating company, it is not physically hurting or oppressing people), people wouldn't be too impressed. The issues people have with M$, although important, are negligible compared to the need to curb disease, famine, and many other things.

      Also, what is wrong with feeling a compulsion to give to charity? He may well feel guilty, considering his huge wealth compared to the millions of needy people out there. Giving money out of guilt isn't a bad thing. Indeed, it is a very good thing if good causes benefit as a result of the accepted practise of generousity and charity.

    10. Re:How about an ANONYMOUS donation? by OwlWhacker · · Score: 1

      I do not think it is our place to choose who is worthy enough to donate to charity

      Neither do I, and I hope I haven't lead you to believe that I do.

      I don't have a problem with Bill giving money to a worthy cause, or running his own charity.

      The problem I have is that some people consider Bill and/or his company to be generous or good because of this.

      If Bill really has a generous spirit, why not do it anonymously?

      he could have donated the $750 million anonymously. If I was a shareholder in M$, I would want to know where that three-quarters of a billion went.

      Remember, we're not talking about money taken out of Microsoft, we're talking about money from Bill's pocket - this donation is from cash returned by Microsoft to its shareholders .

      You see, you're even associating the charity with Microsoft - it isn't hard to do. That's why I question Bill's actions of blatantly donating under his own name.

      Also, what is wrong with feeling a compulsion to give to charity?

      Nothing at all.

      But if you feel compelled, is it generosity?

    11. Re:How about an ANONYMOUS donation? by cjrichard · · Score: 1

      Ok, the points you made just now seem very fair. What I was really trying to say was that just because someone isn't completely altruistic, it doesn't mean that their donation of money and effort is worth any less. However, I fully understand that you were primarily concerned with people considering Gates to be a generous, caring soul. I personally believe that in this case, his actions have spoken louder than (dammit, I didn't want to use this cliche...) words.

  195. Rotary Members have already exceeded Mr. Gates by BuffaloBill · · Score: 1

    We welcome The Gates Foundation to the table, but the local Rotary Club has been at this for a long time betore Mr & Mrs Gates got involved. Thanks to your local folks we are striving to eliminate Polio world wide and in fact have done so in the Western Hemisphere. In addition to the huge financial contribution of the Rotarians, you will also have to recognize in many instances the Rotarians are the only agents to administer vacine to the children in areas of conflict and civil war. The local businessman or educator are the only ones capabile of engendering any trust where governments are suspect. Thanks Rotary......

  196. in other news... by dajak · · Score: 1

    Cover article "The Good Company" of the current issue of the Economist argues that companies should stop pretending that they are "socially responsible" and instead should focus on behaving honestly and obeying the law - provided they face competition in their market - and do good works without even trying.

    "Good works" with lots of publicity are too often just a smokescreen for an evil company.

  197. I can match Gates' genorosity. by cgenman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Let's see, expressed as a total of my reserve capital... minus outstanding debts... carry the one... I've donated twice as much as Bill, with my 20 dollar donation to the Tsunami relief fund.

    In general I find the kind of people likely to give their money away, are not the kind of people likely to have any money to give.

    (No offence meant to Mr. Gates, as he has given a lot more of his money to charitable causes than a lot of people, and even more importantly he seems to really care about them. No matter what you think about his business practices, the Bill and Melinda gates foundation has the largest endowment of any chairitible organization created in recent memory and will be doing positive things for the world long after the man has taken his blue screen of death to the black screen of death. Plus the B&M tend to be focused on practical things, and are pretty good about how they deal out grants.)

    1. Re:I can match Gates' genorosity. by metamatic · · Score: 1
      No offence meant to Mr. Gates, as he has given a lot more of his money to charitable causes than a lot of people, and even more importantly he seems to really care about them.

      Apparently you missed the leaked memo. Just before the Bill Gates Foundation was set up, someone leaked a memo from Microsoft's PR department that advised Gates to consider philanthropy as a way to improve Microsoft's public image during the anti-trust trials. (I've done some searching, but it seems to have disappeared into the memory hole, perhaps someone else can dredge up a copy?)

      Also, the "charity" uses its money to accumulate major stakes in companies that just happen to be aligned with Microsoft's interests.

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
    2. Re:I can match Gates' genorosity. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just know of one other organization which gives more...the Ray and Joan Kroc Foundation. But hey, that is just another foundation run by the head of an evil company (McDonalds).

    3. Re:I can match Gates' genorosity. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't see any problems here:

      point 1: He recieved a memo to give to charity to look good. This is NOT proof that Bill doesn't care about the charities he's giving money too. Often times giving to charities has side benifits to the donater. You could accuse anybody who donates money in their own name (not anon) that they are only doing to look good. Maybe, maybe not, who are we to judge. I'm sure the charity doesn't care.

      point 2: the gates foundation invests it's money in companies MS has an interest in. The worst I can say is that they are using the money for multiple purposes, none of which are illegal. At least in the end very large chunks of the money go to worthy causes.

      Considering the charity has 21 billion I think they've done pretty well keeping it on the up and up. If this is the worst of the accusations it's really not that bad. I would have thought much worse things (i'm cynical and i believe that much money is a cause for corruption). I'm surprised how well it's handled (as far as I know).

    4. Re:I can match Gates' genorosity. by cgenman · · Score: 1

      Also, the "charity" uses its money to accumulate major stakes in companies that just happen to be aligned with Microsoft's interests.

      Well, yes. It is endowed. Meaning, it takes the money it has, invests, and returns to the wider world the returns on investment without consuming the capital. Theoretically, this will allow the Bill and Melissa Gates Foundation to operate for centuries after the man is dead. Maybe even until Longhorn ships. It would be difficult to invest 20 billion dollars in small chunks across an economy centered around your stuff and not bump into people with at least a passing interest in what you do. A 5% stake in a cable provider? Investments in drug companies? That's nothing.

      I don't remember the memo, but I do remember people recommending charity as a way to improve Microsoft's image. That it happened during an antitrust investigation (1994) is no surprise, considering how long the antitrust investigations have been going on. However, there is a difference between setting up a token charity trust and giving 1/3rd of your money to a charitable trust. That in and of itself is a lot larger than my 20 dollar tsunami gift. Plus whenever he talks about charity work the man sounds a lot more alive and vibrant than when he's talking about the new version of Windows. I'm willing to give him the benefit of the doubt.

      Nothing is black and white. Especially not people.

  198. No ordinary vaccine... by dantheman82 · · Score: 0, Troll

    From what I've heard, this vaccination includes a little extra preventative medicine for that dangerous recently-diagnosed strain called Firefox Fever. And there's a Linux Laxative just in case the poor kid has seen a little too much Gnome.

    Many older kids (2+) have apparently seen a Windows Longhorn bootup screen flash briefly before their eyes, and, in a few rare cases, some kids distinctly remember what appears to be a man who was yelling "Developers, Developers", who has become a godfather-figure ever since.

    Of course, they're just kids, so you can't trust everything they say...

    --
    This sig donated to Pater. Long live /.
  199. Give me a break by jabberwocky_rt · · Score: 1

    I may not like the company, but I'll be damned before I piss on someone elses humanitarian efforts regardless of "how much it really affects their pocketbook."

  200. $750 million = ? by intmanmys · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How many more Windows users can $750 million buy? Not a bad investment.

  201. Have you wondered... by koi88 · · Score: 1


    In case you wondered, why BG is so nice: The vaccine he donated is a vaccine against the open-source virus that threatens the western world.

    --

    I don't need a signature.
    1. Re:Have you wondered... by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      s/open-source virus/open sores virus/; :-)

  202. Worthless by goldspider · · Score: 1

    Now if only children in third-world countries depended on free software for their daily physical needs.

    I may be WAAAAY ouf of left field here, but I imagine vaccines against deadly and preventable diseases are much more valuable to these kids than software to install on computers they will likely never own.

    --
    "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
  203. Not a great idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So Bill is sending immunizations designed to immunize healthy American children to children of 3rd world countries who may have underdeveloped immune systems due to malnourishment. If a child dies from immunization in the 3rd world, they're just a statistic, but Bill will still look like a humanitarian.

    He'd do a lot more good for them (and spend less money) if he just gave them a source of clean water. Sanitary conditions go a *lot* further, as it's a *permanent* means of prevention for the entire community, as opposed to one child at a time.

    http://www.vaccinationdebate.com
    http://www.thi nktwice.com

  204. How can I help? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think I'll uprade all my systems to the latest version of Windows software (every type available) so that more money can be given to needy children.

  205. the tax optimization factor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It seems that one point is missing. From what I know on the American Tax system, the taxes a person pays depends on which category he pertains to. The higher the category, the more taxes you pay.

    That explains in part why many billionaires and rich people donate as much money. Of course one has to admint that at the basis, donating is a generous act, and I don't doubt of Mr. Gates's generosity, but I am certain that generosity is not the only motivation for giving such amounts of money. There is a factor of tax optimization of course.

    Let's say Mr. Gates has 50 billion dollars of assets, and that at this level he has to pay 4% taxes. At 49 billion dollars of assets he only has to pay 2% taxes. In this example, by donating 1 billion dollars, not only Mr. Gates ends up saving 0.2 billion dollars. To my memory (rusted souvenirs of my economics course) he can also deduce the amount donated from his taxes...

  206. Bullshit Article by Tom · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This entire article just blew up my bullshit detector.

    First, the Borg icon - this is the Gates Foundation, not Microsoft. As much as I despise Gates, his Foundation is doing a lot of good things.

    Second, the business practice hit. Again, this is not Microsoft donating anything to anyone, it's the Gates Foundation. While Bill's money is largely M$ stuff, the shot is just cheap and unwarranted.

    Three, the dig at the Open Source community. I'm sure if the community had as much money as Gates, we'd be matching his donation before the day is up, just to show it. But we don't. You can't compare the rich man's $1000 donation to the poor man's $100 donation. No matter how you compare it, in one way or the other it won't be fair.

    Finally, the article as a whole - what the f*ck has this to do with "news for nerds" ??? And if it's "stuff that matters", how come we don't read about any similar donations made by other people or foundations?

    Both the article author and the editor who let this through should be ashamed of themselves. I'm sure at least 20 more worthy articles were left out today.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    1. Re:Bullshit Article by Thagg · · Score: 1

      As far as "news for nerds" goes, I think that this article is perfectly appropriate. If you were to think about ways that money could help cure the world's ills, you naturally would gravitate to ways of using modern technology to help keep people from dying from easily preventable causes.

      I commend the Gates Foundation for their work here. Vaccinating millions of people is about the best bang-for-the-buck you can get. It is a great program. Even more than this, I applaud the Foundation's work in fighting malaria -- a horrible disease that is just not on people's radar in the US. These are excellent examples of applying technology to help as many people as possible.

      Now, if they start fighting global warming, I'm going to have to find a way to contribute to the Foundation -- but it won't be by buying Windows :)

      Thad Beier

      --
      I love Mondays. On a Monday, anything is possible.
    2. Re:Bullshit Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, the "OS would give it if they had it" argument is silly. Are people seriously positing that?

      Does the Linux/OS community give as a _percentage_ what Gates has given in all his donations? Of course not, free software included.

    3. Re:Bullshit Article by Tom · · Score: 1

      Depends.

      Is it fair to compare an entire community to an individual? I'm sure there are individuals in the community who give more than Gates, if you go by percentage of wealth or income. I'm also sure there are many that give less.

      Then again, most of us give in other coins. My most valuable resource isn't money, but time. And if you consider the time some of us spend writing Free Software as a donation, rated at a moderate hourly rate, the total would be huge, easily Bill's donations and then some.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    4. Re:Bullshit Article by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Web browsers don't prevent disease.

      Writing open source software might be 'charity' work, if you look at it that way, but it only helps the richest 10% of the world who might have access to a computer at the most.

    5. Re:Bullshit Article by geomon · · Score: 1

      Web browsers don't prevent disease.

      No, but you can learn about your disease by using a free browser.

      Writing open source software might be 'charity' work, if you look at it that way, but it only helps the richest 10% of the world who might have access to a computer at the most.

      And when Bill and Co. produce software that enables the remaining 90% of the world to get internet access, then I will consider the playing field level.

      Gates is really generous with your money, isn't he?

      Where would you have spent the money you were gouged when you were forced to upgrade your PC after M$ dumped more bloatware on you?

      --
      "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    6. Re:Bullshit Article by zenyu · · Score: 1

      Web browsers don't prevent disease.
      That is just not true. Web browsers help people learn, and knowledge is the most powerful weapon in the fight against poverty and disease there is.

      Writing open source software might be 'charity' work, if you look at it that way, but it only helps the richest 10% of the world who might have access to a computer at the most.

      Woah, you need to spend more time in third world countries. You would be amazed at how much time the poor spend on the internet. Internet cafes are on every street corner and are filled with teens and a few older folks spending 25 cents an hour to sit in plastic seats googling away on little. A good portion of their income, but it is well spent. Even if it just helps them learn English it will greatly enhance their earning potential.

      Just the developers of FireFox have done more to save lives than Billy Boy. If he really had any interest in improving the world he would set up a fund to help open source programmers feed their families and maybe subsidise computer hardware and communications equipment.

    7. Re:Bullshit Article by spasmatik · · Score: 1

      Yeah right.

    8. Re:Bullshit Article by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      ... the developers of Firefox have done more to save lies than Bill Gates's foundation which just pledged $750 billion for vaccinations? Even though Windows computers come with IE for free?

      Holy shit, you *define* the term "out-of-touch."

  207. Re:What about Old Europe? by Handbrewer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why are you proud as a citizen of a country when one citizen does something good? Why does it make you feel superior?

    Come back when YOU do something good instead of just throwing flamebait around. I honestly dont care which country gave most, but if we look at money divided in number of citizens of each contry, "old" europe is still in the lead. But i think its good we all chipped in to help the victims of the Tsunami. So stop using it as a dickwaving contest.

  208. Gates is NOT generous by gosand · · Score: 0
    I don't bash him for giving. But let's not kid ourselves and say he is generous. First off, he has created a charitable foundation that will help thousands of people. That is all a fantastic thing, so I am not commenting on that. But look at it realistically:

    1. He named the foundation "The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation". Pretty friggin' self-serving. Sure, it's his and he can name it what he wants. He chose to name it after himself and his wife.

    2. I got tired of people oohing and ahhing when this guy gave a million dollars. So I ran the numbers. A million dollar donation by Gates is the equivalent* of someone with a net worth of $100,000 giving $4. So for someone worth $100,000 to match Bill Gates' contribution of $750 mil over 10 years, they would have to donate $3,000 over 10 years. That is $300/year. Hmm, where is all the oohing and ahhing?

    * this isn't even taking into account that Gates and I live in the same economy, and if he gave away 1/2 of his net worth he could still live comfortably. I could not. So it isn't really "equivalent"

    3. Did Bill Gates donate this, or did his foundation? I am asking, I really don't know. Yeah, yeah, I know where Google is. Is he the only contributor to this foundation? (nice tax writeoff, BTW)

    Bottom line, the money he donates is needed. But don't kid yourself and think that he is making any kind of sacrifice.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

    1. Re:Gates is NOT generous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're so bloody stupid it's not even worth the time to counter such brainless remarks.

    2. Re:Gates is NOT generous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sure are angry, aren't you?

      Gates has personally given a large percentage of his wealth to charity. Before he dies he will have probably given at least 50-75% of his money to charity. End of story.

      I know it's convenient for you to attempt to paint this as his _only_ contribution so you can point out that your arch-villain is only donating a tiny percentage, but did you really think everyone reading this was stupid or part of your "boo-gates" club?

    3. Re:Gates is NOT generous by gosand · · Score: 1
      Yet another AC. Oh well....

      You sure are angry, aren't you?

      Nope, just stating facts and giving people a little different perspective on things. I am not slamming Gates at all - just those who worship him and refuse to think logically.

      Gates has personally given a large percentage of his wealth to charity. Before he dies he will have probably given at least 50-75% of his money to charity. End of story.

      And that is something great, which he does not HAVE to do. He has chosen to do it, and I applaud him for that. But I don't see how people can say it is a great sacrifice. If he does give away 75% of his wealth, he will still be one of the wealthiest people in the US. Think about it - if he is worth 40 billion (probably a low estimate), and he gives away 75% of it (30 billion) he will still have 10 BILLION DOLLARS!!!

      I am not even suggesting that he give away all his money. I am saying he has so much friggin money that pretty much no matter what he gives away it won't be a sacrifice for him. I am glad he is charitable and gives away millions of dollars. But it is no sacrifice.

      --

      My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

    4. Re:Gates is NOT generous by shintaro · · Score: 1

      So let's say he does shit and gives nothing away, now THAT would make the /. crown go wild with happiness and the attacks can really begin.

      Gates is in a lose lose situation in /. no matter what he does.

  209. How many billions ...? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How many billions of dollars did Microsoft spend on the legal fees weaseling out of all those US and EU anti-monopoly law suites?

    That would make one hell of a donation.

    BTW, the donation nicely offsets the capital gains tax for Mr & Mrs Gates. As you can see, Gates sold quite a lot of Microsoft shares this year. Can't blame him for that though.

  210. The Linux community already has matched it by Zphbeeblbrox · · Score: 1

    They give away code for free that is worth millions perhaps even billions. Driving down the cost of software and bringing computing to millions who otherwise could not afford it. They also give away code for free that enables handicapped people to enter the computing world. People like the blind. The linux community has given. Saving companies money enables them to keep people employed and donate more to other charities. I really don't think you could even calculate just how much the linux community has given back monetarily. Its a silly comparison to make if you ask me.

    --
    If you see spelling or grammatical errors don't blame me. I tried to preview but IE here at work borked the CSS
  211. Jealousy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did you know that there are many countries in the world for which the average annual income is US$200? Think about that. Now think about your weekly income. For me, I earn 5 times that amount in one week. Who am I to call Bill Gates greedy, or evil in any way with respect to money?

    Personally, I think most people against Bill Gates in this flame war are just jealous, and if they had the opportunity to make as much money as he, they would gladly accept it. I know I would.

  212. This is pathetic by Oswald · · Score: 1
    The only reason Slashdot can run this kind of bullshit story is because Slashdot doesn't matter. Imagine for a moment that there actually were a "Linux community" and that it had somehow found a way to give 750M USD to a charity. Then imagine that some Microsoft house organ ran an article calling that act of charity everything from cynically-motivated to plain miserly. If this were discovered by the mainstream media and widely publicized, it would be devastating to Microsoft's image. Fortunately for "us," there is no us. This whole sorry episode can be explained away as a bunch of bored, under-employed geeks masturbating onto their computer screens to make themselves feel better about their lowly station in life. Linux will continue to thrive because we aren't Linux.

    For the record, there are a number of things about Bill and Melinda Gates that we can all be grateful for (and no, his ruthless and unscrupulous business tactics are not among them). One is the fact that they give away so much money that finding effective ways to do so (effective both for the recipients and for themselves, I don't doubt--I don't mean to paint them as saints) is practically a full-time job for Bill's father. Another is that they don't seek to turn their unbelievable wealth into unbelievable political clout. The fact that Microsoft ever was sued by the U.S. government (even though a change of presidents caused the suit to be effectively dropped) is testimony to how willing Gates was to just stay away from Washington--until he found out it won't stay away from him.

    Just as there is no way for a man in Bill Gates's position to give away money and not have it look like self-aggrandizement, there is no way for the Slashdot crowd to criticize it without looking like a bunch of crying assholes.

