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Gates tried to Blackmail Danish Government

mocm writes "The Inquirer has a story about how Bill Gates tried to pressure the Danish prime minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen into accepting the European Union's proposed directive on software patents by threating to terminate the 800 jobs at Navision, which had been acquired by Microsoft." Update: 02/16 00:41 GMT by T : cfelde points out a CNET story which says that "The European vice president of Microsoft Business Solutions, Klaus Holse Andersen, denied on Tuesday that the jobs at Navision were ever at risk." Believe who you'd like.

774 comments

  1. Not blackmail by loudmax · · Score: 3, Informative

    That would be extortion, not blackmail.

    --
    KTHXBYE
    1. Re:Not blackmail by Eatmorecake · · Score: 1

      If they told us what he was blackmailing them for, it wouldn't be blackmail anymore.

      Duh.

      --
      Don't you mean.. BIZZARO! ..Signature?
    2. Re:Not blackmail by aendeuryu · · Score: 3, Funny

      From m-w.com: Main Entry: blackmail ... 2 a : extortion or coercion by threats ...

      Po-tay-to, po-tah-to.

    3. Re:Not blackmail by IO+ERROR · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Either way, it shows just how low Microsoft can go.

      What's next, Mafia-style "hits" on politicians who don't do what Microsoft wants?

      --
      How am I supposed to fit a pithy, relevant quote into 120 characters?
    4. Re:Not blackmail by Hope+Thelps · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Whatever it is, it's ludicrously transparent. According to the FFII's translation of the original Danish story, included in their statement on this, Bill said:

      "If I'm to keep my development center in Denmark, then it's a
      requirement that the question of rights becomes resolved. Otherwise, I
      will move it to the USA where I can protect my rights"


      In fact, the location that development takes place has nothing to do with patent validity. Software developed in Denmark can be patented in the USA regardless of Danish or EU laws. Software developed in the USA cannot be patented in countries that don't recognise software patents, ragardless of US laws.

      There's no way that Billis misinformed enough to think otherwise. If he showed occasional signs of honesty or integrity then he might get more respect.

      --
      To summarise the summary of the summary: people are a problem. ~ h2g2
    5. Re:Not blackmail by danheskett · · Score: 1

      Political pressure and violence are the not same thing.

      Really, it's a whole different category of activity, and it shouldn't be joked about.

    6. Re:Not blackmail by phasm42 · · Score: 3, Informative

      You left out the rest of the sentence: [blockquote]2 a : extortion or coercion by threats especially of public exposure or criminal prosecution b : the payment that is extorted[/blockquote] Blackmail is a particular kind of extortion.

      --
      "No one likes working in a hamster wheel, and your shop smells of cedar shavings from here." - TaleSpinner
    7. Re:Not blackmail by the_womble · · Score: 5, Insightful
      In fact, the location that development takes place has nothing to do with patent validity. Software developed in Denmark can be patented in the USA regardless of Danish or EU laws

      Confusing governments over that is a major part of the pro strong patent and copyright crowds argument. Without it the whole "without the aptent laws people ahve no incentive" argument falls apart.

    8. Re:Not blackmail by phasm42 · · Score: 1

      Damn it, been posting on too many of those php boards that use square brackets instead of angle brackets...

      --
      "No one likes working in a hamster wheel, and your shop smells of cedar shavings from here." - TaleSpinner
    9. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It still has a technical document translation layer. Now I'm sure most Dutch speak english quite well, in addition to other languages. But I'm betting that's not the language they do business in. And when a patent is submitted to the USPTO having in english is a good idea. Even then, you still have the issue of many of the people doing the technical work at odds with the companies policies (protecting intellectual property that isn't property in the country they live in). Sure, there's the obvious truths. But there are other less obvious variables to consider.

    10. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Political pressure and violence are the not same thing.

      Actually, there is no fundamental difference. Even the presumption that the result of the political process is the will of the majority in a democracy is flawed. Because the benefits are heavily concentrated, pressure groups, whether they are businesses, unions or political activists, have a strong incentive to lobby for the results they want. The costs are dispersed widely, so the opposition can't easily rally. Politics is precisely about putting a good face on the use of power to benefit particular groups. In the end, the groups that get the benefits are the ones willing and able to deliver money or votes to the politicians.

    11. Re:Not blackmail by hedgehogbrains · · Score: 1

      One is direct coercion, the other is coercion via government. I think it is hilarious.

    12. Re:Not blackmail by Pieroxy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If at least you would have read the article, you would have seen that Microsoft is not the only one company in the entire universe to do this. So no, is does not show how low Microsoft can go, it just shows how low any company can go.

      Stop putting all evil on Bill's shoulders.

    13. Re:Not blackmail by spottedkangaroo · · Score: 3, Funny

      Po-tay-to, po-tah-to.

      Mash 'em, boil 'em, stick 'em in a stew?

      --
      Imagine if you weren't allowed to use roads because a bus company complained about your driving 3 times. --skunkpussy
    14. Re:Not blackmail by Per+Abrahamsen · · Score: 1

      Very few are speaking Dutch in Denmark. For an international IT company like Navision, it is more likely than not that the written language is English, and perhaps also the spoken language.

    15. Re:Not blackmail by aendeuryu · · Score: 5, Funny

      Mash 'em, boil 'em, stick 'em in a stew?
      But stay away from Russia, where the taters eat you...

      This post is likely going to get modded Offtopic. I blame you.

    16. Re:Not blackmail by danheskett · · Score: 1

      Actually, there is no fundamental difference.
      Ahh, no. Mafia Violence = people being killed, or physically hurt by big men with weapons. Political pressure = persuassion, corruption and/or undue influence.

      This has nothing to do with the abstract. Political pressure is not in any equivalent to physical violence. Period.

    17. Re:Not blackmail by ghoti · · Score: 1

      I don't get that. English is one of the official EU languages, so a patent filed with the EU patent office could be written in English, too. Besides, it would probably have to be massaged by patent lawyers for the different patent offices anyway, since they probably have slightly different requirements.

      --
      EagerEyes.org: Visualization and Visual Communication
    18. Re:Not blackmail by DenDave · · Score: 5, Funny

      Blackmail: legitimate sales method, most effective in government Source: Microsoft Dictionary

      --
      -if at first you don't succeed, stay the heck away from paragliding.
    19. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "without the aptent laws people ahve no incentive" isn't very strong an argument to begin with.

    20. Re:Not blackmail by Taladar · · Score: 2, Funny

      Especially since Dutch is the language spoken in the Netherlands, not the one spoken in Denmark (that one is danish).

    21. Re:Not blackmail by Phleg · · Score: 0

      If only I had mod points =(

      --
      No comment.
    22. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Political pressure is not in any equivalent to physical violence. Period.

      The polite response is "true, perhaps, depending on the political scale involved; i.e. office politics vs. state politics vs. international politics, etc." The more honest answer is "you're a moron."

    23. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
      So no, is does not show how low Microsoft can go, it just shows how low any company can go.
      Dude, you need a primer in set theory. Hint: Microsoft is a company.
    24. Re:Not blackmail by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So you are saying that since some other companies may do this, too, that it's not low of Microsoft to do so? No matter how many companies may or may not do this, doesn't make it right and Microsoft should be slammed for attempting it (along with any other company). Since Bill Gates calls himself the Chief Architect at Microsoft, then any wrong-doings, evil or not, most definately are on his shoulders.

    25. Re:Not blackmail by anon*127.0.0.1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You mean Microsoft isn't the only company in the history of forever to use the threat or promise of jobs to try to get favorable decisions from governments?

      I'm shocked. Next you'll be telling me that companies decide where to build new factories based on what kind of tax breaks they can get.

      --
      I am NOT a man!
      I am a free number!
    26. Re:Not blackmail by Seumas · · Score: 0

      Sir, you are my favorite Slashdotter, even though you do have six digits in your UID. That is post of the year, right there. If not all-time.

    27. Re:Not blackmail by NoMercy · · Score: 1

      It really does irk me how many people confuse these things, extortion, blackmail and bribery.

      I'm not sure if this fits the definition of extortion, but it stinks, also stinks that the small software companies which will be hit by the law can't talk to the prime minster at all, even though they might suffer a lot more than 800 job losses.

    28. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [it] does not show how low Microsoft can go

      It does show how low Microsoft can go. Unless you are suggesting they can go lower.

    29. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So no, is does not show how low Microsoft can go, it just shows how low any company can go.

      Wtf? Is it Microsoft doing this or not? If I rob a bank, then that can't possibly tell anything about me, it just goes to show how low some people will go for money.

      Of course it says something about me! I robed a bank didn't I? I'm a bankrobber! Sheesh.

    30. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Stop putting all evil on Bill's shoulders.

      We did not. He did.

      And of course, the question is, just because others do it, is it legal ( let alone rightous or moral)?

    31. Re:Not blackmail by aendeuryu · · Score: 0

      Kamsa hapneeda. To be fair, though, I've perfected my karma hooring ways under another pseud.

    32. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I work for Ericsson, one of the large European companies that is also putting pressure on several governments so that they support software patents.

      Our director of Research and Development, Håkan Eriksson, has recently declared to the press that rejecting software patents would cost several hundred jobs in Europe.

      This has caused quite some concerns internally because some employees (especially the patent attorneys and their assistants) were worried about whether they would keep their jobs. But this was later clarified in some internal communications saying that the public statements were a way to put pressure on governments but no jobs were actually threatened in the foreseable future. So the internal and external communication can be quite different in this case.

    33. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now, now....

      We all know lawyers don't use the same dictionary as you and I.

      It depends on what the meaning of the word 'is' is.

    34. Re:Not blackmail by araemo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why should we not hold microsoft accounable for doing something 'evil' like this? I'd like to hold every company that does this accountable, but most of the time we don't actually hear about it.

    35. Re:Not blackmail by AviLazar · · Score: 1

      exactly. Extortion just uses ones power/influence to get what they want. Blackmail uses some kind of non-physical threat.

      So would this make lobbying groups extorting from politicians as they use their influence to get what they want?

      Without reading the article - did Billy actually blackmail the Danish gov't or did he just put the political pressure on them (sort of like environmentalist groups do, car manufacturers do, oil companies, etc.

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    36. Re:Not blackmail by arkanes · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Not at all true. In some places, and in some times, the Mafia (or other organized crime) have essentially been the government. The difference is mainly one of perception and comfort. There's an implict threat of violence in every governmental action - go ask an anarchist about this sort of thing, they'll blab your ear off. The threat of violence, implicit or explicit, is often used in political negotiations.

      They aren't the same, obviously. But it's a matter of degree and custom, not that they're totally different. Coercion is coercion is coercion.

    37. Re:Not blackmail by cosinezero · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      What, no "soviet"?

    38. Re:Not blackmail by Alarash · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Actually, the two 'official' languages in Europe are English and ... French (/proud ^^). French is the "diplomatic language" because it allows a lot of subtelties (sp). ie: 10 words can have the same meaning to different degrees, whereas in English one word can have 10 different meanings. That's a global statement of course, and I'm sure exceptions can be found, but it's true.

    39. Re:Not blackmail by The+Hobo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What you said is fine, but to be blunt excusing behaviour because others do it when it isn't right isn't right in the first place.

      --
      There is another kind of evil which we must fear most, and that is the indifference of good men. -- Boondock Saints
    40. Re:Not blackmail by djdavetrouble · · Score: 0

      This cements my idea that we need a bash.org for slashdot +5 funnies. So few things make me laugh out loud these days, but there is always a gem or 2 on slashdot that tickles my funnny bone.

      --
      music lover since 1969
    41. Re:Not blackmail by fymidos · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Al Capone was not the "only one person in the entire universe" to do criminal stuff. Actually in his days a *LOT* of people did it. This doesn't make it right and whoever pulls stuff like that deserves to be punished.

      >Stop putting all evil on Bill's shoulders.

      Oh, come on, he personally travels around, threatening people, and this should not be on his shoulders, because ... ?!?!?

      --
      Washington bullets will simply be known as the "Bulle
    42. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have another take on it. I haven't been a friend of Bill since 1993, however I have to side with him on this one. I call it business. The left often calls it a "boycott" and not extortion or blackmail. Maybe we aught to call Jesse Jackson an "extortionist" now? Clearly he is. He says give me money or I'll make trouble for your company or your club (i.e. Nascar for example).
      Continue to boycott the Dixie Chicks.

    43. Re:Not blackmail by coopseruantalon · · Score: 0

      The x makes it sound cool! /Bender

    44. Re:Not blackmail by surefooted1 · · Score: 1

      How is this any different than say...a sports team threatening to leave a city if they don't get a new stadium, a big plant threatening to close and go elsewhere if certain local laws aren't relaxed, or a million other scenarios?

      It's not. It just has Bill Gates in the topic and since the community here has a huge hate for the man, it's a huge story.

      I am not condoning what he did, just as I don't condone a sport team or business doing the same. But when it happens in your own backyard and you turn a blind eye, but look across the world...

      This is not meant to be a flame, just stating something on my mind.

    45. Re:Not blackmail by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

      I thought that was pretty much the whole point behind campaign contributions and lobbying - companies with deep pockets effectively controlling the government by threatening to withdraw support from selected politicians and/or threatening layoffs if their "needs" weren't met.

    46. Re:Not blackmail by mario64 · · Score: 1

      Have you seen Antitrust ? Much truth can be found in films.

    47. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

      > Stop putting all evil on Bill's shoulders.

      Exactly! It's Bush that is encouraging companies to be dishonest. Just look at all his has done for Enron and Worldcom. He's all but given their CEO's a room in the White House!

      Never forget the hatred Bush and the Bush crime family have for the common man. Maliciously putting 800 people out of work is bad, so Bush, of course, supports it. He's said many, many times how much he supports firing employees without giving them severance pay. The man is a nut. Help fight the corporate slant of /. by going to http://www.democraticunderground.com/ and opening your eyes. It's amazing how little the people here know about how Bush is trying to destroy this country and take the rest of the world with him.

    48. Re:Not blackmail by uradu · · Score: 1

      Au contraire, this article shows precisely how low MICROSOFT can go, not other companies. We'll deal with the others as they are found out, but the hand in this particular cookie jar is Microsoft's, so they'll get the spanking.

    49. Re:Not blackmail by jedidiah · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's not and any of those tactics are equally reprehensible.

      What made you think that any of us would consider any such other shenanigans acceptable either?

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    50. Re:Not blackmail by sepluv · · Score: 1
      I take your point, but this is very slightly different from the example you give as the laws in question have nothing to do with the jobs (or were those jobs are located).

      Microsoft can go on patenting their software produced in Denmark regardless of whether software patents are legal in Denmark.

      The only reason they want software patents in the EU is that it would help them in their criminal anti-trust activity in Europe.

      --
      Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
      [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]
    51. Re:Not blackmail by Zhe+Mappel · · Score: 4, Insightful
      If at least you would have read the article, you would have seen that Microsoft is not the only one company in the entire universe to do this. So no, is does not show how low Microsoft can go, it just shows how low any company can go.

      Your Honor, my client stands accused of cutting deals to harm his neighbor, bribing the investigating officer, strong-arming witnesses, and launching "initiatives" in which he vows to indulge in more of the same.

      Far from reflecting personally upon my client, these charges merely show how low any human being can go!

      Stop putting all evil on Bill's shoulders.

      Furthermore, my client is tired of these accusations, which have been repeated on a regular basis for over a decade. Hasn't my client suffered enough?

    52. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heh, in my current situation if I heard that my job was in question over politics like this (and I love my job)..I'd quit immediately, and I wouldn't work my two weeks.

    53. Re:Not blackmail by sepluv · · Score: 1

      Also see the entries for Internet Explorer and Web browser, and windowing system and windows from Microsoft Dictionary (as used by Lindows and DOJ respectively).

      --
      Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
      [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]
    54. Re:Not blackmail by rainman_bc · · Score: 1

      Exactly... Film industry here in BC threatened to leave unless they got tax breaks. That's blackmail too IMO. Business does this all the time. It's their right to withdraw operations if the environment doesn't suit them. Nothing to see here people. Let's not scream bloody murder over this because we're fanboys...

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    55. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then let's burn'em all.
      We'll start with hum... microsoft?
      mmkay

    56. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Danish != Dutch (and Dutch != Deutsch (German))

      Danish is spoken by Danes in Denmark
      Dutch is spoken by people from the Netherlands

    57. Re:Not blackmail by fitten · · Score: 1

      No... what is being said that if you make more noise about Microsoft doing this than any other company that does this exact thing, then you are a hypocrit.

      There's nothing wrong with calling a company out for doing stuff like this. There is something wrong when you act like Microsoft is the only one that has ever done such a thing.

    58. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What I want to know is why this internal communication was never made public (Thousands of employees and no one leaked it? Even you?), or if it was leaked, why was no one interested in the story?

      Come to that, why didn't anyone apply critical thinking in the first part. If we don't have Software Patents in Europe now, how the hell will anyone lose their job if we don't have Software Partents next week, or next year?

      The only answer to this question I can come up with is that journolists are by and large lazy bastards only in it for the money.

    59. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Håkan wants to see you in his office. That big vein in his neck was throbbing.

      Good luck, Sven...

    60. Re:Not blackmail by Freexe · · Score: 1

      [blockquote][p]text[/p][/blockquote] is how to do it!

      if you are going to use html at least use valid html! (note the [] should be )

      --
      "In a time of universal deceit - telling the truth is a revolutionary act." - George Orwell
    61. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Modest Mouse, is that you?

    62. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      English has a fantastically huge vocabulary; it's just butchered more often than not.

    63. Re:Not blackmail by Bob+Munck · · Score: 1
      In some places, and in some times, the Mafia (or other organized crime) have essentially been the government.
      I think it's pretty clear that that doesn't apply to our government.

      Because of the "organized" part.

    64. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Picture dozens of disappointed moderators looking at "Comment already at limit" notices...

    65. Re:Not blackmail by MMaestro · · Score: 1

      Two words : Tax breaks. See : GE, Ford, Dell, UBS, Exxon, basicly any corporation on the Fortune 500 list. If you read business magazines you hear about this ALL the time (Should X company move to Y location?) but its just so commonplace place its isn't even newsworthy in the mainstream media. For Microsoft to do this with a mere 800 employees against the Danish GOVERNMENT is a joke. Steel companies can cause the unemployment rate in small towns to skyrocket to 70+% just by closing their steel mills down and thats NOT because of blackmail.

    66. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, the article mentions Philips doing the same thing.

      However, given Microsoft's track record it is NOT out of the question that M$ told Philips to do what they did or "risk" loss of 'compatibility' with Windows. You know, tweaking a critical dll so that it won't work with Philips hardware, just the way M$ disabled OS/2's compatibility with Win3x

    67. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, do you justify criminal acts today because some have gotten away with criminal acts in the past?

      Let's just save lots of $$$ and disband law enforcement altogether. Would you want to live in that environment?

    68. Re:Not blackmail by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      The impact of 800 families losing their livelyhood is troubling; But I think the Nietherlands would survive it. Maybe those same 800 people could shed some light on how to use Linux from a Broken-Pane point of view?

    69. Re:Not blackmail by duffahtolla · · Score: 2, Insightful
      No... what is being said that if you make more noise about Microsoft doing this than any other company that does this exact thing, then you are a hypocrit.

      Whether we like it or not, Microsoft is a big part of everybodys life, especially slashdotters. When it does something nasty, or something nice, it will naturally be more in the lime light than say Buonjorno.

      This is not being hypocritical, it's being human.

      Hypocritical would be saying that its bad for Microsoft to do it, but not bad for Apple to do it. The amount of attention given doesn't matter.

    70. Re:Not blackmail by Dogtanian · · Score: 1

      Especially since Dutch is the language spoken in the Netherlands

      Strange...

      People from the Netherlands speak Dutch; but 'Dutch' has no obvious connection with either the English country name (The Netherlands or Holland; the latter is wrong, but still used), nor the Dutch country name.

      On the other hand, 'Dutch' sounds like 'Deutsch', but the language spoken in 'Deutschland' (Germany) is known to English speakers as German.

      Hmm....

      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    71. Re:Not blackmail by nutrock69 · · Score: 1

      If I had points, you'd be getting some Insightful from me on that one. It reminds me of a George Carlin ditty about the Reagan Administration...

      "They're against street crime, as long as that street isn't Wall Street. They want to eliminate street crime to make the streets safer for the business criminals.

      Paraphrasing, of course, from "What am I doing in New Jersey?" Disclaimer: I don't work for George Carlin, I'm just a satisfied customer. God, I would love to see some of his ideas to balance the budget implemented... :)

    72. Re:Not blackmail by hostyle · · Score: 1

      The mind boggles. And what language do they speak in the US? Iroquois? Cherokee? Oh wait, its English! How quaint.

      --
      Caesar si viveret, ad remum dareris.
    73. Re:Not blackmail by sig226 · · Score: 0

      Enron/Worldcom corruption started on Clinton's watch. Bush may not be a good president, but
      blaming him for everything is insane, including
      things that started before he was president, hell
      lets blame him WWII and WWI as well.
      Who is moding these posts anyway?

    74. Re:Not blackmail by rspress · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually since this is Microsofts SOP Bill is open to getting all the evil put on his head.

      If, as microsoft claims, their product is the best and most cost effective then why do they need to pressure politicians, smear the competition, etc.

      Standard Oil did exactly the same thing and they got a lot more bad press. Getty was cosidered truly evil was displayed that way in the press. Gates and Balmer are doing the same thing and are pretty much getting a free ride.

    75. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you make more noise about the grandparent post doing this than any other post on Slashdot that does this exact thing, then you are a hypocrit.

    76. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yep. And then they eat your liver.

    77. Re:Not blackmail by miu · · Score: 1

      The thing that is really offensive here is that the parent poster just made the day of a ton of people with an excellent joke and loses at least 3 karma on the deal. Yeah I know karma, shmarma and all that - but why can't slashdot do what seems like some fairly simple coding to make it so even if you don't gain karma from 'Funny', you can only lose karma if the post itself goes below the score you posted it at. While they were at it they might make it so 'Overrated' is only an option on posts that are above their initial score.

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
    78. Re:Not blackmail by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      If you make more noise about the grandparent post doing this than any other post on Slashdot that does this exact thing, then you are a hypocrit.

      I haven't seen any other post on Slashdot about another company doing this. The article in question was about Microsoft doing this, so the posts are in reply to Microsoft doing it. (I know, it also mentions Philips in the article).

      As I stated in my original post, on this subject, it's wrong for whomever to be doing it, whether they are Microsoft or not. But, the fact that others may be doing it does not diminish Microsoft's "lowliness" in anyway.

    79. Re:Not blackmail by superpulpsicle · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In godfather the movie series they specifically not use the word MAFIA.

      In M$ they specifically not use the word SATANIC.

    80. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I don't think the parent poster was joking.

      Illegal activities to coerce politicians to pass legislation for your corporation is dangerous (in all senses of the word) to society regardless of the means.

      If you're a large corporation battling unions or a company getting a monopoly on water in Bolivia so people can't afford clean water or a company like this article, who is trying to gain a stranglehold on the Danish Economy by threatening government officials, people get hurt.

    81. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Steel companies can cause the unemployment rate in small towns to skyrocket to 70+% just by closing their steel mills down and thats NOT because of blackmail.

      Well, often it _is_ because they successfully blackmailed a different politician to give them incentives to move operations elsewhere (korea, a different state, etc)

    82. Re:Not blackmail by gammelby · · Score: 1
      ...(that one is danish)
      Erhm, for some reason, I think Per would know this... ("http://www.dina.kvl.dk/~abraham/").

      Ulrik

    83. Re:Not blackmail by Dogtanian · · Score: 1

      But 'English' doesn't mean 'American'. English didn't originate in the US.

      OTOH, 'Dutch' means 'someone from the Netherlands' and 'the language spoken in the Netherlands'. In otherwords, it relates to something to do with the Netherlands.

      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    84. Re:Not blackmail by cfortin · · Score: 1

      Well, at least until he mentions the naked pictures ....

    85. Re:Not blackmail by drakethegreat · · Score: 1

      There is a huge difference between mafia hits and telling someone you are going to fire 800 people. I don't think trying to put Microsoft at a level of the mafia is reasonable and I think that just shows you are childish and a follower of the anti-microsoft crowd. Trying to say something you think is clever and will be accepted because people here aren't fans of Microsoft. Now I don't like Microsoft either but I don't go around making unreasonable claims about what they might or have done...

    86. Re:Not blackmail by Johnny+O · · Score: 1

      People ask why software version updates are slashdot news.

      I am wondering why this is news?!? M$ does this crap all the time from little deals that arent heard about to crap like this. So why is it on slashdot?

      I'd rather read about software updates ;-)

    87. Re:Not blackmail by malfunct · · Score: 1

      Seems like what he said was if you don't provide a patent situation that I want to deal with then I'm moving my company away. I think this is fine.

      In the end, if the patent laws do what the country thinks they will, then another company will thrive in the new environment and more than replace the 800 lost jobs.

      --

      "You can now flame me, I am full of love,"

    88. Re:Not blackmail by Hope+Thelps · · Score: 1

      Amazing! So they pretty much said "Yeah, we lie to people. We're lying to people about this. But don't worry, we wouldn't lie to YOU. You're special to us!"

      --
      To summarise the summary of the summary: people are a problem. ~ h2g2
    89. Re:Not blackmail by Hope+Thelps · · Score: 1

      Actually, the two 'official' languages in Europe are English and ... French (/proud ^^). French is the "diplomatic language"

      There are 20 official languages of the European Union.

      I don't believe that there is an official "diplomatic" language of the EU, but if you could provide cites to back that up then I would be interested in reading them.

      --
      To summarise the summary of the summary: people are a problem. ~ h2g2
    90. Re:Not blackmail by saleenS281 · · Score: 1

      So what if he can patent it in the US? Who says the point he's trying to make isn't "I won't support a country that won't support the patent laws that protect my business". I doubt he's just itching to run out there and help countries make money that he feels are hurting his company's bottom line. There's nothing wrong with that at all. It's sad that it would cost 800 innocent people there jobs, but then again, the government is just as much to blame as microsoft. It's no different than any other business division. If you want to attract certain types of business, you enact laws that cater to them so that you become more attractive to them.

    91. Re:Not blackmail by magarity · · Score: 1

      the location that development takes place has nothing to do with patent validity

      But location DOES have a lot of legal implications. Just look at the case of the Russian programmer arrested when visiting the USA for writing in Russia software legal in Russia.

    92. Re:Not blackmail by jkalsfdjsadfjsiifj · · Score: 2, Funny

      In danish 'is' means ice cream

    93. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Welcome to the world of moral relativity. One is blameless if others do the same thing and one is an angel if one is slightly less evil than others.

    94. Re:Not blackmail by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 1
      I don't think trying to put Microsoft at a level of the mafia is reasonable...

      You're so right. The Mafia is way behind MS these days.

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
    95. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      And while they're at it give -1 wrong. There are plenty of posts that (probably) aren't trolls or flamebait but should be modded away anyway.

    96. Re:Not blackmail by Flaming+Foobar · · Score: 1
      I am wondering why this is news?!? M$ does this crap all the time from little deals that arent heard about to crap like this. So why is it on slashdot?

      Yeah, they're just extorting a FRIGGIN' COUNTRY! Please tell me you tried to funny.... Pretty please?

      --
      while true;do echo -e -n "\033[s\n\033[u\134_\033[B";done
    97. Re:Not blackmail by AnalogDiehard · · Score: 1
      How about "Bribing a public official"?

      Bribes don't have to be monetary; they can be indirect threats to their job security. M$ threatened to yank those 800 jobs, which would directly affect the public official's popularity at the next election.

      --
      Eternity: will that be smoking, or non-smoking? I Corinthians 6:9-10
    98. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      < & > are your friends. And so is 'Plain Old Text.'

    99. Re:Not blackmail by calvus · · Score: 1
      So would this make lobbying groups extorting from politicians as they use their influence to get what they want?
      Not necessarily, for example: Extortion: Vote our way or we'll break your legs. Blackmail: Vote our way or we'll send the photos of you and your secretary in bed to the newspaper. Bribery: Vote our way and we'll contribute to your re-election fund. It's all in how you coerce the politician.
    100. Re:Not blackmail by AviLazar · · Score: 1

      So what is: "Vote our way, or we will take our business elsewhere"?

      I do this all the time. I go to the store, and negotiate...if I don't like the offer I leave... So Billy is negotiating with the gov't....if they don't like his offer, he leaves...

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    101. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      extortion or (coercion by threats especially of public exposure or criminal prosecution)

      "or" ( || ), binds very loosely compared to other operators (e.g. "by" ( / ) and "of" ( -> ) ).

    102. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Either way, it shows just how low Microsoft can go

      Anyone who, at this stage of the game, STILL needs to be shown what a gangster bill gates is and what a gangster organization bgInc. is, must be so deep in denial (and clearly bill gates so deep inside them), that this won't make a difference.