  213. It's nice by orasio · · Score: 1

    That many people think exactly the opposite.
    That achievement he talks about would be ok, if everybody started clean. When you speak about second generation people, they start at different places, so they can achieve less.
    That's why it's a fallacy. it's dumb to say that rich people are rich ecause they worked hard, and poor are poor because they are lazy.
    Of course that need gives you rights. Everybody is in need, it's just that some can satisfy their need, and some cannot. Earning has nothing to do with it. Most children are born poor, right now, do you think they have earned it? do you think that people who go to harvard have earned it? do they have a right, just because some grand-grandparent hit the jackpot, compared to some boy born in Bolivia? That's just stupid, to say that rich people deserve to be rich, and poor deserve to be poor.

    1. Re:It's nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one deserves to be anything. The rich tend to get richer by doing what made them rich. The poor tend to stay poor by doing things that made them poor. Poverty is mostly a self inflicted malady. If you work hard enough and educate yourself you can break out of poverty. It is easier for some than others, but that's life. We all have an equal opportunity for success. We are not guaranteed that success.

  214. Which disease, please! by Tsu+Dho+Nimh · · Score: 1
    "A lot of the 'scientific' evidence that supports the "vaccination == immunisation" myth gives wonderful stats that show disease rates dropping dramatically at approx the same time as vaccination was introduced, but completely ignores other data, like the general improvement of public hygeine, the introduction of running water, the recognition that things like washing hands and sterilising surgical instruments are good."

    There are food and water-borne diseases, like typhoid and cholera that water and sewer treatment can prevent. There are vector-borne diseases like typhus that vector control can help prevent. You will note that vaccines for these are seldom administered. (except to researchers, and persons travelling to areas where the sanitation systems are not adequate.

    A second category are the diseases with a large reservoir in the animal world, from which it spreads to humans: malaria (birds), yellow fever (monkeys), bubonic plague (rodents). Only yellow fever vaccine is routinely given, in areas where the disease is a hazard, and it is extremely effective, to the extent that unvaccinated jungle tourists get yellow fever while their vaccinated guides do not. An effective malaria vaccine has eluded researchers for decades, and the bubonic plague vaccine is really painful and provides limited protection (it's better than nothing in an epidemic).

    Then there are the diseases that spread human to human, via airborne or direct contact, like smallpox, diptheria and measles. Just look at the sudden, DRAMATIC decrease in measles deaths and severe disabilities, in the USA, immediately after the introduction of the vaccine in the 1960s. Were we lacking running water before then? Did we suddenly realize that aseptic surgery was a good idea? Nope! The only significant change in the society was the administration of the vaccine.

  215. Drug companies by Paradevil · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If it wasn't for the big patent-wielding pharmaceutical companies charging whatever they like for life-saving drugs, then there wouldn't be any money to research the next life-saving druge.

    If only it was as easy to steal chemical formulas as it is to steal software a lot more people would be dead due to bad drugs on the market.

  216. Re:What about Old Europe? by vidarh · · Score: 1
    Keep in mind that most countries does give to more than one cause.

    Incidentally, since you're picking on Norway: Norway gives 5-6 times more in official and private development aid per person than the US does, including Gates' donations.

    Norway, Denmark, Luxembourg, Sweden and the Netherlands are also the ONLY countries that are consistently meeting (and generally significantly exceeding) the UN target of 0.7% of GDP for official development aid. The US doesn't meet this target even if you consider private donations (including Gates') as well.

  217. Over 10 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    While I am guessing he funds most of this. This donation is over ten years. So if you believe the 50 billion someone else estimated, this is 0.15% per year. I would think this was in most people's budgets.


    In addition, I would think that this donation is sitting in a interest bearing account, so it is maybe starting with somewhat less than 750 million.


    While I disagree with Bill Gates monopolistic practices, but I am glad he is bringing attention and donating to a worthy cause.


    I must say however, that the person who posted the article is a real dick.

  218. Dislike for his business practices? by FunnyLookinHat · · Score: 0

    I've never known Bill Gates to be a immoral person in or out of the business world. I think it is well known that he is one of the largest philanthropists that this day has seen (He has made even larger donations, you know), but the point of concern is that he is so hated by the Linux community. Although I am an avid linux user and supporter (it's just better!) I have never look coursely at Bill Gates for creating an Operating System that jump started the PC market and has helped grow many new ideas such as the internet and email by including clients in its windows distribution. Sure it's unstable, and unsafe... but I have a feeling that Linux would be if it were on top and people were just targeting the "next guy on top" to be able to hit as many people as they want.

    Of course, there is the point that many virus-writers are simply micro$oft haters, and thus target the OS in an effort to usurp power and set Linux on the throne.

  219. Drug Companies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has anyone considered the win that the drug companies will get out of this? I would hazzard a guess that Bill is possibly making friends with a very large industry. Giving millions of $$ in drugs to poor people living in countries with few laws allows you to experiment on people to your hearts desire.

    I am skeptical that this gesture is completely based on kindness.

  220. Don't Pity the Poor, enpower them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When are we going to learn that the world does not need fish, they need to be tought to fish.

    1. Re:Don't Pity the Poor, enpower them... by Quill_28 · · Score: 1

      But do they want to learn?

    2. Re:Don't Pity the Poor, enpower them... by Anonymous+Cowherd+X · · Score: 1

      Re:Don't Pity the Poor, enpower them... But do they want to learn?

      I don't know, but they do seem to resist learning how to spell properly.

  221. Bill Gates is poisoning innocent children? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I bet Mr. Gates just ordered a big science lab to research how you can make babies love Windows from the time they are borned. And now they are testing the vaccine on poor african children.

    No, The Open Source Community will not use such a vampiric way to make children of tommorow understand the advantages of OSS. So I suggest someone has to get down the road and really check the contents of Mr. Gates' vaccine.

  222. Generosity by Dracolytch · · Score: 1

    Yes, I believe the individuals that are involved with FOSS are, in general, more generous than Bill Gates is.

    However, that should not undermine the fact that Bill Gates is being generous, and any act of generosity he makes should be accepted with grattitude. Could he be more generous? Yes, he could be... we all could be. He could also be a lot LESS generous. I'm sure thousands of families will thank him for his contribution.

    ~D

    --
    This sig has been enciphered with a one-time pad. It could say almost anything.
  223. If I call the editor an idiot, do I get modded up? by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 1

    First, this is a very good thing. It's too bad, in a way, that it's so noteworthy - all of us, regardless of income level, really should be doing this.

    On the flip side, it makes me think of Jesus' parable about the poor widow and her two coins. We make such a big deal out of a rich person giving a portion of their excess; yet we don't even take notice when a more typical person goes overseas to work in a war-ravaged community, or when a young teacher takes a job in the inner city to help out the kids. We should be honoring all those who act selflessly.

    --
    #DeleteChrome
  224. A better way by mwood · · Score: 1

    Cut the Microsoft Tax by $750,000,000.00 and we'll all have more money to give to worthy causes.

  225. Oh No by adeydas · · Score: 2, Funny

    Mr. Gates is trying to put in a deadly virus through his vaccines and make these kids microsoft patrons and finally take over the world... Don't listen to him, run run! Ok, now you can give me a -1 score.

  226. Economy by lbrt · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Had Bill Gates not caused so much havoc in the IT industry, there would propably be a lot more money to share from other people. The ends don't justify the means.

  227. Indeed... by KennyP · · Score: 1

    Let us see if the others who profix from variants of *nix donate like The Ubergeek Billy Gates does.

    See - get a geek laid and look at what he can do in the world!

    Visualize Whirled P.'s

  228. It's all for taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Rich people and corporations HAVE to make contributions like this to reduce taxable earnings.

  229. Gates Foundation investments by truthsearch · · Score: 1

    Even more than that, the Gates Foundation uses their money that's in holding to invest in Microsoft stock and Microsoft's allies. We're talking about over a billion dollars (tax deductable) being used by a non-profit organization to pump up stock prices. Sure, charity is great and it's the right thing to do. But it should be put in perspective, also. I wish I could find the reputable link where I found that...

    1. Re:Gates Foundation investments by truthsearch · · Score: 1

      Well, here's a start. It references Dow Jones News. They also invested hundreds of millions of dollars in drug company stock, which coincidentally occurred at the exact same time Microsoft started pushing much harder for stronger IP laws. Back in 2002 they had over $21 billion. Also note that they are not required by law to disclose stock holdings.

  230. Right this way ladies and gentlemen... by HarveyBirdman · · Score: 1
    ...here at Carnivale we have the astonishing sight of a geek gobbling up horse manure before your very eyes...

    Much maligned for his business practices, is this proof that sometimes the ends justify the means?

    Well, let me give that the deep thought it deserves. [33 milliseconds later] Uh, no.

    --
    --- Ban humanity.
  231. Ridiculous Thread by Jareeedo · · Score: 1, Redundant

    This is the kind of post where people should either shut up or say "wow, now that's something." This is not the time for *stupid* comments like the poster wrote, "see if the linux folks can match that" or for the kinds of responses where some slashdotters do all sorts of analysis on how an open-source OS helps sick kids. I can't even believe what I'm reading here.

  232. Would people be more willing to pay for windows if by bigmike_f · · Score: 1

    What if a percentage of the price of windows actually goes to charities like this one. Would people be more willing to pay for their OS?

  233. The Prospect of Giving by BorisSkratchunkov · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If Bill Gates was truly concerned about the welfare of giving, he'd give anonymously and discreetly and not make a huge deal (pardon the play on words) about his gifts every time he gave them. Anonymous charity is what makes a human a good person; Bill Gates just wants to make himself look better than he has been. Also, if he truly wanted to help the world's welfare, he'd stop sucking up money like a sponge and concern himself more with a balanced economy.

    As for Linux users, "chriskzoo5," you must realize that Bill Gates is a single entity and that Linux users are far and wide. Additionally, Linux users don't have money growing on their front lawn like Mr. Gates. I'm sure that some donate money to similar causes, but their donations are probably proportionate to their incomes. It's the thought, not the amount that counts.

    By no means am I on a crusade against Bill Gates, "chriskzoo5," I just became a little worked up because of your stupid flamebait. I hope that you receive as much hatemail as Parry Aftab. Bah-humbug to all flamebaiters, and happy holidays to the rest of us!

    1. Re:The Prospect of Giving by Xuranova · · Score: 1

      Oh shut up already. Geezus. Could you be more cynical?

      News flash: putting your name on the largest amount of money ever given out during a lifetime does NOT make you a bad person. And I'm not sure what type of world you live in, but in the REAL world, the amount does count. Because last time I checked the amount of money Gates has donated has done alot more to help the world than whatever you have given.

      --
      "There is no real right or wrong, just what the majority accepts at the time."
    2. Re:The Prospect of Giving by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bet you're a Republican.

  234. So what have you done, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    JACK FUCKING SHIT - I'll bet.

    How much have you donated to {$anyWorthwhileCause} ?

    Save your fucking pontificating!

    Isn't 750M USD a pretty fucking major sacrifice - no matter how rich you are?

    Jeezus - some of you mindless slashbots make wanna puke.

    1. Re:So what have you done, exactly? by gosand · · Score: 1
      How much have you donated to {$anyWorthwhileCause} ?

      None of your business. I can assure you, however, that proportionally it is more than Bill Gates.

      Isn't 750M USD a pretty fucking major sacrifice - no matter how rich you are?

      No, it isn't. Some people scrimp and save to get $10,000 saved so they can make a down payment on a house. And some people spend that much on a night out. Take that 10 grand away from each person: one doesn't get a house, the other doesn't get a night out. Which one is a bigger sacrifice? Bill Gates can lose a billion dollars and still have many more billions to live comfortably. How is 750 mil over 10 years a sacrifice? Is it a helluva lot of money? Yes. Is it going to a good cause? Yes. Is it a sacrifice for him? No.

      Jeezus - some of you mindless slashbots make wanna puke.

      Try putting some thought into your posts, and stop putting the C in AC.

      --

      My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  235. Linux users can't match it but... by vlad_grigorescu · · Score: 2, Funny

    Linux vaccinates Gates' PCs, so it all works out in the end...

  236. Ethiopia is starving because of politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ethiopia has and always will be one of the more prosperous areas in Africa... the only reason why they were starving and you saw all those pictures that caused Live Aid was because of civil war. Those bastard warlords were purposefully cutting off people from supplies of food, it had nothing to do with how poor the country was.

    And who cares what you think of anyone? I don't have $50 billion, I have $50k only saved. But I still wouldn't give a rat's ass what you thought of me.

  237. Linux is not given away by Bigmilt8 · · Score: 1

    Linux is NOT given away. I work for a hospital and we're having to PURCHASE a Linux server license. The truth shall set you free.

    1. Re:Linux is not given away by smellystudent · · Score: 1

      Linux is NOT given away. I work for a hospital and we're having to PURCHASE a Linux server license.

      Ooh look, Linux being given away.

      I assume you've been conned into buying an SCO license...

      --
      Predictive text is shiv!
  238. Not a very good idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Women in developing countries have been accustomed to bearing many, many children. If 8 children are born, with luck one will survive into adulthood.

    With such immunizations, these eight children will all survive past infancy. "Great!" you say, and yes, on the surface it is wonderful. However, women will continue having children at this rate unless REPRODUCTIVE EDUCATION is introduced alongside such a vaccination plan. There's already a little problem called starvation rampant in most areas of the world. Now consider the fact that children won't be dying as infants (when they don't eat all that much) due to these vaccinations. We'll now have substantially more mouths to feed, with the same amount of resources. Now, once these children hit puberty and need more nutrition to mature, they'll either starve to death or face serious growth problems. Such worsened food shortages will create more problems then if there were no vaccinations to begin with.

    All this plan will do is INCREASE suffering. $750 million would be better spent on alleviating hunger across the globe.

  239. the secret is what's in the shots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The shots will include a recently-developed microscopic RFID device. This will allow for more efficient tracking of who has and who has not been "vacinated". Everyone will get a unique serial number (think global SSN). The goal is for 100% to get the shots.


    In addition, those that have received the shots will have a visible mark on their bodies that will identify them as "vacinated" (remember the smallpox vacination mark on your sholder if you're old enough, think bigger).


    Mr. Gates himself has this. There were 665 trials so he got serial number 666.

  240. The foundation and Microsoft by truthsearch · · Score: 1

    Wrong. The foundation has a lot to do directly with Microsoft. The foundation started investing in drug stocks in 2002, exactly the same time Microsoft started pushing harder for stronger IP laws. The foundation also purchased stock in communication companies at exactly the same time as Microsoft. And these are only the investments we know about. The foundation can invest its $20+ billion in any stocks it likes (no one investment over 20% holdings of a company) and it doesn't have to report it.

    At the very least the foundation's massive holdings are being used to invest in Microsoft's allies with tax-free money.

  241. A Cynical View by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's more than one way for these children to get vaccine. The demolition of intellectual property laws which prevent the dissemination of cheap generic lifesaving drugs, for example. Gates built his empire on intellectual property law. In Africa, millions are dying because of intellectual property laws, and there is a worldwide cry for reform. Gate's "generous" donation is a shallow attempt to obviate the importance of the intellectual property reforms people are clamoring for. Is Gates going to donate this much money every year, year after year? Intellectual property reform is a long term viable solution to many of the problems of poor disease stricken nations. Gate's donation is a one time booster shot with political motivations.

  242. Moron! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's big news!

    Gate's donation for this cause exceeds the SUM of all the donations by the US, UK, France and Germany (four huge fucking economies!!).

    And yet for dumb-ass slashbots this is somehow not enough, or must be a cynical ploy!

    Get your fucking pointy little head out of your ass once in a while and see what's happening in the world!

  243. Wrong. You mean $25+ billion he donated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look at the assets of the Bill and Melissa Gates foundation. It's over $25 billion, and to date, has donated over $7 billion. If he is now worth $50 billion, that means he donated so far 1/3 of his total assets to charity. He has already said he is going to donate 99.9% of his assets to charity by the time he dies. This $750 million is nothing compared to what he's already donated.

    Face it, Bill Gates, the guy you love to hate, is the most generous man in history.

  244. You just need to look at the submitter's record by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look at chriskzoo5's user profile.

    Talk about a troll, http://slashdot.org/~chriskzoo5 ... 9/12 of his last posts were -1, and the others were either 1 or 0.

    How about when a story is submitted, the person's text is only taken if they have decent karma? Otherwise they get credit, but the blurb is rewritten to be less likely to be flamebait?

    1. Re:You just need to look at the submitter's record by stupidfoo · · Score: 1

      Otherwise they get credit, but the blurb is rewritten to be less likely to be flamebait?

      Or, if you're Michael, you can just rewrite the blurb any damn way you please.

  245. Tax Benefits for Bill Gates Too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why create a Gates foundation where there are other good international non-profit organizations? Because they can. It will provide a good marketing for the Gates and they can also deduct the donations for tax purposes. It all makes sense.

  246. This should go down with GWB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter heaven.

    Remember the biblical story? A rich man giving lots to church he could afford and the old woman giving all she had.

    I won't diss the contribution because it *is* more than I give. However, I won't laud him for it because he won't miss it.

  247. Do these ends justify those means? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is this proof that sometimes the ends justify the means?

    Clearly:

    1. Gates is a generous man with a foundation dedicated to giving back some of his money.
    2. Vaccinating children is both a good thing and it also helps fend off the spread and mutation of disease for everyone else.

    However...

    3. Gates made a lot of money illegally. Not in the same way as a mobster would but very far from Horatio Alger.
    4. He has far more than 3/4 of a billion dollars -- in fact 23 billion (source: http://evan.quuxuum.org/bgnw.html).

    If that were a larger portion of his total gains, perhaps his ill-gotten money might be put to a better purpose. After all, Gates was born into a rich family - he could go back to zero and still be doing just fine for himself. But does this suggest that - so long as you do good things with your money in the long run - you may behave unethically?

  248. think hundreds of millions, not tens, in grants by westlake · · Score: 1

    In 2003 the Gates Foundation was commiting $200 million in AIDS funding to India alone. Gates Foundation hikes AIDS grant to $200 million I can't believe Slashdot has the foggiest notion of the scale on which the Gates Foundation operates.

  249. More clients by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    By doing this Bill is making sure that the word populations grow, which mean more customers in 20 years. This is actually a investment.

  250. Ends Don't Always Justify Means by Bob9113 · · Score: 1

    Much maligned for his business practices, is this proof that sometimes the ends justify the means?

    How do you feel about criminals who say, "I only steal to feed my family?"

    You may be saying, "for one brief moment, some tiny fraction of Gates' perversion of the free market has been justified by a humanitarian act." That would be entirely valid. Or you might (with a different post) take a Hayek-like position that since the MS monopoly is enforced by the need for interoperability (and not government guns) that it is not a bad thing.

    But supposing, as your post does, that even if his business practices do subvert the economy they are justified because some of the ill-gotten booty is used for humanitarian ends is ridiculous. You would have to show that the monopoly profits are exceeded by the effective output of the charitable contributions. Microsoft brings in about 7.5 billion per year, of which about 2.5 billion is profit. If Gates gives three times this one contribution every year, and it is used with 100% efficiency, that would still be one one thousandth of Microsoft's annual profit. I think even Hayek would grant that Microsoft's monopoly garners more than a $0.20 monopoly price increase over the free market price of Windows XP.

    1. Re:Ends Don't Always Justify Means by Bob9113 · · Score: 1

      Before anyone else points this out - my math is way off. I slipped 3 decimal places.

  251. Smashey and Nicey by Vollernurd · · Score: 1

    Does a lot of good work for charidee, but doesn't like to talk about if you know what I mean, mate?

    Poptastic.

    --
    Smokey, this is not 'Nam, this is bowling. There are rules.
  252. The Bill and Melinda Gates foundation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Note this is the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, not Bill Gates himself directly.

    Charitable works are all well and good but the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation makes sense even from a purely economic point of view in terms of the Tax write offs it affords Microsoft.