    103. Re:Not blackmail by mr+i+want+to+go+home · · Score: 1

      I'm actually wanting to start something like this. I've got a small collection stashed. If you want to add any to this collection, email me at : slashdot at alexmatovic.com

    104. Re:Not blackmail by Hasai · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Okay; let's extrapolate a bit some of the elements of your submission.

      First thing to be noted is the innate bigotry of your statement: Any company will stoop to blackmail. How is this different from other sweeping, absolutist statements that claim, for example, all politicians are corrupt, all police are sadistic brutes, or all (ethnic group) are (place favorite slur here)?

      Second, there is the implication that since 'any company' supposedly will blackmail, then it's somehow less despicable for Microsoft to do so. IMO, this reasoning is just as ridiculous as mine would be if I claimed that since Joseph Stalin butchered millions of his own countrymen with no consequences, it's therefore perfectly acceptable for me to take an automatic weapon over to the local mall and have a good-old time.

      Lastly, as to 'putting all evil on Bill's shoulders,' last I checked, Bill's hand is still one of those on Microsoft's tiller. Have you ever heard the phrase The Buck Stops Here? He has the power to govern Microsoft's behavior, and therefore has responsibility for it.

      'Nuff said.

      --

      Regards;

      Hasai

    105. Re:Not blackmail by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      Personally, I would be unhappy with any company that does this. That being said, the criticism angle is not what is particularly interesting to me.

      I understand that many European countries have the same issues with tech outsourcing we do here. My main interest is that this could really blow up in Bill's face-- even making this threat. BANG.... That is the sound of Denmark going to FOSS....

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    106. Re:Not blackmail by SdnSeraphim · · Score: 1

      I'd hate to say it but you could be close to the truth. Stranger things have happened in business. Murder has happened because of business. The more powerful a corporation becomes, the less "costly" unsociable ideas become. Walmart just closes a store because of fears of unions. A much smaller company would not likely be able to use such an audacious tactic. I believe that politics and business go hand in hand in how power can skew normally reasonable people to do bizarre and immoral things.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right on a subject on which the established authorities are wrong. - Voltaire
    107. Re:Not blackmail by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 1

      i would consider selling somebody elses product as your own without permission is worse than this (apple's gui code)

    108. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If I'm to keep my development center in Denmark, then it's a
      requirement that the question of rights becomes resolved. Otherwise, I
      will move it to the USA where I can protect my rights"


      ...and then to India where no one can protect my workers' rights!

    109. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does not matter: criminal.

    110. Re:Not blackmail by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      It's easily doable.

      They just apparently don't WANT to fix it.

    111. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if you'd used the "Preview" button, you'd have saved yourself the embarassment.

    112. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you, sir, are easily amused.

    113. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We all know lawyers don't use the same dictionary as you and I.

      "you and me".

    114. Re:Not blackmail by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      Are you fully aware that there are several hands in this cookie jar? As of today? And are you aware that I suggested you read TFA? Did you?

    115. Re:Not blackmail by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      How is this different from other sweeping, absolutist statements that claim, for example, all politicians are corrupt, all police are sadistic brutes, or all (ethnic group) are (place favorite slur here)?
      All "big corporations" have already been proven to do the exact same thing that microsoft is accused of today. Hence, it is different from all the other allegations because it is a fact.

      Second, there is the implication that since 'any company' supposedly will blackmail, then it's somehow less despicable for Microsoft to do so
      I am sorry if that is what came out of my post. Microsoft is doing very despicable things. What I am tired of is that people are saying: "See? M$ it teh evil. Bill MUST DIE!". That I am tired of, because anyone in his position (and able to get there) would do the same (again, this have been proven to be true, not just a blank statement)

      He has the power to govern Microsoft's behavior, and therefore has responsibility for it.
      One thing you seem to be missing here: Without his alledged despicable behavior, Microsoft would be nowhere near the position it's in today. So should Microsoft be thankfull for that or in shame? Maybe a bit of both.

    116. Re:Not blackmail by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      Well, the article talks about Philips and Microsoft, and yet everyone is shouting: "Look: M$ is the Evil in person!!!"

      How is that not hypocritical?

    117. Re:Not blackmail by Freexe · · Score: 1

      i did preview it! damn slashdot! < and >

      --
      "In a time of universal deceit - telling the truth is a revolutionary act." - George Orwell
    118. Re:Not blackmail by DenDave · · Score: 1

      I thought the article mentioned Denmark.. The Dutch government (cabinet /ministers) wanted the patents (eh.. Mr. EU Patent, Bolkestein is Dutch)it was the left wing opposition in parlement that actually said "whoa boy"... So maybe evil Bill did call the Dutch aswell... (or was it asswell? )

      --
      -if at first you don't succeed, stay the heck away from paragliding.
    119. Re:Not blackmail by bentcd · · Score: 1

      It would only have been hypocritical if someone said "look MS is evil but Philips are a bunch of swell guys".
      Nobody bothers to mention that Philips is the spawn of satan here because nobody around here cares about Philips one way or the other. Lots of people here care about MS, however.

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    120. Re:Not blackmail by bentcd · · Score: 1

      Well, it is, yes. In large parts of Europe, however, stuff like that still gets slammed down on when it leaks to the press.

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    121. Re:Not blackmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pretty hard to talk about anything with Nerds.
      They start nit-picking on insignificant matters.

      I myself am a software developer, and I must conclude, most of us are obsessive in our need to be precise/accurate.

      But let's try not to get side-tracked on details and stick to the essence.

  2. Yeah.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Billy's gonna close down Navision in Denmark and send the jobs to India, which also doesn't have software patents.

    1. Re:Yeah.... by northcat · · Score: 1

      Err, India has software patents, it was introduced recently.

  3. Here's another article... by MadMoses · · Score: 5, Informative

    ...from heise.de (in German).

    --

    Do not be alarmed. This is only a test.
    1. Re:Here's another article... by neferaza · · Score: 1

      Here is a good overview... http://wiki.ffii.org/SwpatcninoEn

    2. Re:Here's another article... by neferaza · · Score: 1

      A clickable link this time :) http://wiki.ffii.org/Navision050215En

    3. Re:Here's another article... by lisaparratt · · Score: 1

      An unidentified frequency has been existing in the system for some time...

  4. I don't know by Alien54 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    maybe they could try to arrest him on blackmail charges, or something

    How mafioso

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
    1. Re:I don't know by MadMoses · · Score: 2, Informative

      Not really. He didn't say something like "If you vote against software patents, we will terminate those jobs." He said something along the lines of we're extremely unhappy that there are no software patents in Europe. We can't "secure our rights" properly here, so we just might have to relocate that company to the USA.

      Political FUD.

      --

      Do not be alarmed. This is only a test.
    2. Re:I don't know by ergo98 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How mafioso

      Software patents are largely bullshit, however there is nothing nefarious about a business negotiating with government for an optimal business environment. If Bill Gates really thinks that software patents are necessary for a business unit to be viable in a political region, then he has every legitimate right to express that. The government has the right to tell him to go screw himself, and if he really thinks it's do or die then he can pull out.

      This sort of tactic is absolutely classic in many other business areas. Automakers these days only build plants where the government will concede to their demands, as well as often offering up hundreds of millions in incentives.

    3. Re:I don't know by swv3752 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Meaning, he was extorting but not in way that could lead to a potential criminal charge.

      --
      Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
    4. Re:I don't know by MadMoses · · Score: 1, Informative

      You got it.

      --

      Do not be alarmed. This is only a test.
    5. Re:I don't know by antiMStroll · · Score: 1

      A practice can be both common and nefarious.

    6. Re:I don't know by fymidos · · Score: 1

      Applying for patents in a region, has nothing to do with where the software house is physically located (or the nationality of the programmers). While his concern for software patents in europe is legitimate, his proposed "solution" to take away the jobs is irrelevant, and the whole thing is definetely an extortion which should be answered accordingly.

      --
      Washington bullets will simply be known as the "Bulle
    7. Re:I don't know by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      By that logic, people who show up talking how this is a nice shop, shame if it burned down or something, maybe you'd like to pay for fire insurance, are not committing extortion. They are.

      Gates isn't, because what he's threatening to do is legal, not because of how he made the threat.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    8. Re:I don't know by firewrought · · Score: 1
      there is nothing nefarious about a business negotiating with government for an optimal business environment.

      At some point it becomes cheating. Cheating by large, powerful entities is inherently nefarious.

      --
      -1, Too Many Layers Of Abstraction
  5. Hmmmm by Traegorn · · Score: 5, Funny

    Don't think of it as "Blackmail" so much as "Microsoft Job Incentives"

    1. Re:Hmmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      In retaliation the US Senate voted to rename danish pastries "Freedom Cakes."

  6. Microsoft has to pay people to use their software by Joelphil · · Score: 0, Insightful

    how pathetic, maybe Bill Gates should be known as the evil tyrant. Not a very nice guy. But then, we knew that.

  7. Herr Rasmussen... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    You veel accept ein pahtent deerektive, or your employeess.. vill be terminated!

    1. Re:Herr Rasmussen... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny, I never knew Bill Gates had a German accent...

    2. Re:Herr Rasmussen... by ghoti · · Score: 1

      Maybe he brought Arnold Schwarzenegger to add some weight to his proposal ;)

      --
      EagerEyes.org: Visualization and Visual Communication
    3. Re:Herr Rasmussen... by BaseLineNL · · Score: 1

      Actually, because they speak Danish instead of German, it would be more like this:

      Yuoo vill eccipt a petint durictife-a.
      Bork Bork Bork! oor yuoor empluyiis...vill be-a tirminetid!

    4. Re:Herr Rasmussen... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't that the Swedish chef?

    5. Re:Herr Rasmussen... by m50d · · Score: 1

      Danish sounds pretty like German, especially in the south part of the country.

      --
      I am trolling
    6. Re:Herr Rasmussen... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If that's meant to be read as "danish sounds pretty much like german", then I object:

      I happen to speak both languages fluently. Believe me; they are very different. I like both languages, but I stress their phonetically and syntactic difference.

    7. Re:Herr Rasmussen... by KozmoStevnNaut · · Score: 1

      Actually, the swedish chef is only swedish in the USA. Here in Denmark, he's norwegian. And in Germany, he's danish.

      He sounds roughly the same everywhere, though, which I think is a wonderful example of what our languages sound like to foreigners :)

      --
      Eat the rich.
    8. Re:Herr Rasmussen... by m50d · · Score: 1

      I only speak German. But I can usually get an idea of Danish that I hear. Not enough to have a conversation, but enough to know vaguely what they're talking about.

      --
      I am trolling
    9. Re:Herr Rasmussen... by GQuon · · Score: 1

      ...and in Norway, the Swedish chef Swedish.
      I assumed that he was Swedish only in Norway, but then I discovered that the in the rest of the world (read: the USA) he was Swedish too!

      --
      Irene KHAAAAAAN!
  8. You've got a lot of jobs there, Prime Minister by JPelorat · · Score: 5, Funny

    It'd be a shame if someone was to.. set fire to them.

    --
    Hokey statistics and ancient misconceptions are no match for a good thought in your head, kid!
    1. Re:You've got a lot of jobs there, Prime Minister by robvs68 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Prime Minister: Set fire to them?
      Balmer: Fires happen, Prime Minister.
      Gates: Things burn.
      Prime Minister: Look, what is all this about?
      Gates: My partner and I have got a little proposition for you, Prime Minister.
      ...

    2. Re:You've got a lot of jobs there, Prime Minister by MadMoses · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Set fire on them? I say, shoot back with: "We're really unhappy with Microsoft's plans to relocate Navision to the USA. We're also really unhappy about the cost and security holes of Windows. That's why we're thinking about switching all government offices to Linux."

      --

      Do not be alarmed. This is only a test.
    3. Re:You've got a lot of jobs there, Prime Minister by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Score -1, Missed Monty Python Reference

    4. Re:You've got a lot of jobs there, Prime Minister by MadMoses · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Hey, does that mean I'm not a geek?

      --

      Do not be alarmed. This is only a test.
    5. Re:You've got a lot of jobs there, Prime Minister by cablepokerface · · Score: 1

      It's an offer you can't refuse ...

    6. Re:You've got a lot of jobs there, Prime Minister by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Relocate to USA - this is not 1989. The job goes to India or China. Or am I missing something

  9. Blackmail? by toastyman · · Score: 2, Funny

    COWBOYNEAL: BLACKMAIL!
    Inigo Montoya: You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.

    1. Re:Blackmail? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very cool! Inigo always knows best...

    2. Re:Blackmail? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that is just Inconceivable!!!! :P

    3. Re:Blackmail? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The page you're linking to also says "exert pressure on someone through threats".

    4. Re:Blackmail? by kalidasa · · Score: 1

      I dunno, this comes close:

      Tribute formerly paid to freebooters along the Scottish border for protection from pillage.

      (Laugh.)

    5. Re:Blackmail? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      My job involves looking at naked chicks all day. Why doesn't yours?
      Because I'm not an emotionally retard 16 year old.

  10. SOP by fermion · · Score: 5, Informative

    this has become standard, at least in the US. Corporations play one state against the other to gain tax breaks, increase dole payments, and other entitlements. These welfare subsidies can net a several hundred dollars of government payments per anticipated position.

    --
    "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    1. Re:SOP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guess what? It's world wide, and it works in reverse too. The West in general is paying a premium to import corruption. Yay. Merciless imperialism looks better and better every year.

    2. Re:SOP by DenDave · · Score: 1

      Maybe so but in the EU this consitutes a crime and is punishable with serious jail time.

      --
      -if at first you don't succeed, stay the heck away from paragliding.
    3. Re:SOP by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      Maybe so but in the EU this consitutes a crime and is punishable with serious jail time.

      IANAL so, please cite law with appropriate section and paragraph numbers with accompanying link.

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    4. Re:SOP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We are not so right wing in Europe and so don't bend down to large companies like the USA does. So it is highly likely and can be presumed that there will be a law, that will be enforced, covering such crimes.

    5. Re:SOP by arivanov · · Score: 1

      Not quite so.

      EU consideres this illegal only if it is used as an advantage against a competitor. And even then it is not punishable by a jail term. You just have to replay the tax breaks with interest. If you are not using this as an advantage to get an edge on a competitor you can get plenty of government subsidies, tax breaks and development grants. All you have to do is to make sure that none of your competitors complain about it.

      For example most of the EU avionics industry is subsidised, but as there are no complains from within the EU nobody says a thing. As an example to the opposite RyanAir is now being meticulously gunned down to replay every single tax break it got from local councils for creating jobs by chosing obscure countryside airports, because the other airlines complained that it is unfair advantage.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    6. Re:SOP by Politburo · · Score: 1

      Yes and an even more dastardly example of this was right after 9/11, when Citibank (IIRC) threatened to move from NYC unless they were given massive tax breaks. I believe they then went on to get subsidy from the 9/11 redevelopment funds and breaks, as well.

      For all the bitching that GOPists do about welfare, you'd think they'd notice the biggest recepient: Business.

    7. Re:SOP by DenDave · · Score: 1

      Ok re-wording.. In the EU, the legal systems constituting the EU have laws that make threatening of politicians punishable and yes, usually with jail time.
      So, interpreting the offence as a direct threat to a politician,
      Also, blackmail is a threat and threatening people is a general offense, the sanction and treatement hereof, in small european countries with codified legal systems it will typically look like this:
      http://www.openbaarministerie.nl/beleid/beleidsreg el.php?vv=0&tid=3&rid=18
      IANAL either but that doesn't eman you don't know the law.. actually many legal systems assume you do:
      And this one I can link for you in the Netherlands and Belgium:
      http://www.e-regering.be/argumenten/argument3.htm
      http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wet

      --
      -if at first you don't succeed, stay the heck away from paragliding.
  11. Also covered by Groklaw by John_Sauter · · Score: 5, Informative

    Note that this story is also being covered by Groklaw, with some good commentary by Pamela Jones.
    John Sauter (J_Sauter@Empire.Net)

    1. Re:Also covered by Groklaw by DrWho520 · · Score: 1

      It quotes a report in Danish newspaper Børsen, which alleges that Gates told Ramissen and two other Danish ministers last November that 800 jobs at Navision would go unless the EU passed the directive.

      Have they quoted directly from the Danish source? I do not speak Danish or Donut, so I would have no idea if the original story was true, said what people are saying or just a hoax. I find it disturbing when The Inquirer quotes another website, the NOSOFTWARE patents (?) site which has quoted a Danish News paper, Børsen. It just seems like a very dumb thing to be caught doing, inethical and possibly illegal. Guess I will go check out the Grok' now.

      --
      The cancel button is your friend. Do not hesitate to use it.
    2. Re:Also covered by Groklaw by Zocalo · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Have they quoted directly from the Danish source?

      They have a rough translation from a Danish speaker so they should be pretty accurate. That's one of the things I really like about Groklaw, they *always* cite where translations have come from, and because of their global network of volunteers eventually get a proper translation from a native speaker. Their handling this kind of language translation issue is something that Groklaw excels at, and I wish more news sources would do the same.

      --
      UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
    3. Re:Also covered by Groklaw by LinuxTek · · Score: 3, Funny

      Thanks to Richard Stallman and his GNU Project, Linus Torvalds

      I knew that RMS always wanted to name Linux as GNU Linux, but now he claims to have created Linus Torvalds?

      --
      Signatures are supposed to be funny?
    4. Re:Also covered by Groklaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean... Stallman is Linus's father?

      NOOOOO..........

    5. Re:Also covered by Groklaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not that you're able to point out even one example of self-aggrandizing in that article, but hey, why should that stop you from your bias?

    6. Re:Also covered by Groklaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -- Thanks to Richard Stallman and his GNU Project, Linus Torvalds --
      Shouldn't that be GNU/Torvalds?

    7. Re:Also covered by Groklaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > They have a rough translation from a Danish speaker so they should be pretty accurate.

      They also publish the original Danish, so you can check the translations if you wish.

  12. Blackmail or Extortion by kenthorvath · · Score: 4, Informative
    Is there a difference between blackmail and extortion?

    According to dictionary.com, blackmail is defined as the extortion of money or something else of value from a person by the threat of exposing a criminal act or discreditable information.

    Whereas extortion is defined as the Illegal use of one's official position or powers to obtain property, funds, or patronage.

    Is it not extortion that has occured here?

    1. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by will_die · · Score: 4, Informative

      It is neither.
      It is definatly not blackmail, since there is no criminal act or discreditable information.
      It is not extortion because the act of close the office and firing the people would not be illegal. Also it was not made in private.
      It is definatly arm twisting or making a threating comment. Not sure how illegal that would be.

    2. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by Mazzula · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Seems like it is extortion, but only if it is illegal. Blackmail would have been the threat against Gates of revealing the extortion.

      This is extortion in much the same way that if you get a better deal at store A than at store B, or if the manager at store B is rude to you, you might choose to buy from store A and you might remind the manager of store B that you have this power. Certainly it is using the power as a customer of your right to say no, but this may not be illegal, and therefore may not be extortion.

      On the other hand, it may not have been a matter of retalliation at all. It may be that Microsoft was concerned that they would not own the intellectual property developed by Navision if those remained in Europe. There may be legitimate business reasons to develop intellectual property in those places where it is better protected.

    3. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A more useless pile of semantic fucktardery I have never witnessed. You have illuminated no part of this discussion, and we are all dumber for having heard what you have to say. I award you no points, and may god have mercy on your soul.

    4. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by Theolojin · · Score: 2, Funny

      It is neither.
      It is definatly not blackmail, since there is no criminal act or discreditable information.
      It is not extortion because the act of close the office and firing the people would not be illegal. Also it was not made in private.
      It is definatly arm twisting or making a threating comment. Not sure how illegal that would be.


      Um...this is Slashdot, you insensitive clod. We *need* to bash Bill Gates. Stop taking away our fun with real facts. Sheesh. Facts... Did I mention this is *Slashdot*?

      Actually, since you spelled it as "definatly", you seem well aware this is Slashdot...

      --
      Life is short; think quickly.
    5. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by kenthorvath · · Score: 1
      On the other hand, it may not have been a matter of retalliation at all. It may be that Microsoft was concerned that they would not own the intellectual property developed by Navision if those remained in Europe. There may be legitimate business reasons to develop intellectual property in those places where it is better protected.

      True enough. I would be quite surprised if someone as acquainted with the business world and its laws as Bill Gates would turn to such recklessly illegal tactics as extortion or blackmail. My first reactions was what blackmail? But giving the editor the benefit of the doubt, I assumed that what occured was actually extortion. I doubt even that much is likely. I hope someone mods you up.

    6. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by mr.newt · · Score: 1

      It's called "exercising a monopoly."

    7. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      We *need* to bash Bill Gates.
      Who's "bashing" Bill Gates? Whether or not this is illegal is irrelevent. The story is simply about how Gates is prepared to act in order to get his way. That's not a criticism, it's an observation.
    8. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by Theolojin · · Score: 1

      Who's "bashing" Bill Gates? Whether or not this is illegal is irrelevent. The story is simply about how Gates is prepared to act in order to get his way. That's not a criticism, it's an observation.

      Heh. Did you *read* my post? Allow me to quote myself (this should seem vaguely familiar...)

      "Um...this is Slashdot, you insensitive clod. We *need* to bash Bill Gates. Stop taking away our fun with real facts. Sheesh. Facts... Did I mention this is *Slashdot*?"

      --
      Life is short; think quickly.
    9. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by davecb · · Score: 1

      Don't care: it falls under the "Foreign Corrupt Practices Act: (as noted on Groklaw).

      --
      davecb@spamcop.net
    10. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by havoc- · · Score: 0
      One of my favourite Futurama quotes:
      Bender: "There's nothing wrong with murder. Just as long as you let Bender wet his beak."
      Leela: "You're blackmailing me?"
      Bender: "Blackmail is such an ugly word. I prefer extortion. The x makes it sound cool."
      From gotfuturama.com.
    11. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Extortion: to obtain from a person by force, intimidation, or undue or illegal power

      Sure looks like extortion to me.

    12. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 1

      I went running to dictionary.com, also, and if you read the third entry:

      n : extortion of money by threats to divulge discrediting information v 1: exert pressure on someone through threats [syn: blackjack, pressure] 2: obtain through threats

      Then blackmail works. It's not the common usage in the US, though, where we use the first definition. "Extortion" is a better term.

    13. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1
      Huh? How does that work? Isn't all blackmail "arm twisting" and "making threatening comments"?

      One definition I quite like is "Blackmail is the offer to refrain from engaging in an act that one has the right to perform." Walter Block & Christopher F. Kent. Blackmail, in MAGILL'S LEGAL GUIDE, 109 (1999). Fits the bill quite nicely here.

      Let's see. Gates is saying "Do what I say, or I'll make life painful for you" (by damaging the Danish economy). That sounds very much like "Do what I say, or I'll [release embarassing information|trash your stock|kidnap your kiddies]" or whatever Hollywood cliche-blackmail you want. It's all about making threats (in private, do you think it was Gates who leaked this information?) to get what you want.

    14. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by daVinci1980 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, honestly this isn't really that sleezy.

      Texas Instruments did the same thing to the state of Texas less then a year ago. Except that instead of threatening to close a plant, it "convinced" Texas to give it $135M to increase the budget of the University of Texas at Dallas significantly. UTD is getting a new research facility out of the deal.

      Actually one of the coolest uses of blackmail ever, IMHO. (And not just because UTD is my alma mater, either.)

      --
      I currently have no clever signature witicism to add here.
    15. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by Secrity · · Score: 1

      Whether it was legal or not would all depend upon Danish law which would be decided by Danish courts It doesn't really matter, Bill Gates is one of those people who would never be prosecuted for anything.

    16. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by fymidos · · Score: 1

      >There may be legitimate business reasons to develop
      >intellectual property in those places where it is
      >better protected

      No, there aren't.
      Many writers choose to work in a carribean island. This has absolutely no effect on the way their books are protected in US (by US law) or EU (by EU directives or national law).
      MS can write the software in a spaceship travelling to Jupiter, it has no effect in the way it is protected in any individual region with a code of law.

      --
      Washington bullets will simply be known as the "Bulle
    17. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      It is not extortion because the act of close the office and firing the people would not be illegal. Also it was not made in private

      Where did you get that idea? Extortion is extortion, whether public or private. And it is not the act of closing the company and firing the people that is illegal, but the coercive threat.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    18. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      I would be quite surprised if someone as acquainted with the business world and its laws as Bill Gates would turn to such recklessly illegal tactics as extortion or blackmail.

      You never saw the videos of Bill Gates testifying under oath, did you? Or see here.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    19. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by Mazzula · · Score: 2, Funny

      > No, there aren't.
      > Many writers choose to work in a carribean
      > island. This has absolutely no effect on the
      > way their books are protected in US (by US law)
      > or EU (by EU directives or national law).

      It is a reasonable point, but I am still not convinced.

      Although it may be legitimate for MS to use plant location as a prod on this issue even apart from whether the location of the developers makes a difference (as when someone might refuse to do business with a store whose management supports a cause they don't like), I'll stick to the issue of whether it does make a difference.

      Furthermore, I think that the ethics in this situation depend on MS's perception that they have a legitimate business reason to prefer to develop software where patent protection is available, it is legitimate to act in accord with one's beliefs about business success, even if those beliefs are wrong.

      So it isn't enough to say that it doesn't matter, or even to prove that it doesn't matter. What counts is whether MS believes that it doesn't matter.

      In any case, I think that your claim rests on a quirk of copyright law, which is that the entire matter being protected is publicly available and entails no base of knowledge or expertise that resides with the author alone, apart from the published material.

      But copyright law alone cannot be the issue, because the EU does (AFAIK) allow software to be copyrighted. So I think the issue is the underlying knowledge and expertise rather than some published expression. I think that the issue is that MS wants to create a barrier to competition by protecting a body of expertise that it has allocated resources towards developing or otherwise acquiring. The protection could include a combination of copyright, patent, trade secret, and contract protections.

      If MS spends $X to develop a body of expertise, that is then available to competitors at $0, then this clearly puts MS in a bad competitive position.

      The protection doesn't have to be perfect, but it is better if it is more expensive to overcome. One way for another company to obtain the expertise might be to hire the developers. This could be an illegal strategy in areas where intellectual property is protected, and would likely be more expensive for others if it involved expatriation of the developers.

      So I don't think that it is, in all cases, immaterial what the laws are where the software is developed.

      In other cases, a complex interplay of the various protections could be involved. I am wondering if it might be the case that a software patent could be necessary, but not sufficient, to develop a complete competing product.

      For example, a software patent could protect a way of delivering licensed media. The license to use the server software could include access to cryptographically secured and traceable keys, but could restrict trading those keys with areas that did not respect the patents. Media players worldwide might be able to play the media, but the content might, because of the restrictions on servers, have to originate in a nation that respected the patents. A knock-off system could exist in a country that did not respect the patents, but it wouldn't be able to deliver content worldwide, since it would exclude areas where the knock-off client software infringed the patents.

      The point here is that the different components of intellectual property protection might work together to make knowledge of the algorithm less useful in areas where the license to the other components was unobtainable, and yet the patent protection could make license protection workable in other areas.

    20. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by jc42 · · Score: 1

      Actually, there's a better term for Gates' threat, and it's a term that's very popular in the US these days. Think about it. He's threatening to take damaging action against Danish citizens in order to put pressure on the Danish government to do something that he wants.

      Attacking a country's citizens to put pressure on the government is pretty much the dictionary definition of "terrorism".

      He hasn't actually carried it out, so it's only threatened terrorism. But still, it could be fun if European politicians were to publicly point this out. That could make for an entertaining escalation of the rhetoric.

      In any case, I'd wonder about the claims that this is legal. Firing someone because of something their government did would likely to be actionable in a lot of jurisdictions. Collecting on the fines could be a bit tricky, though.

      Lessee; do I need a ;-)? Nah ...

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    21. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by fymidos · · Score: 1

      Let me just say that i find your language extremely professional for this forum, you might want to ease a little bit. I mean, even Martin Taylor was more relaxed ;)

      I stick with my opinion though. When MS applies for a patent in US, supposebly it has to (publicly) provide the patent office whith a description and a working example of the idea.
      It is essential to give the idea to the public if you want to be granted this type of monopoly.

      On the other hand, shutting down the department in denmark would actually force the developers to go work for someone else.

      So there you go. Information is freely available to the public and you lost your experts. How is moving the jobs to US helping then?

      If you want to "protect your investment" under US patent law only, you do business in US.
      The laws in denmark did not change after MS acquired navision...

      --
      Washington bullets will simply be known as the "Bulle
    22. Re:Blackmail or Extortion by will_die · · Score: 1

      reading the original article on this, they are quoting a microsoft employee on what was said, also there were multiple people in the room.
      To consider this blackmail then you would also have to consider that a your employer coming up to you and saying "Stop reading /. during work or you are fired." as blackmail. Both are legally performed action on all sides.

  13. The Danish article is very pro-patents :-( by EsbenMoseHansen · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Mainly it talks about how parts of the IT sector wants to block the contensted directive and how the proponents have been unable to get through due to effective lobbyism from the contensters.

    --
    Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful.
  14. We the people ... by ghoti · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We are going to get ruled more and more by corporations, rather than governments. Since Microsoft is making more than most American states, they also wield quite a bit of power. And since politicians can always be blackmailed with the prospect of lost jobs (Siemens did that in Germany, and lots of other comapnies too), I wonder how long until our right to vote is transferred to our employers ...

    --
    EagerEyes.org: Visualization and Visual Communication
    1. Re:We the people ... by JustDisGuy · · Score: 1
      We are going to get ruled more and more by corporations, rather than governments. Since Microsoft is making more than most American states, they also wield quite a bit of power. And since politicians can always be blackmailed with the prospect of lost jobs (Siemens did that in Germany, and lots of other comapnies too), I wonder how long until our right to vote is transferred to our employers ...
      ...Agreed. The only surprise here is that the Danish gov't didn't cave in...
      --
      "Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity." - Hanlon's Razor
    2. Re:We the people ... by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      We are going to get ruled more and more by corporations, rather than governments.

      You make it sound like this is inevitable. The inherent weakness of any corporation is the need for money & profit - it's we, the cattle-like consumers, that have the power to rally together and simply boycott the products from corporations that don't act in a fashion we deem acceptable.

      Unfortunately, those of us in the "Western World" tend to just sit here and consume whatever is dealt by them without reaction or complaint.

      I'm no Communist, I'm all for Capitalism provided that we use our spending power as consumers to only let those who trade fairly to receive our money.

      We've only ourselves to blame if corporations get too powerful, it's that straightforward.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    3. Re:We the people ... by ghoti · · Score: 4, Insightful

      True, but the question is: how much choice do we really have? There's basically a merger every day, corporations are buying up their competition, and there are quasi-monopolies in many areas. Microsoft is the prime example for this! A lot of things will need to happen for people to switch to alternative products - just look at what has already happened: spyware, viruses, crappy quality, etc. Have people switched? No. Not in significant numbers, anyway.

      In theory, we have the power - whether as consumers or as voters. But in reality, I think we don't really have much choice.

      I know I sound paranoid, but sometimes I just can't help it ...

      --
      EagerEyes.org: Visualization and Visual Communication
    4. Re:We the people ... by k98sven · · Score: 1

      We are going to get ruled more and more by corporations, rather than governments.

      Well.. not if you compare to good old days of the Hanseatic league. :-P

      And since politicians can always be blackmailed with the prospect of lost jobs (Siemens did that in Germany, and lots of other comapnies too),

      They can always try to blackmail them with the prospect of lost jobs. That doesn't mean that the politicians always give in. You don't think a politician who hears this every day won't get wise to the scheme?

      I think the FFII is correct in their statement, it's not a very good lobbying technique.

      But it does work sometimes, mostly in those cases where states can be played out against eachother.
      (Like how GM just played out Germany and Sweden, threatening to move their factories in one to the other. End result is no factory is currently going to be moving and both are getting some nice presents from the respective governments.)

    5. Re:We the people ... by garcia · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In theory, we have the power - whether as consumers or as voters. But in reality, I think we don't really have much choice.

      People don't care about choice... If they did we wouldn't stand for monopolies in telephone, radio, TV, computers, etc.

      People just want "life to be easy". If that means having one company make their descisions for them while they let the cable TV wash over them after work, so be it.

    6. Re:We the people ... by pandrijeczko · · Score: 2, Interesting
      True, but the question is: how much choice do we really have?

      Software is probably the exception to the rule where each and everyone of us does have the choice of OSS, created "for the people, by the people" - okay, maybe OSS isn't always suitable for a particular task but that's another argument...

      Take the food industry. I enjoy a hamburger occasionally but refuse to spend any money in McDonald's, KFC, Burger King, etc. because of what I know their combined power is doing to the agriculture industry world-wide. But this means I buy fresh meat in a local supermarket who, in turn, wield their own corporate power over the meat producing industry. The fact that there's competition in the different supermarket chains means price-cutting and probably the livestock farmers of the world suffering as a result.

      I guess if I was to completely avoid any hypocrisy, I would rear my own livestock and kill it myself for food...

      I think it's just about choosing the lesser of two evils - personally, I take the viewpoint that the more pervasive a corporation is with advertising in the media, the lest likely it is they manufacture a good product (because a good product would sell itself by word of mouth only).

      Consequently, the more I see something advertised, the more I try to avoid buying it...

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    7. Re:We the people ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder how long until our right to vote is transferred to our employers ...In light of the exit polls vs. the diebold sites in ohio, I would say that this is well underway.

    8. Re:We the people ... by saigon_from_europe · · Score: 1
      We are going to get ruled more and more by corporations, rather than governments. Since Microsoft is making more than most American states, they also wield quite a bit of power.
      Problem with large corporations is that their influence is not proportional to their product. The majority of new welth does not come from large corporations, but it comes from SME. Still, large corporations are much more influental in all goverment branches (Disney, as a good example) comparting to small companies. That way they are able to move the government in their favor.

      That is nothing new. Same process happened in USA, Europe and Japan before WWII. Result, counted in dosens of deaths, forced in important changes in all of these regions (USA, Europe, Japan). The main difference was then that main industry was steel-based - current EU was founded as a treaty to control stell and coal industry.

      Unfortunately, people do not want to learn from history. In last 12 years laws in USA are changed in order to favor big corporations. EU does not have enough democracy built in in its legistlative process, and software patents are case where it finally became obvious.

      Luckily for us, modern industry is "content based" so to say, and unlike with steel, war is not its best environment for success. People do not tend to go to cinemas during the war. Also, outsorcing work for Nike sportshoes to sweatshops in Philipines does not work well if your cargo ship is hit by submarine. So we may conclude, that we will maybe live in poverty, but at least we will not die in war!
      --
      No sig today.
    9. Re:We the people ... by rishistar · · Score: 1

      "Fascism should more properly be called Corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power." -- Benito Mussolini

      Seems a relevant quote.

      --
      Professor Karmadillo Songs of Science
    10. Re:We the people ... by The-Bus · · Score: 1

      "We" are not being ruled more by corporations. The employees are "ruled" by corporations, and in most economies, you've got a nice* at-will system. Microsoft terminated their own jobs**, not the Danish government's. If I was the Danish government, I would switch to Linux within the next 24 months so they've got less MS power hanging over their head.

      So what do you do as an employer? If I worked for a company so interested in their own profit that they would revoke any involvement with stakeholders (employees, government/community) I'd be concerned -- as it's a sign that they are less than ethical. At that point, each individual could leave. BUT -- most individuals put ethics below their own paychecks and that's why these companies can continue doing what they're doing.

      Remember, corporations are a distinct legal entity but in sociological terms they are an aggregate of people, that's all.

      If we're ruled by anything, it's money. It may not be the #1 ruler in your world, but it plays a big role. If it doesn't, send me $10,000. :)

      * Economically, it's nice, because it makes for more free market. In reality, most companies don't fire people for no reason, at least not individually. Most people too, leave two week's notice so they don't screw over their employer. It's not perfect, but it's better than unionized labor for most professions.

      ** By proxy.

      --

      Small potatoes make the steak look bigger.

    11. Re:We the people ... by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      "You make it sound like this is inevitable. The inherent weakness of any corporation is the need for money & profit - it's we, the cattle-like consumers, that have the power to rally together and simply boycott the products from corporations that don't act in a fashion we deem acceptable."

      And that's where the government comes in, the most successful corporations make sure they don't sell anything directly to the people but to the government on behalf of the people instead. It's just another layer of insulation between them and responsibility.

    12. Re:We the people ... by zotz · · Score: 1

      New law proposal to discuss:

      Only living people can own voting shares in corporations. Other corporations can only own non-voting shares.

      And now what happens?

      all the best,

      drew

      --
      FreeMusicPush If you want to see more Free Music made, listen to Free
    13. Re:We the people ... by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      And that's where the government comes in

      But who votes the government in?

      The problem is that "we the people" are fickle and vote for a political party based on our own greed (tax-cuts, etc) rather than on long-term policies that might limit corporate power.

      We're all still responsible for all this...

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    14. Re:We the people ... by CKW · · Score: 0, Troll

      > The fact that there's competition in the different
      > supermarket chains means price-cutting and
      > probably the livestock farmers of the world
      > suffering as a result.

      That's called competition, and yes it does involve a lot of hard work, worrying, risk, and hand wringing. That's the price we pay for having a more efficient system of production that doesn't result in us having 10 times as many chicken farmers as we actually need.

      Buuuutt, the general point about massive corporations throwing their weight around is well taken. Take a look at this - http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/mtibbets/20050214 #i_have_the_distinct_pleasure, notice items 1, 2 and 6. And what's this guy teaching? Corporate governance. Nice eh?

      I try not to worry too much, our federal governments do have the penultimate seat of power - and if push comes to shove we should be able to "set things straight".

    15. Re:We the people ... by theManInTheYellowHat · · Score: 1

      In theory, we have the power - whether as consumers or as voters. But in reality, I think we don't really have much choice.

      We only have power if we excersise it togather, in a unified voice. Then we have all the power in the world. What needs to happen is to get Joe & Josephine Sixpack to give a shit and get them to stop their consuming and voting with out thought.

    16. Re:We the people ... by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      a more efficient system of production that doesn't result in us having 10 times as many chicken farmers as we actually need.

      This seems like an oxymoron.

      If you have more people producing chickens than you actually need, the prices of chickens drop, the profits of each chicken producer fall and some of them go out of business or find more profitable things to do. Therefore production drops, prices go up until a balance is reached between price, production and public demand. Isn't this just self-balancing anyway?

      I do accept that government farm subsidies (to NOT produce as much as you are capable of) make no sense and throw the whole thing out of balance but otherwise supply & demand find their own equilibrium.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    17. Re:We the people ... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I guess if I was to completely avoid any hypocrisy, I would rear my own livestock and kill it myself for food...

      This reminds me of an idea I had for a restaurant, which I like to bring up when I'm around vegetarians and vegans. It's a chicken restaurant, serving many different chicken dishes. What's different is that there's live chickens in the back, and when you come in you get to pick your chicken, then they give you an axe and you have to chop its head off.

    18. Re:We the people ... by PantsWearer · · Score: 1
      And now what happens?

      The corps lobby congress with their nice, easily-organized, centralized money (as opposed to the public's horribly-organized, decentralized money) and get corporations declared "living people."

      Doesn't sound to difficult to me.

      --
      Be glad life is unfair, otherwise we'd deserve all this.
    19. Re:We the people ... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The choice is to pass laws that severely limit the rights of corporations, instead of granting them new abilities. This is particularly applicable to the current discussion, because software patents help corporations more than individuals, especially if their terms are very long. Arguably, copyright law has the same problem. You could probably fix a lot of what's wrong with our world by shortening (or eliminating, but that's another discussion and one I'm less sure about) the terms of copyrights and patents, especially software patents. I still believe that both are useful but I don't agree that they should be so bloody long.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    20. Re:We the people ... by silicon+not+in+the+v · · Score: 1
      I wonder how long until our right to vote is transferred to our employers ...
      For people who work under a strong union, it already has. My father-in-law worked at a steel mill that originally belonged to Ford Motor. The employees were all part of the UAW union(United Auto Workers). Whenever it was election time, they gave all the employees a list of the candidates they were supposed to vote for.
      --
      We may experience some slight turbulence and then...explode. -Capt. Mal Reynolds
    21. Re:We the people ... by CKW · · Score: 1

      Ummm, now that I re-read things, you're right.

      "The fact that there's competition in the different supermarket chains means price-cutting" - any price cutting that ocurrs is cutting the costs of the supermarkets and helping to eliminate extra supermarkets, and keeping the profit margins in their business low. It doesn't hurt chicken farmers at all! Chicken farmers are in their own little world of supply and demand.

      The right question is - how does a supermarket cutting it's own retail prices hurt farmers? They can't **force** the farmers to sell to them at a lower price.

      The fact that there is competition between supermarkets has no direct effect on the "suffering of farmers".

    22. Re:We the people ... by fhwghads · · Score: 1

      Well, I'm not a gun nut, but at the risk of sounding like one, I think our rights to vote will be transferred when they're yanked out of our cold, dead hands. Eventually public perception will catch up with Gates, and legal or not this kind of tactic will backfire on him miserably. And if he's not corrected in one fashion, or if he resists correction, a race to the bottom will ensue to see what the most violent way of taking care of the problem is.

      --
      Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition!
    23. Re:We the people ... by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

      You tell em Tyler Durdan.

    24. Re:We the people ... by zotz · · Score: 1

      "And now what happens?

      The corps lobby congress with their nice, easily-organized, centralized money (as opposed to the public's horribly-organized, decentralized money) and get corporations declared "living people."

      Doesn't sound to difficult to me."

      You are getting too far ahead. Would they want to? Would it actually have a negative impact on stockholders? On board members? On corporate officers? Would it have a positive impact for the public at large?

      Anyone have any thoughts?

      "Be glad life is unfair, otherwise we'd deserve all this."

      Do you wonder if we do deserve all this and life is unfair anyway?

      --
      FreeMusicPush If you want to see more Free Music made, listen to Free
  15. That does not make sense by Arioch+of+Chaos · · Score: 4, Insightful

    These threats are common. However, is there really any relevant connection between where R&D/software development takes place and where one can apply for patents? Of course not. Nothing is preventing Microsoft from applying for US patents for the things they "invent" in Denmark. The question of where they can get a patent is not intrinsically linked to where they do their development.

    --
    IAAAL - I am actually a lawyer ;-)
    1. Re:That does not make sense by JustDisGuy · · Score: 1
      These threats are common. However, is there really any relevant connection between where R&D/software development takes place and where one can apply for patents? Of course not. Nothing is preventing Microsoft from applying for US patents for the things they "invent" in Denmark. The question of where they can get a patent is not intrinsically linked to where they do their development

      This is not about innovation. This is about IP enforcement which is why M$ is all-aboard.
      --
      "Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity." - Hanlon's Razor
    2. Re:That does not make sense by ghoti · · Score: 1

      The point was not to be able to patent stuff done in Denmark, but to patent stuff in the EU (no matter where it was developed, since that doesn't play any role anyway). This would give them the chance to sue lots of companies in the EU, like the do in the US - thus strengthening their position their.

      --
      EagerEyes.org: Visualization and Visual Communication
    3. Re:That does not make sense by ghoti · · Score: 1

      That should read "their postion there", of course. *smacksself*

      --
      EagerEyes.org: Visualization and Visual Communication
    4. Re:That does not make sense by Arioch+of+Chaos · · Score: 1

      Exactly. The threat to "move jobs" has nothing to do with the patent system. It is made to make the politicians come to the "right" decision.

      --
      IAAAL - I am actually a lawyer ;-)
  16. Microsoft threatend the Danish Prime Minister by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When checking the Danish newspaper Børsen it also mention that Microsoft layers, Marianne Wier, was the one who they quoted and one would now wonder how long she will stay at Microsoft Denmark. So it turns out that this wasn't that great of deal for the Navision and Damgaard people after all according to this article.

  17. soon to be fixed by germ!nation · · Score: 1, Funny

    a Microsoft spokesperson later said that they would look at fixing extorsion and racketeering problems in Version 2 of their conversation.

  18. 800? by northcat · · Score: 1

    Support for software patents for just 800 people?

    1. Re:800? by Simon+Lyngshede · · Score: 1

      And one other company have already informed the government that they can't work with software patents, resulting in their 500 employees losing their jobs. That brings us to 300 jobs in exchange for accepting software patents.

    2. Re:800? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      we are only 5,000,000 people here in Denmark... if you didn't knew that...
      A company with 800 employees is not considered as small in our reality.

    3. Re:800? by geekster · · Score: 1

      But hey, we're a small country so every bit counts right ;)

      I am joking of course. I hate patents with at passion.

  19. The Golden Rule ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    He who has the gold, makes the rules.

  20. Danish Government has Tough Decision by bigtallmofo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Hmm... Let's weigh the options for the Danish government:

    1. Loss of approximately 800 jobs
    2. Implement stifling patent policies that will likely make Microsoft and other massive patent holders even more wealthy while crippling innovation within their country.

    I wonder which one they should pick?

    --
    I'm a big tall mofo.
    1. Re:Danish Government has Tough Decision by ghoti · · Score: 1

      I'm sure you're considering the voting power of those 800 people, plus their families and friends, plus all the people in the little town where this happens (businesses, restaurants, etc.) who are also affected. And then, Denmark is slightly smaller than the US, so a couple thousand votes are quite significant.

      --
      EagerEyes.org: Visualization and Visual Communication
    2. Re:Danish Government has Tough Decision by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If patent laws are passed and Microsoft makes it so that the only place to develop software in Denmark is for Microsoft, I'm not so sure those 800 jobs are all that important.

    3. Re:Danish Government has Tough Decision by wannabgeek · · Score: 0

      It _is_ a tough decision. Loss of 800 jobs is immediate, obvious and can lose them votes. I don't know anything about Denmark specifically, but I'm assuming it is a normal democracy. Where as the second choice is non-obvious, and may not win them much votes except for those of a few geeks!

      Lakshman.

      --
      I'm much more funny, interesting and insightful than the moderators think
    4. Re:Danish Government has Tough Decision by Dracolytch · · Score: 1

      At the same time, it's clear that in a move like this MS already has too much power, and bending to their will would give them more. Will the politicians look at the facts, and fight the good fight?

      If it were in the US, that'd be a no-brainer question, but in Denmark, there's hope. ;)

      ~D

      --
      This sig has been enciphered with a one-time pad. It could say almost anything.
    5. Re:Danish Government has Tough Decision by archen · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think either way, if I was one of those 800, I'd be looking for an alternative place of employment. I mean I certainly wouldn't want my job depending upon the whims of Bill Gates and his disapproval of some laws.

    6. Re:Danish Government has Tough Decision by Simon+Lyngshede · · Score: 1

      Actually Gates pick the perfect timing. At the election last week employment was a big issue. Denmark really need to lower the unemployment rate and currently the politicians are aiming kreative jobs and jobs in the IT sector. Losing 800 jobs right even before beginning investments in technologi sector could be pretty scary for a lot of our politicians. Just like anywhere else in the world, most of people in our government know shit about software, computer or the implication of software patents. Basicly they just listen to whoever has the best lobbyists.

    7. Re:Danish Government has Tough Decision by KrunZ · · Score: 3, Informative

      The little town (Vedbæk) is one of the richest (http://hjem.get2net.dk/rungsted.roklub/huse_langs _stranden2.htm) towns in Denmark. It was one of the richest before Microsoft entered (http://www.microsoft.com/danmark/jobs/vedbak.asp) , it was one of the richest before the company (http://www.sinca.com/noticia_aquiere_navision.htm l) that Microsoft bought started, and it will remain one of the richest after Microsofts leaves.

    8. Re:Danish Government has Tough Decision by thogard · · Score: 1

      Or option 3:
      Set up a company to do what those 800 people did before they got sacked and complete directly with MS. Governments tend to have enough cash to take losses over a few years.

    9. Re:Danish Government has Tough Decision by indigeek · · Score: 1

      Or, show the finger to microsoft and get Linux and Openoffice in all government applications.
      50-60K licenses for office apps should compensate for 800 jobs...
      I would think that it will also be possible to legally ban msft from their country...

    10. Re:Danish Government has Tough Decision by mr3038 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Loss of 800 jobs is immediate, obvious and can lose them votes.

      Just make sure that public understands that the choice to lose those jobs is done by Microsoft. I assume that the company was doing pretty fine until Microsoft bought it and if Microsoft is now threatening to fire those people, it's their choice.

      We have had a couple of similar situations in Finland where large companies asked for lower taxes or "they would be forced to fire people". Okay, they got the lower taxes and now they are firing people to increase profits. As a result, I don't trust local for-profit entities a little bit.

      --
      _________________________
      Spelling and grammar mistakes left as an exercise for the reader.
    11. Re:Danish Government has Tough Decision by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I wonder which one they should pick?

      They would rather support patents and save the jobs, of course. Voters don't understand patents, but they do freak out with any event related to "losing jobs".

    12. Re:Danish Government has Tough Decision by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      And then make sure the company can't be bought by any foreign companies. In fact, it'd help if they passed a law that no Danish company could be bought by a foreign company, or at least by no non-EU company. Allowing foreign companies to own your domestic industries and have power over your government is a recipe for disaster.

    13. Re:Danish Government has Tough Decision by tomjen · · Score: 1

      --Denmark is slightly smaller than the US--

      We have 5 million people in this country. (that incluedes retired people, Babies etc)

      --
      Freedom or George Bush
    14. Re:Danish Government has Tough Decision by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vedbæk is more or less a suburb of the capital. I don't think that many of the navision employees live in Vedbæk.

    15. Re:Danish Government has Tough Decision by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "Just make sure that public understands that the choice to lose those jobs is done by Microsoft. I assume that the company was doing pretty fine until Microsoft bought it and if Microsoft is now threatening to fire those people, it's their choice."

      Considering that MS also owns Great Plains, there is always the possibility that they bought Navision for the purpose of nuking it. It would not be the first time that somebody bought a competitor for the purpose of migrating the customer base and shutting them down.

    16. Re:Danish Government has Tough Decision by incabulos · · Score: 1

      If I was working at Navision in Denmark I would be looking to get out of that company as quick as possible. Can you imagine the hit to morale and the panic meetings that this threat would have stirred up at Navison? Navisons' customers must be thrilled with this bit of news also.

      I'm guessing that the 800 jobs will start to shrink fairly quickly, not because people are being fired en masse, but because they are abandoning the company for more secure employment.

  21. Re:Danish Conservatives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What, exactly, is bad about being anti-immigration? They're a small country, afterall...

  22. thats tough by boeserjavamann · · Score: 1

    i hope that this is not the truth. but it would be another proof that some companies are to mighty.

    1. Re:thats tough by Morning+$tar · · Score: 1

      I agree that extorting a government is a bit much, but I think threats of taking your business elsewhere is a common practice. I'm doing some IT work for a friends business and we usually get to talking about business in general. Basically, 95% of there products come from China--actually, an importer buys them from China, and then they buy them from the importer. Well, we found out where the factory is in China and decided to buy directly from the source. This will work for a few months until the importer figures out what is going on. He'll then say to the factory, "I'm 80% of your profit! Stop selling to them or else". And then the factory will (most likely) tell us to get lost. I know of one factory that took it as an idle threat and they've since gone out of business.

      But I agree that a corporation has no right 'negotiating' foreign policy. I don't know why I wrote all that... I guess I'm bored.

  23. Get ready by Timesprout · · Score: 1

    for a lawsuit.

    --
    Do not try to read the dupe, thats impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth
    What truth?
    There is no dupe
  24. Bill rocks. -slightly off topic. by Eatmorecake · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Seriously. He does. Anyone else ever hear about his name totaling 666 in askii? His name I think is actually William Henry Gates III or something - look it up. Total the #'s used in ascii and you get 666. I don't remember if you add 3 for the III or not, but it's six in the morning. Anyways, they should just nationalize the company that he suddenly, mystically, magically owns, after he fires everyone, and then no one can complain. They'll make a lot of money on top of things.

    --
    Don't you mean.. BIZZARO! ..Signature?
  25. public interest versus corporate interest by plinius · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Corporations are 'pressuring' public officials every day, often using bribes. The World Bank is well-known for bribing officials, and that info comes from the former head of the World Bank. Corporations are and the banks that represent their interests are always bribing people. Just look at Coca-Cola, charged with assassinating union leaders in Columbia: the assassins were govt-paid paramilitary agents, who set up a military camp outside of a factory after the assassination to intimidate the workers. When you look behind the veil of TV and the other media, what you see is sickening, frightening to some, and outrageous. After all, just look at how Bush stole the 2004 election in order to help the corporate interest: www.electionfraud2004.org.

  26. Microsoft is scum by 10Ghz · · Score: 1

    So what else is new?

    --
    Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    1. Re:Microsoft is scum by ifwm · · Score: 1

      And people who can't tell the difference between a lifeless business entity (Microsoft) and the PEOPLE who run it should be euthanized.

      But, as you say, what else is new?

    2. Re:Microsoft is scum by 10Ghz · · Score: 1

      I know it's convenient for the PEOPLE to hide behind the corporation. But Microsoft (as a corporation) and the people behind it pull crappy stunts like this. Yes, the grunts at MS are propably OK people. But the executives are scum, and therefore the company they lead is scum.

      yes, they really are scum.

      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    3. Re:Microsoft is scum by ifwm · · Score: 1

      NO, the executives are scum, but the BUSINESS is just a group of contracts and assets.

      Take a business course, grow up a little, and stop trying to turn lifeless corporations into the next version of satan.

      Really, your position is just stupid.

    4. Re:Microsoft is scum by 10Ghz · · Score: 1

      Business is what their executives and employees make it out to be. If people behind MS are scum, then the business is scum as well.

      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
  27. Gates is full of it by pesc · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've heard this kind of logic from the patent lobby numerous times:

    "If we don't get software patents in Europe, we can't develop stuff there. We have to develop in in the US where we have software patents available."

    This is pure FUD and BS. Why can't we develop stuff in Europe and apply for patents in the US? Most of the technology in patent applications in Europe was developed in foreign countries.

    The smart thing to do is to develop tech where you have smart people. And apply for software patents in the US and have a free market without software monopolies in Europe. If you develop a product that happen to infringe on a forest of software patents, you can only market it profitably in Europe. Too bad for the US.

    I hope politicians learn to call this kind of extortionist bluff soon.

    --

    )9TSS
    1. Re:Gates is full of it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly to the point. No matter where you are: You can file as many patents in foreign countries as you want, according to this foreign country's rules. There are international treaties that guarantee every foreigner to be treated equally regarding patent laws.

    2. Re:Gates is full of it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is pure FUD and BS.

      The word "lies" is much more clear and apt.

    3. Re:Gates is full of it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If gates moves the inventors to the US he can sue them if they try to re-invent their invention elsewhere, because he'll retain the patent. If they live in EU his patent isn't legal so he can't do that. He can still try to get noncompetetive clauses into labor contracts but european countries would support patent enforcement more uniformly than restrictive labor contracts.

      So he has a point -- he can't oppress his workforce as effectively in a place where software patents aren't recognized.

    4. Re:Gates is full of it by Arioch+of+Chaos · · Score: 1

      You have a point. However, NDAs and trade secret laws probably will let you bully most employees into submission

      --
      IAAAL - I am actually a lawyer ;-)
    5. Re:Gates is full of it by DavidTC · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No. All patents are supposed to be implimentable from the patent information by itself. Patents are not secret...if you patent something, everyone is supposed to know how to do it, they're just supposed to be unable to do it.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    6. Re:Gates is full of it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, more full of it than a Christmas turkey ...

  28. If all else fails..... by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Cheat.

    Its not how you win the game, only that you do. At any cost.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  29. Scary by Alarash · · Score: 5, Interesting
    When companies/corporations begin trying to extort countries, and not the weakest countries mind you, something is wrong.

    I'm beginning to believe that what I read in sci-fi will come true (ie: in the future, mankind is ruled by corporations that want to make money).

    And even more scary is the fact that for one extortion of that kind we hear of, numbers of other extortions of the same kind happen and we never hear about it. Brrr.

    1. Re:Scary by kmak · · Score: 1

      Corporations have been doing it through IMF, WB, WTO, etc.. for years, through it may (or may not, I'm not that up to date) be relatively new to the software industry.

      For one example, http://www.projectcensored.org/publications/2001/1 5.html

      --

      I'm not the devil.. just his advocate.
    2. Re:Scary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not quite right, you see, it is already true in a country called the USA. Maybe you should look a little closer. To the rest of the world it is glaringly obvious that the USA is being imperialistic and right wing, but it citizens just turn round and look on anything negative about the states as being unpatriotic.

      Pride is one thing, not being able to criticise yourself and see errors leads to fascist dictatorships.

    3. Re:Scary by hattig · · Score: 2, Interesting

      When the corporation becomes government.

      And when the corporation exists to benefit from the people it 'governs'.

      And when the corporation 'feeds' the people by giving them money, whilst restricting the rights of the people via law.

      Then you have slavery.

      Now for a rant with lots of flaws...

      The solution is to equalise the lobbying power of corporations with that of the common person. Disallow corporate funding/gifts of government employees. The government should be run FOR the people, because the people elect the government. If government is run for the corporations because of corrupt self-interest by the government employees (I'm sure a large portion of the readership here can guess which country comes to mind first, although sadly many others join the list quickly) then what is the point of democracy? Democracy is nothing but a facade, nothing better than what we had before blacks, women, poor people had the vote. It is rich people conniving together to run society for their own benefit only.

      With modern technology, it shouldn't be that hard for the individual to vote themselves on the issues they care about. They don't need their local elected offical to toe the party line (or run after the corporate carrot) when voting. With this, government would be for the people, by the people, and because the party line, or the corporate carrot, won't be available for government employees (although government would exist to organise it all still) the will of the people, not the rich or the corporation, would be foremost.