    It is also worth noting that the calls for generic prescription drugs can be considered a serious threat to the patent and "intellectual property" lobby and these kinds of donations akin to the boy stopping a leak in the dike with his finger, they hide a much bigger problem.

  253. Off-Topic Re:The Linux Community? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is just irritating to me. I don't know about this case specifically, but martyrdom is overused lately.

    While Patrick Volkerding ... has been sick for several months ... is asking people ... to help him pay his medical bills

    Philanthropy is great, but who are you helping when you don't take care of yourself first? Someone else has to come along and pick up after you.

  254. Re: this and all Linux gave $x posts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That may be true, but the 2 aren't comparable. Free Software isn't gonna save the world any more than $750 million. You can't balance lives saved and future economic improvement (which is hinged on MANY other factors besides technological advancement... ). I love linux, and I love hearing about countries utilizing it, but it is childish to see someone do something nice and all you can say is "Well I did this, and it is better than what you did". It shouldn't be a contest for the title of Biggus Dickus. Bill Gates did a good thing, and has done so in the past and probably will give more in the futre. It doesn't change the effect open source will have on the world. It doesn't change Microsoft's image. Lives are being saved, and we shouldn't piss on that just to make the "Linux Community" feel good. The 2 can coexist without comparing stats.

  255. I was thinking the same thing. by gimpboy · · Score: 1

    When President Bush donated $10k to the tsunami relief effort I did some math. It turns out we would have made the same fractional donation (as in fractions of our pretax income) if Bush made 2 million a year. So sure I didn't donate millions of dollars to charity, but if all the money I donate to charity is added up each year (fsf, npr, Carnegie Library, etc) it's a pretty significant chunk of my income. The irony is that I make so little as a grad student (about 20K per year) that I really don't benefit from itemizing my taxes and I cannot write any of it off --- I'm sure Bill doesn't write any of this off either ;).

    --
    -- john
    1. Re:I was thinking the same thing. by bluGill · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure Bill can write this all off either, in fact I'd be surprised if he can. Once you write off so much, the Alternative minimum tax kicks in, which puts an effective limit on what can be written off. Most people with as much money as he has have to pay this.

      Of course his tax returns are not public, and I wouldn't bother reading them if they were, so I can't say for sure. However I can make estimates based on what is public about his income (as a major office holder his income from Microsoft work is public, though he may have other income we know nothing about), donation levels, the tax code, and such.

  256. Yes you're right Linux community DOES give by DrYak · · Score: 1, Interesting
    Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity

    Linux community gives 100% up front.


    Yes you're compltetly right.
    Just don't think "monney". Think "trying to build a better world".
    On this news, there's a lot of slashdotter replying "But it's unfair : linux does not have money, we cannot give anything..."
    It's not about the money it's also about all the help provided to community.
    What has Gates done ? Once in the life time of his enterprise, he gave a couple of % of his fortune to a health organisation (just to buy a new image after the lost lawsuits ?). That's it. That's all.

    Meanwhile around the world there are tons of Linux/OpenSource developpers trying to build healthcare information managment systems.

    There are a lot of projects. Like Care2x, like FreeMed, like many others.
    These systems are developped for free. These systems run in a lot of places already (even in developping countries !).
    There are studies that proved these systems helped reducing health-care costs (and this is even more important for developping counrties that have fewer ressources).
    There are studies that proved these systems helped increase the quality of health-care (allowing the doctors to better follow the patients that require long-term care, specially HIV patient in developping countries).

    Just have a look on linuxmednews (a slashcode-powered news site).

    So, like parent poster, we can answer the question asked in the news : Yes, the OpenSource / Linux community have proven to be very generous and usefull in the health domain. Much more than a compagny trying to buy itself a nice public image after a few lost lawsuits.

    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
    1. Re:Yes you're right Linux community DOES give by Kihaji · · Score: 1

      Once in a Lifetime?

      Well, then he must do it up well....

      http://www.gatesfoundation.org/default.htm/

      Some peoples children, really.

    2. Re:Yes you're right Linux community DOES give by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's bullshit like this that makes me just shake my head sometimes. Having a free OS doesn't make you any better than the next guy. I run various systems (some windows, some linux, a little misc) none of them have made me a better person by association. And as far as Linux being used in healthcare, if Linux wasn't available, they'd use something else. Whoop-dee-fucking-doo.

  257. "donated Vaccines" are just like "donated Windows" by Savage650 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    The Bill and Melinda Gates foundation is pledging $750M to vaccinate children worldwide over the next 10 years

    Guess why these children (or rather the countries they live in) cant afford vaccines? Could it be

    • Because vaccines and other drugs (e.g for AIDS treatment) have to be imported at high prices.
    • Because manufacuring these vaccines/drugs in-country (which could be quite cheap in comparison)
      is forbidden without licensing American "Intellectual Property".
    • Because the US is pressuring the rest of the world to "harmonize" IP regulations (read up on WIPO, TRIPS,etc)
    • Which just happens to benefit "IP" owners like Gates
      Remember his "Pinko Commie IP thieves" rant a few days ago?

    Whatever part of this money is actually used to buy vaccines, it cant (and won't) be enough for everyone. Thus, it just creates a new market for the pharmaceutical industry ("See, this vaccine is real good. ask those who have been inoculated. It's a real pity we ran out of free shots, so you will have to pay in US dollars" .. "Got no money? We might accept kidneys and organs").

    Plus, it could keep the developing countries from openly revolting against the IP tax. Offering a few breadcrumbs for the first to bend over is just a cheap way of keeping them divided.

    Gates donating vaccines is just a strategic move to protect his IP-based income, not to be confused with actual philanthropy.

  258. Gates Foundation by dave_mcmillen · · Score: 1

    I've recently been involved in preparing a grant application to the Gates Foundation, and came away with a very positive impression of the institution. These people are serious, they're well-funded, and they're doing their damnedest to make good decisions about how best to address health challenges in the poorest nations in the world. They're placing a lot of emphasis on addressing diseases that don't always get a lot of funding in the West, like tuberculosis and malaria.

    (Full disclosure: we didn't get the grant, so I don't like them out of some sense of gratitude. But it did seem clear that they were going through a good peer review process, and they were gratifyingly willing to consider proposals from non-traditional sources - we were a bunch of physical chemists, for example.)

    So say what you like about Gate and his operating system, but he's doing a good thing with this Foundation, and shame on anyone who says he's not doing "enough".

  259. emm-jay, on the radio-aye.. by newr00tic · · Score: 1

    He can spend $750M on vaccinating children, but not for vaccinating his GODDAMN Operating System!?!

    He's already got TONS of viirii -issues already; why not go for them first!?! ..Who the fuck is he NOW? ..Michael Jackson?

    --
    A horse can't be sick, you know, even if he wants to.
    1. Re:emm-jay, on the radio-aye.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you serious? You're putting your computer before people that need help around the world? It's scum like you that scream the loudest when you have to sit in a waiting room to get medical care...while children lay dying all over the world from diseases that cost pennies to cure! Its people like you that can't see beyond your own fucking greed and self interests that are taking this world to hell in a handbasket...fucktard.

    2. Re:emm-jay, on the radio-aye.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jejeje. If you couldn't see THAT as a joke, you've never been here before.

      Now take your Tsunami-hyped quasi-intelligence somewhere else.

  260. Re:Actually, "Robin Hood" is no compliment at all. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Jesus, you Randites quote that book like Christians spout the Bible.

    p.s. Hood robbed mostly from the thieving rich - unproductive tax collectors, aka the coercive government, and feudal lords. A true capitalist would welcome him for his deeds (though not the "rob from the rich.." mantra he has been associated with).

  261. Why Not? by Bazoinker · · Score: 1

    I must admit the capableness of the open source community to unite towards a common goal (other than building software) has been proven by the efforts of spreadfirefox.com in their bid to market firefox. This type of community effort could and possibly should be aimed towards relief and social developement projects as well.

  262. $550 in Windows XP licenses? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like most of the time that M$ has to fork over some money they try to do it with in house products that don't cost them as much.

  263. Snappy Answers to Stupid Questions by npsimons · · Score: 1

    is this proof that sometimes the ends justify the means?

    No, it's proof that rich smucks who cheated their way to the top are always willing to spend a few bucks to make themselves look better.

    Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity.

    Ok, sure, why the heck not. According to this, Bill is worth 29.5 billion dollars. A rough estimate of my own "investments" puts me roughly at a paltry $10,000, and ignoring the fact that Bill will probably "donate" things which are of dubious value (ie, Microsoft software), and that Mr. Gates will still have 28.75 billion dollars after this, sure I'm willing to donate $250 dollars to "match his generosity" (2.5%). Or, if he donates Microsoft software, I promise I'll submit a patch to an open source product RSN.
  264. Citizen Microsoft by blazerw11 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's good that MS gives a lot of money to Washington, because they've screwed the state out of millions, maybe even billions, more. Please read this article for more details.

    --
    A great many people think they are thinking when they are merely rearranging their prejudices. -- William James
  265. already have by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity.

    We've already given the world $15b in free software. Gates is playing catch-up. That said, I'm proud of him. He's shown a big heart and a big vision ever since he decided to set up and fund that foundation.

  266. GATE OUTDOES GOVERNMENT?! by enigmals1 · · Score: 0

    I hate to say it but it's pretty sad when a single enterprise outdoes our goverment in some charity support. And yes they do other donations too, so it's not like they're concentrating everything into this one act.

    ...and I'm a Republican FOR our goverment in general. :(

  267. Bill's wealth and the tsunami by macdaddy · · Score: 1

    I wondered shortly after the tsunami hit, when they were talking about the 6 billion dollars (or thereabouts) that the UN had pledged to the cause from various countries, why Bill Gates didn't chime in with a billion of his own. It was estimated that he was worth $47 billion last April. I understand that it's his money and that he can't afford to donate to every charity that comes knocking. The thing is this isn't just any old charity. A natural disaster like this will probably never happen again in his lifetime, maybe not even in the lifetime of his kids. It seems to me like a perfect opportunity for Bill to do the right thing. My comments aren't directed entirely at Bill either. Bill isn't the richest man in the world any longer. Last I heard Ingvar Kamprad was the richest man in the world. If all these billionaires though their pocket change in a pot we'd probably have a couple billion right there. That would certainly be a fair amount to send over for the relief efforts.

  268. Re:Er (HowMod) by shreevatsa · · Score: 1

    Does the Linux community have $750 million? Just curious.
    In the few hours since this news first appeared on /., I have seen this particular (first) post modded 2 Funny, 3 Insightful, 1 Interesting and 0 Flamebait.
    I'm new to slashdot, so just wondering:
    Is this phenomenon of erratic moderating very common on slashdot?

  269. pretty amazing by idlake · · Score: 1

    Moderators are actively suppressing dissent from your opinion as "flamebait" and "troll". I find that a pretty sad statement about the ability to debate in this forum.

    Apparently, there are a lot of Microsoft-friendly folks here who simply don't want to have to justify their beliefs.

  270. We should all be incredibly joyful.. by cttforsale · · Score: 1

    that the fabulously wealthy king throws the peasants a fucking bone every now and then. Thankyou your majesty.

    These big dontations that corporations give are nothing compared to the cumulative donations that private individuals give. They're just big loud PR vehicles to show how "nice" they are. Hey, I'm all for making money. I give approximately 10% of my annual earnings to 3 organizations I believe in. These amounts St.Microsoft dole out are just piss in the wind to them. Let's call a spade a spade.

  271. Gates is not particularly evil ... by Landak · · Score: 1

    Microsoft is. Heck, he's not even the head of it any more! Don't get my wrong; I still hate Microsoft- but am I the only one here who sees "Microsoft won't appeal EU Ruling" one day, and then gates donating $750m the next?

    Is it me, or did the mass media not have *time* to pick up on the whole we're-an-evil-company thing before gates created a publicity storm?

    --
    My UID is prime. Is yours?
  272. What a troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Gates doesn't claim that the ends justify the means, isn't it rather silly to discuss it here?

  273. Mod Story FLAMEBAIT by alphakappa · · Score: 1

    Sometimes I wish there was a moderation option to do so. The story uses the donation to take cheap shots at everyone and true to /. culture, everyone has taken the bait.

    --
    "When the only tool you own is a hammer, every problem begins to resemble a nail." - Abraham Maslow (1908-1970)
  274. Do a little research before complaining by Juktar · · Score: 1

    http://www.it-director.com/article.php?articleid=8 888

    2 billion! and 5 billion! You can't argue over numbers like that.

  275. What the hell are you talking about? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >>None of which can be prevented by vaccines anyway, so this bit doesn't make a lot of sense.

    **Many** commonly fatal illnesses can be prevented by vaccines!

    What fucking planet are you from?

    1. Re:What the hell are you talking about? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "**Many** commonly fatal illnesses can be prevented by vaccines!"

      "Commonly fatal" does not mean terminal. Traffic accidents over 50mph without a seatbelt are "commonly fatal" but that does not make them terminal illnesses.

      In fact, the diseases in question are not even "commonly fatal", example:

      Diphtheria has a mortality of around 40%.*
      Whooping cough (Pertussis) has a mortality of around 0.2%.*
      Tetanus (neonatal) has a mortality of around 60%, I can't find the data for adults on short notice but I assure you it is less than in vulnerable neonates.**

      Shall I go on? Terminal illness means 100% mortality. Like, if you have it, you WILL die from it unless you die from something else first, and there is no cure. None of the diseases for which we currently have vaccines fit that description.

      As far as I know the vaccines for some real "terminal illnesses" like stage IV cancer, NYHA IV congestive heart failure, chronic kidney failure, don't exist yet...

      Vaccines don't exist because a disease is "terminal". Vaccines exist to prevent the spread of easily transmitted infectious diseases - since having most of the population sick and using up limited health care resources due to a preventable disease is more expensive than vaccinating. Plus we get the added bonus - if the vaccination is done worldwide and aggresively - of potentially being able to wipe out the disease a la smallpox (which was probably the most dangerous disease we had vaccines for since it spread like wildfire and had a mortality 20-50% (still not terminal!)*).

      "What fucking planet are you from?"

      Earth I think. What about you?

      *Sources: Fauci, Braunwald, Isselbacher et al, Harrison's Internal Medicine, 14th ed, McGraw-Hill, 2001. pp 1019,1030,1066, 1255.
      **ACOG Committe Opinion No. 282, website: www.acog.org/from_home/publications/misc/bco282-1. cfm

  276. Have to ask the source of the money. by mrinella · · Score: 1

    If it's taken from monopolistic rent, then we would have been better off donating the money directly ourselves. If Microsoft sells products that increase economic productivity by more than they cost, then it's a genuine humanitarian act. Given the legal decisions against Microsoft here and in the US, I tend to think it's taken from rent.

  277. doubled the amount by Bellyflop · · Score: 1

    It seems that Gates has doubled the amount of the donation to $1.5 billion. Here's a NYT link (yes, I know, registration...): Gates Charity is Doubling Vaccination Gift

    1. Re:doubled the amount by RedWolves2 · · Score: 1

      Doesn't matter Bellyflop no amount of money is going to be good enough for these Immature Microsoft bashing assholes.

      They will still come up with their conspiracy theories and reasons to hate him.

  278. Slight difference by daimou · · Score: 1

    While Bill Gates has been generous to 3rd world countries and people living in squalid conditions, the Linux community has helped the affluent stay affluent. Computers are nice, and having a computer virus free or bug free is nicer, but if its a choice between eating and surfing the net worry-free, I don't really see that as a choice. Its true that Gates has used practices that might violate man's law, but at the same time he's keeping true with a higher law of kindness and generosity. Its easy to be cynical of the rich, easy to say "he's only doing it as a tax shelter," but if that were the case, most people would do what he does. They don't, there's a reason for that. It may be that Linux has some greater longterm benefit for humanity, I don't know. I do know that millions of children are dying every year and this money will most probably be very useful in slowing down that rate. Free is good, free is nice, but give me the health to pursue those free things anyday.

  279. Apples and oranges, chalk and cheese by Norin+Radd · · Score: 1

    As generous a gift as this is, I would hope that it wouldn't require a rich guy to feel philanthropic in order to vaccinate children worldwide. Comparing the open source community effort to the Gates Foundation doesn't quite have parity. Comparing the Gates Foundation with the millions of people who give a small amount on a regular basis, year after year ... that's a better match-up.

  280. Nanopropes by PeanutGallery · · Score: 1

    I call attention to the 'borg icon...

    Egad! Nanoprobes!!!!

    --
    -- Just another unsolicited opinion... from the Peanut Gallery.
  281. HOLY CRAP... I can't believe this. by FlimFlamboyant · · Score: 1

    I cannot BELIEVE you guys are comparing free software on someone's PC to the health and livelyhood of a human being. Software never fed anyone. Gee whiz, how in the world did we feed ourselves until Linux came along? Man, listen to yourselves! Please tell me you aren't serious!

    --
    But God demonstrates his love for us, in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us - (Romans 5:8)
  282. Rubbish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    - The Russian space program
    (I'll grant this one. Sure, they couldn't afford it and took a cavalier attitude towards the lives of their cosmonauts, but they did have some breakthroughs. After the first few, however, the U.S. space program was arguably more successful.

    - Modernizing and arming their country in time to crush the Nazis
    (Modernizing? Ha! Weather, country size and shear numbers were the primary factor. Many of Zhukov's troops were armed with shovels, because they didn't have guns.)

    - Being able to sustain a nuclear stand off for forty years with the USA
    (But during those forty years the people lived in poverty, waiting in lines to get bread, while their own government spied on them. At the end of the forty years, the government collapsed into insolvency.)

    - Some of the best film, art, poetry and literature came of the Soviet Union.
    (And the same country sent many of those artists to the gulag.)

    1. Re:Rubbish. by johnny6vasquez · · Score: 1


      Modernizing? Ha! Weather, country size and shear numbers were the primary factor. Many of Zhukov's troops were armed with shovels, because they didn't have guns

      The Russian ability to produce tanks overwhelmed the Nazis. Their tanks (at first, until the Germans copied them) had innovations like sloped shell deflecting armour and heavier guns. The Germans focussed on finely engineered vehicles while the Russians built huge assembly line factories to mass produce thousands of tough, heavy, winterized, wide-stanced tanks. They were ugly, with the welds showing, but they kicked ass. And there were many many more Soviet tanks than German.

      You think a bunch of guys with shovels alone could hold off the Nazi war machine? Sure there were millions of poorly armed peasants in the front lines but without Soviet armour they would have faced the same fate as the Incans against Pizarro's superiour technology. That was a case where one side was not able to catch up technologically. Each mounted and armoured cavalier accounted for hundreds of Incan footsoldiers killed.

      No, the reason the Russians fought off the Nazis is that the Germans were unprepared for winter, which bought the Russians time to ramp up an incredible feat of technological mass production, done in less time than ever before. Keep in mind that at the same time the Soviets also relocated their factories to central Russia during to avoid the Luftwaffe.

      The cost they paid in human lives was horrible, but to claim that they didn't modernize is false.

      But during those forty years the people lived in poverty, waiting in lines to get bread, while their own government spied on them Let's be objective. Didn't both sides do this?

      And the same country sent many of those artists to the gulag. How soon you forget the MacCarthy years.

      Yes. The Soviet Union folded. Yes, Russia was a shitty place to live freely. But to just dismiss huge chunks of history like that isn't right. I'm glad to live here and I value my freedom just as much as you do, but I doesn't mean I have to turn off my brain. There are good logical reasons for supporting capitalism but blind faith in our system isn't one of them.

  283. Matching generosity... by X86Daddy · · Score: 1

    Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity."