      Take Europe. Software patents as they were suggested would merely protect corporations in the USA. There is no benefit to having them over here, it would destroy lots of businesses in the arena. Businesses that make a lot of money and employ a lot of people who contribute to their country's economy. I think that a few governments are thinking past the initial bluster and seeing it for what it is - a way for US companies to extend their domination throughout Europe, before Europe gets too powerful.

    4. Re:Scary by Politburo · · Score: 1

      When the corporation becomes government... Then you have slavery.

      More accurately, you have Fascism.

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

      You need to go back and check your history.

      Hearst (of Hearst newspapers) basically *started* the spanish american war to sell more newspapers.

      These kind of things are not uncommon.

      What needs to be exposed is that folks are doing it. Makes it increasingly difficult to keep doing it.

  30. Pretty Interesting by Allan+Grinshtein · · Score: 1

    This is pretty interesting in a "Who is John Galt?" way.

  31. As a community... by PornMaster · · Score: 1

    We for one reject our software patent wielding overlords!

  32. Rough Translation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative
  33. For those who didn't read the article: by MadMoses · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Gates said that he's displeased with the process of political decisions on software patents in the european union. In particular, he seems to be unhappy about the successful opposition by many european IT companies and software developers.

    He further claims that Microsoft can secure their rights better in the USA.

    I call BS on that: if Microsoft relocates Navision to the USA, they can patent there all they want, but guess what, their patents won't mean squat in Europe without the possibility to patent software in the EU.

    --

    Do not be alarmed. This is only a test.
    1. Re:For those who didn't read the article: by wronski · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Gates said that he's displeased with the process of political decisions on software patents in the european union. In particular, he seems to be unhappy about the successful opposition by many european IT companies and software developers.


      Thid democracy thing is really a drag. He might want to consider outsorcing to North Korea.
    2. Re:For those who didn't read the article: by MadMoses · · Score: 1

      Democracy is only welcome if it can be influenced by the megacorporations through money and lobby representatives. They don't really like it when the will of the citizens makes a difference, like in this case of continued opposition by the most of the european IT industry.

      --

      Do not be alarmed. This is only a test.
    3. Re:For those who didn't read the article: by TheDredd · · Score: 1

      He further claims that Microsoft can secure their rights better in the USA.

      So maybe he should keep his dungheap software in the USA and make the world a better place!

      Sorry.. got a bit carried away

    4. Re:For those who didn't read the article: by Zemran · · Score: 1

      displeased with the process of political decisions

      Yeah, isn't democracy a drag...

      Microsoft can secure their rights better in the USA.

      Bu**sh**, as you said it, I concur.

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    5. Re:For those who didn't read the article: by Triskele · · Score: 1

      Trouble is, Americans only believe in the one world law and that is that of the USA. Any deviation from that is commie^H^H^H^H^Hterrorist and must be erased. Europe is continually putting up with pressure from across the Atlantic to conform to what the US corporations have paid the US federal government to make law. Currently Condie Rice is trying to spanner the ICC wrt Darfur genocides.

      --

      --
      USA: home of the world's largest terrorist training camp.

    6. Re:For those who didn't read the article: by rseuhs · · Score: 1
      if Microsoft relocates Navision to the USA, they can patent there all they want

      They can patent in the USA all they want anyway, no relocation to the USA needed.

      For patent purposes, it's irrelevant where it was developed.

    7. Re:For those who didn't read the article: by silicon+not+in+the+v · · Score: 1
      Gates said that he's displeased with the process of political decisions on software patents in the european union.
      "Gates is coming here?"
      "Yes, and he is most displeased with your apparent lack of progress."
      "We shall double our lobbying efforts!"
      "I hope so prime minister...for your sake."
      --
      We may experience some slight turbulence and then...explode. -Capt. Mal Reynolds
  34. Here's a thought by NeoGeo64 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Couldn't Microsoft just buy Denmark?

    1. Re:Here's a thought by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      He could, but if he wanted to buy Belgium at the same time he might need to check the cushions on his couch.

    2. Re:Here's a thought by yotto · · Score: 1

      This is modded Funny.

      I would personally mod it +5: Scary.

    3. Re:Here's a thought by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get lost... We are not interested in selling.

    4. Re:Here's a thought by bushidocoder · · Score: 1

      Have you seen how weak the dollar is right now? BillG would have to liquidate a ton of his stocks to buy an authentic cheese danish right now.

    5. Re:Here's a thought by erik_norgaard · · Score: 1

      No, there is a law forbidding foreigners to buy summer residence in Denmark. You will have to become danish citizen - and there you go: 67% of your income right into taxes. Oh, and add the 25% VAT on anything you buy and an extra 180% on your car.

      What, did Microsoft's fortune disappear right there?

    6. Re:Here's a thought by mprovost · · Score: 1

      Well MS doesn't have the cash available to outright buy Denmark, but they are a bigger economy. According to wikipedia, the 2003 GDP of Denmark was either $170B or $212B, depending on how you measure it. According to Yahoo finance, MS has a market cap today of $282B, so even with some growth of the Danish economy over the past few years, MS is still larger.

    7. Re:Here's a thought by KontinMonet · · Score: 1

      Eh? So Denmark makes US$200-odd billion per year. M$ is a one-off US$200-odd billion value, Why does that make M$ bigger?

      --
      Did he inhale?
    8. Re:Here's a thought by Pop69 · · Score: 1

      Denmark would probably be cheap but I doubt they could afford to buy out LegoLand !!!!!!

      Come to think of it, if MS go through with their "threat" I bet this will be dismantled pretty quick.

  35. Re:Microsoft has to pay people to use their softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In dollars, not as a percentage of wealth. By that metric he's below average. Which means that buy amassing such a fortune less money is given to charities. Worse yet, much of his charity work takes place out in the third world, where as most people give in their own communities. One should note that robber barons, and why not lump in Gates with them, felt a duty to give back to their country as a way to even the score for how much they've taken. Notice how this tradition died with Howard Hughes. And he did it on accident.

    He's an ass, and the only thing about him that's good for charities is that it's one stop begging, which will be largely ignored.

  36. Danish better start a OSS project soon by e_AltF4 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Converting all Danish government IT away from MS towards OSS will surely bring far more than 800 jobs and KEEP those in the country.

    Go read some Gibson "Cyberpunk" books to see what you get if you let corporations run the world.

    Just my 5€Cents.

    1. Re:Danish better start a OSS project soon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      because open source software is so difficult to install, administer and use.

    2. Re:Danish better start a OSS project soon by goldspider · · Score: 1

      If the purpose of the government is to create more state jobs at a greater expense to taxpayers, then you're right on the money.

      However I don't really think that's what government should be trying to do. But then, we ARE talking about Europe...

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    3. Re:Danish better start a OSS project soon by bullitB · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, where the the hell have you been for the last 150 years? Corporations do run the world, yet we're really no closer the mythical world of "they own everything" than we were when that idea was first floated.

      This is business as usual. If RedHat made these same comments to the US government about moving jobs out of the US because of software patents, would you have the same concern?

    4. Re:Danish better start a OSS project soon by e_AltF4 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > If the purpose of the government is to create more state jobs
      > at a greater expense to taxpayers, then you're right on the money.

      "Greater expense" still has to be shown - we aren't talking about
      Jane Doe's home PC here. Governments should think in longer time
      frames and also should give some weight to vendor independance,
      freedom of upgrade cycles, local IT jobs (including education, R&D
      and stuff) and - as a bonus - getting rid of blackmail :-)

      > However I don't really think that's what government should be
      > trying to do. But then, we ARE talking about Europe...

      Some of us may be in doubt that the US government would shut up
      and comply if a Chinese or EU software monopoly would try those
      "persuasion tactics" on them.

    5. Re:Danish better start a OSS project soon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In theory that would be 5 øre. Denmark doesn't use the Euro

    6. Re:Danish better start a OSS project soon by toby · · Score: 1
      Go read some Gibson "Cyberpunk" books to see what you get if you let corporations run the world.

      Or look out your window, or turn on the TV.

      --
      you had me at #!
    7. Re:Danish better start a OSS project soon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I'm sure the Danish government will listen to Reason.

  37. Devil? by ChTh · · Score: 1, Funny

    >from the dancing-with-the-devil dept.

    Now what did the Danish prime minister do to deserve such a name?

    1. Re:Devil? by wed128 · · Score: 1

      The danish prime minister was the one doing the dancing. Bill was...well you see

  38. Microsoft will probably dump Navision anyway. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Article on Microsoft purchasing Navision

    Microsoft will probably have to dump Navision anyway. This is the kind of stuff that's gets outsourced to India and it's not the kind of software you go to Microsoft to get anyway.

    This is just Bill Gates squandering Microsoft's cash pile and blowing steam. What's new?

    1. Re:Microsoft will probably dump Navision anyway. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That, my friend, is not the point here...

      The point is that a corp. tries to blackmail a government. This is illegal. Mr. Fogh (DA-PM) should ask his good buddy G. W. Bush (US-Pres) to hit mr. Gates very hard in the head with something very heavy...

  39. Yes, they do link to the original article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    And yes, they actually do quote the original article. PJ runs such a tight ship. I sometimes forget, being a denizen of /.

  40. Cut off your nose.... by 91degrees · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Surely they purchased the company for a reason. The staff would have been part fo that reasons.

    Laying off that many staff in a fit of pique would create a perfect opportunity for a competitor to set up a company that does pretty much the same thing with the same employees.

    1. Re:Cut off your nose.... by wannabgeek · · Score: 0

      Yeah right. Do the same thing with the same employees, and get sued to hell by M$!

      It's not as easy...

      --
      I'm much more funny, interesting and insightful than the moderators think
    2. Re:Cut off your nose.... by GospelHead821 · · Score: 1

      Suppose the reason that Microsoft purchased the company was not the expertise of the employees, but the leverage that ownership of the company would provide them should they wish to pressure the European Community into passing laws that Microsoft favours.

      --
      Virtue finds and chooses the mean.
      Aristotle, Ethica Nichomachea
    3. Re:Cut off your nose.... by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      I was looking at it from Microsoft's point of view. They could possibly sue if this happened. But they might not win.

      It's possible, and quite likely that nobody would try this out of fear of Microsoft, but Microsoft doesn't know this for sure.

    4. Re:Cut off your nose.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, yes it is, as long as we don't have software patents in Europe, and as long as no-one brings actual code. In the ERP business it is not vital that you can do business in the US (although very nice) where any software patents might be valid. And although you CAN bind people with non-compete clauses in Denmark, you can only (by law) bind them for one year and you have to pay them half their salary for this whole year if you fire them - and the clause automatically expire if the company closes. This is why Billy is shit scared of the thought of not having software patents being valid in Europe (and thereby Denmark) and this is why he is probably bluffing in this case. You can actually get competition from people you lay off *shudder*

    5. Re:Cut off your nose.... by abb3w · · Score: 1
      Laying off that many staff in a fit of pique would create a perfect opportunity for a competitor to set up a company that does pretty much the same thing with the same employees.

      Depends on the NCO's the staff had to sign-- if the NCO allows it, then yes, the opportunity is indeed perfect.

      --
      //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
    6. Re:Cut off your nose.... by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1
      In a small town in new zealand, the main employer (a freezing works) closed down the factory (and hence the jobs of hundreds of people). They sold the land with a lien(?) on it saying that no-one else was allowed to give them their jobs back (i.e. compete with the parent company) for 20 years. The courts have upheld this, even though it is terrible for the town and the taxpayers (since someone else started up again and was sued by the old employer). What's the betting MS would try to put that sort of thing into any leaving contracts?

      And what happened to the people who left Ubisoft for EA and were sued? I hope Danish law is more sane.

    7. Re:Cut off your nose.... by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      It's still possible that someone would find a way. Especially because office space is a lot easier to come by than factory space.

    8. Re:Cut off your nose.... by Frasier · · Score: 2, Informative

      Depends on the NCO's the staff had to sign-- if the NCO allows it, then yes, the opportunity is indeed perfect.

      IANADL (I am not a danish lawyer).

      Typical limiting agreements that I have seen only apply when the employee leaves, not when he is fired.

      Some jurisdictions even force the issue to protect the employees (at least Finland that I know of).

    9. Re:Cut off your nose.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tell that to Ellison after what Oracle did to PeopleSoft ...

    10. Re:Cut off your nose.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On several occasions I have seen it stated that the EU Court of Justice has ruled non-compete agreements for employees unenforceable. However, I couldn't find a reference in their web search engine. Can anyone point to a reputable source on this?

    11. Re:Cut off your nose.... by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 2, Informative

      IIRC European law doesn't much like NCOs because they act as a restraint of free trade.

    12. Re:Cut off your nose.... by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Why? What did Oracle do to Peoplesoft?

    13. Re:Cut off your nose.... by GJSchaller · · Score: 1

      Companies have assetts other than people. Hasbro bought Avalon Hill not for its staff (which were all terminated), but for the brand name and titles that they held. The staff was more of a hinderance, when Hasbro already had all the staff and production facilities it needed, all it wanted was the brand names and rights to all of AH's games. As a result, Hasbro now has two things: All the classic games (Squad Leader, Panzer Blitz, etc.), and the Brand Name (Axis & Alies is now an Avalon Hill game, not Milton Bradley).

    14. Re:Cut off your nose.... by weicco · · Score: 1

      IANAFL (I Am Not A Finnish Lawyer :) but I live in Finland...

      Those limiting agreements have been proven to be void in Finnish courts. I've heard of at least two lawsuits where former employer have lost their cases. Of course you can demolish your own defense by saying that you intentionaly broke your contract, but if you are quiet (no law requires you to inform your former employer where you are going to work next) the whole burden of proof is on the employers side.

      In fact I remember reading some article written by some (don't remember what anymore) goverment agency that if your boss-to-be makes you write such limiting agreement, it can be seen as harrassment.

      Of course you musn't take my word on this, you should check your local union for clearance if you are planning to leave for competitor or something like that.

      --
      You don't know what you don't know.
  41. What's the problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Everybody gets all holier than thou over stuff like this, but I really don't see any reason why Gates is doing something wrong. Ownership has no meaning without the ability to do what you want with it. If I buy a priceless work of art for the express purpose of destroying it, that's my perogative. If MS acquires a company to use as a bargaining chip to get something they need, then that's their perogative. If the Danes didn't want him to be able to do that, they should've blocked the purchase of their company in the first place, or they should not bend to his demands and be willing to suffer the consequences.

    Frankly, I don't understand why powerful people don't use their power more often. If I had been Martha Stewart, for example, I would've told the government that if they convicted me, I would liquidate my company and put all my employees out of work. I would then use my remaining wealth to buy small businesses and shut them down. And then ask the government whether my head on a stake was worth that price. It may sound like I'm advocating white collar terrorism, but I think that if you have leverage, there's nothing wrong with using it.

    1. Re:What's the problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simply amazes me that a coherent and well-thought argument gets modded as troll.

      Oh wait. Its Pro-MS. Silly me.

    2. Re:What's the problem? by Mant · · Score: 1

      The Danish government can't just block aquisitions. In the EU you would have to have an investigation, and prove that the resulting company would have too much control over the market.

      Also, if you are a public company you have legal obligations to your sahreholders. CEOs rarely own their companies, small businesses aside, trashing it during a hissy fit would almost certainly be illegal.

      Of course the main reason it is wrong it is immoral. Firing people as leverage on their goverment, when it doesn't actually help you patent sutff anyway (stuff developed outside the US can be pateneted there). There are lots of things you can do with things you own or control, but becuase you can do it doesn't mean you should.

  42. Re:Microsoft has to pay people to use their softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually he does a lot for school systems, universities, inner city - that type of thing. As for his wealth I understand that roughtly 95% of his wealth will be going to various causes and what not upon his death. No proof of the claim - we will have to wait and see what happens when he does keel over.

  43. for those who still believe in democracy... by Fuzzums · · Score: 5, Insightful

    please wake up. it's "we, the corporations of the USA"

    --
    Privacy is terrorism.
    1. Re:for those who still believe in democracy... by Scorpius-nl · · Score: 1

      Well, isn't this happening on the lowest levels already? I don't live in the USA, but i heard Bush is planning to privatise most of the social security, so every citizen can be "in control" of his/her financial situation. Basically making citizens small corporations, with little or no (financial) goverment influence.

      The real questions you gotta ask is then, how can all these citizen corporations make profit .. and how long will they stay in business ?

    2. Re:for those who still believe in democracy... by eluusive · · Score: 1
      The real questions you gotta ask is then, how can all these citizen corporations make profit .. and how long will they stay in business ?
      Not very long....
    3. Re:for those who still believe in democracy... by aralin · · Score: 1

      Since 1886 controversial decision of the U.S. Supreme Court a corporation is a "person". So "We, the People..." naturally includes the corporations, which are persons like you and me. Only possible in the land of free people... err... corporations :)

      --
      If programs would be read like poetry, most programmers would be Vogons.
    4. Re:for those who still believe in democracy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is the spin.

      What is really going to happen is that you get to "own" 2-3% of what you currently pay in the regressive part of our income tax code. Most here have been brainswashed to the point where they can't see that our "Social Security" taxes are nothing but a regressive income tax, but that is plainly what they are. Once the fungible nature of money is ignored, all manner of idiotic nonsense is supportable and believable.

      And by "own" I mean you can do whatever you want with it as long as you invest it in a list of approved (by Wall Street) funds, and when you retire buy a (Wall Street approved) annuity.

      So it is really just a minor reshuffling of who gets to spend the loot. Legislators or fund managers? And it is plausible that it will be a more efficient way to provide retirement funds. But it is "privitzation" in the same way that WTO is "free trade" . Genuine freedom requires only repeal. If governments proper role also includes feeding people that haven't saved enough to retire on, so be it; there is no reason the funds have to be raised with a regressive income tax.

    5. Re:for those who still believe in democracy... by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

      "Not very long...."
      but who cares anyway. don't look at the government.

      "but i heard Bush is planning to privatise most of the social security"
      nice going.
      1. mess up
      2. privatise
      3. blame them

      --
      Privacy is terrorism.
    6. Re:for those who still believe in democracy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately the public still retains the ability to vote people into office as they choose. So long as we can do that, we can shut the corporations down if necessary.

  44. Ob vocabulary quibble by jc42 · · Score: 1

    The charge would be "extortion", not "blackmail".

    Gates would be found innocent of blackmail, because that's a different crime. It probably doesn't matter to the media, who are usually sloppy with terminology. But if you want to convict someone of a crime, you have to charge them with the crime that they actually committed, not some other crime.

    Any criminal lawyers here want to expound on the definitions?

    --
    Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    1. Re:Ob vocabulary quibble by DaHat · · Score: 1

      Gates would be found innocent of blackmail

      I was unaware that any court ruled on the innocence of a person, instead on their guilt, in finding them guilty or not guilty... I have yet to hear of someone getting off and the jury finding them innocent.

    2. Re:Ob vocabulary quibble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Gates would be found innocent of blackmail, because that's a different crime.

      No, because in fact, blackmail is a form of extortion. Also, it's entirely possible for one to speak metaphorically, or to make threats that are perfectly legal, but extortive. Thus, when North Korea starts making threats that we call "nuclear blackmail" (or nucular if you prefer), we're not talking about actual blackmail taking place, nor actually filing charges in a court of law...

      I swear, sometimes geeks really do think in code, and can't handle natural ambiguity or fuzzy distinctions.

    3. Re:Ob vocabulary quibble by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      Blackmail is the form of extortion that treatens someone with exposure of fact(s), true or not. This is not blackmail, unless there's something we don't know. This is a different kind of extortion, where someone is threatened with something besides that.

      And it's probably not legally extortion, either, because the action threated is not revealing information or an illegal action or a misuse of a position, but, trust me, everyone here understands hyperbole. They just don't understand using the wrong damn word. It'd be like talking about Gates 'kidnapping' the jobs or 'robbing' the government.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    4. Re:Ob vocabulary quibble by jc42 · · Score: 1

      ... trust me, everyone here understands hyperbole. They just don't understand using the wrong damn word. It'd be like talking about Gates 'kidnapping' the jobs or 'robbing' the government.

      Yeah, and I've heard phrases much like that. I'd just call them metaphors.

      And, while blackmail is a form of extortion, it really doesn't apply here, not even metaphorically. After all, the salient part of blackmail is that I don't threaten you to direct harm; I just threaten to reveal something about you to others. Gates isn't threatening to reveal some evil deed that Danes have done. He's threatening to take direct action against Danish citizens in retaliation for their not obeying his wishes. This isn't blackmail by any stretch or hyperbole or metaphorical use. It's a different sort of extortion.

      It's also politics as usual, of course.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    5. Re:Ob vocabulary quibble by jc42 · · Score: 1

      I swear, sometimes geeks really do think in code, and can't handle natural ambiguity or fuzzy distinctions.

      OF course we do. It comes with the job description. When dealing with gadgetry, especially computers, you learn very early on that ambiguity or fuzziness is an inevitable precursor to disaster. You learn to pay close attention to details that others would consider trivial. A missing (or extra) comma or semicolon can utterly change the meaning of a chunk of code. "Off by one" is a euphemism for "totally, disastrously wrong".

      You'd expect such people to carry this to other aspects of life.

      Of course, in fora like this, it's also a source of subtle "in" humor. In this case, the humor was hinted by the "Ob" in the title, which long-time /. participants will understand instantly.

      One of the interesting facets to this pickiness is the notoriously bad speling and grammer you read here. That might be worth a sociology thesis by itself. I don't think I understand it fully.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
  45. Let's all use Mono! by puppetluva · · Score: 1

    Microsoft seems really open to fair competition and doesn't resort to extortion or underhanded legal tactics.

    On this very sound footing, I suggest that we use an 80% patent-encumbered standard with Microsoft's core interests at stake. Let's base our core desktop software on it and hope our regular and very consistent enemy won't try to do anything nasty to us!

    PS: To all the dreamers who are going to tell me that CLR and C# are ECMA/ISO standard. . . Let me tell you that published standards hold no weight against the market standard-bearer and should remember that Javascript was an ECMA standard called ECMAscript and they still onesy-toosied the Javascript standard.

    1. Re:Let's all use Mono! by rpozz · · Score: 1

      Parent is OT, but quite right. Uncle Bill will have seen Mono coming a mile away, and certainly has plans for it. Microsoft makes money almost entirely through lack of interoperability.

  46. I wonder how the 800 feel by ButtNutt · · Score: 0

    knowing that their major contribution to MSFT is as a "pawn"? Would make me feel kinda low and want to learn Linux :)

  47. Former Navision employee by SteelLynx · · Score: 5, Interesting

    No, not me. I've never worked for Navision and can't recall anyone I know (personally) who's done so.

    However, a while back (before her marriage to our crown prince) our crown princess did work for Navision.

    I can't help but wonder if Bill Gates would have dared threaten to close the workplace of an upcoming queen...

    --
    It's 19:11:42. Do You Know Where Your Meat Body Is?
    1. Re:Former Navision employee by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

      You have princes and princesses? Perhaps Microsoft could lobby the government to liberate you. Then you will likely get some more friendly IP law.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    2. Re:Former Navision employee by tomjen · · Score: 1

      Against 80% percent of the people, and the will of the majority of the goverment, i dont think he could do it.

      The royal house is only for show off these days, they have no voting rights etc.

      --
      Freedom or George Bush
  48. Obligatory Simpsons Scene by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Back at the peaceful Simpsons house. Homer is reading "Internet for Dummies".

    HOMER
    Oh, they have the Internet on computers now!

    MARGE
    Homer, Bill Gates is here.

    HOMER
    Bill Gates?! Millionaire computer nerd Bill Gates! Oh my god. Oh my god. Get out of sight, Marge. I don't want this to look like a two-bit operation.

    Marge groans and rolls her eyes. Bill Gates and two "associates" enter.

    GATES
    Mr. Simpson?

    HOMER
    You don't look so rich.

    GATES
    Don't let the haircut fool you, I am exceedingly wealthy.

    HOMER
    (quietly to Marge) Get a load of the bowl-job, Marge!

    GATES
    Your Internet ad was brought to my attention, but I can't figure out what, if anything, CompuGlobalHyperMegaNet does, so rather than risk competing with you, I've decided simply to buy you out.

    Homer and Marge step aside to talk privately.

    HOMER
    This is it Marge. I've poured my heart and soul into this business and now it's finally paying off. (covering his mouth) We're rich! Richer than astronauts.

    MARGE
    Homer quiet. Acquire the deal.

    HOMER
    (to Gates) I reluctantly accept your proposal!

    GATES
    Well everyone always does. Buy 'em out, boys!

    Bill Gates companions begin to trash the "office".

    HOMER
    Hey, what the hell's going on!

    GATES
    Oh, I didn't get rich by writing a lot of checks!

    Bill Gates lets out a maniacal laugh. Homer and Marge cower in the corner as the room continues to be trashed.

    1. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both are correct.

      Like ketchup and catsup.

      Seriously... Look it up.

    2. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by S.O.B. · · Score: 1

      Actually in the U.S. its "checks", "cheque" is the British spelling.

      DOH!

      --
      Some of what I say is fact, some is conjecture, the rest I'm just blowing out my ass...you guess.
    3. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      What I've always wondered is, do Brittish people have cheque-boxes and cheque-marks and cheque-points? Or are all of those check-*'s?

    4. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      Indeed, which is why "checks" is incorrect ;-)

    5. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      Yes they are all check. If the US had a Chancellor of the Exchequer would you call him a Chancellor of the Exchecker ?

    6. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by AviLazar · · Score: 1

      I don't think we have chancellors...i think we have secretaries of *....or would they be called "Administrative Assistancts" of *

      --

      I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
    7. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by doppe1 · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      Actually in the U.S. its "checks"

      That's only because they can't spell,
      when enough people can't spell a word properly,
      they just change the word to match.
      Woohoo, spelling by democracy.

    8. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by DoctorMO · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      With our higher population density 57 million british out number each other much more, droning out the sickly sweet american 'culture'

    9. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is it or is it not the same root word as a "check" in hockey, or a "check on one's power"? Despite all the funky exceptions in English, we have this funny belief that the same word should be spelled the same way. Our habit of not importing all your quaint and effete euro-spellings is a _feature_ of the language.

    10. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by displaced80 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Nope -- we have ticks :)

      Tickboxes, Tickmarks are just 'ticks'.

      Amongst programmers, 'checkboxes' is understood. But if I were to tell a user to put a check in that checkbox, I'd get an odd look.

      Although we do have checklists, which (oddly) are usually ticked-off. Even though the person doing the ticking would announce 'Check!'. Checkpoints are indeed 'check'points, unless you're referring to those cheque-cashing (no, not caching) shops which sometimes call themselves 'Chequepoints'.

      Schoolkids will get ticks on their work, not checks.

      And yes -- flashlights are torches. It's 99.9% certain that the person hearing the word will understand whether or not it's of the 'flaming' variety, based on context. That other 0.1% of the time can be quite funny/dangerous/deadly. But only to D&D players who take things too far.

      --
      What's the frequency, Kenneth?
    11. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by sepluv · · Score: 1, Interesting
      Woohoo, spelling by democracy.
      You, sir, are a dumbass. What else do you propose? Spelling by dictatorship?

      (And for the record I'm a Brit who finds some USan spelling ocnfusing/annoying.)

      --
      Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
      [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]
    12. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by booch · · Score: 1
      Homer quiet. Acquire the deal.

      I believe that's "You'll sour the deal". </SimpsonsPedantry>

      --
      Software sucks. Open Source sucks less.
    13. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      doesn't sound as good though, does it ;)

    14. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by karnal · · Score: 1

      It's 99.9% certain that the person hearing the word will understand whether or not it's of the 'flaming' variety,

      Walking around downtown with a friend of mine, it's easy to tell who is of the "flaming" variety just by listening.

      Call 'em glitter girls or whatever, it's kinda crazy down there.

      --
      Karnal
    15. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by soft_guy · · Score: 1

      Like we're really going to have a position in the US as stupid sounding as a "Chancellor".

      --
      Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
    16. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the parent post is why I love those wacky British. They're crazy, but you just gotta love 'em.

    17. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by MadChicken · · Score: 1

      I'd say you'd tick the items on the list that you've checked.

      It's nice when you can type out "Check that cheque" without feeling like an idiot.

      But I'm from Canada, and we might more often need the word "tick" for the insect, so on our insect observation lists, we would "check off 'tick'"

      --
      SYS 64738 NO CARRIER
    18. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by loserMcloser · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, I'm pretty sure it's "You'll queer the deal."

    19. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by Dogtanian · · Score: 5, Funny

      Like we're really going to have a position in the US as stupid sounding as a "Chancellor".

      Well, you have a president; that's pretty stupid-sounding.

      Hang on, I don't think that's what I meant. Let's get rid of the colon....

      Well, you have a president that's pretty stupid-sounding.

      That's more like it.

      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    20. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by booch · · Score: 1

      Damn, I think you're right.

      --
      Software sucks. Open Source sucks less.
    21. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      I don't think it is the same word, that's why it's spelt differently.

      What's hockey ? Is that the game which is like rounders or the ice skating one ?

    22. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by doppe1 · · Score: 1
      What else do you propose? Spelling by dictatorship?

      You know, everything that isn't a democracy is not always a dictatorship. How about spelling by educated people rather than appealing to the lowest common denominator.

      USan

      ocnfusing

      I'm finding your British spelling slightly annoying too :P

    23. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "(And for the record I'm a Brit who finds some USan spelling ocnfusing/annoying.)"

      Hehehe...well, I for one like the differences...I usually spell the American style, but, on occasion I do the British version, and sometimes even cross my 7's and Z's for the heck of it.

      I do however, find the term "USan or USAsian' annoying. By standards of most of the world, if you refer to an American, they are referring to a citizen of the United States of America. There's not confusion with Canadians or Mexican...they live on the North American continent, but, they are not Americans.

      :-)

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    24. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by identity0 · · Score: 1

      Don't forget our "Drug Czar", which conujres images of the Romanovs snorting coke, or "Secretary of Homeland Security", which sounds like a slender blonde chick in a sexy fascist uniform defending the fatherland wth a Luger.

      Heck, both of those would be an imprrovement over the current incarnations...

    25. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by mrdaveb · · Score: 1

      Although we do have checklists, which (oddly) are usually ticked-off. Even though the person doing the ticking would announce 'Check!'

      I don't know the origin of these words, but I've always imagined that a checklist is so called because you are checking that the the things on the list are present/correct. Perhaps over time, the mark on the paper also came to be a check. Although I imagine that could lead to some bearaucratic disaster: "Did you check the brakes?" <looks at list> "yep!".
      As for calling out "check" when marking a tick, I imagine that's travelled back across the atlantic from America - I expect people used to just say "Yes" or "OK".

      --
      Homme petit d'homme petit, s'attend, n'avale
    26. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by nickco3 · · Score: 1

      Americans out number the rest of the English speaking world.

      There are more Chinese English-speakers than there are American ones. And don't forget India is part of the English-speaking world.

      What an arse.

      --
      -- Nick "Hallo this is Beel Gates, und I pronounce weendows as ... WEENdows"
    27. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. Let's get rid of Colin. He's pretty stupid-sounding too.

      That's even more like it.

    28. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by blugeoned · · Score: 1

      You mean like the French?

    29. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by AvantLegion · · Score: 1
      Well, you have a president; that's pretty stupid-sounding.

      Hang on, I don't think that's what I meant. Let's get rid of the colon....

      Well, you have a president that's pretty stupid-sounding.

      Almost as stupid as someone that can't differentiate a colon from a semicolon...

    30. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      No, he is much more stupid than that.

    31. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by Dogtanian · · Score: 1

      >> Americans out number the rest of the English speaking world.

      > There are more Chinese English-speakers than there are American ones. And don't forget India is part of the English-speaking world.

      Yeah, but what level of competence are they at? I mean, we should really be considering people who can speak English with some degree of skill....

      Unfortunately, that excludes most Americans. Boom boom!

      Thank you, thank you! I'll be here all week... [notices menacing crowd slowly edging towards the stage and tiptoes backwards towards the exit]... or maybe not.

      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    32. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's get rid of the colon...

      Then you have Ronald Reagan

    33. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by donothingsuccessfull · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you'd have something that sounded, well, more gubernatorial.

    34. Re:Obligatory Simpsons Scene by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are wrong at worst or have reading comprehension problems at best. Either get a clue, or re-read the grandparent, you stupid fucker. He clearly said "Qemu accelerator". Which is an x86 specific component and is only available with Linux x86, you stupid stupid fucking moron. Now either pull your head out of your ass and fucking apologize or shut the fuck up and never post here again, you stinking retard. It's amazing how someone can be so totally ignorant even when the facts are immediately in front of their face. You worthless piece of shit.

  49. So we're not good enugh no? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    As a dane i found this switch in the Microsoft - Denmark relationship quity funny:

    Ballmer has seen the future, and it's Danish
    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/07/13/wh y_cant_w e_all_be_like_denmark/

    TORONTO--Steve Ballmer says there is a simple way to turn around Microsoft's money-losing enterprise applications business--make the whole world like Denmark.
    http://news.com.com/Ballmer:+Nothing's+r otten+in+D enmark/2100-7343_3-5267742.html

  50. And? by jb.hl.com · · Score: 1

    it's not like this is surprising, Microsoft is well known for using extortionate tactics to get things done in its favour.

    --
    By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
  51. It would be libel on CowboyNeal's part by glrotate · · Score: 1

    2 a : a written or oral defamatory statement or representation that conveys an unjustly unfavorable impression

    1. Re:It would be libel on CowboyNeal's part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gates is a public person. Have fun trying to convict anybody of libel against a public person.

  52. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by thenextpresident · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The only way this could be construed as immoral or objectionable activity is if you accept the premiss that Microsoft's monopoly dominance is absolute and that there are no acceptable alternatives

    Actually, this has nothing to do with monopolies. It's immoral because Gates is threatening to lay people off. 800 people out of work is not something a politician wants, nor does it help an economy. What Gates was doing was using the 800 employees welfare as leverage which is immoral.

    --
    Jason Lotito
  53. The real question is... by JessLeah · · Score: 2, Interesting

    How did he respond? Or has he not responded yet? If he hasn't, is there a way to reach him? A letter-writing campaign maybe?

    1. Re:The real question is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      you can contact "Statsministeriet" - the ministry where the PM resides in at : stm@stm.dk

      link to homepage: http://www.statsministeriet.dk/Index/mainstart.asp ?o=2&n=3&s=2

    2. Re:The real question is... by tomjen · · Score: 1

      Christiansborg
      Prins Jørgens Gård 11
      1218 København K

      Telefon 33 92 33 00
      Fax 33 11 16 65

      E - mail stm@stm.dk

      --
      Freedom or George Bush
  54. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by Hope+Thelps · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The only way this could be construed as immoral or objectionable activity...

    Rubbish. I'll decide what I do and don't find objectionable, thank you. I find threatening people's livelihoods in order to bully their governments into enacting the legislation you want to be very highly objectionable.

    Describing natural consequences of legislation is acceptable. That isn't what they are doing here. The place in which software is developed has no impact on whether it is patentable in any given market. This is a threat, pure and simple, it's a threat against innocent employees as a way of pressuring others, and it should be resisted.

    --
    To summarise the summary of the summary: people are a problem. ~ h2g2
  55. Why was it software patents were bad? by Snaller · · Score: 1

    I must have missed a briefing...

    --
    If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    1. Re:Why was it software patents were bad? by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1
      Because it outlaws programming if you don't work for a major corporation (with cross-licensing agreements with all other corporations). Individual Americans can only program because the law happens to be only very selectively enforced.

      If you have to check every line of code and algorithm you write against the tens of thousands of patented ideas (some of which are very broad) instead of writing code, you are actually a patent lawyer, not a programmer.

    2. Re:Why was it software patents were bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Allowing patents on software means allowing patents on ideas.

      When software is only protected by copyright, you know you can publish your work if you did not copy it from someone else. When software is protected by patents, you can write code that infringe a patent without even knowing.

      Big corporations exchange patent licenses and carry on selling software normally. Smaller companies or individuals that have no patent portofolio can be attacked at any time because they infringe a patent they did not knew about.

      Patents were designed to protect small companies and individual investisement so that they can live. Software patents help big companies to kill them

    3. Re:Why was it software patents were bad? by Snaller · · Score: 1

      Check.

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
  56. Uhm.. thats business by cybrthng · · Score: 1

    Philadelphia gets screwed by Newark and vice versa all the time.

    Especially when it comes to businesses that move every 5 years for tax advantages.

    It's the republican Mantra "If you can't hang with the big boys, then get out of the way"

    1. Re:Uhm.. thats business by petrus4 · · Score: 1
      In the case of people like yourself, it's just business as long as it happens to someone else...and if you're one of those rare individuals with whom even that isn't the case, you might really want to ask yourself some pointed questions about what your priorities are in life. It pains me that there are so many people walking around on this planet who don't understand that altruism can itself actually be motivated by self interest, because we do all ultimately rely on each other. No single human being lives in a vacuum...nearly all of us exist within a web of dependencies, whether it's family, friends...or customers. Lest corporations forget...if the customer doesn't pay for their product, they don't make money.

      This is what corporations and people like the author of the parent post don't understand.


      This may be highly instructive.

      >It's the republican Mantra "If you can't hang
      >with the big boys, then get out of the way"

      Any individual or entity which exists via destroying others eventually destroys itself...it's a mathematical certainty. When they run out of external victims, the chaotic urge to destroy turns inward...which is where it really came from in the first place. It's appropriate that you mention the Republicans being connected with that saying, actually...because over the next few years, they are going to learn about the reality of that particular principle.

  57. The Real Reasons by Das+Auge · · Score: 2, Interesting

    When ever a story about Microsoft is posted you get those who say that people only hate Microsoft because they're number one. No, so many people hate Microsoft because stuff like this and this is only a single incident.

  58. Dead Patent-Law Sketch (Part 1) by sepluv · · Score: 4, Funny

    Here's something I wrote the other day, which seems particularly appropriate now this story has come out:

    The Cast:

    • Mr. Gates
    • A European Commissioner
    The Sketch

    A `customer' (with brown envelopes and chequebook aready) enters the €C in Brussels.

    Mr. Gates: 'Ello, I wish to register a complaint.

    (The commisioner does not respond.)

    Mr. Gates: 'Ello, Miss?

    Commissioner: What do you mean "miss"?

    Mr. Gates: I'm sorry, I have a cold. I wish to make a complaint!

    Commissioner: We're closin' for lunch.

    Mr. Gates: Never mind that, my lad. I wish to complain about this patent law what I purchased not two years ago from this very office.

    Commissioner: Oh yes, the, uh, the computer-implemented inventions one...What's, uh...What's wrong with it?

    Mr. Gates: I'll tell you what's wrong with it, my lad. 'E's dead, that's what's wrong with it!

    Commissioner: No, no, 'e's uh,...he's resting.

    Mr. Gates: Look, matey, I know a dead patent law when I see one, and I'm looking at one right now.

    Commissioner: No no he's not dead, he's, he's restin'! Remarkable law, idn'it, ay? Beautiful sophistory and ambiguity!

    Mr. Gates: The anbiguity don't enter into it. It's stone dead.

    Commissioner: Nononono, no, no! 'E's resting!

    Mr. Gates: All right then, if he's restin', I'll wake him up!

    ...

    Mr. Gates: You let the European Parliament kill 'im, didn't you!

    Commissioner: I never!!

    Mr. Gates: Yes, you did!

    Commissioner: I never, never did anything...

    (Mr. Gates takes patent law out of briefcase and thumps it on the desk. Throws it up in the air and watches it plummet to the floor.)

    contd...(due to limit on post size)

    --
    Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
    [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]
    1. Re:Dead Patent-Law Sketch (Part 1) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have never had the misfortune of reading such a large pile of utter crap in my life.. I feel stupider for having read it!

    2. Re:Dead Patent-Law Sketch (Part 1) by henrypijames · · Score: 1

      This is a great sketch, we should actually organize some people to perform it and send the video recording to the EC (and to all anti-patent-law organizations, of course). An additional live performance in front of the EC would of course be a ingeniuos publicity stunt.

    3. Re:Dead Patent-Law Sketch (Part 1) by sepluv · · Score: 1

      That may be rubbing it in to much, but if anyone wants to perform it, please do. I haven't actually seen the original sketch, so I don't know how it is performed.

      --
      Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
      [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]
  59. Incase it gets /.'ed by neferaza · · Score: 1, Informative

    NO SOFTWARE PATENTS, NO NAVISION IN DENMARK SAYS MICROSOFT

    According to danish newspaper Børsen [1] and the Copenhagen Post [2], Bill Gates, the founder of Microsoft is threatening the danish government to move jobs from Denmark to the United States should Denmark continue to oppose the software patent directive.

    Although the political players in the European Commission, spearheaded by Commisionner Charly McCreevy, continue to assure the proposed directive would not allow US-style patents on business methods and software to creep in the european patent system, the big companies in the IT sector seem to know better.

    FFII, one of the key players in the opposition of the directive, sees its analysis verified by Microsoft and is asking when the council and commission will decide to tell the truth about the planned directive.

    They urge the Commission and the Council to accept what democracy wants. Several national parliaments and the european parliament have come to the conclusion that the current proposal is not acceptable. On thursday the european parliament will decide to aks the commission to throw away the beleagured proposal and return to the drawing board.

    "We are not opposing a directive, we want a good directive and the current proposal is simply not good", says Hartmut Pilch, founder and president of FFII. "We have seen that the majority of SME in europe know exactly what they would gain from the current proposal - nothing."

    For these very reasons FFII has decided to call for a demonstration in Brussels. On Thursday, 17th of february they plan to show the council that they think it has become a "Banana Union". More information on

    http://demo.ffii.org
    Links

    [1] http://www.borsen.dk/dagens-nyheder/?ids[]=70135 [2] http://www.cphpost.dk/get/85881.html
    Prelaminary translation of the article

    Gates threatens Fogh [dk PM] with closing Navision

    The founder of the world's largest software company Bill Gates is now
    ready to close Navision in Denmark and move the almost 800 developers in
    Denmarks largest software company to the USA.

    This was firmly stated when he met with Prime Minister Anders Fogh
    Rasmussen (V) [V = liberal party] in November 2004, as well as the
    minister of economics and industry Bendt Bendtsen (K) [K = Conservatives]
    and the minister of science Helge Sander (V).

    The threat may become reality, if parts of the IT industry succeed in
    blocking a controversial EU directive on software patents, that
    Microsoft [more than anything in the world] wants to be approved, but
    which time and again has been delayed thanks to their opponents very
    efficient lobbying.

    "If I'm to keep my development center in Denmark, then it's a
    requirement that the question of rights becomes resolved. Otherwise, I
    will move it to the USA where I can protect my rights" said Bill Gates
    according to Microsoft Chief legal council[?] Marianne Wier, that also
    took part in the meeting with Anders Fogh Rasmussen.

    Bill Gates bought the Danish development department, which builds upon
    the merger of the two IT companies Navision and Damgaard, for almost 12
    billion DKK back in 2002.

    It has not been possible to reach Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen
    to have him explain in detail [lit. "deepen"] how he reacted on the
    harsh message from Bill Gates.

    Additional information

    * Navision is a ERP software provider, no research entity. It was bought for 1.4 Billion DKR, not to gain access to Navision's patents but to enter Navisions enterprise solutions market. Navision has very good ERP solutions and competes with SAP. German SAP also has very few software patents, although they are rapidly increasing their portfolio. At the ERP market there are hardly any software patents. The whole ERP market is dominated by European players.
    * Where are those DK Navision software patents? See 35 granted software patents suspected from Denmark. Before Microsoft boug

  60. Re:Patents cripple innovation? by Jane_Dozey · · Score: 1

    Ever heard of copyrights? You know, those things that currently give good protection to software developers (not to mention artists, writers etc) in Europe right now. Oh, but hang on, that can't be right can it? After all, surely we're all living in a dump right now because we don't have software patents to protect us. Now, I should really stop typing at my computer because it must be imaginary, turn off my radio to stop hearing those pirates playing illegal material and stare at the wall because I have no reason to do anything innovative.

    Really, get a clue.

    --
    Silly rabbit
  61. Dead Patent-Law Sketch (Part 2) by sepluv · · Score: 5, Funny

    The Sketch (contd...)

    Mr. Gates: Now that's what I call a dead patent law. The JURI is no longer out on that patent law...its most definitely deceased.

    Commissioner: No, no.....No, 'e's stunned!

    Mr. Gates: STUNNED?!?

    Commissioner: Yeah! 'E was stunned by all the public backlash! Patent laws stun easily, major.

    Mr. Gates: Um...now look...now look, mate, I've definitely 'ad enough of this. That patent law is definitely deceased, and when I purchased it not two years ago, you assured me that its total lack of movement was due to it bein' tired and shagged out following prolonged internal diplomacy.

    Commissioner: Well...uhhh...we prefer to do things dead slow and sure like in the EU!

    Mr. Gates: Well...the dead bit is most certainly right. Look, why did it fall flat on his back the moment I got home last time? I never had these problems with Congress...

    Commissioner:Remarkable patent law, id'nit, squire? Lovely contradictions and those beautiful convoluted sentences!

    Mr. Gates: Look, I took the liberty of examining that patent law when I got it home, and I discovered the only reason that it had got as far as it had in the first place was that no one had actually READ it.

    (pause)

    Commissioner: Well, o'course they don't! They're not payed enough for that...at least they are, but we pay 'em NOT to read 'em. That's the trick, you see. Trust me...that patent law will fly straight through as an A-item in the fisheries committee...just like...a parrot, sir...you know parrots love a bit of fish...the great thing is, sir, that the ministers and MEPs avoid it like the plague on account of it stinkin' to 'igh 'eaven...

    Mr. Gates: Never find how 'igh your damn committee stinks, this patent law wouldn't fly through your committee if you put four million volts through every minister present! 'E's bleedin' demised!

    Commissioner: No no! 'E's just a li'l slow!

    Mr. Gates: 'E's not slow! 'E's passed on! This patent law is no more! He has ceased to be! 'E's expired and gone to meet 'is maker! 'E's a stiff! Bereft of life, 'e rests in peace! 'E's pushing up the daisies! 'Is metabolic processes are now 'istory! 'E's off the twig! 'E's kicked thebucket, 'e's shuffled off 'is mortal coil, run down the curtain and joined the bleedin' choir invisibile!! THIS IS AN EX-PATENT LAW!!

    (pause)

    Commissioner: Well, I'd better replace it, then. (he takes a quick peek round the back) Sorry squire, I've had a look 'round the back , and uh, we're right out of patent laws.

    Mr. Gates: I see. I see, I get the picture.

    Commissioner: I got a HIPC initiative. Uhhh...your good...ummm...friend, Mr. Brown had this idea you see but he hasn't got the means...

    (pause)

    Mr. Gates: (sweetly) Pray, will it take out my competitors?

    Commissioner: Nnnnot really.

    Mr. Gates: WELL IT'S HARDLY A BLOODY REPLACEMENT, IS IT?!!???!!?

    Commissioner: N-no, I guess not. (gets ashamed, looks at his feet)

    Mr. Gates: Well.

    (pause)

    Commissioner: (quietly) You know I thought that uhhh...spread in Teen Beat was rather good...uhhh...D'you.... d'you want to come back to my place?

    Mr. Gates: (looks around) Yeah, all right, sure.

    Copyright

    The original dead parrot sketch was written by Graham Chapman, et. al. for Monty Python's Flying Circus and is © 1989 Pantheon Books/Random House, Inc. My modification of it is co

    --
    Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
    [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]
    1. Re:Dead Patent-Law Sketch (Part 2) by nacturation · · Score: 1

      Any resemblences or references to real people, living or dead; or real events, businesses, or organisations are purely co-incidental.

      You misspelled "purely intentional".

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
  62. Backfire! by redelm · · Score: 5, Informative
    ... and if I and others decide to detest M$ over a hostile action, that too is our right. The separation of business and politics is a much bigger deal in the EU than in the US. Rightfully so IMHO. M$ just lost cred bigtime, especially if this is widely reported.

    As for Martha, had she tried those stunts, I'm sure that the DoJ would be happy to add bribery (maybe extortion) charges and her shareholders would've sued her to powder. There is supposed to be separation between the legislative, executive and judicial branches of govt in the US. And an independant judiciary (incl prosecutors) most everywhere else.

  63. Re:Anit-Immigration != anti-immigrant. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem is that it isn't sane.

    And most Danes know him as Anders Fjogh Rasmussen (His real name is Fogh). Fjog means something like a fool in Danish.

    He's also the guy who helped invading Iraq because he felt it was the right thing to do. (his words)

  64. help us stop Microsoft extortion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    This company is far from any ethical standards and any proper business conduct. We can safely say that Microsoft is acting in a criminal manner besides producing mediocre software and paying their executives to spread blatant lies.

    At the same time there are honest people, companies, and organizations that produce quality open source operating systems e.g. Linux.

    There is simply NO excuse to use windows anymore, perhaps except for gaming. People who still use windows are retards and companies who do are not just acting irresponsibly but are guilty of supporting this criminal entity.

    1. Re:help us stop Microsoft extortion by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      Sorry, but the OSS community does not need people like you.

      Using OSS software is about exercising a choice, whether it's using Firefox in Windows or trashing your hard drive and going completely with Linux/BSD/etc.

      Educating and informing the commercial software users about OSS and letting them decide is the right thing to do, name-calling and abuse is the wrong thing to do and makes you no better than Microsoft & their predatory tactics.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
  65. I like Danishes by N8F8 · · Score: 1

    What a bastard that Gates must be to blackmail Danishes.

    --
    "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
    1. Re:I like Danishes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Danes call them Vienna brød

  66. Re:Reasonable Point of View gets modded down again by Frnknstn · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Post as AC, and you get what you deserve.

    --
    If it's in you sig, it's in your post.
  67. common definiton: Racketeering by 192939495969798999 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Generally, something "arm twisting" like this is commonly considered "racketeering", meaning "if you don't do what we/I want, 'something bad' is going to happen".

    --
    stuff |
    1. Re:common definiton: Racketeering by smithmc · · Score: 1

      Generally, something "arm twisting" like this is commonly considered "racketeering", meaning "if you don't do what we/I want, 'something bad' is going to happen".

      That depends on whether the "something bad" is illegal. If it's "we're going to set fire to your pizzeria in the middle of the night", that's clearly racketeering. If it's "we're going to close this company which we own", that's different. It's still objectionable and repugnant, but it's not really illegal.

      --
      Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
  68. Danish government by alw53 · · Score: 0

    Denmark has dealt with Stalin living next door;
    they are not scared of Microsoft.
    If it comes down to it, they can cost Bill a lot more than he can cost them -- a nice open-source mandate would be a good place to start.

    1. Re:Danish government by isotpist · · Score: 2, Funny

      You and I don't seem to look at the same kind of map.
      Did Stalin live in Sweden or Germany?

    2. Re:Danish government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Ahhh..

      Yet another display of the supreme quality of topographical knowledge of the average US-ian.

    3. Re:Danish government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bornholm, in the middle of the Baltic sea, is danish... it was liberated bu Russian troops after WW2.

    4. Re:Danish government by White+Roses · · Score: 2, Funny

      Oh, like either of those is better: Hitler or Abba.

      --
      Do not touch -Willie
    5. Re:Danish government by Quixote · · Score: 0

      Have you looked at Google Maps ? It's all blue out there, let your imagination run wild.

    6. Re:Danish government by infolib · · Score: 1
      Denmark has dealt with Stalin living next door

      Yeah, the missiles had only 10 minutes to touchdown in Denmark. You americans would have had lived all of 20 minutes longer. We were so much braver than you.

      Anyways, we were not scared enough of the soviets. US nukes were all that kept the poor polish grunts off our beaches, but did we want any of them in our country? No. NO! NO! (Huge protests etc. etc.)

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced libertarian utopia is indistinguishable from government.
  69. Who owns Microsoft anyway... by osinarin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    from what I understand (which may be very little, who can tell such things!) Bill Gates doesn't own Microsoft and hasn't for a while, he only has a small stakeholding.

    details here(new window)

    anyway, sounds like bill's bark is worse than his bite. I dont think he has the authority to make this kind of decision for microsoft!!! (although you can argue the rest of his ms minions will follow he every command). Sounds like the danish pm has nothing to worry bout.

    as to this tactic, its a normal business tactic. not suprised in the least, its how the world works.

    1. Re:Who owns Microsoft anyway... by Foofoobar · · Score: 1

      Ownership of a corporation is down to it's largest shareholders. Bil Gates IS the largest shareholder followed by Steve Ballmer.

      Bill just isn't CEO who is the person who runs the show. But for all intents and purposes, when the largest shareholder speaks, the board and the CEO listen and RARELY differ.

      So while no one can be sole owner, he is the most influential and largest stockholder; he just doesn't handle the day to day responsibilities... that's Steve's job.

      --
      This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
    2. Re:Who owns Microsoft anyway... by osinarin · · Score: 1

      I thought there would be a simple explanation! : )

  70. Clippy strikes again? by jcinnamond · · Score: 1, Funny

    It looks like you're trying to write a blackmail note...

  71. Then just move !!! by neo2k.dk · · Score: 0

    Let him move his damn "develop"-thing, leave for at better world !!!

    --
    neo2k
  72. Extortion by minus9 · · Score: 1


    Leela: "You're blackmailing me?"

    Bender: "Blackmail is such an ugly word. I prefer extortion. The x makes it sound cool."

  73. Re:Danish Conservatives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, if you look a bit into Denmark's specific version of anti-immigration policy, you might come to understand why many people dislike Anders Fogh Rasmussen. Like, for instance, that many Danes have had to move to Sweden to live with their foreign spouses. It's not that it's strict, it's hostile.

  74. Coersion by LEgregius · · Score: 1

    It's all coersion either way.

  75. I'm disturbed by you lack of faith by gelfling · · Score: 1

    I thought all you gen X libertarians lived and died by the bitchslapping magical invisible free hand of commerce. If Danes don't want to have jobs, no one will force them.

  76. all your danish belong to us. by pureone · · Score: 1, Funny

    resistance is futile...

    --
    120 chars is not bloody enough for a real sig!!! you bastards even count spaces!!!
  77. Heaven forbid! by ScentCone · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Change the players to something more politically correct, like a Hybrid Car factory, and watch exactly the same thing play out. Big companies always look to put their people, their money, and their wake-generating activity in a place (or tax framework) that best suits their bottom line. Why do you suppose that Japanese car manufacturers have partnership plants in Kentucky? Because Michigan was out of room? No, because they dangled issues like jobs in front of political decision makers, and the best deal won. Did the editors of this posting just fall off a turnip truck or something? That headline is gratuitous. Come on, now.

    --
    Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    1. Re:Heaven forbid! by petrus4 · · Score: 1

      Just because a lot of other people have done it, that doesn't make it any less wrong. According to your logic, the next time a murderer is brought up on charges, a winning defense argument could be, "Your Honour, why is the court so shocked? Murder is something which happens all the time!"

      Although, assuming you're American (probably a fairly safe bet, given this site's known readership) it is true that your country's society in particular probably isn't all that far off the above scenario anyway. Guantanamo Bay has been seen endless times as ample evidence that the American government has grown somewhat blase about atrocities.

    2. Re:Heaven forbid! by cosinezero · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but it's microsoft bashing, so it floats to the top of the barrel to be skimmed off for /. fodder.

      Never mind that this is the way -any- business gets done, especially in foreign countries. Politicians regularly sweeten tax deals for companies.

      Heck, what about RJReynolds? They pay off politicians by keeping plants in the right districts AND by lining their pockets with cash, simply so they can make cancer a leading industry.

      MS is going to pull 800 jobs? Woo. How many did any number of our car companies pull out of mexico, china...

    3. Re:Heaven forbid! by cosinezero · · Score: 1

      I'm shocked and appalled you'd compare this to gitmo, when this is much more associable to concepts like 'FAIR TRADE'.

      Microsoft is a BUSINESS. They choose to do business WHERE and WHEN it suits their bottom line.

      Ever hear of the concept of a BUSINESS DEAL - "you scratch mine, I scratch yours"? Yeah, that's all this is. There's no criminal action when a company chooses to close a plant because it's not profitable for them. There's also no criminal act when a company chooses to stop selling to a country.. or in this case - chooses to stop BUYING (labor) from a country.

      This isn't a case of 'because everyone does it, it's OK', it's a case of "There's nothing wrong with this, except that Microsoft is doing it so it's cool to bash them to get your mod points up."

    4. Re:Heaven forbid! by ssj_195 · · Score: 1
      Ever hear of the concept of a BUSINESS DEAL - "you scratch mine, I scratch yours"?
      This seems more like a case of "you scratch mine, or I'll stab yours", to me :)
    5. Re:Heaven forbid! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So a business isn't allowed to take into acccount the tax rate when opening a new factory? What are they supposed to go on? Eye color?

      If I own a business and you jack the tax rate up to 100%, I got news for you: I'm relocating. Once we are over that the rest of this discussion is just about bargaining power.

  78. Corporations don't have morals by Takeel · · Score: 1

    Whether or not this story is accurate, I think it serves as a reminder that corporations by nature don't have ethics.

    For-profit corporations exist to generate profit. Every action a corporation takes is scrutinized to ensure that it works toward the goal of making profit. Actions that might appear to be based on ethics are still motivated by profit. For example, donations to good causes aren't done as a nicety; they're for generating good PR and tax write-offs.

  79. Are you his mommy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    how lame of you to be such an apologist for a person such as BG.

    BG does what he does in a willfull way.

    Do you think that he is evil?

    He gets what he deserves based upon his behavior just like the rest of us.