    Forbes lists Bill Gates's wealth at 48 Billion, making this donation 1.56% of his worth (just a rough calculation, I'm sure there's a lot more to it)

    So, making a 1.56% donation of the accumulated $0.00 licensing fees from Linux sales should be a rather straightforward affair. We can do it!!!

  284. Anyone recall where the "generosity" came from? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When Billy boy was single and one of the wealthiest people on the planet, he was widely known as the stingiest, having never given a single dollar of his billions to charity.

    It was only after he (a) got married, and (b) was getting his butt kicked in court on the anti-trust trial, that he started donating.

    Yes, his money will benefit many who really need it. But for Bill, it's all just PR.

    Don't attribute good motives to an evil man just because his self centered actions happen to have some positive effects for others.

  285. Drug companies by KFW · · Score: 1

    Unlike software, where the cost of development is relatively low, testing new drugs is a VERY expensive proposition. People can argue endlessly about the "how much is too much" question, but there has to be some mechanism to pay for drug development costs. To expect companies to simply recover their manufacturing costs is unreasonable. /K

  286. But... by WebMacher · · Score: 1

    Leaving aside the snotty Linux comment and how we feel about Microsoft and Bill Gates... I'm not sure how comfortable I feel about the fact that a billionaire is singlehandedly stepping in to do what the United Nations, and all of its member countries, will not do. It's great that the Gates Foundation has decided to do this, and I think they do a lot of good work, but we're becoming increasingly dependent on the whims of a few billionaires. Sometimes those whims are excellent (we can thank Andrew Carnegie for kickstarting our public library system!) but they are no substitute for national and international policy. Bill Gates's foundation can buy vaccines, but he can't change the regulatory climate for pharmaceutical companies, launch an investigation into pricing practices, stop civil wars in the countries where kids lack vaccination, strengthen the Kyoto Treaty to slow global warming... etc. I think what these large foundations do is great, and they definitely have their important part to play, but I fear that they are also used as an excuse for inaction by our government, and other governments.

  287. Unbelievable by truesaer · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The number of people who are acting like this is some kind of paltry donation just because Gates has a net worth of 50 billion is unbelievable. First, a lot of his assets are not liquid. You can just sell 30 billion of Microsoft stock by clicking a couple buttons in your eTrade account. But that isn't the real point...the real point is that

    1) You can only give so much to a single cause. Its not necessarily possible to even handle huge donations even if you spread them around to a bunch of groups because there just aren't enough people to use the funds.

    2) Gates has donated billions in the past and will donate many billions in the future. This is just one single donation. Whats the big fuss? Its like arguing that dropping a dollar in a Salvation Army kettle makes you cheap despite the fact that you donate to lots of other charities throughout the year.

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

      meh. Defending him is like saying you can rob a bank, and then dropping a dollar in the pot absolves you. Charity from a criminal.

  288. Similar to government funded charities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Governments overtax citizens and expect praise when they decide which charity should be rewarded. (Microsoft model)

    Citizens should decide which charities to support and have their donations be tax exempt.
    (Linux community model)

  289. Egregious Remark by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

    "Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity."

    Let's see if Gates can - as the "richest man in the world" - who only donated $3 million for tsunami relief - match Sandra Bullock - who is far from the richest woman in the world - who donated one million dollars on her own. Anyone for "The Net" - a movie about an egregious computer billionaire who ended up in handcuffs at the end of the movie?

    Let's see, the Gates Foundation has maybe TWENTY BILLION in the bank - which they are using to buy stock in places like Cox Communications - so that means Gates' $750 million is less than one-twentieth - 5% - of the value of the Foundation... Anybody want to bet the Foundation's untaxable income this year exceeds 5%?

    Meanwhile, Gates - and Microsoft - gets a PR tick the same day it's reported they are dropping their appeal of the EU requirement that they strip their media player out of Windows because of monopoly status...

    Get a grip.

    --
    Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
  290. All of it? by Enzo90910 · · Score: 1

    Hold it, dude! $750M over 10 years is hardly all Gates' money. More like a small fraction of what he'll earn during the same time. And all of this is tax deductible anyway. Not to belittle Mr. Gates' gift, but it probably cost him less than the 10 bucks I gave to the tsunami victims cost me, relatively speaking.

    --
    I don't have much to add.
  291. OSS Donation by hangel · · Score: 1

    OSS community donates knowledge and time that should amount an important figure.

  292. Besides... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...you can't buy your way into heaven.

  293. Evil Plot? by iolaus · · Score: 1

    Step 1. Vaccinate all the children of the world.
    Step 2. Begin secret disease research.
    Step 3. Wait for new super-viruses to take hold.
    Step 4. Open Microsoft Pharmaceuticals, the only company with vaccinations to stop super-viruses.
    Step 5. Profit!

    It could happen!

    --
    I find laziness to be an excellent motivator.
  294. The Original Post... by His+Shadow · · Score: 1

    ...should be moderated as a troll. Apples and oranges doesn't cut it as describing the error of this comparison. Apples and dwarf stars maybe... Let's see the Linux community match 750 million? How about you give the nebulous concept of the Linux Community monopolistic control over the corporate desktop for twenty years, add forced upgrades and a pricing system bordering on a pyramid scheme, and they'll get back to you.

    --

    Fiat Homos et Pereat Theos

  295. This is About Patents by Red+Rocket · · Score: 1


    Due to the high costs of prescription medicines and vaccines, a lot of developing countries are looking at the current patent regime as an oppressive blockade to their access to them. Eliminating patent protection for these products would allow them to become more available for these people.
    Naturally, Bill doesn't want to see patent protection weakened in markets he sees as growth opportunities.
    See also: BILL GATES: KILLING AFRICANS FOR PROFIT AND P.R.

    --
    - Hail to our fearless misleader! Fool speed ahead!
    1. Re:This is About Patents by TheSync · · Score: 1

      Eliminating patent protection for drugs would also mean - no new drugs. How many more people would die?

      In truth, there are plenty of cheap generic drugs that could save millions of people from death in developing countries. Unfortunately, the governments of these countries kill their own economy through not respecting property rights and setting up corrupt government monopolies. When a country has a non-functioning economy because of government policies, its people can't even afford the cheap drugs, and die.

    2. Re:This is About Patents by Red+Rocket · · Score: 1


      Whatever. I really don't feel like arguing the merits and failings of the so-called "free market." Just don't call this philanthropy. It's capitalism and P.R.
      Americans are total suckers for a good P.R. campaign.

      --
      - Hail to our fearless misleader! Fool speed ahead!
  296. False dichotomy by hey! · · Score: 1

    No question, on the hierachy of priorities, not being dead is greater than software freedom. But it's silly to talk about this as if providing vaccines has an either/or relationship with providing software.

    Once those children are alive, then what?

    They should educated and made productive citizens of the world economy, otherwise the next generation of children will be vulnerable and dependent. Free software may help them. What we have learned from the Indian example is that there are great reserves of brain power that have heretofore been untapped.

    That said, you shouldn't take your vague contribution to a "Linux Community" as the extent of your involvement with the problems of the world. This is the flip side of the coin: providing vaccines has an either/or relationship with providing software.

    Bill's foundation work is laudable, but it doesn't fundamentally affect the way he lives. I'm not belittling this, I think it's great, but I'm mentioning this by way of pointing out that if other people, the great mass of less wealthy people, lifted a finger in a similar way, they could have a huge impact without compromising their lifestyle. For example, in my family we've been taking advantage of Mercy Corps' program where you can buy a package of services for a needy area. You can even buy a sheep or a cow for a family, which may be enough in some cases to lift that family out of poverty. I can assure you that once the money was donated, we never missed it.

    If every person who is part of the "Linux Community" (especially us folks who are in effect just hangers on) bought just one mercy kit a year, the impact would be stupendous with virtually no impact on our lifestyle.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  297. Viral Marketing by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    Of course the ends don't justify the means. Unless you mean a billionaire spending a few months of his income on PR to prove that he's not such a bad guy, after all. Maybe the richest person in the Linux community could donate 1.6% of *their* net worth to something similar, like global contraception, or women's literacy. Since there's no Linux billionaire, Red Hat's Bob Young probably represent's about $270M, sparing something around $40M, or $4M:y in proportion to Gates. That ought to bring some greater chance at a real life to at least 10M people every year, so let's see someone step up.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  298. Cluckshot - seek professional help immediately by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are one seriously paranoid, limited asshole!

    Why can't you see beyond your tiny little horizon of the software engineering world, and for a single moment (gasp!) consider the problems that people have in the real world (such as dying for lack of vaccination)?

    It's myopic, maladjusted, tiny-minded idiots like you, that make me want to run a mile from Slashdot.

  299. Robin Hood by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most readers would probably say the fictional character of Robin Hood was doing a good thing, so why not say the same for Bill Gates?

    He "robs" from the rich and gives to the poor. What's wrong with that?

    Nuff said!

  300. Pfft - I beat that every year. by Sgt_Jake · · Score: 1

    First, this is the 'B&M Gates Foundation' - a charity, not a software company. They get donations from a lot of places - other than Microsoft - and use it for their causes. Their reason for being is to do what they're doing, which is without question a wonderful thing and deserves nothing BUT respect and admiration. But the foundation is NOT Microsoft, nor is it exclusively Bill Gates' personal wealth and effort. Melinda maybe, but I'm not sure if she plays a pivotal role in that organization...

    Microsoft and the open source community both make software - neither is dedicated to charitable causes exclusively. The challenge is totally misplaced.

    And finally, I donate close to 10% of my money every year to charities I believe in. I'd say that in comparison to Microsofts' billions, the .15 percent (NOT 15%, not 1.5%. .15%!) donation per year over 10 years is a palid and sad compared to my 10%. Nyah. ;)

    1. Re:Pfft - I beat that every year. by jonhuang · · Score: 1

      Just to point out that the foundation is NOT a charity--it's a charitable trust. All the money came from Bill.

      Also to point out, it had $27 billion of his $50 billion worth. He's earmarked over 50% of his worth for charity, and has publically stated he intends to donate the vast majority (over 98%, probably) on his death.

      What you're donating is admirable though, and I congratulate you as well.

  301. incorrect by i41Overlord · · Score: 1

    The 40 billion is his cash in hand though. Including stock we're looking at more like 80-100.

    No, the 40 billion is not cash he has in hand. That's his net worth, meaning that figure includes the stock he owns. The vast majority of his worth is his stock.

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

      his "stock" ? ( http://www.public.iastate.edu/~cokere/wow-bg.JPG )

  302. Re:The Linux community has ALREADY "matched this.. by TheSync · · Score: 1

    Disease does have enormous costs, but you have to change government policies to support free markets and private property before you will have any prosperity.

    The US became more prosperous than most sub-Saharan African countries are today even when typhus, polio, and other diseases were rampant, not to mention at a time when antibiotics did not exist. That is because the US had effective policies to support free markets and property rights. The same thing applies to many European countries.

  303. Wouldn't it be interesting if by xRelisH · · Score: 1

    Gates donated some money ( no strings attached ) towards Patrick's medical bills?

    I don't see how it would hurt, sure slackware might me somewhat of a competitor, but most Joe Somebody Windows users wont want to deal with Slackware.

  304. breakdown of $750M by greenash · · Score: 1

    I'd be curious to see how much of $750M goes toward production, distribution, and so on and how much ends up as profit for the pharmaceutical companies.

  305. Dream On... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity.


    Let's see... Several million dweebs living in their parent's basement are going to donate $750M? Not!

  306. What if they don't *want* vaccinations? by DamienMcKenna · · Score: 1

    What if they (specifically their parents) don't want a vaccination, due to not wanting to overdose them with mercury, antifreeze and other poisonous substances? Can they have the money instead? Or is this just a cover for BG getting in bed with the pharmacutical companies? Conspiracy theories abound.

    Damien

    1. Re:What if they don't *want* vaccinations? by RedWolves2 · · Score: 1

      Your an idiot!

    2. Re:What if they don't *want* vaccinations? by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      What if they (specifically their parents) don't want a vaccination, due to not wanting to overdose them with mercury, antifreeze and other poisonous substances?

      Then they (specifically their parents) are ignorant mouthbreathers who probably also believe you can get rid of HIV by raping a virgin - both ideas have roughly the same scientific merit.

      Do you know what the LD-50 of antifreeze is? I suspect you could sustain a .5cc injection of raw propylene glycol without many problems. If thimerosal decomposed to methylmercury instead of ethylmercury, then a vaccination would contain a couple times more than WHO's established average allowable daily intake limits, but it's not so that's pretty much a straw man.

      In a nutshell, skipping vaccinations is one of the worst forms of child abuse around. If someone's stupid enough to keep their kids from getting them, then they shouldn't be having kids in the first place.

      Can you tell I feel rather strongly about this? My sister works is an infectious health analyst, and she makes me seem pretty uninterested in comparison.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    3. Re:What if they don't *want* vaccinations? by downix · · Score: 1

      Might I point out that the mercury from vaccinations has been tied to a trend of rising autism here in Florida? That is why the wife and I worked with our doctor to use non-mercural based vaccinations, despite the fact that our insurance would not cover them. Cost us a pretty penny, and we're pinching them to begin with, but is worth it for not exposing our son to risk.

      Frankly, calling someone that does not give vaccinations child abusers is really not only misguided, but ignorant. Might I point out that most of the issues that Damien here mentioned are caused by recent trends in vaccinating techniques, not by the vaccines themselves. The urge to "save a buck" does put children at risk, and if you cannot see that, then I'm sorry. The concept of vaccinating is a good one, no one will argue with you on that, but don't you ever wonder if there isn't a better manner of handling it?

      --
      Karma Whoring for Fun and Profit.
  307. So, can we lose the stupid Gates as Borg icon now? by iBod · · Score: 1

    Whatever you think of Microsoft, Gates, with this single, unprecedented act of giving, will make far more of a difference to the well-being of mankind than all Slashdot community put together could ever hope to.

    Can't we just do the right thing here or once, and give the man credit where it's due, rather than acting like a bunch of petty, spiteful children?

  308. Re:Yeah! We can! by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

    "Sure thing! We can refuse to procreate. Less children = less sickness worldwide."

    It's hard to raise children in your parent's basement, not to mention the problems in actually getting a date, so I think many Slashdotters are doing all they can to fight population growth.

  309. Re:The Linux community has ALREADY "matched this.. by Vellmont · · Score: 1


    The US became more prosperous than most sub-Saharan African countries are today even when typhus, polio, and other diseases were rampant, not to mention at a time when antibiotics did not exist.


    That's mostly due to geography. Sub-Saharan African countries don't have winter, so diseases like Malaria never have a chance to die off with the insects. I'm sure there's other disadvantages to living in the tropics as well.

    --
    AccountKiller
  310. Ends justify means? by SLOGEN · · Score: 1

    You mean, Microsoft earned their money to give them away?

    Or do you think they are aware enough of their image to try and invest in improving it?

    --
    SLOGEN [ http://ungdomshus.nu : Sebastian cover music]
  311. It would be nice... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...if he would "pledge" the same to vaccinate Windows.

  312. Vaccinations by qray · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Hopefully his foundation will have more luck protecting kids against viruses than his Outlook and OS teams have protecting their products.
    --
    tosid ifido sidwod farsto

  313. He's Doing better than other rich guys by GatesGhost · · Score: 1

    His business practices (and 'vulnerable' software) aside, gates has contributed more to charitable causes than most of the worlds richest people (probably combined). and i've heard that he wants to donate all his money when he dies, instead of giving it to his family. as a philanthropist, he deserves some kudos.

    1. Re:He's Doing better than other rich guys by mstefan · · Score: 1

      I recall reading that he does plan on giving a bulk of his wealth away, but he wants to do it before he dies; which makes sense because he'd want control over where it actually went.

      However, unless he's changed his mind since, he had talked about leaving ~300 million or so to each of his three children. And I sincerely doubt that he's going to leave Melinda high and dry; in fact, you could argue that the she and the kids are the real motivating force behind his philanthropy. Their foundation alone, aside from the other things she's involved in, is worth about $30 billion.

      --
      "Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former." --Albert Einstein
  314. Nice tax break considering new tax laws by neckdeepinspecialsau · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I don't doubt the sincerity of the gift or that Mr. Gates truly want to help these kids but if you look at it from a business standpoint.

    800 mill will not go far in this cause but will make a nice tax break for a man who makes that much cashing in stock in a weekend. It will take something like 12 billion to do this for 90% of kids in the poorest countries.

    1. Re:Nice tax break considering new tax laws by jthayden · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Assuming the 12 billion figure is correct, let 15 of the other richest people in the world pony up so dough too. It isn't Billy's job to solve all of the world's problems by himself. Sure he will get a tax break, but maybe that is why he gave 750 insteed of 500. You don't make money off a tax break, you just don't lose as much. To argue he did for a tax break doesn't make sense.

      How much did Larry give? At least Bill gave and he has given in the past. Hell he is even a democrat.

      There are lots of things to bust his balls over, but this is not one of them.

      Stand up and applaud the gift, encourage others to give too, then go back to attacking him for his business practices.

    2. Re:Nice tax break considering new tax laws by RedWolves2 · · Score: 1

      So what are you saying that he should of just kept his money and not done anything? At least he does something! You don't hear of to many millionaires parting ways with their money very often.

      It was in our local news recently that Bill Gates and foundation gave $5 million to our city schools. Why did he do that for us? Because he wants to help but not feel like he owns the process.

      It's just like tsunami relief you hear actors and companies giving $1 million of thier own money. Who cares that $1 million ain't going to do crap for the victims...but enough people together that donate what they can when they can is going to make a difference.

      You got to ask yourself what if the story read Steve Jobs donated $750 would you be reading in the comments that it was a conspiracy or that $750 million ain't going to do shit? NO! Because the editors of Slashdot posted this story for the lone reason as to fuel the immature fire of microsoft bashing. "ooh look at how he's through his money around now" "conspiracy" "Fix outlook instead"

      This place and the people that visit are truely unbelievable sometimes.

    3. Re:Nice tax break considering new tax laws by Frenetic_Alphabet · · Score: 1

      VERY well said!!! Its a shame there isn't more people around here like yourself.

      --
      I reject your reality and substitute my own
    4. Re:Nice tax break considering new tax laws by neckdeepinspecialsau · · Score: 1
      Listen maybe I wasn't clear. I agree it was very nice of Mr. Gates to do this. Frankly I admire the guy (although I don't always agree with him).

      That said all I'm saying is look at this gift in scale. Much has been made of the size of this donation, his is a little less than Mr. gates spent on his Porsche 959 that he can't drive on the street.

      His gift although nice is no greater than other gifts given by other people no matter size. It's just hype, news and in the end a tax break.

  315. What is the value of all free software? by jago25_98 · · Score: 1

    Maybe we (well they, me not being a programmer) already have...

    if you price software like Microsift does and charged for Apache, MySQL, Linux kernel and so forth.

  316. Re:Well, he had one reason for "ends vs. means" by ianscot · · Score: 1
    The submitter had no reason to insert those last two statements except to provoke negative comments.

    The /. entry form does let you specify a "department," doesn't it? And one of the choices is "the ends-justify-the-means" department. Maybe our submitter was just fishing for a category.

    (Personally, if I'd submitted this story I might have included a reference to Andrew Carnegie. Maybe that'd have been a hot button too? I've wondered whether B.G. is comparing himself to Carnegie before...)

    --
    "Fundamentalism" isn't about divine morality. It's about human authority.
  317. Mr. Gates - How about Vaccinating your OS? by www.sharkdefense.com · · Score: 0, Redundant

    C'mon now. A good cause, of course, but how about all the children who get "infected" with spyware, porn and gambling websites using your Windows boxes? tsk tsk.

  318. Ya-Shen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmm, and just what is he injecting into them?

    Has he not also contributed to an organization formed in the 30s for the extermination of the black 'race'? Indeed, of the 43 million babies executed in this country since 1973, 20 million have been black, though blacks are only 12% of the population as a whole.

    Remember the YaShen in SG-1?

  319. Re:The Linux community has ALREADY "matched this.. by TheSync · · Score: 1

    GDP per capita of Zimbabwe is $1900 a year. Meanwhile, let's look at two other countries with native malaria. India has a GDP per capita of $2900 per year, and Singapore has a GDP per capita of $23,700 per year.

    Malaria can easilly be wiped out in a country of appropriate wealth. Simple tools like repellant-coated mesh nets can dramatically reduce its spread.

    Also, do not underestimate the influence of disease in the US in the time before the advance of medicine.

    In the late 1800's, the US had epidemics of Yellow Fever, Influenza, Smallpox, Cholera, Typhus and Typhoid.

    In 1916, 7,000 people died in the US from polio. In 1918, 500,000 people died in the US from influenza. Today, nearly 500,000 people have died in the US from AIDS.

    In 1850, real per capita GDP in the US was about $2000 / year, higher than Zimbabwe today.

    I suggest again that government economic policies trump disease in terms of keeping an economy down.

  320. Ends and Means by Arkaein · · Score: 1

    while I'm glad that Bill G is donating his money to worthwhile causes, the ends do not justify the means.

    Given the choice, I'd rather that the US government had done it's job and smacked down the Microsoft monopoly a long time ago, which likely would have save the software consuming world at least an order of magnitude more money than the $750 M that Gates is donating. Governments could have collected part of this money through taxes and giving it as foreign aid, giving what could easily be a larger lump sum of aid while simultaneously taking less money (on average) from taxpayers/consumers. I'm sure libertarians as well would have just liked to have the choice of saving money not spent on an illegal monopoly's products and donated at their own choice.

    As generous as this donation appears, the tremendous amount of money still in Gates' coffers shows the size of the sinkhole created that would not exist in a truly competetive marketplace.

  321. The normal rules don't apply by bamurphy · · Score: 1

    Once you have the kind of money BG has, well, way way way before you even have that much, the normal laws of money dictating your activity really stop applying so much. Somewhere around 300M, it really becomes virtually impossible to buy enough additional things and actually enjoy them. There really is only so much value an extra dollar, or million, or billion can do for you, and the dropoff happens pretty early on. So, no, its not like this is an amazing contribution from him, because he'll never need that 750 million, but also, it's not like his primary goal nowadays is greed - because he already has more money than he could ever ever spend. He is motivated by ego maybe, or sheer agression and love of the business and its trappings. In terms of the tax argument, sure he gets benefits from doing that, but honestly, do you really think taxes are high on bill's list of things? Sure hey pays more yearly than most of us ever will make, but so what? He's so far beyond needing any of that money that he has been afforded the freedom to do what he wants to do, when he wants, and how, regardless of the monetary consequences. So when he does things, they need to be judged apart from his wealth - if they are right, they are right, if they are wrong, they are wrong. He can't plead either way that he has to do it for the money. If Bill really really thought, you know, I want to be loved, I'm going to get into OSS and put so much money behind it..... he could, easily. But he obviously doesn't believe that. And I believe its an honest process in his head, even if his logic is flawed and he might be dishonest to prove his points - but is HE threatened by OSS? I dont really think so. Maybe some % of his vast fortune, but not enough to affect his lifestyle, goals, or activities in any way.

  322. Put your money where... somebody elses mouth is by foolip · · Score: 1

    Instead of arguing over what percentage Gates has given or who is more generous of Gates and a poor man giving the same percentage, I offer a challenge for any honest, rational human to accept:

    I will assume that you have more money than you need to cover your basic needs. This will be true if you can ever afford to buy a new computer, buy ice cream or take a few beers at the pub. If you don't have any surplus money then you have nothing to give, and what I say does not apply.

    You have your basic needs: food, clothes, shelter, transport, communications -- things which are required for you to live at a level where you do not feel that you are in some sort of distress. These needs take some part of your money, and anything else you have left is surplus. If you were to spend this on yourself, it would be to satisfy relatively trivial desired compared to the unfulfilled needs of large portions of the population of our planet. I will argue that that money would be put to better use if spent on those in need.

    There appears that there are effective ways of improving the conditions of those in need on the long term. This could be spening resources (money in this case) on infrastructure, education and possibly famine relief (although it could be objected that feeding the hungry does not attack the root of the problem, but instead helps create another generation of people who will also starve unless the real problems are solved). If you do not agree on any of these measures, consider fair trade, population control, caring for the environmental (greenpeace) or human rights activism (amnesty international and others).

    If you have any surplus money, you could (morally ought, I believe) give all or some of this to a cause which you believe will effectively help those in need. But how much? Giving nothing at all is clearly not optimal. Also, giving all of what I have defined as surplus may not be optimal either, as it would exclude you from some social activities (e.g. going to the pub) which may be required to uphold a healthy social life and without which your wellbeing would be at risk, and with it your ability to continue bringing home money to give to the needy. We arrive at the conclusion that you can (ought) give somewhere between nothing and all of your surplus.

    Since it is difficult to determine which is the optimal giving rate, I suggest that you set this level in an honest way as you see fit. I feel that for me, as a full time student on state subsidies and loans, half of my surplus is reasonable. In no way am I certain that 50% is the optimal number, but it allows for a simple system which is self-adjusting to my current financial situation.

    I suggest a system which is as follows. For each purchase that can rightly be considered surplus consumption, record that amount. When the total amount of money spent exceeds a nice even number like $10, $100 or in my case, 100 SEK, give that money to a cause which you believe will be of high benefit to humans (living or future), non-human animals, the environment or some other cause which you judge to be more important than your own needs (none of which are essential since those needs are already covered, or no surplus consumption could have taken place). Such a system has several benefits:

    • Your own basic needs cannot be threatened by your will to help those in need since it is only surplus money that is at stake. Thus you run no risk of putting yourself in a similar situation as those you are trying to help -- something which would hardly help in the long run.
    • Those times when you have no money to spend, you will give none. When you have more to spend, you will give more. This may be better than giving a fix amount every month or week, as sometimes feeling that one is not able to fulfil the obligation of giving may be dissuading and may hurt long-term giving.

    My claims here have been rather moderate and aimed at finding a practical method of sharing ones surplus. It is possible that the moral obl

  323. Stay tuned by Illserve · · Score: 1

    Next on "Numbers that Equal 100", the percentage chance that the poster of this story is a Microsoft employee.

  324. King of New York by Concern · · Score: 1

    Kind of like Christopher Walken in King of New York. Sells drugs by night, builds a children's hospital by day. He even has a "great" speech about it. Does it sound goofy and incoherent? Yeah, it is.

    Monopolies are bad for the economy. They create inefficiencies that propagate into every aspect of our lives and result in traditional economic malaise: substandard goods and services at higher prices, fewer jobs, fewer opportunities, stalled progress.

    To have the man at the head of the monopoly put on his King's hat and say "I am magnanimous today" makes you feel kind of like an asshole, doesn't it?

    Let alone when one of his lackey-wannabes says "Who is as generous as the King?"

    Amazing what America has come to.

    --
    Tired of Political Trolls? Opt Out!
    1. Re:King of New York by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's funny (laughable, more) that you think it's logical for there to be a "monopoly" in intellectual property.

      I invent something, people love it - everyone buys it. Now, my idea belongs to the people and I have to play nice with it? Ridiculous, absolutely ridiculous and stupid.

      Anti-trust/monopoly law only makes sense wrt physically limited products. Oil, water, air, power, roads, etc...

      The entire proceeding against Microsoft is embarassingly idiotic and it's meant to save software dinosaurs who can't compete and _not_ to serve the consumer, who _chooses_ Windows.

  325. The Linux community can give 10x this amount! by jmawhorter · · Score: 1

    This donation represents 750 million USD over 10 years, thus 75 million USD per year. For the sake of argument let's say there are 2 million people in the "Linux community". I'm sure that is an underestimate but it doesn't matter for the sake of this exercise. 75 million USD/ 2 million = 37.5 USD per year per Linux user. I'm sure the vast majority of Linux users either live in wealthy western nations or are of above average wealth in the nations in which they live. So 38 USD per year is pocket change for most Linux users. I'm sure this is less than the average annual spending of Linux users on carbonated beverages (for which to total worldwide annual spending is ~200 billion USD). Even 500 per year would hardly be noticed by most Linux users. That would amount to 1 billion USD per year. I would bet most Linux users could afford with some small sacrifice to give 5000 USD per year away. That would amount to 100 billion USD over the 10 year period of Bill Gates' 750 million USD donation which starts to make his gift look like a drop in the bucket. Don't underestimate the power of a large number of people. If anyone is interested I've put together a short "slide show" examining visually what people choose to allocate money to and what they don't. It is at http://joel.mawhorter.org/priorities/priorities-in tro.html I will warn you that it is graphic and you will likely find it disturbing (but hopefully moving and educational). Joel

    1. Re:The Linux community can give 10x this amount! by RedWolves2 · · Score: 1

      OK great since you are asking the linux community to match this one donation...can you also figure out how the linux community can match all his other donations to schools and other charities.

      For example Bill gave $5 million to the Rochester, NY city schools this past year. How much would each Linux community member need to pitch in to match that? While your figuring that out I'll figure out the rest of the donations for 2004.

      The point is you can't compete. Just give what you can and be happy that someone is trying to give back to the community.

    2. Re:The Linux community can give 10x this amount! by jmawhorter · · Score: 1

      Huh? Did you read my whole post? I just showed how easily the Linux community could give away 1 billion USD per year. I highly doubt the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation gives away more than that per year.

      My point, which I think is easily demonstrated, is that we as a group can easily compete with Bill Gates' giving. We just choose not to!

      Joel

    3. Re:The Linux community can give 10x this amount! by RedWolves2 · · Score: 1

      You should do your research before you doubt:

      http://www.gatesfoundation.org/MediaCenter/FactS he et/

    4. Re:The Linux community can give 10x this amount! by RedWolves2 · · Score: 1

      You also might want to figure in that Billy boy upped the donation

    5. Re:The Linux community can give 10x this amount! by jmawhorter · · Score: 1

      I stand corrected. Thanks for pointing that out. However, my point remains unchanged. The Linux community could outgive Bill Gates (especially in the long term) if it wanted to. As I mentioned in my original post, the Linux community could almost certainly give $100 billion USD over 10 years. There is no way Bill could sustain that kind of giving. Please understand I'm not bashing Bill Gates here for what he is doing. I'm just showing that giving large sums of money to help people is well within the reach of a large group like the Linux community.

    6. Re:The Linux community can give 10x this amount! by jmawhorter · · Score: 1

      I'm glad to hear that but it is irrelevant to my point. I showed that the Linux community could easily give 10 billion USD over 10 years which is still a lot more than 1.5 billion.

    7. Re:The Linux community can give 10x this amount! by Juktar · · Score: 1

      http://www.it-director.com/article.php?articleid=8 888 "Last year (2001) he was reported to have given $2 billion to charities through the Belinda and Bill gates Foundation. In 2000 he gave more than $5 billion." MUCH more than that....

    8. Re:The Linux community can give 10x this amount! by Juktar · · Score: 1

      And of course you know that the whole Linux community would be in competition with 1 person right? When many people contribute, of course you can make 1 persons donation seem trivial.....

    9. Re:The Linux community can give 10x this amount! by RedWolves2 · · Score: 1

      Yes I agree the logic is there to outgive...but is in the hearts of the linux community to give...who would organize it?

      It's the linguistics that is hard.

    10. Re:The Linux community can give 10x this amount! by jmawhorter · · Score: 1

      My point wasn't to make Bill's donation seem trival. It isn't. My point was that this attitude that we can't possibly colletively give this kind of money becuase we aren't all rich like Bill is not true.

  326. Re: Mind Control by FlyingPostman · · Score: 0

    Don't you know that vaccinations are are form of governemnt mind control? Now Bill Gates is in on this so there is a future generation of Microsoft customers that will use Windows even though it sucks!

  327. Not really by Dh2000 · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure the point she was making was that the scum of the world, A.K.A "the peasants" were being propped up by a kind of socialist hero.. and THAT was what really bothered her.

    She didn't like the idea that people might bend or break the rules if their livelihoods depended on it.

    She didn't like the idea that people who got rich might actually have to pay to help those pathetic dirty vermin climb out of the cesspit of poverty. She wanted each person to save themselves in a sort of anti-socialism, where no-one need feel sorry about his suffering neighbor and no-one need help them.

    Those that are incapable of helping themselves and used others to support themselves (the unemployed relying on social aid, for instance) are seen as parasites on their "superiors".

    1. Re:Not really by zorander · · Score: 1

      Can you argue with this logically rather than appealing to emotion? I'd be interested to see some *real* discussion on the topic.

    2. Re:Not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The question is weather you believe government should be concerned with its citizens or its own existence. If the state (referring to Hobbes) is like a mortal god - able to legally end life then the state has the same power as god. Should citizens then fear the state and allow it to have absolute rule? Or should the state be subservient to needs of the citizens whom it owes its very existence?

      These are questions that have been asked since the conception of the first republic and there is not a nice answer.

      Robin Hood went against the sovereign and therefore basically entered in to a civil war. Some one like that cannot exist if there is not a large base of support who all sympathize with his actions. So in this case the relationship between the sovereign and the citizens has failed.

      The problem is the only way to resolve a problem with a sovereign is civil war and civil disobedience as is the case with Robin Hood.

      With a republic you have periods of harmony between the state and its citizens. When they get unbalanced, it does not need civil war to re-balance it. Republics have the unique ability to re-examine themselves or look back to its roots and emancipate its self with out bloodshed.

      The balance of a sovereign or a state is like a pendulum swinging - there is no sweet spot or long term stability. So look at your own country - it might seem like there are so many institutions to protect it from extreme situations - but in the end they only lessen the two extremes, they do not prevent unrest.

  328. the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I saw on the Simpsons that vaccines are really a ploy by the card companies to make people buy holiday cards. I am guessing that someone re-engineered vaccines to make people want to buy Microsoft products. I know that must be the reason.

  329. Just because by adewolf · · Score: 1

    Just because someone donates to "charities" does not change that person's character. By the way here are what those "vaccinations" can do:
    http://www.healing-arts.org/children/cdc.htm
    What percentage of the money donated actually get's used to buy what the children need?

    Alex

    --
    "The Brady Bunch is back...working homicide"
  330. Machiavelli by doodaddy · · Score: 1

    While I'm grateful that this money is going to a good cause, I believe Machiavelli mentioned that a tyrant should open a few hospitals and schools to confuse the masses. You give up 10% of your wealth, keep the other 90% ill-gotten gains, and let the peons fight it out.

    I was watching a special on, I believe, Noriega. It's been a while. Anyway, once the government came down on his billion-dollar cocaine empire, he started building hospitals and kissing babies. When it didn't work, he had many govt officials shot in the bloodiest street crimes possible.

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

      You're a disgusting nerd. Next, why don't you compare him to Hitler and Stalin?

      Pathetic fuck, get a life and stop obsessing over how much you hate a man who has saved more lives and made a bigger difference in the world than you and 100 (if some blind troglodyte decides to get drunk and mate with you) of your decendents will ever make.

    2. Re:Machiavelli by doodaddy · · Score: 1

      Thanks for making my point about getting the peons to fight it out. Moron.

  331. REPOST:The Linux community can give 10x this by jmawhorter · · Score: 1

    Sorry. Preview first, post second :-)

    This donation represents 750 million USD over 10 years, thus 75 million USD per year.

    For the sake of argument let's say there are 2 million people in the "Linux community". I'm sure that is an underestimate but it doesn't matter for the sake of this exercise.

    75 million USD/ 2 million = 37.5 USD per year per Linux user. I'm sure the vast majority of Linux users either live in wealthy western nations or are of above average wealth in the nations in which they live. So 38 USD per year is pocket change for most Linux users. I'm sure this is less than the average annual spending of Linux users on carbonated beverages (for which to total worldwide annual spending is ~200 billion USD). Even 500 per year would hardly be noticed by most Linux users. That would amount to 1 billion USD per year. I would bet most Linux users could afford with some small sacrifice to give 5000 USD per year away. That would amount to 100 billion USD over the 10 year period of Bill Gates' 750 million USD donation which starts to make his gift look like a drop in the bucket.

    Don't underestimate the power of a large number of people.

    If anyone is interested I've put together a short "slide show" examining visually what people choose to allocate money to and what they don't. It is at http://joel.mawhorter.org/priorities/priorities-in tro.html. I will warn you that it is graphic and you will likely find it disturbing (but hopefully moving and educational).

    Joel

  332. I thank Ted Turner by doodaddy · · Score: 1

    Did anyone else happen to notice that the Gates Foundation came along less than a year after Turner donated one billion to the U.N.?

    That might sound like a fragile connection, but the reading I've done on Gates seems to point out that he does most things to one-up someone else.

    Oh well, I'm thankful the money goes to a good cause.

    1. Re:I thank Ted Turner by RedWolves2 · · Score: 1

      "Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity."

      God I hate people that try to one up others!

  333. Thank you Bill by captfi · · Score: 1

    As much as I hate your software and your companies monopolistic habits, I thank you.

    You are helping the worlds sick more than most governments can or will.

    --
    "Never trust a computer you can't throw." -- The Mac
  334. Re:The Linux community has ALREADY "matched this.. by radish · · Score: 1

    I agree, but there is one major practical difference - the money which people don't spend on free software probably doesn't end up going to charity, it probably ends up at Dominos, Anheiser Bush or LFP! Of course people should be free to spend their money as they see fit, but I just wanted to point out that this donation at least guarantees that the worthy causes get some cash.

    --

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

  335. The linux community hasn't been raping by kawabago · · Score: 0

    The information economy! So naturally we don't have that extra cash!

  336. Over 10 years? It's just interest... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm no going to do the exact math, but earmarking $750M, and getting 10% annual return, giving away annual interest of $75M, will leave them with the initial $750M. Hm...

    Big deal, I'll donate all interest from money I can never spend too...

  337. Its worth it by kilauea · · Score: 1

    I would happily live in a software monoculture where children do not get sick.

    Get a grip, OS's are not everything.

  338. Different purposes: MS makes money, not software by antispam_ben · · Score: 1

    The whole purpose of Microsoft is to make money (see the charter of any corporation). Software just happens to be the 'vehicle' they use to make the money and take it to the bank.
    A significant amount of Microsoft's money goes to Bill Gates. He can do anything he wants (within the law, of course) with his money.

    The whole purpose of "The Linux Community" is to make software. It's not to make money, raise money, redistribute money or to do anything with money.

    By the time I press submit there will probably be 1000+ comments on this 'article.' Congrats to the author for successfully trolling slashdot.

    --
    Tag lost or not installed.
  339. Re:The Linux community has ALREADY "matched this.. by Vellmont · · Score: 1


    I suggest again that government economic policies trump disease in terms of keeping an economy down

    Possibly, but quite irrelevant to Bill Gates. You can't throw money at a problem like government economic policies. Sure, you could bribe some government officials, but they'd laugh all the way to the bank.

    --
    AccountKiller
  340. To be fair... by willCode4Beer.com · · Score: 1

    You gave 2.5% of your "discretionary income".

    Bill Gates being worth 50 billion is not the same as earning 50 billion/year (which he doesn't).

    So, he gave 1.53% of his worth, not his income. Never mind the fact that he could never turn that 50 billion into cash. The act of him selling any significant portion of those MS shares would drive the value of them into the ground.

    That said, you are both to be commended.