    PS: Microsoft seems to do a pretty good job of going as low as they can.

  80. Correct word... by abb3w · · Score: 2, Insightful
    is obviously Danegeld. =)

    --
    //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
    1. Re:Correct word... by cosinezero · · Score: 0

      Why this hasn't been modded to 5 I'll never understand. Great post.

    2. Re:Correct word... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because those of us with mod points don't like him OR you.

  81. Darth Gates by HangingChad · · Score: 5, Funny
    You and your pathetic band of Eurotrash nations will accept software patents or you will feel the power of our fully operational Deathstar! Powered by XP.

    Just as soon as it reboots...any second now...is the Deathstar back up yet? Damned 14 year old hackers!

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  82. I knew it! by Dunkirk · · Score: 1

    It was clearly obvious that this sort of thing was going on in the debate over software patents in the EU. I'm just glad some of it -- any of it -- has come to light. Don't get overly excited about this news. It's also clear that any big company in the business of proprietary software is in there, pulling out every dirty trick they think they can get away with so as to get software patents passed. I would encourage the EU-based Slashdot readership (*both* of you, according to how many comments I read about how biased Slashdot is towards America...) to get involved in digging up more of these stories for submission. Microsoft fears what I hope: that blockage of software patents in the EU will culminate in the reversal of allowing them in the USA.

    --
    Acts 17:28, "For in Him we live, and move, and have our being."
  83. No problem, European competition will torch them by NigelJohnstone · · Score: 1

    No problem, if they sack experienced developers and move to the USA, those developers will go work for someone else and make another European company!

    The value in that company isn't in the existing products, its in the knowledge of the people to make next generation products.

    They just want less competition in Europe.

  84. Patent documentation by zyche · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The software industry in the US is ofcourse terrified at the prospect that Europe will not get software patents... I guess they consider this an "unfair condition" for competition, since the belive that european software companies can create cheaper "copies" of US developed software.

    But another thing: as I have understand it you are required to very carefully document what you patent. So, to get a patent on software you will have to decribe the used algorithm very carefully.

    Now, US software patents may render quite a dangerous tool for american companies as their european counterparts quickly will gather the needed information from the patents documents and create a substitute version. The tool will turn itself against its master...

    1. Re:Patent documentation by joss · · Score: 1

      > to get a patent on software you will have to decribe the used algorithm very carefully

      Well kinda, but the patents are written by lawyers, not engineers. The engineer sits in a room with patent attorneys and they turn whatever information the engineer gives them into legalese. For 95% of software patents its easier to figure out how to write an equivalent program by just running the actual software and observing its behaviour. Then once you've understood it, you can read the patent and chances are pretty good the original used the same basic algorithms.

      The thing is.. the tricky thing about most trutly innovative software is not how you solve the problem, but what problem you choose to solve. You cannot obtain a patent on the problem, so instead companies obtain patents on the solution they used and any other reasonable solutions they can think of at the same time.

      You cannot legitametly patent the problem, but you can try [business methods], and since the USPTO uses a "grant now, litigate later" model, patents hugely skew things in favour of large companies.

      --
      http://rareformnewmedia.com/
  85. Moderation -2 (Troll, Flamebait) by gmuslera · · Score: 0
    That is the kind of moderation that usually gets here this kind of negative comments on Microsoft politics or products (imagine that yesterday i had put a comment saying that the only way Microsoft can get its sponsored laws passed is by blackmailing).

    So in this story that kind of mod points will go to the comments that try to minimize or ignore that kind of Microsoft behaviour? Or could be the truth be moderated as troll?

  86. What a surprise by petrus4 · · Score: 1

    And people tell me I'm overly judgemental and I'm being way too hard on poor widdle Bill when I tell them about what a tyrannical, degenerate scumbag he is.

    However, Gates being a genuinely evil human being is a fact that we've all been aware of for some time. The thing that I suppose we should be appreciative of when he continues to behave like this is the fact that the more he does it, the larger the number of people who will come to see him for what he truly is...which will in turn bring about Microsoft's decline all that much faster.

    So please, Bill. Carry on with the Darth Vader/Al Capone routine, by all means. All you're ultimately doing is digging your own grave...a fact about which the rest of us couldn't be happier.

  87. It's Microsoft Bribery v3.11a by celtic_hackr · · Score: 1

    This is Bills' twisted take on bribery.
    "If you do this morally worng thing for
    me, I'll keep 800 people in your pathetic
    little country working...

    until the next time you #$%! europeeans
    piss me off."

  88. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Gates is threatening to lay people off. 800 people out of work

    But working for Bill Gates' company is not a natural human right, so what is objectionable about this? Just because he is wealthy (and he's a self-made man, remember), those 800 people suddenly have control over his finances?

    Say you had something for auction on eBay. One bidder contacts you and tells you he really needs the item you're auctioning, and he came to your eBay auction because he expected to get it at a low price. He tells you he expected to pay only 10% of what the auction's currently at, and it's not even over.

    Do you have a moral imperative to stop the auction and sell the item to the beggar at the cost he wants? If not, why does Gates?

    People do not have a right to be employed by Bill Gates, and if it will be such a disaster economically if he pulls out of an area you'd think the politicians would be bending over backwards to suit his demands -- seeing as how their livelihood is apparently utterly dependent on Mr. Gates' presence in their area of political control.

  89. True... by Dasch · · Score: 1

    And it's working. The government suddenly seems to be in favour of the patent law after Billyboy threatened to move the largest IT business in Denmark to the US.

    And what's with Poland changing their mind?! I bet they've received an offer they couldn't resist, too.

    Ahh, thank God for the freedom of western democracy!

  90. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by museumpeace · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Given the trend of governments, especially those in the EU, toward use of FOSS to run their bureaucracies, I would expect that a ploy by Microsoft like the one reported could blow up in their face. What would stop Rassmussen from saying to Gates "OK, you fire the 800 programmers. While they are looking for work, we will fund their unemployment insurance with the money we save by dumping Microsoft OS and Office products. In fact, maybe some of those displaced workers would not mind helping us install and configure Linux, Firefox and Open Office in all our departments." The Danes are not noted for caving in to aggressive ulitmatims.

    --
    SLASHDOT: news for people who can't concentrate on work or have no life at all and got tired of yelling back at the TV.
  91. Re:Microsoft has to pay people to use their softwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Drug lords in Brazil give a lot of money to charity, too. Doesn't mean I have to like them.

  92. Familiar style? by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    That's spelled "MafiaSCO".

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  93. Suprise! by tod_miller · · Score: 2, Informative

    If you care to check out my other posts on the subject of EU patents, I do wonder just where Microsoft would be behind the curtains.

    In the everlasting words of Bill Gates "Suprise Fuckers!".

    Well, I think this is obviously a way of setting up a legal platform to kill linux (after SCO failed) by removing the last bastion of patent turf war.

    We need to have out own patent office, the GNUPatent office, and get it recognised.

    --
    #hostfile 0.0.0.0 primidi.com 0.0.0.0 www.primidi.com 0.0.0.0 radio.weblogs.com
  94. It was close to election day - priorities change by svin · · Score: 0

    Well I suppose you have a good point. However we recently had an election in Denmark (Feb. 8th), where one of the main-themes was employment. In fact both sides of parliament promised to create 50.000 new jobs (a lot in a country with 5-6 million inhabitants).

    The current government was also in power before this election, and it would have made their promises look quite ridiculous, if it had been announced, that we were loosing 800 jobs the day before election day.

    The articles I've found make no mention of the date of the meeting, but if it was before Feb. 8th, I think Bill Gates would have had quite some leverage.

    PS. To comment on the blackmail/extortion threads above: If it was before election day it comes damn close to being illegal, as it could be viewed as a threat to disturb the election process (IMHO, IANAL)

  95. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I find threatening people's livelihoods

    You mean the ones Gates created and sustains of his own free will?

    This is a threat, pure and simple, it's a threat against innocent employees

    You mean the ones Gates himself employs?

    The Stolen Concept

  96. I suspect that it will depend on how much money... by WindBourne · · Score: 1
    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  97. "especially" != "specifically" by aendeuryu · · Score: 1

    It's a vague definition, but it leaves open an interpretation in which extortion and blackmail are in some ways the same. In this situation, Mr. Gates attempted to coerce by threat. According to the dictionary, anyway, that's blackmail.

    1. Re:"especially" != "specifically" by B3ryllium · · Score: 1

      The dictionary indicated that blackmail is a subset of extortion. Threatening to break someone's legs if they don't give you money isn't blackmail, it's extortion. Threating to release nude photos of a person in a compromising position with a ferret, that is blackmail. Mostly because you tended in the past to inform them of your intent *by mail*. ;-)

    2. Re:"especially" != "specifically" by aendeuryu · · Score: 1

      The dictionary indicated that blackmail is a subset of extortion.

      Naw, it didn't. When dictionaries indicate something as being a subset, the language is pretty explicit about it.

      square: 2 : a rectangle with all four sides equal

      baseball: a game played with a bat and ball between two teams of nine players each on a large field etc. etc.

      spaghetti: 1 : pasta made in thin solid strings

      Logic dictates that the phrasing does not on its own eliminate other possibilities. It indicated pretty explicitly that "blackmail is extortion or coercion by threat". The appended clause only talks about the form those threats sometimes take, but doesn't eliminate a broader use of the word, which is applicable to Mr. Gates's actions. Otherwise, it would have been stated less vaguely.

    3. Re:"especially" != "specifically" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why are you arguing about an inaccurate dictionary definition? Are you a member of MENSA?

    4. Re:"especially" != "specifically" by jadavis · · Score: 2, Insightful

      English is a powerful language and the nuances and connotations matter. If you ignore them, you may be technically correct according to the dictionary, but you have failed to effectively communicate.

      "Especially" is used to give you hints about the connotation. In this case, the connotation of blackmail is that you are threatening to reveal something.

      --
      Social scientists are inspired by theories; scientists are humbled by facts.
    5. Re:"especially" != "specifically" by aendeuryu · · Score: 1

      English is a powerful language and the nuances and connotations matter.

      Indeed. Which is why one can differentiate between implied definitions and actual definitions.

      If you ignore them, you may be technically correct according to the dictionary, but you have failed to effectively communicate.

      Depends on the audience. You can also fail to effectively communicate by trying to alter standardized definitions of words.

    6. Re:"especially" != "specifically" by jadavis · · Score: 1

      If you're saying that some previous posts misrepresented the denotation of blackmail, you're probably right. I was just trying to set the argument on the right track by seperating the connotation (what the other posts were talking about) from the denotation (what you were talking about).

      --
      Social scientists are inspired by theories; scientists are humbled by facts.
  98. An argument that Gates actually committed a crime. by Baldrson · · Score: 2, Interesting
    From MSN Encarta:
    Sherman Antitrust Act, basic federal enactment regulating the operations of corporate trusts, passed by the U.S. Congress in July 1890, through the efforts of Senator John Sherman of Ohio. The act declared illegal "every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce among the several States, or with foreign nations." Criminal penalties were provided for violators of the law, and aggrieved persons were entitled to recover three times the amount of losses suffered as a result of the violation. The Sherman Act has been amended and supplemented by several subsequent enactments. Most notable among these enactments was the Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914. See Monopoly; Trusts.

    OK, so given that the main article's title changes "blackmail" to "extort", /. is probably not committing libel.

    I'd change it. Even though Gates is a "public figure" it really is poor practice to throw around accusations carelessly.

  99. Can I hear from Denmark, please? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Goats tried to Blackmail Danish Government

    Tried? Considering the Danish "performance" during last May's council meeting, I'd say "succeeded"!

  100. Do the math ... by zonix · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Couldn't Microsoft just buy Denmark?

    Hmm, let's see ... Denmark's biggest bridge, that's about 6 billion USD right there? You do the math.

    z
    --
    What would an EWOULDBLOCK block, if an EWOULDBLOCK could block would? -- me
    1. Re:Do the math ... by BBird · · Score: 0

      do you mean like he bought the US (Govt)?...

    2. Re:Do the math ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Couldn't Microsoft just buy Denmark?

      Hmm, let's see ... Denmark's biggest bridge, that's about 6 billion USD right there? You do the math.

      While Microsoft may not be able to own the entire country, they may be able to buy up a bunch of the country's external debt which according to the CIA World Factbook is $21.7 Billion

    3. Re:Do the math ... by Politburo · · Score: 1

      Design cost != value.. I would imagine that the 6 Billion you quote is the full cost of the bridge, including preliminary designs, environmental studies, seismic studies, etc, etc, etc. The actual cost of the materials is far less.

      The value as a transportation link, on the other hand, may be far greater.

    4. Re:Do the math ... by spacefrog · · Score: 1

      It's second-hand. Bigger question is, "How much would it be worth on ebay?"

    5. Re:Do the math ... by zonix · · Score: 1

      While Microsoft may not be able to own the entire country, they may be able to buy up a bunch of the country's external debt which according to the CIA World Factbook is $21.7 Billion

      The Danes aren't too concerned with the external debt. It's just a matter of priorities.

      E.g. consider that Denmark's current development assistance to foreign nations is around 1.6 billion USD per year. This represents around 1% of Denmark's GNI and is the highest in the EU - I believe - and it's certainly well beyond the average country effort of around 0.4%.

      z
      --
      What would an EWOULDBLOCK block, if an EWOULDBLOCK could block would? -- me
  101. Open letter to the Danish prime minister by thomasdn · · Score: 1

    Hi.

    There has been sent an open letter to the Danish prime minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen. The letter can be read at: http://perlpimp.dk/openletter-primeminister-200502 15.txt

    The letter is in Danish, but maybe a translation is comming up?

    P.S. I am a citizen in Denmark.

  102. 800 jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    800 jobs, is it a big deal for a nation, to buckle.

  103. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by plague3106 · · Score: 1

    Its not just that alternatives exist, its that MS can lock them out totally by 'leaveraging' their monopoly. Which many would argue is exactly whats happening.

  104. Digging own grave by Alarash · · Score: 1
    Well, maybe something good could come out of this (hey, don't all look at me like that, I'm not done yet! :).

    I don't know about you all but if I was in this government, I'd make sure that Danmark would ever, ever again buy a Microsoft product and move to an open source solution (or, rather, accelerate the migration since it seems many European countries are looking into that lately).

    Bill, if you read, thank you for digging your company's own grave.

  105. Not blackmail... by Insurgent2 · · Score: 0

    ...Hotmail!

  106. Re:Danish Conservatives by Dasch · · Score: 2, Informative

    I happen to live in Denmark, and trust me, it's not the size that's the problem. The problem is that our minister of state from the once-liberal, right-wing party "Venstre" ("Left" in English, kinda confusing actually) has allowed the Danish People's Party, a bunch of rascists with close ties to the extreme right, to dictate the immigration laws in order to get their support in other areas.

    Anti-immigration is nothing but rascism. Phew!

  107. Patents only for start up companies? by Axoiv · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Why not restrict software patents to smaller start up companies? For a 7 year patent time or so?

    These large corporations dont seem to help humanity in any way. Cutting of jobs, threatening governments? It's getting out of control.

    Smaller businesses, on the other hand, could produce more jobs and don't jam up the justice system suing anyone against them.

    1. Re:Patents only for start up companies? by GauteL · · Score: 1

      And what would stop the big companies from just starting smaller companies to do the patenting for them?

    2. Re:Patents only for start up companies? by Axoiv · · Score: 1

      You mean like a daughter company? No, that would not be allowed.

      Anyway, I'm not presenting the perfect and final legislation right here and now on slashdot. :-)

    3. Re:Patents only for start up companies? by gnuman99 · · Score: 1
      No no no. You set the fees for software/business method patent filing at

      price=($100)*(Y+1)^1.5

      Where Y is the sum of the number of patent applications you filed and number of patents that were granted to you.

  108. Interesting... by catdevnull · · Score: 1

    I find it interesting that we pick on MS for this while other corporations in the US do this daily to individuals, companies, states, countries, and even other corporations.

    The irony is, unless you're a self-sustaining hippie commune in rural Idaho, you're probably going to be a corporate consumer if you like it or not. Our entire way of life is at the mercy of corporations. You're a tool of the man, man.

    --

    I might know what I'm talkin' about, but then again, this is Slashdot...
  109. Ahaaaa... by hilli · · Score: 1

    If that is what it takes to get them out of this country (DK), then so be it.

    If only they could have let us know, that this is what it would take to do it many years ago...

    --
    /Hilli
  110. An interesting lesson in economics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft have attempted many of the tactics that a true monopoly is supposed to be able to employ to maintain its position. These include undercutting competitors on price and threats such as these. Without government protection to create barriers to entry for competitors, a coersive monopoly is not possible. The only monopoly that can be sustained without that support is one that is based on economies of scale, where the monopolist's average cost per unit is driven down by high volume.

    Software should be one of the best natural monopolies possible. The cost of developing and testing the code is a one-time cost for any given release. The cost of producing another unit is extremely low. Yet the behavior we are seeing from Gates and Balmer tells us clearly that they know their pricing model and cost structure aren't in line with an economy of scale. They don't believe they can maintain their position by competing on the basis of price, quality and features.

    The reasons are plain for all the world to see. Windows and Office are overpriced at retail. The only thing holding up their volume is the fact that they are both sold at a discount to multiple customer bases. The biggest is probably the people who get them bundled with new hardware. They have deliberately created a lock-in strategy of incompatible, proprietary file formats. They don't believe their customers will stay otherwise when they can leave for OpenOffice with next to no effort and Linux for less trouble than reinstalling Windows.

    Microsoft's quality is notoriously poor. Their security flaws are widely regarded to be design flaws. You don't fix those with patches. Once you expose and API, people are going to use it. Turning it off because it is insecure by design is going to break software people are using.

    Microsoft have exactly three features that the open source community can't match. Their software supports its own file formats better. Of course, the current version of Office doesn't support earlier Office formats better than open source. Windows runs apps that Linux doesn't. Even when there are open source competitors available for the apps, there is a cost to converting. Their software supports its own security-flawed APIs better.

    The common ground on all three of Microsoft's advantages is lock-in. It keeps customers from defecting. However, it is self-defeating. Microsoft must maintain lock-in and there are significant costs to doing so. Open source has none of those costs because it doesn't have to maintain lock-in. It is based on a model that has abandoned that strategy. Microsoft are very, very scared.

  111. Blackmail chmackmail by JFMulder · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Come on. All this because it's Bill Gates. Poeple, companies do this all the time. Some companies are always threatening the Parti Quebecois in Quebec to leave Quebec if it ever separates from Canada. Company threaten governments to leave if they raise the taxes to much. This is not news.

    I'm not saying this is an okay thing. Companies should not do this. I'm just saying it's unfair to make this newsworthy only because it's Microsoft.

    1. Re:Blackmail chmackmail by inf0stud · · Score: 0, Troll

      "Poeple,[and] companies do this all the time"
      Are "Poeple" a new type of cloned human atuned to needs of corporations? Perhaps they are all around us and we don't realise? I think it's poeple that accept crappy software without fuss. I wonder what the people:poeple ratio is now?

    2. Re:Blackmail chmackmail by JFMulder · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      When you put as much effort writing in a second language as I'm putting right now, then you might come and critisize me. For the time being, stop feeling special because you found a typo.

  112. Re:Danish Conservatives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He was better know for attempting to turn christiania into trendy flats

    That place is nothing but a huge drug market and free-birding off the rest of the country so it would only be best to level it.

    At least it looks like he got the country with him becoz he just got re-elected again. But then again. So did Bush.

  113. Philips did the same by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Philips threated to move all there reseach and development facilities, out of Europe, to the US and Asia. So the "blackmail" applies not only to MS. Ofcourse MS makes bigger headlines.............

  114. It is a criminal act by Baki · · Score: 1

    Why is there no criminal act? I think there is, since false arguments are being used to pressure democratically elected politicians.

    If overthrouwing the government is illegal, this should be illegal too, and deserves harsh punishment for the persons involved.

    1. Re:It is a criminal act by Alcilbiades · · Score: 1

      Just because one hates microsoft doesn't mean they don't have a say in a government they are supporting. If the population cares not that 800 ppl will lose their jobs then microsoft will just take their business and taxes with them and the country will have to find someway to replace the lost jobs.

  115. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by miskatonic+alumnus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Your logic is astounding --- I guess we have no grounds to ojbect or complain about anything unless it violates a natural human right. Now genius, why not define natural human right for us.

    Here is one for you. The corporation doesn't have a natural right to make a profit, nor use the roads that taxpayers pay for, nor the airwaves for communications that are owned by the people, etc. etc. etc. You corporate apologists make me want to puke.

  116. alright i RTFA by AviLazar · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is not blackmail. The poster of this threat should be shot. At best this is extortion - more likely it is using political influence - just like MANY lobbyists do. You know when the NHL goes on strike for contract disputs, SEPTA goes on strike for contract disputes. When environmental groups lobby and put the squeeze on politicians. When car and oil companies do the same thing.

    Frankly - it is also business. Billy probably was thinkign "if these guys want to screw me over with their .... then I am going to just pull my office from there so I don't get screwed..."

    --

    I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
  117. Most businesses do this by Evro · · Score: 1

    Sports team to city: "Build us a new stadium or we're moving somewhere that will."

    Random Corporation to state: "Give us tax breaks or we'll have to take our business elsewhere."

    There are other examples I'm sure, but suffice it to say that this is not something new and nobody gets in an uproar when other companies do it.

    --
    rooooar
  118. Bribery and Extortion is a Way of Life by Greyfox · · Score: 1
    In big corporations. Corporations bribe politicians with "campaign contributions" and have always wielded the stick of removing jobs from a region if the carrot didn't work.

    As for the bribing bits, it's all quite nicely documented for you on opensecrets.org (For the USA anyway.) You can go there and tell exactly which politician is in which company's pocket. The extortion side is a little less well documented, probably because it has to be used so infrequently. Once you give a politician a nice fat check, they usually stay bought, or they don't stay in the business long.

    The US Congress made a halfhearted attempt to limit the amount of the bribes that big companies could give them, but I'm not seeing as how that's doing a whole lot of good. Probably because the attempt was halfhearted. After all, if you had a nice source of suitcases of money, you wouldn't really want to stop it, even if a cute little puppy or an orphan occasionally had to get burned alive to make it happen. Would you?

    Anyway the upshot of all of that is that if we really want the current status quo to change, we'll have to make some draconian new laws on what corporations can do, and we'll have to draw them up in tidy paragraphs so they don't conflict with... The Constitution. And the only way that's going to happen is if everyone gets riled up and stays riled up enough to vote any politicians who resist out of office. And I don't see that happening.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  119. which only proves that by Baki · · Score: 1

    this is not true 'information' that is being given to the danish minister, but nothing less than extortion. Thus illegal and punishable similar to a coup d'état and other democracy threatening actions.

  120. philips' natlab by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know for a fact that philips has threatened multiple times to move the natlab research center in the Netherlands (Eindhoven) somewhere else (Asia), if some politicians didn't do what they wanted. According to the article they are putting pressure on the dutch goverment, I'd guess this is what they are doing.

    Threatening like this is very common for big companies. And is maybe isn't always a bad thing either. Sometimes they might even be telling the truth, because the alternative might be bankruptcy.

    Abuse is probably very common as well. Power corrupts.. we knew that.. nothing new here really.... But still it is IMHO an immoral act.

  121. EU software Patents, big playaz, politics by Kvasio · · Score: 1

    Sad enought, Poland will probably step under pressure from big ones (such as M$, Siemens and others). They made the same blackmail to our prime minister and probably he was not the man with hard balls.

    I'm so much pissed with it.

  122. Re:The Philips threat by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 1
    1. Loss of approximately 800 jobs
    The pressure from corporate bigwigs is definitely on. Earlier, the CEO of Philips claimed that not adopting software patentability would result in the loss of "billions of euros and tens of thousands of jobs". Yeah, right. This is another one of those "protect my interests or Satan will come and eat your babies" threat. The sad thing is that the opinions, however uninformed, carry a lot of weight with politicians. Thankfully Poland is one of the countries where politicians have seen the light, and realise that software patents will be detrimental to their own burgeoning software industry.
    --
    If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
  123. Wake up! Corporations are co-opting democracy by ahodgkinson · · Score: 4, Insightful
    This is what happens when multi-national corporations gain wealth approaching that of medium sized nations. They tend to start (mis-)using the power that wealth affords them to promote their own agenda. While this is done for financial gain and not as evil for evil's sake, the result is a disproportionate balance of power/rights to the favor of the corporation at the expense of the private citizen, with little regard for unintended consequences that the public might suffer.

    Unfortunately, multi-national corporations have a great deal to gain with such practices, and their expected value is actually fairly high, even taking into account the legal fees, fines and embarrassment of getting caught now and again.

    Unfortunately, the public, as compared to the vested business interests, is generally apathetic, since they have less to lose individually, than the corporations. This means that the corporations will merely continue their efforts until the public loses interest and they succeed in converting their selfish desires into government policy. This may take years, but they have the focus to see it through to the end.

    In the particular case, software patents, there has been public outcry in Europe against them and the politicians have generally listened. Each time we think the issue is close some massive business entity resurrects the discussion, in spite of the public opinion. Obviously this hasn't yet met with success and now Microsoft is attempting some innovative (sic) and repulsive tactics.

    What should we as individuals do?

    • Spread the word and name names. Tell your friends, your co-workers, you boss, or even better, your neighbor the elected official, that Microsoft has attempted to co-opt the democratic process in Denmark.
    • Wite letters to newspapers, journals, and elected officials explaining why software patents are a bad idea in Europe.
    • Vote with your feet. Stop buying/using products from companies that engage in unfair business and political practices.
    • Donate to the EFT, Groklaw and other similar institutions.
    • Remain vigilant.
    If you dont know much about the arguments surrounding software patents, have a look at: http://www.nosoftwarepatents.com

    Note: I'm not against big business, provided they play fair. Unfortunately, my experience has been that large corporations tend to use their size advantages in ways that make it difficult for smaller (and in many cases more innovative) business to compete. It's up to the small guy to fight back (in a fair way :).

    --
    ---- It won't be as bad as you fear or as good as you hope, but it will take twice as long as you plan.
    1. Re:Wake up! Corporations are co-opting democracy by kjamez · · Score: 1

      Vote with your feet. Stop buying/using products from companies that engage in unfair business and political practices.

      i agree. we already have people standing outside of starbucks complaining about fair trade coffee and the likes? how is this any different? corporations don't just print money, it's given to them for various services/goods/etc they provide (excluding the occasional good-ole-boy contract with a wealthy country) ...

      it's be said thousands upon thousands of times: if you don't like microsoft products, don't buy them.
      (if you have a bad meal at a $75/plate restaurant, would you go back?) actively campaign at your uni/govn't agency/corp. to make a switch to free/oss stuff. bitch, whine, kick, scream, hand out flyers about 'microsoft's bad business practices' and how it affects [insert country/corp]'s people and/or livelyhood. don't say anything slanderous, and try to keep the FUD to a minimum, and you'll be okay.

      It's up to the small guy to fight back (in a fair way :).

      precisely. hitem' where it hurts, right there at the bottom line. unfortunately, the way most corp's deal with a falling bottom line is to fire the people making the least ... lots of them. it's easier to do that than to perhaps force a 5% pay cut on the people making the $1.2m salaries ... how would they pay for that new rols that way?

      --
      you can't have everything, where would you put it?
    2. Re:Wake up! Corporations are co-opting democracy by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      we already have people standing outside of starbucks complaining about fair trade coffee and the likes?

      Yes, but we also have thousands of people going into Starbucks every day to buy their over-priced coffee without giving a moment's thought to the coffee growers in Brazil/Africa/etc.

      It's one thing caring but it's only effective when the majority care...

      if you don't like microsoft products, don't buy them.

      Sure, Microsoft want to sell Windows and Office to Joe Sixpack through computer stores but this is not their greatest concern - a great proportion of the public at large run MS products from borrowed MSDN CDs anyway.

      It's the computer vendors selling the stuff per-installed and the corporates with the licensing deals that fill the Microsoft coffers...

      If Joe Sixpack stops buying pre-installed Windows PCs and complains to his boss that he's not prepared to use Windows at work (and gets listened to!) then we can make a change. But MS is so entrenched in these areas that it's more likely security and cost issues will drive MS out of the marketplace, not direct public action...

      actively campaign at your uni/govn't agency/corp. to make a switch to free/oss stuff. bitch, whine, kick, scream, hand out flyers about 'microsoft's bad business practices'

      Joe Sixpack doesn't give a damn about this, I'm sorry to say. He just cares about surfing the Internet, playing his games, editing his photos and taking his PC round to a relation to get it fixed if it goes wrong.

      Maybe if all us anti-Microsoft tech-heads stopped repairing all our friends and relatives Windows PCs, things would eventually grind to a halt for Joe Sixpack & his Windows :-)

      the way most corp's deal with a falling bottom line is to fire the people making the least

      Ain't that the truth! One Joe Sixpack boycotts a product and another Joe Sixpack loses his job due to falling profits - yet MR Fat Cat CEO still gets his bonus!