    --
    ----- If communism is a system where the government owns business, what do you call a system where business owns govern
  341. Oh! Oh! I can! by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Just give me your address, then I'll kidnap you and blackmail your family - then repeat until I have the funds!

    Then of course all my sins would be washed away, just because I did something good in the end.

    I guess then the means would be justified, or something like that...

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Oh! Oh! I can! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is life in your world sad? It certainly appears so from the outside looking in.

  342. Get over yerself. by UncleRage · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It's not a small redeeming act. It's 750 million dollars worth of vaccine for children worldwide.

    It's not one act. The Bill and Melinda fund have quite a few of these on their table.

    In any other discussion, I would agree with many of your sentiments. Bill is a hardnosed business bulldog who will chew through anyone in his way. HOWEVER, millions upon millions of children will actually have a chance to make it past the age of 5 thanks to this donation.

    Believe it or not, it's not always about right and wrong or morraly correct. These are easy debates for those with food on the table. Regardless of motive the final act is judged in and of itself.

    C.S. Lewis examined this at length and I do agree. Do a harmful thing for a rightous reason - it's still a bad thing. Do a good thing for a bad reason... good has still been done.

    Scream and cry to the blind gods above for truth all you want. They're deaf (if not dead) and we still have a mess to clean up.

    I'll personally put all my Bill bashing to the side today and say this, "Good job, Mr. Gates. You may be an asshole, but you're an asshole that's done a few good turns."

    --
    #SickNotWeak
    1. Re:Get over yerself. by Twanfox · · Score: 1

      You may be willing to permit this moment of charitable good will to cloud whatever else he has done, but it's my perogative to look beyond that. I don't dispute the act of donating to be useless, as certainly many more children will not suffer and die, and that is good. However, I don't hold the same belief that doing good things for bad reasons will only ever be good, especially since in humanity it tends to be a tool of manipulating good will.

      Wealthy people use charities such as this to further their own interests. A true telling point about the wealthy is if they would have donated if they got nothing for it (no tax breaks, no publicity, and noone knew about it but them). While "good" comes of it, I don't rate it high on the list of 'noble' things unless they would have done it even if noone knew.

  343. St. Bill? No. by Famatra · · Score: 2, Informative

    "You will see that Bill has given $27 Billion of his $50 Billion fortune"

    Since he is a monopolist, a large portion of that $50 billion was leveraged from the pockets of consumers via using monopoly power to maximize profits.

    There is a perminant loss to society when monopoly power is exercised (called dead weight loss, and is the same loss to society from taxiation). One would also expect that the consumers who would not have had to pay billions extra for this product would have also donated it to charities.

    Its nice that hes doing it, but he is far far away from being St. Bill for the reasons above.

  344. yhea that's what i want...not! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you have just been vaccinated...please reboot now for the changes to take effect.

  345. Re: this and all Linux gave $x posts by dollargonzo · · Score: 1

    i completely agree. i was merely playing devil's advocate, and trying not to fall for the flamebait. it's not a contest, but morally, i agree much more with what the linux community is doing than with what bill gates is doing. he did not create microsoft with the intention of giving part of its profits to needy children: that is merely a byproduct of his success. clearly, few if none in the linux community can afford to give that much money to charity, so each of them do what they can. the difference is that the goal of the linux community is charity and "giving back", which is much more noble.

    --
    BSD is for people who love UNIX. Linux is for those who hate Microsoft.
  346. Re:The Linux community has ALREADY "matched this.. by TheSync · · Score: 1

    Sure, you could bribe some government officials, but they'd laugh all the way to the bank.

    The World Bank and IMF have become experts at exactly that...

    They call them development loans or grants, which are immediately put into the pockets of contractors connected to developing governments, and the governments then fail to implement free market reforms they promised to implement in return for the loans/grants. Some countries even then default on the loans...and complain they are "highly indebted."

  347. Not Bill, but the shareholders that pay. by barfy · · Score: 1

    Everytime Bill Gates "sells" stock, he adds to the current float, and customers have to be found to buy his stock. This competes with everyone else that wants to sell thier stock and the natural marketplace. This is from the view of the marketplace, newly minted stock that now has to be dealt with. With the result that this new stock in a larger pool of stock being sold into a system that does not generate that many new buyers. Since Bill has been selling his stock, Microsoft is down ~75%. It has remained flat during the recovery. The shareholders have been screwed out of BILLIONS in equity.
    Shareholders would have been better off in general if the company would pay him the large salary he deserves, and more money was disbursed through dividends. Bill should be paid by the profits of the company, rather than out of the equity hide of the shareholders.
    It is really nice that he has been so generous with the Stockholders money.
    Other foundations have spent decades bleeding off stockholder value in such a way that the friction does NOT cause a downword valuation in the stock. Bill and Paul have been raping the marketplace, shareholders be damned.

  348. Mod parent as troll. by Newander · · Score: 1

    Seriously, what the hell is that doing on the front page.

    --

    Jesus saves and takes half damage.

    1. Re:Mod parent as troll. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Way to group-think dissenting opinion out of your encapsulated universe there slash-driod!

  349. Tell it to a kid by bonch · · Score: 1

    Go up to one of those kids he's vaccinating and tell them, "It's nice you're being vaccinated, but the money used to vaccinate you was leveraged from the pockets of consumers by the monopoly power of Windows market share. He's not a nice man." They'll just blink at you.

    1. Re:Tell it to a kid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting point.

      However, I think if you go up to one of those kids who is getting vaccinated and say "This is from Bill Gates" as you shove the needle in them...

    2. Re:Tell it to a kid by Famatra · · Score: 1

      "Go up to one of those kids he's vaccinating and tell them, "It's nice you're being vaccinated, but the money used to vaccinate you was leveraged from the pockets of consumers by the monopoly power of Windows market share. He's not a nice man." They'll just blink at you."

      Maybe my previous post was a little complicated so I'll make it simple for you: Without Bill being a monpolist 'stealing*' money from us, we would have had that money in our pockets and would have donated a portion of the billions stolen* so these children would still be getting their shots.

      The benefit would be we would not have a monopoly in software operating systems, we would not have to rely on the charity of billionaire monopolists either.

      -Complicated stuff-

      *Stealing as in a monopoly takes extra resources from society by reducing output produced thus raising the price. This action results in a perminant loss so society called dead weight loss (or 'the excess burden of monopoly').

  350. Can't be trusted by renderhead · · Score: 1

    No matter what lengths he goes through to prove that he only cares about vaccinating children, I'll never believe that Arvin Sloan --er-- Bill Gates has really changed his evil ways. Omnifam my ass!

    --
    I wish that my inferiority complex were as good as yours.

    -RenderHead

  351. Gates is not doing this to clear his "conscience" by Steeltoe · · Score: 1

    I remember reading some astronomy predictions on Gates, and the interpretation specifically mentioned that Gates would donate TONS of money for good causes. This was in the late ninties, and he wasn't really that famous for his donations then.

    This donation is just the beginning. Mark my words, when the world needs it, Gates/MS will donate incredible amounts of money in order to restore economic power. I'm pretty sure he will be prominent in getting other rich people along on it too.

    I believe Gates thinks he is entitled to all the business opportunities he can get, and frankly, it's only natural for bussiness to try to reach monopoly. So this is not to clear any "conscience".

    In the future, Bill Gates will actually become pretty popular because of his big heart (and wallet). Everyone's heart opens when trouble rams, just like the Tsunami.. The idea of having the super-rich will not seem so bad.

    It's just too bad people need crisis in order to start to care.. *sigh*

    If you are a cynical rationalist this will just seem like empty rambling. Just wait and see though. I'm pretty confident in this source.

  352. That makes me SO ANGRY! by argoff · · Score: 0, Troll

    ...You will see that Bill has given $27 Billion ...

    Imagine that a Linux type OS hit the mainstream 20 years earlier. The value to society would have made $27 billion seem like a drop in the bucket, but that didn't happen specifically because Bill Gates and friends chose to criminalize copying rather than embrace it.

    A free (as in "freedom") OS would not only have been worth hundreds of billions more to society, but empowered people in a way so that they could help themselves rather than begging to uncle Bill every time. Well, I'm sorry, but the plantation masters of the 1850's were noted for being chariatable too. Maybe it's because they, like Bill, know they are criminals and are just trying to justify it. Thanks, but no thanks. A free slave

  353. flamebait? by MrDiablerie · · Score: 1

    "Let's see if the Linux community can match his generosity" Was it really necessary to tag that on there?

  354. a quote by latroM · · Score: 1

    [WEB] Mark 12:41

    41 Jesus sat down opposite the treasury, and saw how the multitude cast money into the treasury. Many who were rich cast in much. 42 A poor widow came, and she cast in two small brass coins, which equal a quadrans coin. 43 He called his disciples to himself, and said to them, "Most assuredly I tell you, this poor widow gave more than all those who are giving into the treasury, 44 for they all gave out of their abundance, but she, out of her poverty, gave all that she had to live on."

  355. The Linux Community Already HAS matched Bill's.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    generousity through its technical contributions.

    And if you need a link from the Linux communities generousity to the underprivoledged in the world then here's one: Thanks to Linux and Open Source, many an impoverished community now has the opportunity to run computers on older hardware with free software. That, in turn often translates into job training and other opportunities.

  356. But is there a vaccine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    against Windows ?

    Bill Gates is a SCUMBAG. A clever PIG.

    If he wants to do some good to humanity,
    he can kill himself !

    I'm sure a lot of people would volunteer to
    help him.

  357. Revelation by jmrobinson · · Score: 1

    I believe The book of Revelation talks about the anti-christ vaccinating children and ending world hunger..soo.....if Bill gates is the anti-christ, would the mark of the beast be the windows insignia??!

  358. Underlying structures to capitalism by HalfOfOne · · Score: 1

    Your post has enough of Ayn Rand's tireless rhetoric to drown a small nation, but it lacks perspective and foresight. That you post it would indicate you agree with it, which is a slippery slope indeed. There is room for this sort of "as rich as I can possibly get" notion as long as there is an opposing force. Not the notion of morality, kindness, or connectedness to your fellow man, but an actual force like a law, tax, etc. I doubt very highly that a majority of the richest people still feel tugs of morality, but some of them still respond to laws. Those of whom haven't bought ways around them. That force can come in the form of a higher tax bracket for the rich, or some other means of a hard limit on personal wealth. I'm not sure who's objective enough to decide what that limit should be, but I would argue that it shouldn't be Rand. I have an image of her as a baby, and her first and only word she's screaming is "MINE....MINE....MINE" over and over again. Was that your first word too?

  359. Have you been charitable? by peterkmoch · · Score: 1

    So you're comparing yourself to the widow with the two copper coins? Have you "put in everything-all she had to live on"? Have you even given away the same percentage of your overall wealth as he has of his?

  360. You might want to reconsider your worldview by Steeltoe · · Score: 1

    A totally innocent child will only see the good attributes. It will simply not recognize evil.

    You are what you see.

    Always seeing the negativity, is really depressing and nothing good will come out of it. The more you hanker and focus on it, you just become more negative yourself.

    The media should really learn from this, because the constant onslaught of negative news, are really affecting us. (Try go a week without watching TV and reading the news, you'll be amazed. A month, you will balk.).

  361. Ad Hominem by eclectist · · Score: 1

    Most rants against Bill are just that, Ad Hominem arguments. I agree with the poster - it's M$ that's often the problem, not Bill Gates. In fact, I'm very impressed with the philanthropic activity of the Gates Foundation, especially regarding malaria. The OS sucks, but flames often disregard that it was in the early days that Bill was a mover/shaker in the company, and now there should be more Ballmer than Gates rants. As for the philanthropic activity of the Gates Foundation, I'm just happy he's not using his excess millions building a M$-themed amusement park.

  362. if generousity is a state of mind... by aeoo · · Score: 1

    Consider who is more generous? Someone whose mind is bent on acquisitiveness 99% of the time and on giving only 1% of the time, or someone whose mind is bent on giving 99% of the time and on acquisitiveness 1% of the time?

    Someone whose mind is bent on giving most of the time, is such one going to accumulate much wealth?

    Consider, who is cleaner? Someone who makes a big mess in his room throughout the year, and does a huge cleaning job on each New Year's Day, or someone who doesn't make any mess to begin with and thus has nothing to clean?

    Generosity should not be measured in dollars. Generosity should be measured in mind share and mind time.

  363. A measly $75 million a year... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    from the world's richest man? What a genorous benefacter.

  364. Re:The Linux community has ALREADY "matched this.. by spasmatik · · Score: 1

    How is this insightful? How does the linux community contribute anything? You, using free software doesn't add anything to my life or a poor hungry kid in Somalia. Get a grip. Maybe if you actually contributed to writing and maintaining linux and then bought computers installed linux and flew to Somalia and tought a little Somalian child how to hate Bill Gates, and talk in non-sense like you do, and and hack some C code in emacs to vaccinate her friends could you consider to be helping the world. Wow.

  365. The trick is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... a man who gives a pittance of the riches he has (Microsoft) is very different from those who give 100% of what they have (Linux developers). I'll be impressed when Microsoft gives every penny of what they have away to the needy without expecting anything in return.

    When you can afford to give, it isn't really giving.

  366. So Bill Gates is Robin Hood now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I take it the point to this trolling article is that we should forgive Microsoft's numerous illegal actions because Bill Gates gives a lot of money to charity?

    If I rob a bank and give all the money to a orphanage, do I still deserve to go to jail?

    What if I build 100 schools with the money?

    What if I pay for 1,000,000 vaccinations?

    Shold I go to jail?

    The submitter of this article says no.

  367. The Bible? by evilplushtoy · · Score: 1
    There's a parable in the Bible about Jesus and his Disciples watching a rich man drop a bag of gold into the collection box, followed by a poor woman who drops the only 2 copper coins she has. Which sacrifice was greater? In order to contribute to such a cause in the proportions that Bill Gates has, you're talking 1.5% of your current net worth. Given that I have negative worth, due to student loans that I haven't paid off, it's not a valid analysis for me, but 1.5% is hardly what I'd call groundbreaking, given that I tithe 5% at Church every week.

    Don't get me wrong, it's great that he gave the money, but let's not canonize the guy. He didn't have to give anything, so it's good that he forked it up, but it's hardly all that praiseworthy. At the level of wealth he has, that 1.5% means far less to him than 1.5% would mean to you or I.

  368. As much as I support open source...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Going along with that and the "linux helps developing nations develop" cries, by that logic we should also include and factor in the contributions of Windows based products, both legit and illegal copies.

    By having Windows, Word ,and Excel, they are able compete with and work with those companies in more developed countries. Plus they have the advantage of working with common software, and don't have the hassle of incompatibilities.

    1. Re:As much as I support open source...... by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 1
      Going along with that and the "linux helps developing nations develop" cries, by that logic we should also include and factor in the contributions of Windows based products, both legit and illegal copies.

      I'd actually only include the illicit copies. And that's incidentally always been my problem with the "But Linux is free (as in beer) which helps the poorer nations". Guess what, so is every other major software, as they simply don't pay for it. A copied version of Windows costs just as much as downloaded version of Linux, so no change there. Which is incidentally why I'm against copyright infringement. If only Bill would actually start to enforce the Windows copy right world wide. Alas he's much to clever to do that. Welcome to an economy with almost zero margin cost.

      By having Windows, Word ,and Excel, they are able compete with and work with those companies in more developed countries. Plus they have the advantage of working with common software, and don't have the hassle of incompatibilities.

      I'm not sure that's much of a factor in the situation we're discussing here, i.e. the rural (subsistance farming) areas where lack of vaccination is a problem. These people typically have very spotty electricity, if at all, so competing with anyone on anything remotely 'industrial' is in general not on. Having Word or not is not the problem.

      No, my argument is basically the broken window fallacy. The money you paid for software (some of which now pays for vaccinations) could have been paying for vaccinations directly and if you used Linux you'd still have the software as well, so arguably, more money could have paid for vaccinations. If the people actually in need of the vaccinations copies windows or Linux doesn't really factor much into it, as they don't have the money to pay for vaccinations in the first place. (Especially if they had to pay for Windows).

      It should of course be noted that this doesn't have anything to do with the generosity of Bill Gates or not. This is solely an argument as to whether the Free source movement actually contributes anything to the economy. So far we're clearly ahead.

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
  369. The U.S. Government by JakeD409 · · Score: 1

    To change the target of your criticisms for a second... did anyone notice that Bill Gates donated over twice as much to child vaccinations as the entire U.S. government did to tsunami relief?

  370. You have to dig pretty deep... by TANSTAAFL_Guy · · Score: 3, Insightful
    OK, so maybe this is a little redundant. But it seems that only a few slashdotters can tell the difference between Bill, Microsoft, and the Gates Foundation ...

    Bill is the wealthiest man in the world. But what many people forget is that Bill comes from money, OLD MONEY. His family are the kind of people who sit on boards of directors and have dinner with US Senators kind of money. The kind who drop out of Harvard and not some state school. And they are also the kind of people who don't just phone it in to Jerry Lewis every year or give to the office United Way campaign to get that warm-and-fuzzy feeling, but who create friggin' foundations. Bill provided some serious seed money to create the foundation's endowment, which was then invested and grown and is gradually being given away to worthy causes. Its not like Bill's personal signature is at the bottom of each check the Gates Foundation hands out (at least, I wouldn't think that he is that hands on).

    Yes, Microsoft is the evil empire blah blah blah ...

    And the Gates Foundation does good things in the world. Only a drooling idiot would argue that providing funding to fight AIDS or vaccinate children against common (and some not so common) diseases is somehow bad. Go take your dumb ass and your tinfoil hat and crawl back inside your parent's basement. If only more of the truly wealthy people in this country felt a similar responsibility to give something back to their communities, the nation, and the world instead of just buying another Ferrari or vacation home...maybe the world would be just a slightly better place...maybe.

  371. the P2P community!!! by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

    Obviously, the P2P community has been most generous. Who can even count the amount of free software, music, and movies that have been made available for FREE over the internet! It's simply remarkable! Hail the KaZaAs and the Gnutellas!

    --
    Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
  372. Mr. Gates and Your Children's Potential. by twitter · · Score: 0, Troll
    I would like him to pay for my Windows installation at work to be vaccinated from virus infections. ... Will someone please think of the children?

    Let's think directly of children and Microsoft. I'd like the same for every school that's had problems with M$ junk. How about Microsoft giving back every cent of profit it ever made selling that junk to schools to begin with? They might even give back the $250,000 settlements the BSA extorted from Philadelphia and Los Angleles school systems because a few teachers coppied M$ Word and other crap administrators demanded they have but refused to pay for.

    Can Free Software match Gates in generosity? No, it will do much more. It will end his company's parasitic load on schools, hospitals, churches and other worthy organizations. The sum of that donation makes $750,000,000 look very small.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  373. Similar to the "giving" in India? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is this effort similar to his "humanitarian" giving in India, where he simultaneously spent 3X what he donated to charity in an effort to keep Linux out of their schools?

    This is probably just his first tax shelter giveaway of the year. The money is peanuts to him, it could be argued that he didn't even *earn* this amount of money - it's just some accrued interest from his other money. Whereas F/OSS developers give time and effort (two things difficult to place a price tag on) selflessly, and from a "account" (their lives) that cannot be replenished with a little time and an interest schedule.

    Bill, give away half of what you have banked up to charities worldwide, unconditionally and no strings attached. You'll still have more money than you can spend in your lifetime, and I'll be convinced that your heart isn't a little, shriveled up crusty black piece of manjerky.

    While you're at it, throw in some open patents, too...