      I'm all for direct positive action but the reality is most people just don't give a damn, I'm sorry to say.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    3. Re:Wake up! Corporations are co-opting democracy by kjamez · · Score: 1

      Yes, but we also have thousands of people going into Starbucks every day to buy their over-priced coffee without giving a moment's thought to the coffee growers in Brazil/Africa/etc. It's one thing caring but it's only effective when the majority care...

      but isn't that the entire point of 'direct positive action'? to make people care who would otherwise know nothing about it? fair trade coffee being a good example: i had none clue about what level of exploitation was taking place, but i loved some coffee. i moved to oregon, and i got handed a flyer, and now [do my best to] buy only fair trade coffee. their action cause a minor loss of sales to the opposing cause. i told other people about fair trade coffee ... lather, rinse, repeat. if you stop activly campaigning for something, you are as apathetic towards the cause (if not moreso because of your knowledge) by failing to do anything about it.

      It's the computer vendors selling the stuff per-installed and the corporates with the licensing deals that fill the Microsoft coffers...

      who are in turn yet another corp, with a dropping bottom line. if Dell won't sell you a PC with a choice of operating system / bundled software, 'dude don't get a dell'. Your local pc shop may or may not offer you a better deal in that regards. Even if they charged the equilivent of the ms-tax to install/setup/secure your fedora install (not distro war, just example), i (as a concerned consumer) would gladly consider alternatives.

      I'm all for direct positive action but the reality is most people just don't give a damn, I'm sorry to say.

      not true. i believe it's lack of exposure. have you ever met a californian without a 'cause'? going back to coffee: stereotypically (and sometimes truely) tennessee'ans don't even know where coffee comes from, much less that this random company they've never heard of (i have one starbucks within 40 miles! beat that.) would be exploiting someone somewhere over it.

      --
      you can't have everything, where would you put it?
  124. You can choose... by jeti · · Score: 1

    You can choose between any of this government.

  125. Re:Can't anyone read an article? by soulhuntre · · Score: 1

    "Doesn't anyone know what that means any more?

    You do realize where you are posting right? And who this is about (MS?)? Of course this is true. Just like it's true that when you buy a MiniMac god gives the world a cute new puppy.

    So, a company may decide to no longer operate a subdivision because the governments of the country it is in tool hostile action.

    Sounds completely reasonable to me.

    it is AMAZING how many /. people are positively communist int heir willingness to have government run their world.

    --
    --> Fight tyranny and repression.... read /. at -1!
  126. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by miu · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It isn't illegal, but it is arrogant, not really haggling - more like classic carrot and stick. At the very least this kind of strong arm move could backfire and encourage the other party to determine how fast they could re-employ those 800 people in the native software industry, maybe even one based on OSS. That would not only resulting in lost business for MS, but give the Danish government additional incentive to resist software patents.

    --

    [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
  127. Re:Patents cripple innovation? by BJH · · Score: 1

    No more computers.

    Show me a patent that applies to "computers" in such a way as to prevent any general-purpose computer being produced without infringing on that patent.

    No more internet.

    The Internet is not patented, or indeed patentable.

    No more internet routers.

    TCP/IP is not patented.

    No more TV.

    TV was the end result of many different people's work. Thanks to patents, only the person "first past the post" reaps monetary benefit from that work. Golly, that's fair...

    No more radios.
    The first patent on radio was eventually overturned, about 50 years after the original invention. Granting that patent was kind of pointless, wasn't it?

    No more books.

    Books cannot be patented, unless you've come up with a new and exciting way of gluing together cardboard and paper.

    No more artwork.

    Artwork cannot be patented.

    No more music.

    Music cannot be patented.

    I guess you could buy a guitar and start to sing... but wait. Who's going to make a guitar?

    Guitars were invented years before patents even existed. Are you suggesting retroactive patents now?

  128. Re:No problem, European competition will torch the by torpor · · Score: 1

    The value in that company isn't in the existing products, its in the knowledge of the people to make next generation products.

    you seem to be missing a point. the value of this company is in its revenue and ability to pay the wages of 800 people. it may not seem like a lot, but its also lost tax revenue as well. this adds up.

    sure, that talent will go elsewhere and get absorbed into the rest of the economy, somewhere, somehow, hopefully. but the point gates is making: this won't be fun for anyone.

    --
    ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
  129. Backfired! by infolib · · Score: 2, Informative

    The danish Social Democrats just denounced Gates' threats in a press release. The social democrats control whether software patents have a majority or not in the danish parliament.

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced libertarian utopia is indistinguishable from government.
  130. theroot.ofallevil.com/billgates/ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Stop putting all evil on Bill's shoulders.

    But see, he IS evil!
    theroot.ofallevil.com/billgates/

  131. Re:Microsoft has to pay people to use their softwa by Herschel+Cohen · · Score: 1

    The basic problem with this charity is that it always seems to be tied in to Microsoft product purchases. Many of these same school systems might well be forced to expend cash and pay fines for not having sufficient number of licenses.

    Charity? Or simply another <I><B>sharp</B></I> business practice?

  132. Re:Patents cripple innovation? by earthbound+kid · · Score: 0

    Since when is the concept of a guitar patented? There must be one crazy rich old Spanish dude somewhere...

  133. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by GregWebb · · Score: 1

    Aside from the argument being thin enough for me to think you're probably trolling, no, he's not particularly a self-made man. His father was a seriously rich lawyer and his mother was on several large corporate boards - can't find who, but I'm sure there was a family link to the IBM board that got MS-DOS considered for the PC. So, while he's improved on his start, I hardly think he qualifies being described as straight up self-made.

    --

    Greg

    (Inside a nuclear plant)
    Aaaarrrggh! Run! The canary has mutated!

  134. Ob. Bender Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Leela: "You're blackmailing me?"
    Bender: "Blackmail is such an ugly word. I prefer extortion. The x makes it sound cool."

  135. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by randomencounter · · Score: 1
    Um, he bought a company created by Danes, and is threatening to shut it down. One could speculate that the value to Microsoft of this particular company was leverage on the Danish government.

    Of course, that would imply a degree of scheming and underhanded forethought that would be impolitic to imply in this august forum.

    --
    Forget diamonds, copyright is forever.
  136. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by asr_man · · Score: 1

    Maybe someone should mail Microsoft's software development competitors in Denmark a big Microsoft box conatining yellow armbands with the words "EU Software Patents" printed on them.

  137. Not so tough as you think by Oestergaard · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You see, sw patents are only a problem when you are starting up new business - if you are IBM (or Microsoft to some extent) already, then they are useful.

    My point here being, that software patents are only 'stifling' if you intend to start up new business.

    And you are only likely to realize this, if you realize that starting up new businesses is important for an economy to grow.

    Back in the late '90s our government found out that Denmark should be a country of innovation, a high-tech economy so to speak - we cannot compete with china on industrial production costs anyway. So, in order to "boost" research they shut down the only government super computing center we had, sending researchers elsewhere to go beg for computing power.

    To further strenghten our position as a nation of researchers and scientists, we have one of the most expensive but crappiest primary school systems in the western world - which is one thing, but the fact that anyone refuses to do anything about it underlines how important it is to the government to really position our country with a high-tech economy. Or not...

    Copyright law was changed last year, to make it illegal to use or develop debuggers and disassemblers. I wrote to the minister in change of that decision letting him know that I and anyone else developing software would be breaking that law. Got some bullshit answer back which didn't address the problem, so now I'm practicing my right to "civil disobedience" every day on the job, along with everyone else in the software business in this country...

    800 jobs is money right here right now. "Stifling" is in the eye of the beholder. For a government which is determined to break any initiative or start-up business, either indirectly thru neglect or directly thru law, it seems like it is not such a tough decision to make.

    Oh, and add a photo opportunity with Bill and it's a done deal.

    1. Re:Not so tough as you think by SQLz · · Score: 1

      What about the Eolas patent?

    2. Re:Not so tough as you think by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you want true civil disobedience, instead of "civil disobedience", you might want to notify the police yourself everytime you open up a debugger to do your job and insist they arrest either you for breaking the law, or your employer for making you break the law ;)

    3. Re:Not so tough as you think by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      we have one of the most expensive but crappiest primary school systems in the western world

      Oh, come on. You Europeans claim to be best at everything. Face it, America has a much crappier system that's just as expensive.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    4. Re:Not so tough as you think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only winners are the lawyers. There will certainly be more than 800 extra needed in Denmark as every company will have to check whether what it's doing has been previously patented. So let's get those 800 reeducated shall we? (/sarcasm)

    5. Re:Not so tough as you think by Rares+Marian · · Score: 1

      Software patents hurt any business not just start ups. a long running small business is crippled the minute a software patent stops them being able to innovate.

      Software patents stop innovation. It has nothing to do with entering the market. It has everything to with stayin in the market.

      Unless you are trying to suggest businesses can go on without continually doing new things.

      --
      The message on the other side of this sig is false.
  138. yes it does belong on Gates' shoulders by Robocoastie · · Score: 2, Informative

    >>Stop putting all evil on Bill's shoulders. Actually it should be there. Gates, being the richest man in the world in charge of the biggest technology company in the world is in the unique position and power to influence many other sectors of the economy. This also makes him a role model. So yes the evil does rest on his shoulders just as mistakes in government are placed on the President's shoulder's even when its actually the House, Senate, Generals, or all a mix of them all really responsible. Also you're setting a strawman arguement. In this instance Gates is clearly being unethical and shows how eccentric he's getting. Bottom line his company should have been actually punished when found guilty of monopolistic practices by breaking it into pieces like Standard Oil was. But it wasn't, it just got a wrist slap showing us how corrupt our government has become because it wants his money. -- That's how powerful Gates is - he influences and bullies governments.

    1. Re:yes it does belong on Gates' shoulders by Stickney · · Score: 1
      Where in American law (or in International law, for that matter) does it say that "monopolies are bad"? In fact, monopolies are the dream (or should be) of every business out there. Diversify, own everything within your realm of expertise (and yes, I know Microsoft sucks and doesn't have expertise and blah blah blah). That's how you become phenomenally rich. I'd love to be in Gates position. He took a product that was good, marketed it well, and built a great business on a great business model. Stop being jealous!

      Now, I realize that monopolies (East India Tea Company) are exactly what caused some parts of the American Revolution, but that was a government controlled, government sponsored, government owned monopoly. I think that if the government owned MS, either MS would have gone down years ago, or the national debt would be gone right now. Microsoft built a monopoly without govenment protection, and when the time comes it will fall without govenment action.
      "That's how powerful Gates is - he influences and bullies governments."
      Yep. I sure wish I did.
      --
      ...the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.
  139. well by SQLz · · Score: 1

    If Gates gets fired there is always room for him at the pentagon.

  140. great article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where do people find these crazy articles? The one that's linked has choice quotes like "Microsoft bent my Danish prime minister" and "Allegations fly thick and fast".

    Also, the word "ginger" is used as an adjective to describe an advocacy group.

  141. Mono and patents by pohl · · Score: 1

    While everybody else is discussing the subtle distinction between blackmail and extortion, now might be a good time to revisit the idea of whether projects like Mono really ought to feel comfortable about Microsoft's stance on patents. Any astroturfing mono fanboys care to comment about how benevolent Microsoft is? Why would they extort like this if they didn't want the leverage?

    --

    The "cue the foo posts in 3, 2, 1..." posts will commence with no subsequent foo posts in 3, 2, 1...

  142. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by kamasutra · · Score: 4, Insightful
    You mean the ones Gates created and sustains of his own free will?

    Navision was a successful company bought by Microsoft (last year if my memory serves me right, but could be wrong about that). Gates (and Microsoft) hasn't created it and even less sustained it. Their own work did that.

    You mean the ones Gates himself employs?

    Yes. As so many have already explained, this is a disgusting threat because where software is produced doesn't have any correlation to legal protection it has in market in which it sells.

  143. Navison is doomed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No mather what, Navison is doomed.

    Microsoft bought Softimage with the sole purpose to legitimize Windows NT in the high-end visual workstation/digital animation market and to take away sales from SGI (it's mostly a niche - not Microsoft's - player by now). They sold it as soon as SGI was dying. They supported Alpha, MIPS and PPC to hamper the development of alternative OSs for the platforms and then killed support as soon as convenient - they can make or break a hardware platform. I see a pattern here.

  144. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by DoctorMO · · Score: 1

    This sort of thing should be illgal and land the people involved in serous jail time for attempting to take control and/or influence a governments elected by the people. It's a crime and I want any CEO/Manager/Owner of such activates to take social responsibility for their actions.

  145. Re:An argument that Gates actually committed a cri by cosinezero · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Read the whole act here: http://www.stolaf.edu/people/becker/antitrust/stat utes/sherman.html You are allowed to restrain trade with a country, you just can't monopolize it. (see section 2) You completely misunderstood the source, and the concept of anti-trust law. Nothing in anti-trust law says you can't STOP doing business in a country.

  146. Worst....article....ever by gexen · · Score: 0

    ** This is not flamebait, I am just trying to make a point **
    "Hi,
    I'm a typical Slashdot reader. Even though the story doesn't give any details at all and is barely 5 sentences long, I am going to take is as truth despite lacking any real proof or evidence and then start blabbering about how much I hate Microsoft."

    Now, I'm not saying they DIDN'T do it, it sounds like something a business would do. But this piece of "journalism" is not enough to condemn Microsoft for anything. That is by far the poorest execuse for a news article I've ever seen and nothing in it should be taken as fact.

    1. Re:Worst....article....ever by Peter+H.S. · · Score: 2, Informative

      Now, I'm not saying they DIDN'T do it, it sounds like something a business would do. But this piece of "journalism" is not enough to condemn Microsoft for anything. That is by far the poorest execuse for a news article I've ever seen and nothing in it should be taken as fact.

      Fair enough, but I can assure this story is the real deal. Your danish is perhaps a little rusty, but here are some links anyway:

      http://www.borsen.dk/dagens-nyheder/?ids[]=70135
      http://politiken.dk/

      It is worth noting, that the source for the story, is none other than Microsofts chief lawyer in Danmark, Marianne Wier, who was present at the meeting between Bill Gates and the danish Prime Minister Anders F. Rasmussen.

  147. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by cosinezero · · Score: 0

    Serious jail time?

    Hahahahaha

    I hope you don't smoke, because it'd be a shame to label you an idiot AND and hypocrite.

  148. Out of context? by cparisi · · Score: 1

    I am not one to usually defend Bill Gates, but *perhaps* MS determined that it could not run a profitible business there if the directive passed. Sort of like when the US outlawed child labor, so now textiles need to be made in other countries....

  149. Just an idea by steveoc · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Just an idea for how the Danish Govt might choose to react to this 'threat'

    1) Cancel all govt microsoft contracts, convert everything to FOSS.

    2) Use the money saved to employ the 800 laid of developers. Start a govt funded company to support FOSS development and porting to Danish local requirements.

    3) Make use of the new govt funded company to support the new all-FOSS govt infrastructure

    4) Let the new company grow into a commercially viable unit in it's own right, and generate income into Denmark from providing services to other EU states for FOSS migration.

    Nett effect - saves a load of money leaving the country (MS Taxes), creates long term local employment, generates incoming coming into the country.

    Too easy. They should call his bluff I reckon.

  150. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by uradu · · Score: 1

    > But working for Bill Gates' company is not a natural human right

    Carly, I do hope you're not using HP computers to post this, right?!

  151. Linux under Windows by Quiberon · · Score: 1
  152. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by Stanistani · · Score: 1

    >One bidder contacts you and tells you he really needs the item you're auctioning...

    I didn't stop the auction.

    But I checked out his story and sent him another one at cost.

    It's called humanity.

  153. I do know by ThinWhiteDuke · · Score: 1

    I'll follow your analogy...

    An automaker asking a government for financial incentives before building a plant is one thing.

    An automaker asking a government to pass a law drastically reducing car safety measures before building the plant is quite a different thing.

    An automaker, already having a plant, threatening the government to close that plant unless the car safety law is passed is yet another thing.

    All these situations can be called negotiations. Yet they are very different morally and legally. I sincerely hope you can see the differences.

    --

    It would be nice to be sure of anything the way some people are of everything.
    1. Re:I do know by ergo98 · · Score: 1

      Of course there different morally, and anyone who thinks that I am personally defending Mr. Gates is blinded by their own bias. I'm simply stating that Mr. Gates is fully within his rights to use the levarges he has to try to get what he wants, morality having nothing to do with it, and the government is fully within their rights to tell him to go F himself (and conversely to publicize it, as they have, to use THEIR leverage against Microsoft).

    2. Re:I do know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An automaker asking a government to pass a law drastically reducing car safety measures before building the plant is quite a different thing.

      Good grief. You are talking about life and limb. That is nothing like this current issue. At least make an analogy that makes sense.

    3. Re:I do know by ergo98 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      My god. I apologize for my borderline-illiterate response. Here's the corrected version.

      "Of course there are differences morally, and anyone who thinks that I am defending Mr. Gates is blinded by their own bias. I'm simply stating that Mr. Gates is fully within his rights to use the leverages he has available to try to get what he wants, morality having nothing to do with it. The government is fully within their rights to tell him to go F himself (and conversely to publicize it, as they have, to use THEIR leverage against Microsoft)."

    4. Re:I do know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Of course there are differences morally, and anyone who thinks that I am defending Mr. Gates is blinded by their own bias. I'm simply stating that Mr. Gates is fully within his rights to use the leverages he has available to try to get what he wants, morality having nothing to do with it. The government is fully within their rights to tell him to go F himself (and conversely to publicize it, as they have, to use THEIR leverage against Microsoft)."

      In either case, the problem is that modern governments seem to be forgetting they HAVE leverage against huge corporations like Microsoft.

  154. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by mysticgoat · · Score: 1

    It isn't extortion or blackmail. It's called leverage, and it isn't illegal.

    First, this isn't "leverage" the way that term is used in legal businesses, where it refers to a particular kind of debt financing (taking a second mortgage on your house to launch your new business is leveraging the business with your homeowner's equity). You are getting confused by a mafia euphemism for extortion.

    It is true that this probably wasn't actually blackmail (unless there was some kind of pressure put on the Danish officials to keep quiet about the offer). It is therefore probably technically legal (I would expect as much from Bill Gates-- not because I think he's honest but because I think he is very shrewd). But if it happened the way it was reported, this was extortion and is definitely immoral (even if legal).

    European copyright law should be developed based on the merits of the arguments for and against its details. Bill Gates has alledgedly used a threat of economic harm to a participant to try to influence this process. That would be extortion, and is definitely immoral even if though it may have been done in a legally defensible way.

  155. What EU shoul do now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    ...as the union they claims to be is :

    Abort any further work on the Patent Directive

    Apply a EU wide 150% tax on all Microsoft products for the next 5 years (including OEM products and volume licenses)

    Withdraw all Microsoft patents in EU

    ...and then we'll see who is in trouble.

    This will of course not happen... Politicians don't have balls anymore...

    1. Re:What EU shoul do now... by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      Thing is it's not even politicians who are pushing this thing forward, it's the European Commission who I certainly don't remember ever electing to do anything.

    2. Re:What EU shoul do now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are right... but I still hope that our politicians have the power to abort the process...

    3. Re:What EU shoul do now... by pandrijeczko · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Believe me, I dislike Microsoft as much as the next guy but as a resident in the EU, I definitely don't want this!

      Sure, come down hard on Microsoft for monopolistic practices, lack of security or bundling in Windows Media Player but please don't force me, as a government, from not being able to make a free choice...

      Give me the facts, tell me how good OSS is and how crooked Microsoft are and let me decide which products I do and do not want to buy or support.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    4. Re:What EU shoul do now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry but the facts are not enough...
      They need to bleed...
      The best way to change the situation is to make Microsofts software much more expensive... and I can't really see any problem since they use several techniques to pay as little tax in the EU as possible.

  156. The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill by iamnobody2 · · Score: 1

    This happens all the time, Microsoft beating up on "the little guy" altho its odd to be thinking of entire countries as "the little guy" now. But really, just like everything else, they'll get away with this, they'll keep progressing until they're stopped, which likely won't happen anytime soon. And to tell the truth, I actually like their products, it's just the corporate ethics i have a problem with

    --
    nobody's perfect
  157. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by St.+Arbirix · · Score: 1

    As a Slashdot Libertarian I'll weigh in on this one...

    But working for Bill Gates' company is not a natural human right, so what is objectionable about this? Just because he is wealthy (and he's a self-made man, remember), those 800 people suddenly have control over his finances?

    800 people have jobs under the false pretenses that they're actually needed for more than leverage. The government isn't supposed to be dicking around with companies, IMHLibertarianO. This is an example of a company dicking around with a government to try and make it dick around with other companies. I think that makes Gates a dick twice over and someone's getting unfairly screwed.

    Do you have a moral imperative to stop the auction and sell the item to the beggar at the cost he wants? If not, why does Gates?

    The item has already been sold. Now the seller is trying to get the buyer to take it up rear from him or else he'll take back what he sold you. He didn't tell you he'd be making that ultimatum beforehand so now you're stuck between returning the item you're already using or taking it up the rear.

    People do not have a right to be employed by Bill Gates, and if it will be such a disaster economically if he pulls out of an area you'd think the politicians would be bending over backwards to suit his demands -- seeing as how their livelihood is apparently utterly dependent on Mr. Gates' presence in their area of political control.

    It's not going to destroy their economy to lose 800 jobs. It *is* going to be annoying to Denmark in specific. The option that Gates is offering is that instead all of the EU is going to share the nuisance. Overall, the politicians should be ignoring Gates, but Socialism does funny things to the relationship between companies and governments.

    --
    Direct away from face when opening.
  158. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by Duhavid · · Score: 1

    Those people's continued employement should strictly be a matter of the company producing a reasonable profit and doing well in the market. Not leverage for someone ( who already has a lot ) to get more.

    No, they have no "right" to be employed. But extortion is not a right either.

    And shouldnt the Danish people and goverment decide Danish policy? How is extortion to attempt to control a foreign nation's policy a good thing?

    --
    emt 377 emt 4
  159. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by nacturation · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The corporation doesn't have a natural right to make a profit, nor use the roads that taxpayers pay for...

    Hm... I don't recall ever seeing a corporation driving down the road. But hey, at least the person driving that truck gets paid by a corporation, is able to make a profit from the work, and pays the taxes on that profit which is used in part to fund the road on which he drives.

    But interesting argument you've got there. I suppose you (and the mods, apparently) consider it insightful to state that a non-human entity doesn't have human rights?

    --
    Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
  160. In the State of Denmark... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...there seems to be something rotting :-)

  161. in slashdot speak by Prince+Vegeta+SSJ4 · · Score: 2, Funny
    It's immoral because Gates is threatening to lay people off.

    CEO Ballmer: I have your approval to proceed, then my lord?

    Chairman Gates: Proceed. Wipe them out . . . All of them.

  162. Here's the full quote by FunWithHeadlines · · Score: 1
    Cute. But as you must know, but maybe not those who didn't go to Groklaw to read what was said, you quoted only part of the sentence. The full sentence reads:

    "Thanks to Richard Stallman and his GNU Project, Linus Torvalds, and thousands and thousands of good-hearted and skilled programmers who cared enough to give the world some very fine software, you actually do have a choice. "

    In context, no grammatical confusion.

  163. You're missing a synonim by mbaciarello · · Score: 1
    intransitive senses : to conduct activities aimed at influencing public officials and especially members of a legislative body on legislation


    Actually, it's taken from M-W's definition of " lobby," the verb, but it fits eerily in...
    1. Re:You're missing a synonim by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your "synonim" is missing a 'y'.

  164. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by anonicon · · Score: 4, Funny

    Thank you for providing such a clear, coherent, well thought out argument for the legalization of racketeering, extortion and blackmail. You must be most proud of yourself.

    Chuck

  165. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by aralin · · Score: 1
    Just to improve your argument, in many of the socialist countries, people had a right to a job, same as you think about a right to publicly state your opinion or right to carry a gun, which they in turn didn't have. Most of them thought about it as their natural right too, though.

    I know that my parents did and they are struggling to grasp a world where they don't have a right to a job guaranteed as hard as you would struggle to live in a world you cannot open your mouth whenever and however you well damn please.

    --
    If programs would be read like poetry, most programmers would be Vogons.
  166. This Means War by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    Now we know where these deathless new EU SW patent proposals come from: Redmond, Washington. The next step is to look into how Microsoft pressured the treacherous Dutch representative last year to misrepresent Dutch policy by pushing the patents, and the Spanish rep last week when they wavered. Every rep who pushed EU patents must be investigated for connection to this Microsoft operation, which is no doubt joined by other global IP giants. If the EU doesn't stand up to these foreign (and perhaps domestic) corporate attacks on their soverignty, they'll be a coroprate feifdom as wholly owned a subsidiary as is the US.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  167. Primeminister a sucker for everything American by Bender+Unit+22 · · Score: 1

    Not that I hate America, but he really is a sucker for everything american. And a handpuppet of Bush.

    He pretty much bends over without blinking so I am quite sure that he will go for the patent law and not against.

  168. Mmmmmm... Danish by Demodian · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Sounds like something he would try to have for breakfast.

  169. Actually MS did this because they cant dominate by argoff · · Score: 1

    You see, even though MS has 35 bln. in the bank and a market cap of half a trillion - the euro economey puts out at least 6 trillion per year. With pure market forces pushing Linux to the front, MS doesn't have a hells chance in Europe unless they can cut it off with patents.

    So in truth, it's not that MS dominates, it's that they can't compete and are taking desperate measures to stop the bleeding.

  170. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You corporate apologists make me want to puke.

    $10 says you live in California and vote Democrat.

  171. I can see it now.... by phorm · · Score: 1

    Linus... I .... am... your... FATHER!

    1. Re:I can see it now.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Search your GNU/Feelings! You know it to be true!

  172. Re:No problem, European competition will torch the by FunWithHeadlines · · Score: 1
    "sure, that talent will go elsewhere and get absorbed into the rest of the economy, somewhere, somehow, hopefully. but the point gates is making: this won't be fun for anyone."

    Correct. The essence of Gates' statement, one he has every right to make I might add, is 'Do what I say and nobody gets hurt.'

  173. Hmmm wonder if this applies by codepunk · · Score: 1

    http://www.usdoj.gov/criminal/fraud/fcpa/fcpastat. htm

    --


    Got Code?
  174. In Danish News by clsc · · Score: 1

    In danish news it is reported that the Govt. does take that threat seriosly and are considering how to actively support software patents. ...yet another thing that this govt. just don't get (recently re-elected, they do have a track record of four years with a lot of really stupid/nasty stuff going on, yet it seems just above 50% of the population preferred that they should stay). Anybody know a nice country one can move to ?

    1. Re:In Danish News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll suggest Switzerland... they are not members of EU... and they've got absolute democracy...
      ...and excellent chocolate ;-) ...but you have to speak German, French or Italian... preferably all three...

  175. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by Vince+Mo'aluka · · Score: 1
    FYI: Natural Law

    I guess we have no grounds to ojbect or complain about anything unless it violates a natural human right

    Sure you do. And you do too. Complaining does not constitute an initiation of force (unless it elevates into harrassment or threat). The act of complaining is therefore moral and just, as is any instance of voluntary association. You don't, however, have a moral right to invoke force (government) unless natural law has been clearly violated. (The only moral use of force is in defense of force, according to natural law.)

    The corporation doesn't have a natural right to make a profit

    Sure they do. Any instance of voluntary association is moral and just according to natural law. The act of trade is, by definition voluntary (if it wasn't voluntary it wouldn't be trade, it would be theft, fraud, or extortion). Perhaps you are confusing the right to chase after profit (voluntary) with some artifical, government-imposed "guarantee" of profit (involuntary)?

    Of course, the vast majority of people in the world today do "approve" the initiation of force (offensive, rather than defensive force) and indeed, most can't imagine any other solution. So in the end, us anarchists and our philosophy of zero-aggression are relegated to lunatic status, people keep trying to "solve" problems with force rather than voluntary association, and the world remains violent and unjust.

    --
    You took his stuff. You pound him.
  176. Re:No problem, European competition will torch the by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He does NOT have every right to make such a statement. It is extortion.

  177. in a word, no by grocer · · Score: 1

    The Dutch have retained the vestiages of their early modern empire and are the largest investors of capitol in the US (The Far East still holds the most US debt but the Dutch hold the most US assets)

  178. Probably out of context by bushidocoder · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I've been thinking about this all morning, and laying 800 people off as a blackmail to pass a certain political desirable just doesn't make sense. It actually doesn't ring of BillG's style, and its bad business - what were those 800 people doing? Its not like Microsoft doesn't have release schedule problems with its products already.

    If I had to make a guess, I'd say one of two things actually happened - First BillG may have threatened to MOVE the company, which isn't quite the same as firing them all but it just about as bad morally. Unfortunately, companies do this all the time, especially manufacturing companies - hell, its half the reason auto makers have unions.