  374. A tsunami of magnaminity by ahdeoz · · Score: 1

    How about instead of "pledging" money -- how much of all the orgy of tsunami money pledged by magnaminious nations and wealthy individuals will actually be paid out, much less distrubuted to those in need by the greedy carrion NGOs and and charities -- we see how many kids we can actually get vaccinated, although that's hardly the most pressing need of kids without vaccines. Ignorant third world people have a kind of needle fetish, since a long time now, because injections have on occasion saved lives, so that often people want to feel a needleprick (and are often happily obliged by tourist medicos) as a symbol of good luck or even cosmopolitanism. I've heard of times when a doctor proscribes penecillan or some other ingested medicine, that the patient begs for a shot until the western relief worker gives him a saline ingection.

  375. Symbiant or Parasite? by twitter · · Score: 0, Troll
    "the linux community is providing free software for the people in deprived countries, I know which I prefer" yeah, and I'm sure they'll be gatefull for the free software when they have terminal illnesses.

    Bad IT policy hurts everyone including doctors and hospitals. In the Microsoft World, the one that all large publishers want to build, you will pay and pay again for the tools and information you need. In the free software world, you own your tools and information is freely shared. As an exercise in the difference in costs between the two models, compare $750,000,000 over ten years to amount of money wasted on M$ software by schools and hospitals in any given year. Also consider the detrimental effect 100 year long copyrights are having on the spread and publication of medical information by libraries and other institutions.

    The money Mr. Gates is giving today, he got yesterday by ill means. I'm glad he's giving some back, but I'd be more impressed if he would free his software and quit impeding the free flow of real information for hollywood pimps.

    some people really need to grow up.

    Indeed they do. Examine your priorties.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:Symbiant or Parasite? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -1 Troll m2'ed unfair.

  376. Re:Actually, "Robin Hood" is no compliment at all. by Dasein · · Score: 1

    There are plenty of reasons to dislike Ayn Rand but it's valuable to understand where she's coming from because, IMHO, she's right about many things.

    In this particular excerpt, she's arguing essentially, that taxing the rich to support the poor is immoral and the person who does is is scum.

    One of her core tenets is that "Man--every man--is an end in himself." People who abdicate that duty or entice other to abdicate that duty are immoral. Granted, I'm just some guy whose read a couple of books, but to me that means that giving a man a fish is immoral but teaching a man to fish is moral. In one instance you are saying, "It's okay to not learn to fish, I'll do it for you." in the other, you are saying "Here, take responsibility for your own fish." In the end the man that was taught to fish is not beholden (although maybe grateful) to the teacher. The man was given a fish is beholden to the giver (if he wants another fish).

    Now, think about the people who do this in the modern world. She's basically talking about politicians. These folks take money from the those that have it (and I don't mean just the rich but middle and lower classes as well) and set up social services, which although well intentioned, have the effect of making the poor dependent on the politician. Essentially the politicians, in most not all cases, just give the poor a fish.

    That sucks.

    So, I'm all over government-sponsored training and short term help to complete the training. I think we do far less than we should.

    However, the "give a man a fish" type of help should be limited to the period of time where you're also "teaching a man to fish".

    --
    You are not a beautiful or unique snowflake -- but you could be if you got off your ass.
  377. Re:Actually, "Robin Hood" is no compliment at all. by sweetleaf · · Score: 1

    Ayn Rand overlooks one critical item - most wealth is derived from natural resources. These resources belong, at a fundamental level, to everyone, and are not something that can be denied in perpetuity to future generations simply by the selfish claims of ones forefathers.

    Noone has an inherent exclusive right to natural resources, and these resources must return to the public over time.

    This return to the public is accomplished via taxes. Taxes are a rental fee charged to those who monopolize public resources - water, land, timber, and oil.

    The people who levy taxes are not thieves, they are simply returning public resources to the people.

  378. flamebait by shiftless · · Score: 1

    Who gives a fuck what they want? Seriously? If they can't figure out how to survive on their own without constantly being given billions of dollars in handouts, let 'em die.

    It's time people realized that each man on this planet is responsible for his own life, and it's not up to us to feed him, take care of him, and make sure he's tucked in at night. If someone wants to help people out, great, more power to em- but don't expect everyone else to do it, too.

  379. Bill's real accomplishments by prz · · Score: 1

    As much as I dislike Microsoft business practices and the Windows OS, I must say that Bill Gates is one of the leading philanthropists in the world, and I admire him for that. So many of the other rich software moguls use their money to buy another yacht or personal jet, but Bill chooses to change the world for the better, in ways that really matter. When he is on his death bed looking back on his life, his humanitarian work will give him much to be proud of. --Phil Zimmermann

    1. Re:Bill's real accomplishments by JustNiz · · Score: 1

      He's got so much money he can still have whatever he wants and still give 3/4 billion away. Its not like he's going to miss it.

  380. Lay Off by Pi-Zero+Meson · · Score: 1

    Bill Gates may or may not be the anti-Christ to you but lets get real he would be worth a lot more the 50 ish billion he has now if he hadn't given like 27 billion to charity in total more then a third of his wealth in total he has given to charity I strive to tithe 1/10th of my income and don't always get there (poor collage student) he has gotten over a 1/3 of his so lay off.

  381. Matching by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

    You mean we should donate 1.5% of our income to medical programs too?

    --
    I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
  382. Colombian druglords are loved. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    I am too late to this discussion, nevertheless I want to make a point that explains the ambivalent feelings I have about Bill Gate's generosity.

    Colombian druglords very often use their ill-gotten profits to benefit the communities where they live.

    They will finance schools, public works and even the local church (I have heard priests lavishing praise on these individuals).

    Bill Gates is not druglord by any means (although his company uses similar tactics to spread the use of his software) but I always find hard to accept the end justifies the means mantra.

    Maybe in the case of Mr. Gates it does, but frankly I wish that the person giving this money had an ethical bussiness profile more worthy of the charity causes he is sponsoring.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  383. I don't think it's that philanthropic... by christopherfinke · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...because he probably realized that dead children don't buy software.

  384. Re:real changes will be made by changing the socie by kinsoa · · Score: 1
    (Thank you for your remarq about my english level, I'm sure you speakgerman and french as good as me. Correct my errors if you want to be helpfull. And I don't see the link between my english level and the value of my args, but, ok.)

    capitalism, full-blown capitalism

    Remember that capitalism is exponential and need free territory to be conquered. Do you have an example of closed capitalism ? No, of course not, because it can't exist. Not all contries can have capitalism, or if they have, capitalism will die (which will happens soon).

    Sharing the world ressource is the only way.

  385. who gives money by vikny · · Score: 1

    just remember guys a person who gives the money usually doesn't have anything else to give.

  386. Wouldn't it be more efficient.... by torok · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't it be more efficient to buy a few patents from these drug companies and lower the cost of the drugs? How much would that cost - anybody know?

  387. Re:Actually, "Robin Hood" is no compliment at all. by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

    No, Ayn Rand's view - to make a long theory short - is that forcing a man to give his fish to another is immoral.

  388. Re:Different purposes: MS makes money, not softwar by nagora · · Score: 1
    He can do anything he wants (within the law, of course) with his money.

    I think you'll find that Bill's spent a good deal of energy on making sure the law ain't got nothing to do with what he does with his money or anything else. In a country where one dollar = one vote the only constraint on the rich is eachother.

    TWW

    --
    "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
  389. For God's sake... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm really sick of the people who are really sick of the people who are using this as an opportunity to bash Bill Gates. I've seen about 20 complaints about how Slashdot users are a bunch of jerks for doing so, but I haven't actually seen any that did do so. Maybe they all got modded down; can we please mod down the complaints, now?

    I think everybody acknowledges that this is a good thing. At the same time, ridiculing the Linux community for not doing the same is obviously ridiculous, and clearly a flamebait. It's more than possible that linux users around the world *have* provided that many millions, and more besides, to charity. They just didn't necessarily do it as a collective whole. That's quite aside from the free software provided, as many people point out (which is definitely comparable to direct donations--countries that can use free software to improve their lot will be able to fight diseases themselves, instead of relying on donations from foreign billionaires).

    If the Linux community could manage to donate $1 billion as a collective whole, I think it would be fair to expect the Microsoft community (which something like 50 times bigger) to donate $50 billion.

  390. charitable trust by Sgt_Jake · · Score: 1
    ...it's a charitable trust. All the money came from Bill.

    ... well, spank me and call me embarrassed, I did not know that. I am, officially, impressed. That's twice he's done that to me - the first was his commitment to help police fight child porn by donating both time and resources. ... I hate when I can't totally hate him.

  391. Drugs, IP and Bill Gates by Aron+S-T · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There are several points that need to be made here:

    1. The money Bill Gates is giving away are ill-gotten gains derived from monopolistic practices. if we had a government with balls, they would have confiscated most of Microsoft (and Bill Gates) money. Why should he have the right to decide how to spend stolen money? Maybe society as a whole has different priorities.

    2. Bill Gates recently called people who oppose his view of "intellectual property" communists! Well if it makes me a communist to believe that drugs should not be developed for corporate profit then so be it. [N.B. Please: before you start flaming me about how all "innovation" happens because of greed and how without copyright and patent monopilies life would be nasty, brutish and short, pick up a book on the history of science or the history of art or the history of music or the hostoty of philosophy or the history of any human artistic and/or intellectual endeavor].

    If Bill Gates would support the restraint of insanely restrictive copyright and patent laws, we could eradicate many diseases around the world without him having to give a $750 million donation. In terms of benefit to the world, it would be far preferable if he used his money and clout to fight ridiculous IP laws, than give this money away on vaccinations. Far more lives could and would be saved. But precisely because he uses his money and clout to oppose such modifications, he is partially responsible for many people dying, and his $750 million gift cannot compensate for that.

    3. The article is pure flame bait. But since it was posted as "news" it is our right and duty to respond to its huge BS factor.

  392. Simple tax write-off by lowlands · · Score: 1

    I would do that too if I had an army of financial advisors telling me that this neat trick is going to make him money instead of "costing". Good for the kids though. Do remember that last time BillyBob visited India he put way more money into getting Microsoft products into their education system than he donated to their aids research which is a major issue in the country. Shows you where his priorities are.... On the flip side, there is our community that makes a huge effort in creating something the entire world can benefit from. I don't think the community has anything to match dollarwise and can feel pretty good about themselves and what they have achieved. Now everybody back to work!

  393. Generosity by sacrilicious · · Score: 1
    Let's see if the Linux community can match [B ill Gates'] generosity.

    Ok. Let's see, he's giving 2% of his net worth to vaccinate kids, so to match that we'd need The Linux Community to donate 2% of THEIR, uh, revenues. What's $0 x 0.02?

    From another angle: he's keeping only the first $40 billion of his wealth for himself. So to match this, we'll need each member of the linux community to likewise keep only $40 billion per person, and then selflessly donate the rest. I know that only $40B per person can be a bitter pill to swallow, but when people like Bill lead the way then it's time to show that we really believe in the ideals we talk about. If you personally feel that you need more than forty thousand mansions, then we in the linux community do not want you here.

    --
    - First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
  394. Bill Gates is still very evil. uknowit. by Herr_Nightingale · · Score: 1

    I was nearly killed by a routine MMR vaccination, and I know others who have been damaged. Later, the thimerosol gave me ADD and mild autism.
    See here if you're a UK resident who's been injured by vaccines
    In British Columbia, parents of autistic children have launched a lawsuit against healthcare authorities for endangering and permanently damaging children. Vaccination causes autism, ADD, and other mental disorders.
    See here for interesting info if you're a vaccine victim from Canada
    Personally, I'd like to maim the moron who decided that mercury derivatives make great additions to the crap they shoot into kids nowadays.

    Info here
    Interesting Viera Scheibner's research here
    help for Isle of Man vaccine victims here
    You probably have friends who have been damaged by vaccines. Think about it.

    In conclusion, Bill Gates is still evil. Even Dr. Gardner agrees; ou have all been warned. Thank you.

  395. Can you say - accelerate charitable trust? by Axe · · Score: 1
    Is not all this charity thing just an old tool to escape capital gains tax?

    It works like this - you invest securities into charity. Charity pays you back an annuity, and the remnant goes for the charity cause (all used to be legal - probably some variation is still legal). Now you accelarate this annuity and get back up to 95% of you contribution in two years. So you just got 95% of you securities instead of 85% after Bush's capital gains tax.

    I have heard this strategy was designed personally for Gates, and widely copied, until it was shut down byt IRS. I bet they came up with some variation.

    --
    <^>_<(ô ô)>_<^>
  396. Doesn't Matter by Jiggily · · Score: 1

    All the terrorist still say that Americans are still a bunch of self centered money grubbing capitalists that need to die. Maybe next time they will fly a plane into Microsoft headquarters because Bill didn't donate money to there latest problem.

    --
    Do not meddle in the affairs of sysadmins, for the are subtle and quick to anger.
  397. Disgusted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Frankly, I am totally disgusted at whoever posted this news post.

    I am by no means a Microsoft Lover, or a Bill Gates fanboy, but when a man donates 3/4's of a billion dollars to a charitable cause, you won't find me trying to pick holes in his generosity or talk garbage about the man.

    But what really is pathetic, is tying in his donation with Microsoft and the Linux Community. Bill (and Melinda's) Charity Organisation is a totally independent organisation run entirely by Bill and Melinda, with no ties to MS and nothing to do with Open Source.

    I cant wait for the Open Source community to try and match 'Red Cross Donations'.

    Maybe it's time for a few Linux Zealots out there to mature?

  398. you assume too much Re:TORVALDS GAVE the world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You assume WAY too much. Are you a troll? Or just clueless? Or perhaps a clueless troll?

    > You know that without DOS there would have been
    > no Linux, right? Linus worked on a PC and DOS
    > was the only viable OS.
    >Without an existing OS and compiler you have a >very hard time developing anything, except you >like writing machine code.
    >And I just assume that Linus used an unlizensed >copy of MS-DOS, just like we all did back then
    > Also, I seriosly doubt that the compiler and
    > text editor used by him were legally purchased.

    Wrong on all counts...

    FYI: Linux was developed on MINIX (not on DOS) using gcc. (and gcc was developed as a part of GNU project in case you didnot know)

    http://www.li.org/linuxhistory.php

  399. Re:Actually, "Robin Hood" is no compliment at all. by WaterBreath · · Score: 1
    I do understand the reasons for the philosophy. Ideally, it promotes the most efficient evolution of human society. The only people who would survive to contribute to the gene pool are the people who are willing to help themselves. She doesn't rule out good-will offering, only forced collection of funds/goods that will be distributed as a temporary salve for poverty. But I question whether, in her system, there is really any encouragement for people to even give good-will offerings, because it does put them at an economic disadvantage.

    Her philosophy bothers me because it assigns a moral responsibility to people not to aid those whose situation is unfortunate due to their own actions (i.e. there is no mercy), but it does not assign a moral responsibility to people whose situations are comfortable, even if not due to their own actions, to help anyone at all, even if those in need cannot help themselves. In short, it's okay to be selfish if you're rich, but it's not okay to be merciful to people who are suffering due to laziness or bad choices.

    She effectively says that greed is okay, grace is nice but you'll suffer for it, and mercy is bad. That may help us advance in some areas, but it certainly doesn't promote the kind of qualities that I value in humanity.

    If that last paragraph doesn't make sense, then to clarify what I mean by grace and mercy: grace is giving someone something to benefit them, that they don't necessarily deserve; mercy is not giving punishment to someone who does deserve it. There's a significant difference. I understand discouraging mercy. I don't agree with it, but I understand it. What worries me more is that Rand's philosophy it allows, but does not encourage grace. Grace (IMO) is beneficial to humanity, but it costs the giver economically, and so it seems that without encouragement, it would be bred out of humanity eventually.

  400. But it's not the children... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...it's the computers that get viruses!!!

  401. Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While it's laudable that Gates is forking over a large chunk of cash for immunization - the article states that even more - about $8-$12 billion will be needed to "close the gap" for developing countries...

    One has to ask oneself - if these countries just clamped down on the birth rate instead, how much would be needed then?

    How much could be saved if the $750 million were turned into condoms which were then air dropped on the villages along with whatever language these people speak? Besides the cost of immunization, what about the costs incurred with all the infrastructure etc. that goes into supporting a kid...

    Moral issues aside: I'm leaning toward saying "fuck it - let darwin handle it" and let all the unimmunized kids die - however, then there's a whole other problem related to burials, and other diseases...

  402. Immunization issues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is much discussion in the medical community about the danger of world wide immunization programs.

    Many doctors, researchers have started talking about the long-term negative effects of many vaccination programs on large segments of the population.

  403. BIG Conspiracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can smell some big conspiracy here. He is saving all those childrens lives so that when they grow up, they can buy windows xpxxp 2050! what a scumbag!

  404. Large companies by JustNiz · · Score: 1

    (and therefore probably Gates too) regularly give money to charity for the tax benefits. Its a net win for them otherwise they wouldn't do it.

    I'd be more impressed if he actually did something solid towards the environment, like promoting hydrogen vehicles, or saving the rainforest, than just helping to grow more people which make the problem worse.

  405. Grey by cartpullerjcak · · Score: 1

    Let me preface this by saying that I'm an avid Linux user. I have three observations. 1) MS software, in general, really blows. 2) This software has been forced upon us mainly by means of anti-competitive motions by Microsoft, including the filching of other people's IP, which is rather interesting in the face of recent remarks made by Gates himself on the subject, regardless of the fact that he no longer really holds the reigns of the company itself. 3) The Gates Foundation has and continues to do some wonderful things worldwide. I feel that Gates probably has a Machiavellian outlook, which I do not personally espouse. Now, the way I see it, #3 does not excuse #'s 1 or 2, and neither do #'s 1 or 2 ameliorate #3. It can be said simply that while Bill Gates' practices in the corporate realm in the guise of Microsoft have been immoral and borderline abhorrent to American Capitalism, his Foundation, on the other hand, has done Wonderful Things. The world is not black-and-white, on the contrary, just about everything falls in between.

  406. Not ALWAYS a good thing to vaccinate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some vaccinations, such as recombinate Hepatitis B vaccine hurt children such that France stopped requiring children to have it. For other injuries, go to www.909shot.com to get another perspective.

  407. Drug "Vaccines" for Children Would Alter Brain by stock · · Score: 1
    "Brave New World: Drug "Vaccines" for Children Would Alter Brain Chemistry --Forever"

    " Children to get jabs against drug addiction

    Ministers consider vaccination scheme. Heroin, cocaine and nicotine targeted

    A radical scheme to vaccinate children against future drug addiction is being considered by ministers, The Independent on Sunday can reveal.

    Under the plans, doctors would immunise children at risk of becoming smokers or drug users with an injection. The scheme could operate in a similar way to the current nationwide measles, mumps and rubella vaccination programme.

    Childhood immunisation would provide adults with protection from the euphoria that is experienced by users, making drugs such as heroin and cocaine pointless to take. Such vaccinations are being developed by pharmaceutical companies and are due to hit the market within two years.

    The Department of Trade and Industry has set up a special project to investigate ways of using new scientific breakthroughs to combat drug and nicotine addiction.

    A national anti-drug immunisation scheme is one of the proposals being put forward by the Brain Science, Addiction and Drugs project, an expert committee of scientists appointed by the Government earlier this year.

    Professor David Nutt, a leading government drugs adviser who sits on the committee, told the IoS that anti-drug vaccines for children are likely to be among the panel's recommendations when it reports next March.

    Professor Nutt, head of psychopharmacology at the University of Bristol and a senior member of the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs, said: "People could be vaccinated against drugs at birth as you are against measles. You could say cocaine is more dangerous than measles, for example. It is important that there is a debate on this issue. This is a huge topic - addiction and smoking are major causes of premature death."

    According to the Government's own figures, the cost of drug addiction - through related crime and health problems - to the economy is £12bn a year. There is a strong incentive for the Government to find new ways to halt spiralling addiction. Last week, the IoS revealed that cocaine use had trebled in Britain with increasing numbers of users switching to highly addictive crack cocaine.

    Scientists are already conducting trials for drugs that can be used by doctors to vaccinate against cocaine, heroin and nicotine addiction.

    Xenova, the British biotechnology firm, has carried out trials on an anti-cocaine vaccine which showed that 58 per cent of patients remained cocaine-free after three months.

    Meanwhile, experts at the Scripps Research Institute in San Diego, California, have developed a super-virus, harmless to humans, which produces proteins that can block or reduce the effects of cocaine.

    The team at Scripps tested the virus on rats by injecting it into their noses twice a day for three days.

    On the fourth day, the rats were given a shot of cocaine. The researchers found that cocaine had more effect on the rats not injected with the virus than those that were. Scientists hope that the virus will help stop the cravings experienced by cocaine users for the drug by blocking the pleasure they normally associate with cocaine. This anti-drug medication is expected to be available to users within the next two years in the form of a nasal spray.

    Proposals to introduce a national anti-drug vaccination programme have been given a cautious welcome by MPs and experts.

    Ian Gibson, head of the Commons Science and Technology Committee, said the Government would have to carry out public consultation. "There is no reason to think this would not be a starter or beneficial," said Dr Gibson, Labour MP for Norwich North. "But ... proper consultation with the public needs to happen well in advance."

    David Hinchliffe, chairman of the Commons Health Committee a

  408. Wait, I'm missing something here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Given all the Gates-bashing here, I'd like to invite all who do it to explain to me why and how Bill Gates acts with malice, and what's the point if he doesn't.

  409. Vaccinations by Puppet+Master · · Score: 1

    Shouldn't he be trying to vaccinate Windows first?

    --
    The day Microsoft creates a product that doesn't suck, it will be known as the Microsoft Vaccuum Cleaner!
  410. You make me laugh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    You're not taking context into consideration. If Bill gave 98.5% of his total assets, he'd still be rich than most people could dream of. On the contrary, someone making 50k annually and has a family of 2 kids and his wife, 1.5% ($750) annually amounts to his kid's education fund or anything else his family needs.

    If a drug dealer gave 1.5% of his total assets to charity, would you think he's generous?

  411. Did it ever dawn on anyone?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ill gotten gains given to the poor.

    He still reamed on section of the population to give it to another.

    Linux will never make this kind of contribution.. becuase it would have to steal all the money first... then wring more out of a monopoly to do it.

    The windows/office users have already paid for this.

  412. Forget Net Worth! by tavilach · · Score: 1

    Everyone keeps arguing that $750 million for Ol' Bill is equivalent to, say, $90 for someone who makes $50k. That's true, but there are two things that everyone seems to be ignoring... First of all, while $90 for said person is the equivalent in terms of ratios and kindheartedness, $90 is not $750 million! I could buy 512 MB of quality RAM for $90, whereas I could buy an entire company (including the RAM division) for less than $750 million, or 375,000 powerful notebook computers. $90 would buy one person about twenty McDonald's meals, whereas $750 million would buy one million people about 150 McDonald's meals! Regardless of Bill's net worth, or his intentions, $750 million is a shitload of money, and it will accomplish a hell of a lot more than $90 ever could. Second, rich people usually like to horde money. Someone who makes 8 figures might only use up 6 figures, but that doesn't mean that they'll give the rest to charity. That's rarely the case. Ratios simply don't tell the whole story: $750 million might be nothing compared to his net worth, but it's still a lot of money, and there's no way that he views it like it's $90: He must be aware of the extra purchasing power he would have with it, regardless of whether or not he would employ that purchasing power. Wealth is usually about hording, and rich people love to feel like they have tons of money that they can spend, even though the chances of them actually spending it are slim to none. He could easily have horded such a huge sum of money, but instead, he gave it away, among many other donations. It may benefit him for tax reasons, but regardless, the fact that he's not hording it says a lot about him. He's no angel, but he's obviously not the devil, either. Anyway, I have one final point. Never criticize donations, regardless of what you might think of a person or his/her intentions, as you never want to take away a person's motivation for donating. Donating money is inherently good, regardless of whether or not the person benefits in the long run. Would you rather millions of children get vaccinated, and Bill benefit in the realm of taxes, or would you want to ignore the children so that Bill could suffer with his taxes? Think about it...

    --

    "Give me a lever long enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, and I shall move the world." -Archimedes
  413. rational dislike or Irrational Hatred? by N_Hill · · Score: 1

    Rational dislike becomes irrational hatred when you refuse to acknowledge anything good coming from your competition.

    Some of you crap on Gates' donation - calling it a PR stunt or what have you... Listen, Microsoft will sell products whether Gates donates or not. What I find incomprehensible is that you elevate your blind hatred of Microsoft/Gates above the lives of millions of children dying from preventable illnesses. Isn't humanity and life more important?

  414. Re:I'll see you that OS and raise yu one office su by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, and we all know the developing world honors IP and doesn't have access to bootlegs.

  415. Subject. by Dirtside · · Score: 1

    Bitching about what Microsoft does with their money is invalid as long as Microsoft earned it all fair and square.

    What's that, you say? Monopoly? Abuse of power? Violation of the Sherman Act? Conviction in federal court? So they didn't earn it all fair and square?

    Then let the bitching commence. I for one am simultaneously glad that such international charity efforts will be happening, and yet sad that Microsoft had to extort all that money in the first place. What if they had instead played fair to begin with, and left consumers (not to mention all the companies they crushed) with the choice about how to spend their own money? (No, Microsoft never held a gun to anyone's head and said "Buy Windows," but eliminating virtually all the competition is de facto the same.)

    --
    "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
  416. The Ends Justify The Means by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funny how you embrace moral relativism when it suits your ends. I suppose by that logic, if I steal money from you to vaccinate poor kids it's OK then, right?

    You say you're not a MS fanboy, but c'mon--anyone can see through it when you write crap like this all the time.

  417. ok by louden+obscure · · Score: 1

    i applaud his effort. he is very generous. no, i will not use his PC software products. my choice. damn, his choice to donate all that effin money seems to make my choice to appear puny. oh well. but then not paying for my OS and various and sundry software lets me bail out my kids more often from their occasional financial woes and still have a bleeding edge desktop on less than current hardware.

    --
    Serenity now, insanity later.
  418. Re:St. Bill? No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you even know the meaning of the word monopoly or are you simply repeating what you've had rammed down your willing throat many times over? You say Microsoft is a monopoly?

    Merriam-Webster defines monopoly as: 'ownership or control that permits domination of the means of production or the market in a business or occupation usually for controlling prices and that is achieved through an exlusive legal privilege (as a governmental grant, charter, patent, or copyright) or by control of the source of supply (as ownership of a mine) or by engrossing a particular article or commodity (as in cornering the market) or by combination or concert of action'

    1) Microsoft has no governmental monopoly leverage such as designated 'utilities' (telecom, cable, etc.)
    2) Can you possibly say he has cornered the OS market? Ha! Hardly, millions of people use Linux every day, millions more use Apple OS. PalmOS and SymbianOS also come to mind.

    What else is left to say? Microsoft is no more a monopoly as any other competitor in the OS market. Stop your whining use another OS if you care so much.

  419. Mods: The truth about bonch/rd_syringe/OverlyCrGuy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Moderators: Please note that "bonch" is a known fanatical psycophant whose obnoxious offtopic rants are legend here on Slashdot. It doesn't matter what the topic is, he'll find a way to scrape in some pointless Microsoft shilling. While nobody expects us to love Microsoft in any way, his particularly tepid style of calling anyone he replies to "troll" or "liar" because he happens to disagree with whatever they're saying is well documented and should not be rewarded. If anything, bonch is the type of person that should not be part of the open source/free software community. He is an anathema to all that is good about free software.

    I'm posting this so that you (the moderator) have some context to consider bonch and not mod him up whenever he posts his filler preformatted rants about installing Windows or whatever that unfortunately get him karma every single time and allow him to continue posting his trademark toxic crap (read on) day in and day out. You may consider this a troll - I consider it community service. And I ain't kidding.

    If you're a /. subscriber, I invite you to look through some of his posting history. I guarantee that you'll be hard pressed to find someone that is more "out there" than bonch. You'll also probably notice he's got quite an AC following. Don't just read his posts, make sure you go through the replies.

    For example, in this recent post bonch not only calls the OP a troll but attempts to "tell it like it is" while making some vague argument about "MS". Yes, if you're confused, you're not alone. The reply (modded +0) proceeds to simply destroy his bogus argument. You will notice he did not reply. This is what some people call "drive-by advocacy". A sort of I'll just leave you with my thoughts here and move on to the next flamebait kind of deal. In fact, he almost never replies because he knows that his fanatical arguments simply do not hold up to any sort of discussion. It's not that he's chosen the wrong cause - he's just going at it in a completely wrong way.

    More? Just read though this post and the subsequent replies. I guess this stands on its own.

    More? Bad spelling in astounding conspiracy theories, more offtopic FUD and uninformed "I'm right, look at me" rants, promptly proven wrong. Worse even, bonch wants to be Bill Gates, apparently (that first one is a winner). I mean, really. You think?

    FUD, FUD, FUD, FUD, offtopic FUD, and more FUD. This guy is like the Monty Python SPAM skit, but with FUD and more FUD instead of canned meat. Amazed yet? Don't forget that KDE and Gnome make you dumb, and it's all a Slashdot conspiracy. How low do you want to go? Maybe as low as this?

    The infamous Slashdot Front Page Troll? Nuclear fireballs? It goes on and on and on and on and on and on and on (troll?). Like the energizer bunny. Or take these two, which stretch the definition of weird.

    It's up to you. We can get rid of this guy and make Slashdot a better place. I don't know about you, but I'd rather take the trolls and crapflooders over people like "bonch" any day. And I sure as hell don't want to be categorized along with him. This is not how you advocate free software, period.

  420. Open Source vacinations by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 1

    The open source community could develop vacines far better than what Bill's donation will do.

    Of course no one will ever know if they have exactly the right version for them, and by the time they figure out how to use the proprietory syringe the disease will have killed them.

    --
    George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
  421. not fair... by Cryptnotic · · Score: 1

    Compare the Walton family (collectively worth more than Bill) and you'll find some real tight-fisted bastards

    Collectively they have a lot more fists than Bill though.

    --
    My other first post is car post.
  422. Easily done by leonbrooks · · Score: 2, Informative

    Read here. Or to put it another way... my goodness, you really looked hard, didn't you?

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Easily done by Bellyflop · · Score: 1

      What do those websites have ANYTHING to do with not paying your investors early on? You can make all sorts of allegations about accounting fraud - that's for the bean counters to figure out - but I'd be awfully suprised if any publicly traded company has included a clause providing a timeframe for ROI in their shareholder's certificates, much less Microsoft.

  423. More children would be vaccinated without Bill by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    Brasil was all fired up to send mucho generic AIDS vaccine to Africa, and one of Bill's pharma companies sued in international courts to stop them, and won. How's that for a punch in the throat?

    And guess how Bill's spending the 750M? I don't think very much of it will be on actual African or Asian medical staff to do the distribution and injecting, I think the majority of it will go to one of Bill's pharma companies to manufacture the stuff, so the countries and aid organisations involved still have to foot the bill for distributing and applying the stuff. Bill gets a tax-writeoff and another profit and leverages other people's charity efforts. But that could just be the cynic (and historian) in me.

    And... don't get me started on vaccines as a magic bullet.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:More children would be vaccinated without Bill by cluckshot · · Score: 1

      It is difficult to answer a whole bunch of posts accusing you of saying what you did not and implying what you did not but I shall try. The parent here of this gets the point well. He begins to see the donations for what they are, simply means to move control power and influence into Bills hands even further. I am not a "tin foil hat" guy. I don't see anything but what is going on and report it. I left the readers to go look for the facts themselves and I disdain in an opinion forum the continual demand for "Proof" from those who would reject any presented facts no matter what they were anyway. I figured knowlegable people could figure out what was going on and the parent to this post pointed this out in an area I didn't know about. I am absolutely sure that there are many other such examples because I know that these people think strategically and their motivations (Gates etc) are never altruistic. There isn't a mench in the bunch. They are merely pirates moving their operations into other areas.

      Those who do not know the history of these people that believe that Bill Gates is this self made guy who developed from innovation etc. It just isn't so. He arose from the premier banking and financial family of the Seattle Washington area. They arose a generation previously as they converted their Lumber Empire into Banking. (Those who know the "Robber Barons" of that era know just what this family is!) This is not the rags to riches story of the kid genius but a story of power and influence to the max for the heir of the local pseudo royalty. This is a family just like any line of monarchy.(See Thomas Paine in "Common Sense" for the details) They have only seen that they need to morph into another incarnation to adapt to the times and retain their power.

      The unique thing here is that it is starting to be known who they are and their "Devine Right" is wearing off.

      --
      Never Politically Correct ~ I prefer the facts If you don't like what I say, get a life, or comment yourself.
  424. Neat business plan by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    1. Give $750M to your own vaccine company
    2. UK Gummint gives another $750M to your vaccine company
    3. Mark up products by 300% on the way out the door, keep $1250M
    4. Have someone else pay for distribution and application
    5. Profit (by $500M or 66%)
    Nice quick turnaround, too.
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  425. The solution to poverty: kill the poor! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You almost said that the way to erradicate world poverty is by killing the poor. While it may be true, it is totally unnaceptable.

  426. Ok, by orasio · · Score: 1

    I don't know what country you are talking about (in the story they are talking about a lot of countries)
    but in my country it's not so. Many poor people don't get a complete education, because they need to go to work first.
    In many places in south America there are children who didn't have the chance to learn how to read.
    I am getting a degree on IT, but I know that there are lots of people in my country who don't have access to educations, and after that they dn't get any jobs. It's very little what they are doing to stay poor, the problem is that they don't have opportunity.
    In the US, while the situation is milder, the same thing happens. The rich get the best education, and the best jobs, just by being rich.
    You could get a nice education or a nice job, being middle class.
    If you are poor, you could get there, but it's a huge difference in opportunity.

  427. Re:The Linux community has ALREADY "matched this.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's pretty fucking stupid of you to suggest that open-source software will contribute more to a strong economic and political infrastructure in poverty-stricken African nations than vaccinations against community-devastating diseases.

    Jesus tapdancing Christ.

  428. The fraud has allowed them to bury income and... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    ...make paper expenses which as well as the obvious and prima function of effectively defrauding their own staff drags money out of areas which would open it up for candidacy as a dividend.

    IOW, regardless of any putative dividend law, the fraud has made their dividends artificially late.

    Thinking about it, dividends are a fairly esoteric concept anyway (although not as bad as futures and options), so maybe that's appropriate in its own odd way.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  429. Re:The fraud has allowed them to bury income and.. by Bellyflop · · Score: 1

    My comment was made with regards to this statement:
    Bill Gates is worth so much because he defrauded his stockholders in not paying proper returns on investment early on.

    Reading is fundamental. Try it sometime. The dividends are not artificially late. They were never promised. The early investors got proper returns on their investment via the 600 fold gain in the stock's price which was even more amplified by their pre-IPO strike price. Dividends payments were never registered with the SEC, so why would the investors expect that? I doubt that they are crying themselves to sleep in their golden sheets at night.

  430. Global Community Effort by rtb61 · · Score: 1
    Linux and it's contributers are giving something unique that has never been given before, a golobal community effort, where people from all countries have an oppurtunity to contribute to a resource that will benefit to the whole community.

    This has never before been achieved in human history and this is what Bill Gates via Micrsoft wants to destroy. And why do they want to destroy this unique in human history effort, for his own self graftication and a seemingly insatiable greed. People (micrsoft marketers) will say that Bill Gates is only one member of a board that runs Microsoft and that it is the corporations actions not his own. But there is never a escape from the fact that a corporations actions and behaviour reflect the physcology of it's board members running it (personally I believe that Bill Gates et. al. have a lot to be ashamed of and to make up for).

    If Bill Gates want's to be truly generous he just simply needs to cease attempting to destroy a golbal community effort and withdraw from the operating system market.

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  431. OK, how about... by DamienMcKenna · · Score: 1

    Really? So if ethylmercury is so safe then why did the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the U.S. Public Health Service (PHS) release a jointed statement concerning questions over the safety of it in children?
    http://www.cdc.gov/nip/vacsafe/concerns/thimerosal /thimerosal-AAP&PHS.htm

    Here are some interesting tidbits:

    * Vaccines are injected straight into the bloodstream, bypassing much of the body's natural defenses in the digestive, respiratory and skin systems.

    * Polio is cited as an example of the success of vaccines, yet.. "In June of 1959...all non-paralytic cases of poliomyelitis were to be henceforth recorded as 'meningitis, viral or aseptic,' a disease which itself only became reportable in 1952 (Canada)." - Catherine Diodati MA (Immunization History, Ethics, Law and Health p116)

    * Beddow Bayly, author of the book "The Case Against Vaccination" said: "After vaccination was introduced, cases of aseptic meningitis were more often reported as a separate disease from polio, but such cases were counted as polio before the vaccine was introduced. The Ministry of Health admitted that the vaccine status of the individual is a guiding factor in diagnosis. If a person who is vaccinated contracts the disease, the disease is simply recorded under a different name."

    * Formaldehyde is classified as a carcenogen by the FDA (http://cis.nci.nih.gov/fact/3_8.htm) so why do you want to inject it straight into my baby's bloodstream?

    * My baby's doctor once told us that one injection gave about the same amount of mercury as you would have eating fish once per week for a year. Lets do the math. My baby is about 1/8th my weight, so the dose-per-weight increases eight-fold, and is supposed to receive a large number of thesebefore he's two years old. Then there's also the fact that again it goes straight into the bloodstream rather than the digestive system, therefore it would have a stronger effect on my baby's body.

    * Economics... if vaccines were so good for us, then why aren't they free for everyone? Why are these pharmacutical companies making fortunes selling them? How many schools do you that are making money hand-over-fist, yet those are also for the public good?

    * The disease life cycle is changing. Before vaccines you got certain diseases as a child (when your body was able for them) and built up life-long resistances to them; this resistance was then passed on to children via the mother's milk for the first few years until the child's own body was able to fight disease sufficiently, and onwards, continuing the cycle. Compare that today when children are given vaccinations against normal childhood diseases, the vaccine wears off by the time they reach adulthood, they come in contact with the disease (often from someone who was just given the vaccine) and contract it, developing more serious symptoms than if it had been contracted as a child. As a result of this many "booster" vaccines are promoted to help you through adulthood. I think breastmilk is a better way to go with it, actually.

    * The whole US medical establishment blows off the side effects of vaccines. My niece developed what the CDC labelled as serious side effects from one vaccine - labored breathing, diziness, etc, etc. When the parents brought this to the attention of their doctor it was blown off saying "ah sure she's fine now" and "well that kind of thing can happen". I'm sorry, if you develop what the CDC says are "serious side effects" then there's something wrong. Another niece developed seisures twice, both within a few days of receiving vaccinations, but again this was blamed on something else, in this case an ear infection (?!?).

    Damien

  432. Those who refuse to learn from history... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    ...are doomed to repeat it.
    (See Thomas Paine in "Common Sense" for the details)
    Thanks for pointing this out. If not even Americans will read this, what hope has the rest of the world to know Trey's background?

    Of course, if the robber barons were more than a little embarrassed at their history, they'd see to it that the next generation never even got to see it. And just how many modern schoolchildren know that Paine's book even exists?

    Look into the origin and purpose of schools as we know them, and viola, the reason becomes obvious.
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  433. nT by anonymous3050 · · Score: 1

    nT