    The second option is that he was planning on axing the workforce for valid business reasons and offered to throw them a bone and keep it open if the PM supported software patents.

    Neither is too many shades better than the extortion reported in the article, but both are common tactics in the business world. Personally, I think we should say screw them all to all the companies that try to pull off BS stunts like this. Starting with Microsoft.

  179. No more LEGO for you! by Anonymous+Writer · · Score: 1

    So Gates thinks he can coerce the Danish government with 800 jobs? Well Denmark can retaliate by withholding LEGO from the US! Oh the horror!

  180. What are the options for an informed citizenry? by maynard · · Score: 1

    I wonder how long until our right to vote is transferred to our employers ...

    Interestingly... could you imagine Microsoft (or any other large corporate entity) pulling this stunt on the Chinese government? This is a hardball power play, and while 800 jobs might have a marginal affect on the local economy, frankly China (or Denmark for that matter) could easily give Microsoft the finger and eat the loss.

    All of these companies are playing a 'divide and conquer' game to foster a legislative and regulatory 'rush to the bottom' between states here in the US and nation-states in the nascent EU, or between smaller nations throughout the world. Their plan has worked spectacularly here in the US where States are weak and the federal government policy makers (in both political parties) are ideologically in agreement with corporate-elite class. But unlike the US, many member states in the EU have a long history of labor organization and revolt, with the populace well educated and rightly suspicious of corporate power gone awry.

    Whether the EU populace cares enough about the issue of software patents is of less importance than whether the citizens of various EU member states begin organizing across old national boundaries like the private concerns have already done. Organized labor and citizenry should provide a check against both government and corporate usurpation of political power regardless of popular will. Where decentralized organization and policy-making have failed, the countries have fallen into various states of authoritarianism, from outright totalitarianism to repressive centralized republics. Thus, our vote becomes worthless if we can't set the policy agenda.

    China is an example of a totalitarian government with the power to check large multinationals like Microsoft, but without any measure of democratic freedom or citizen involvement in the political process. The US is an example of a republic which has been centralizing power by dismantling organized labor in order to foster pro-multinational business policies, and in the process destroying traditional democratic freedom for its citizenry. We citizens in the US risk being as marginalized as the Chinese or Russian citizenry, though political rhetoric from our leaders would never admit as much. The EU is the best example of disjointed patchwork of nations, some of which still foster the goal of decentralized political power spread among the populace. Much of this due to the lessons of the French Revolution still reverberating through their culture.

    One thing I think is certain: sovereignty is collapsing all across the world as nations fold into one another to form power checks against corporations and other larger nations. While the collapse of the old Soviet Union may be seen as a counter-example against this trend, looking at Eastern European states requesting entry into the EU or NATO, or Middle Eastern bordering states like Turkey requesting entry into the EU, and we see a pattern of centralizing power as a check against the United States. That is a political and military alliance, however it also has the effect of creating a power-base to check against corporate tyranny as well. The outcome may well be a collapse to three or four world governments as a result. Whether those governments will turn democratic and spread power among the citizenry or centralize their power base is the real question.

    The question becomes: where is the natural power balance between nation, corporation, and citizen in a free state?

  181. Re:We the people ... (defending us) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People just want "life to be easy". If that means having one company make their descisions for them while they let the cable TV wash over them after work, so be it.

    Regardless of anyones opinion on ("big") goverments and/or big business, you need central control to build something big, complex and completly new in say half a lifetime. Nature takes many generations to do anything, this is why.

    This is shown perfectly by telephone networks, (broadcast) tv and radio. In these cases there was a central force getting/making decisions for choices like "where are telephone numbers handed out?", "how long are telephone numbers?" and "what part of the radio spectrum will consumer devices support?". Without somewhat thought over and more or less agreed upon answers these systems *are* possible... they will however, never be cheap, easy... or a succes in the short to medium term.

    Sure its the people who use the goverment controlled sewage system that ensure the goverment (if it desires so) will keep control over the sewage system. But does that really say much more about this person then that he or she doesn`t feel like debating the diameter of sewege pipes with the neighbours?

    If to many people got a say we would still be working on "Telephone, radio, TV, computers, etc." I am not saying the current result is "the best" or even "good", I am just just saying the current result is the way it is becouse all the choices that led to it where made, usualy only once. Sometimes the choices made are insanely stupid and/or downright evil, but they where made. They were made without me, and as a matter of fact, there is likely a working TV when I get back home in a minute or ten.

  182. except that.. by bmajik · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Navision historically has sold its wares in europe. So patent/copyright laws in europe are very much relevant in europe.

    Also, the denmark office was an aquisition which afaik is a separate company, Microsoft Business Solutions, that may be incorporated separately in Denmark for historical reasons.

    let's be clear - I definitely think gates is saying something along the lines of "if you're not going to make an effort to protect software, i wont make an effort to continue investing in your economy". That seems like a reasonable thing to say, doesn't it ?

    --
    My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    1. Re:except that.. by geegs · · Score: 1
      let's be clear - I definitely think gates is saying something along the lines of "if you're not going to make an effort to protect software, i wont make an effort to continue investing in your economy". That seems like a reasonable thing to say, doesn't it ?

      I think I found the deliberate mistake. Do I win a prize?

    2. Re:except that.. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Why don't you read it as "if you're not going to make an effort to protect the current model of development and sale of commercial software" because that's really what they're saying. It's a reasonable statement, and a reasonable action, in a system defined by law and not reason.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re:except that.. by Hope+Thelps · · Score: 1

      Navision historically has sold its wares in europe. So patent/copyright laws in europe are very much relevant in europe.

      To their continuing to produce this at all? Possibly, yes, you'd have to wonder why they bought the company in the first place if they couldn't compete in a market without software patents but fair enough I guess everyone makes mistakes. However, he's not saying he'd close the operation down completely, he's saying he'd sack all the Danish workers and hire US ones instead. And he's pretending that that's based on having more protection if the workers are in the US, which is a fabrication. Where the software is developed has no impact on its patentability in different markets.

      Also, the denmark office was an aquisition which afaik is a separate company, Microsoft Business Solutions, that may be incorporated separately in Denmark for historical reasons.

      Again, the location of the developers is irrelevant to the patents issue. I've got nothing against them closing that office if it makes sense to move all their interests closer to home. That's just a completely different subject.

      let's be clear - I definitely think gates is saying something along the lines of "if you're not going to make an effort to protect software, i wont make an effort to continue investing in your economy". That seems like a reasonable thing to say, doesn't it ?

      No, I don't think it's a reasonable thing to say. Having a monopoly on particular functionality in addition to having copyrights over the particular program isn't a REASONABLE expectation at all. However, if that was what he had said then I'd agree that it would be an HONEST thing to say, compared to what he actually came out with.

      --
      To summarise the summary of the summary: people are a problem. ~ h2g2
    4. Re:except that.. by Nikker · · Score: 1

      That seems like a reasonable thing to say, doesn't it ?

      Well I guess your right now arent you? All they have to gain from this is billions in lawsuits and get to keep all of the EU under his thumb. Sure it sounds reasonable. This is an example of strategic aquisition. You think Bill bought this company because of their technology or merely on the fact it employed so many country men?

      Like wake up man!! Its bone heads like you that try to make this kind of thing look ok. These guys are not mom and pop shops, they buy people and things like chess pieces.

      Ask your self this if this company did not have so many Danish people working for them do you think Bill would have bought them out?? Look at the company and figure that out for your self...

      Good luck

      --
      A loop, by its nature, continues. If that didn't make sense, start reading this sentence again.
    5. Re:except that.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't you read it as "if you're not going to make an effort to protect the current model of development and sale of commercial software" because that's really what they're saying.

      That's obviously not what he's saying. He wants to change the law, and thereby change the 'current model', that's the whole point of what he's saying.

  183. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by tomjen · · Score: 1

    Our goverment paies you money if you cant find a job provided you want a job. Heck they will even help you find one.

    That is what we get for paying 50% in tax.

    --
    Freedom or George Bush
  184. Why does Bill Gates hate America so much? by Zhe+Mappel · · Score: 0, Troll
    Gates' imperious, not to mention immoral, behavior toward Danish workers and indeed Danish sovereignty seems modeled on the tactics favored by the regime in Washington. Invade and occupy here, threaten jobs there. Any objections? Tough luck!

    But as the world is understandably revulsed by this bullying, there is increasingly a price to be paid. Boycotts, already harming sales of US products abroad, are merely the start. The reconfiguration of international political and military alliances is another, as witness events in motion from Europe to Asia to South America. Bullying incites an already dangerous world. And it sends those sane and decent elements, who should be one's natural allies, into confederacy against you.

    Poor America: allowing your oligarchs to ruin your good name for no more than the price of a paltry tax cut or a cheap Walmart shirt is an awfully poor bargain. Look around: Luce's American Century is over. The dollar's in steep decline, your prospects dim, your employers shuffling jobs offshore, your enemies multiplying like an OxyContin habit, your unbought friends fewer and fewer. Time to wise up.

  185. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Maybe someone should mail Microsoft's software development competitors in Denmark a big Microsoft box conatining yellow armbands with the words "EU Software Patents" printed on them.

    Or maybe they should be yellow stars of David that they could pin on their jackets...

  186. not lunatics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So in the end, us anarchists and our philosophy of zero-aggression are relegated to lunatic status

    If it makes you feel better, I don't see anarchist philosophy as lunatic, merely hopelessly idealistic. There will ALWAYS be someone who is willing to use force to obtain the selfish desires that society as a whole refuses to cede him. But any true anarchist society will be very slow to respond, out of either a reluctance to use force, or confusion as to whether the individual's use of force is truly unacceptable (i.e., how far over the line must an individual step before a society can cross that same line in its on defense w/o betraying societal morals?)

    Basically, a society founded on anarchist principals would either be ripe for the plucking by a few powerful, corrupt individuals, or would have to be composed of a citizenship that was far above average in individual initiative and will. Over time, individual initiative and will are EXACTLY what a successful society breeds out of its average citizens, b/c they are counterproductive to the society as a whole.

    my $0.02

    1. Re:not lunatics by Vince+Mo'aluka · · Score: 1
      You should do some reading up on the philosophy of anarcho-capitalism if you're interested. There is solid evidence (as well as philosophical rationale) that a voluntary society would result in much lower crime rates than any coercive (government-run) society ever could. Of course, no voluntary society could ever possibly exist until the majority of the world's governments evolve to embrace libertarianism (strict limits on government power). Why? Because if such a voluntary society were to emerge, it would be immediately destroyed by the current world superpower.

      There will ALWAYS be someone who is willing to use force to obtain the selfish desires that society as a whole refuses to cede him. But any true anarchist society will be very slow to respond

      Don't confuse anarchism with pacifism. Anarchism only forbids the initiation of force; reasonable force used in self-defense is entirely moral according to natural law. Also consider that anarchism does not promise 100% morality and justice; it promises the closest thing to 100% morality and justice.

      --
      You took his stuff. You pound him.
    2. Re:not lunatics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should do some reading up on the philosophy of anarcho-capitalism if you're interested.

      You should do some reading up on current military theory. There is no anarchist solution to the problem of WMD proliferation. Anarcho-capitalist libertarians necessarily must believe in the individual right to own nuclear weapons. This theme is even prominent in libertarian/A-C fiction, e.g. The Probability Broach and Snow Crash (but the dilemma is never solved).

      Under an anarcho-capitalist system you not only would have the right to own nukes, but nobody could do anything to you until you had actually issued a nuclear strike (preemption violates the non-coercion/non-initiation of force principle).

      This, among many other reasons, is why anarcho-capitalists and libertarians are referred to as "Libertopians".

      BTW, if you want a real-world example of an anarchy -- go to Somalia. Have fun!

    3. Re:not lunatics by Vince+Mo'aluka · · Score: 1

      Don't know why I'm replying to your canned arguments, but I will point out that today, in our statist world, WMD not only exist, they are used on a regular basis! (You didn't think the US government managed to kill over 100,000 Iraqi civilians with bows and arrows, did you?) Ironically, the state which claims to be saving the world from WMD is the state which posesses more WMD than any other, and has proven over and over its will to use them to murder innocent civilians.

      So much for your theory of governments solving the problem of WMD. No, I didn't prove that a voluntary society guarantees the absence of WMD, but I did just prove that governments haven't solved the problem of WMD (or war in general) -- not by a long shot. Why? Because the root of all war is centralized power. As long as government exists, war is guaranteed.

      --
      You took his stuff. You pound him.
    4. Re:not lunatics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So much for your theory of governments solving the problem of WMD

      You missed the point. If your problem is a leaky bottle, you don't solve the water-containment problem by breaking the bottle. Governments can contain the problem of WMD because, on statist principles they can preemptively strike and issue edicts restricting the freedom of others to keep and use such weapons. It isn't a perfect solution, but it is a solution that can coexist without contradiction with principles of statism.

      This technically could be solved under anarchy... but only by a sufficiently powerful legal/defense order ending the state of anarchy by establishing dominant control, and afterwards violating libertarian precepts of natural rights.

      Tell me, without arguing for or against governments... as an anarcho-capitalist, do you believe in the fundamental right of individuals to possess doomsday devices which have the potential to kill in the billions, without restriction?

      Do you believe that preemptive strikes are immoral (being that they violate the non-initiation of force principle)... even when the stakes could be all human life?

      These are problems that glib responses are not going to solve. If you want to dismiss them, do so at your own peril - they're the hottest philosophical topics of debate among enlightened A-Cs right now, and there isn't any easy apparent solution.

      Check any libertarian philosophy and you'll find that the problem of "lifeboat scenarios" is an outstanding problem for most libertarian theories of rights. In an emergency situation, libertarianism goes out the window and is replaced in all cases by pragmatic utilitarianism. The essence of the problem with Libertopianism is that we're in a "lifeboat scenario" in reality with WMDs.

    5. Re:not lunatics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I didn't prove that a voluntary society guarantees the absence of WMD

      Guaranteeing their absence is impossible at this point, which is the point. Any politico-philosophical theories must now necessarily account for the existence of doomsday devices in reality, or they will never be more than utopian fantasies.

      Personally, I believe A-Cism can still exist eventually -- once Earth isn't the sole habitat of humanity and stealth dispersion is possible. Implement it in today's world, however, and you get Somalia... not paradise.

      Because the root of all war is centralized power. As long as government exists, war is guaranteed.

      The problem of WMDs makes it unnecessary to have to consider "war", because a single individual in possession of a nuke can do as much damage as a pre-nuclear era "war" could.

      Governments may be the root of war, but individuality is the root of psychosis. And all it takes is one psychotic individual in legal possession of a nuke to ruin the whole party for the rest of the peaceful anarchists. And the only way to solve the problem of the nuke-empowered rogue individual violates A-C dogma. It's an inescapable problem.

      If you're interested in discussing this issue with other A-Cs in more detail, there's been a year-long debate going at Atlantis_II where most of the finer points have been hashed through. Good luck.

    6. Re:not lunatics by Vince+Mo'aluka · · Score: 1
      do you believe in the fundamental right of individuals to possess doomsday devices which have the potential to kill in the billions

      No I do not, because as the destructive capacity of such a device goes up, the more it becomes an active threat rather than a defense mechinism. How does it become a threat? Let's use the analogy of the drunken driver. He doesn't set out to initiate force against others. But, the drunker he gets, the more his presence on the road becomes an active threat to others, and the greater the likelyhood of accidental disaster. Similarly, the more powerful a weapon becomes, the greater the likelyhood of an accident causing mass destruction. This, I believe, would be interpreted as an active threat (an real initiation of force) by the free people who have settled in the area before such a weapon came into existence. (How could one possibly live peacefully knowing that a simple accident next door could blow up the entire city?)

      How to solve the problem is another question. Personally I believe that in a purely voluntary society, the issue would never come up in the first place. Incidentally, I see you citing Somalia as an "anarchist" society. Would you consider Somalia a voluntary society? I certainly do not, so I don't know where you are trying to go with that. If it's not voluntary, it's not anarcho-capitalism -- remember, the basic tool of both warlords and government is force! (To the anarchist, there is no fundamental difference between being ruled by a warlord, king, or elected official. If you are ruled by anyone other than yourself, you are subject to an initiation of force.)

      Do you believe that preemptive strikes are immoral (being that they violate the non-initiation of force principle)... even when the stakes could be all human life?

      Of course I do. Under no circumstances may any individual or government choose to "sacrifice" a human being for any reason. Why? Property rights. You cannot choose to trade (or destroy) something you don't own in the first place! If human rights are absolute -- which I belive they are, because I am a human being myself and as such, I do own myself -- then nobody can possibly make that decision but each individual human being who would be "sacrificed". To go ahead with such a plan -- the war on Iraq to cite a current example -- is to rob each individual of their most fundamental human right to own themselves.

      --
      You took his stuff. You pound him.
  187. Re:Fighting with Mod Points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Typical groupthink also. "If I register, I can get mod points. If I have mod points, my ramblings are legit compared to reasoned arguments from someone without mod points. Thus, I must register. Moreover, I must read at +5 because only filtered +5 posts are legit." Or rather, only groupthink +5 posts are legit, and registered users are Never known to game the system.

  188. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by Vince+Mo'aluka · · Score: 1

    A violation of business ethics, perhaps, but certainly not immoral. The relationship between an employer and employee is voluntary. Unless the voluntary contract specifically states that Gates will never fire or lay off his employees (which it doesn't, because that would be economically impossible), then it is entirely moral for Gates to do so. So you can claim a violation of business ethics, but you can't claim an initiation of force (immoral association).

    Of course, government is so entangled in the market nowadays that it's not this clear and straightforward. Is Gates receiving some benefit from government which is ultimately provided not through voluntary association but force? If so, then there is no clear answer, because whoever "wins", wins only at the expense of somebody else's right to voluntary association.

    --
    You took his stuff. You pound him.
  189. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by tomjen · · Score: 1

    That story is false, and you would have know that if you followed the link the grandparent posted.

    As for not talking ultimatus it was the danish people who helped the Jews - not the goverment.

    --
    Freedom or George Bush
  190. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by NanoGator · · Score: 1

    "Rubbish. I'll decide what I do and don't find objectionable, thank you. I find threatening people's livelihoods in order to bully their governments into enacting the legislation you want to be very highly objectionable."

    Yeah, but is that because the word "Microsoft" is in that sentence? What if it were IBM? Apple?

    --
    "Derp de derp."
  191. Uh... the *Inquirer*? by Vthornheart · · Score: 1
    Come on guys, let's not post things that are total and obvious fluff. The Inquirer, for those who may have forgotten, is the same "Newspaper" (cough cough) that runs stories on 300 pound babies, alien abductions, and violent furry sexual encounters.

    The question if its truth or not will depend, for me at least, on if a real newspaper takes it on... which I highly doubt.

    --
    -Vendal Thornheart
    1. Re:Uh... the *Inquirer*? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...the story is also published in danish newspapers, on both danish public service television channels and in danish edition of Computerworld OnLine.

    2. Re:Uh... the *Inquirer*? by demon · · Score: 1

      It's not _that_ "Inquirer", actually...

      --

      Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
      Max: "I'd be peeing my pants if I wore any!"
    3. Re:Uh... the *Inquirer*? by Vthornheart · · Score: 1

      It's not? Oh, you're right... it was slashdotted earlier, and I assumed there was only one Inquirer. My bad. =)

      --
      -Vendal Thornheart
  192. Public / Private partnership by Darth23 · · Score: 1
    This is just another wonderful example of hot Governments and large corporations interact these days.

    The no so veiled thread to cough up some tribute or new laws or we'll axe jobs is pretty standard. Since governments are 'responsible' to the people governed, while the corporations are only reaponsible to their shareholders, corporations can look at the small picture, and even intentionally plan to harm the public good in order to increase market share/profits/the general operating environment.

    Add in the ability to travel across political boundries at will adding or withdrawing economic support based on the short term self interest a small entity, and you end up with the kind f situation descrobed in the article.

    "Repeal environmental clean-up laws or peopel will gewt laid off"; "Build is a new stadium with public funds, or we'll move the team to another city"; "Give our for profit company huge government tax and hadnouts or we'll move to another region, or another country - and heck, we might move there anyway after we've grabbed the cash".

    These are all pretty standard business practices these days.

    --

    -------- In Soviet Russia, "Soviet Russia" sigs hate Slashdot.

  193. You'll queer the deal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    nt

  194. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by sangreal66 · · Score: 1
    Um, he bought a company created by Danes, and is threatening to shut it down.
    No, he is threatening to move it to the United States where he feels a better climate for his business may exist.
  195. somebody got out in time... by spectrokid · · Score: 1

    one of the most famous ex-employees of Microsoft Denmark: HKH Kronprinsessen, aka Her Royal Highness the Crown Princess of Denmark

    --

    10 ?"Hello World" life was simple then

  196. price of cheese by Asgard · · Score: 1

    I seem to recall some novel set in the future where there existing a small set of mega-corps. The government couldn't do anything to them because 'they might raise the price of cheese 5 cents and crater the economy'.

  197. That price might be high. - Bill G 1991 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bill Gates said : "If people had understood how patents would be granted when most of today's ideas were invented and had taken out patents, the industry would be at a complete standstill today. ... The solution is patenting as much as we can. A future startup with no patents of its own will be forced to pay whatever price the giants choose to impose. That price might be high. Established companies have an interest in excluding future competitors."

    This was quoted by Fred Warshofsky in "The Patent Wars" of 1994. The text is from an internal memo written by Bill Gates to his staff. Part of has appeared in another Gates memos.

    from
    http://swpat.ffii.org/vreji/quotes/index.e n.html#b gates91

  198. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by JohnsonWax · · Score: 1

    "The corporation doesn't have a natural right to make a profit"

    No, but it does have an obligation by definition to do so. If moving those 800 out of of Denmark made MS more profitable, Gates would have an valid justification for doing it. He doesn't have to, of course.

    If there's anything unethical about this, its that the patent situation and those 800 jobs have nothing to do with each other and Gates justification for termination the 800 jobs appears to have nothing to do with the profitability or operation of MS. It appears totally arbitrary (it may not be, he may have decided to close down that unit months ago and is offering to reverse a decision he already made, we'll never know).

    But corporations are also taxpayers by definition.

    In the end, what MS is doing is unpleasant and well beneath a company as successful as them, but they aren't doing anything wrong. I would expect anyone taking a job with MS or Apple or any company willing to constantly and strongly push the edges of their envelope to be aware that their job is far from secure.

  199. Billy Gates Stomping feet by kurt555gs · · Score: 2, Insightful


    If you don't play my way, i'll take my marbles and go home

    Greed!

    The man is sick.

    --
    * Carthago Delenda Est *
  200. Re: Princess ex Navision -- unHoly Sh!t by redelm · · Score: 1
    Methinks Billy just stepped in it!

    The princess undoubtly has friends/acquaintences who still work at Navision, and more importantly, must be seen as protecting them. Now that this is out in the open, the Danish PM can't just backdown.

    BG better back down & fast ("I was misinterpreted") or the Danish Parlement will pass a Navision Act (Whereas viability of Navision has been threatened by it's foreign owner to interfere in domestic politics, all material actions of Navision require review by the Dept of Labor).

  201. The prime minister denies blackmail claims by andymar · · Score: 1

    From Ritzau (Danish news agency): Statsministeren afviser, at Microsoft skulle have truet med at lukke Navision og flytte 800 arbejdspladser til USA. Statsminister Anders Fogh Rasmussen (V) afviser, at stifteren af verdens største softwarevirksomhed, Bill Gates, skulle have truet ham med at lukke Navision i Danmark og flytte de knap 800 udviklere bag Danmarks største software-succes til USA. - Det har han ikke gjort på noget møde med mig. Jeg kan slet ikke bekræfte den udlægning, slet ikke. Det har vi slet ikke været inde på. Nej, siger Anders Fogh Rasmussen til Ritzau. Statsministerens afvisning kommer, efter Børsen tirsdag kunne berette om Bill Gates' trussel, som skulle være kommet på et møde i november med Anders Fogh Rasmussen samt økonomi- og erhvervsminister Bendt Bendtsen (K) og videnskabsminister Helge Sander (V).

    Anders Fogh is saying that Bill Gates has not told him about any plans of moving Navision to the USA.

    1. Re:The prime minister denies blackmail claims by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      oh yeah... and what else could he say

      Yes, that basterd has tried and we have no option than follow his wishes ? (he looses his face)

      Yes, that bastard has tried and we will roast him ? (he must wote against the directive)

      No thats a lie... (now everything is OK, and he is doing what politicians do best... lying)

      Which one would you pick ???

    2. Re:The prime minister denies blackmail claims by Hymer · · Score: 0

      ...Børsen tried to get a comment from pm. Anders Fogh Rasmussen before printing the article... it took him 12 hours to remember what mr. Gates "didn't" tell him...

  202. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by IAmNotACowboy · · Score: 1

    you're right. being employeed by a particular individual or corporation is not a natural human right. however, once an individual is employeed by a particular individual or corporation that individual has the right to be treated as a free human being and not a hostage. in other words, should the aforementioned individual actually be terminated it must be for legitmate reasons relating to his or her job performance (not completing objectives, laziness, inappropriate office behavior, etc..) if what ever human resources entity that is responsible for those 800 employees can prove that every last one of them is an imcompetent worker, then they should, by all means, be fired. this right to work free from arbitrary termination may not be reflected in law (IANAL), but i do maintain that it is a natural human right.

  203. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by The+Conductor · · Score: 1
    working for Bill Gates' company is not a natural human right, so what is objectionable about this

    I don't subscribe to the knee-jerk anti-corporatism that often floats around here, but it is fair to say that Microsoft, being a business corporation, is limited by its charter to act like a business. When Bill Gates uses his charge as a corporate officer to meddle in politcs (beyond that in which Microsoft has a direct fiduciary interest like negotiating a tax abatement or some such), it is tantamount to running a political campaign on the company dime. The stockholders haven't given permission for it, so such behavior constitutes malfeasance.

    Now if Gates threatened to buy the company from Microsoft for twice what it was worth out of his own personal fortune (he would have to set up some sort of blind trust to do this properly since he has a role as both buyer & seller in such a transaction), and then lay everyone off, then that would clear him of malfeasance. We could still call him obnoxious for that, though.

  204. Not at all by NigelJohnstone · · Score: 1

    "company is in its revenue and ability to pay the wages of 800 people"

    Not at all! The market (Europe) provides the revenue!! As long as Europe is not poor their will be capital to tap that revenue/market. The people sacked will have a leg up over new people in the new company, so they will have a commercial advantage.

    In other words, MS exits Europe, someone else hires their staff and makes the next product themselves. MS loses that market because it would have to take a step back and relearn the lost skills.

  205. what a concept by suezz · · Score: 1

    a government that does not give in to corporate interests. Now if the U.S. could follow suit.

  206. useless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    who need this old useless Navision crap, MS thinks maybe its cheap then its good for our customers.

    my 2 cent

  207. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by J.R.+Random · · Score: 1

    The above post pretty well sums up the cloud cuckoo land that libertarians live in, and shows why I am not one. The principal of one man, one vote is made meaningless when a multi-billionaire can extort a government to produce the laws he wants. It is especially ironic when you consider that of the 800 employees who are programmers, most of them no doubt oppose software patents themselves.

  208. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1
    I despise the idea of natural rights. Rights are a fabrication. We are animals with big brains, and we act like it.

    On the other hand I understand the view espoused by (among others) certain founders of the USA who felt that enumerating basic human rights also limits you to those rights, just as describing proper behavior in law means that you must permit anything not explicitly proscribed, even if it is harming others, or just taking advantage of them. For example, Nike would have a somewhat lower ROI if it paid people a living wage, or perhaps even a bit more than a living wage, but it would still make incredible amounts of profit. Why are they allowed to essentially subject people to slavery? Arguably they're not hurting anyone, and they are employing people who would otherwise be unemployed, but why on earth do we allow them to pay the people so little when there is no reason to? It's not like we can't live without their products.

    By the same token, we have created a system of law to allow a ficticious entity to own property, make statements, et cetera. Thus we have granted these entities the right to attempt to make a profit. Since we have done it with law, we have granted them the right to do all of it in any way permitted by law, whether it is moral or not.

    A corporation thus has as much right to make a profit as you have to pursue happiness.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  209. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by John+Courtland · · Score: 1

    It was 1939, I believe, when corporations obtained the same "rights" as citizens.

    --
    Slashdot is proof that Sturgeon's Law applies to mankind.
  210. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1
    In a capitalistic society, business and government are inseparable. The difference between this and campaign contributions is that they've increased the cost to the people if they don't get what they want, by threatening to unemploy 800 people. If they DO get what they want, then the entire nation suffers until the law is revoked, which rarely happens. Thus, it would be a lot better to have Microsoft lay 800 people off, assuming you agree that software patents are eeeeeeeevil.

    Those people can still work on software that won't even be sold in their country, which is what's wrong with this whole thing. That is the basis under which I would prevent Microsoft from doing this; if they bought the company JUST to use it for blackmail, then fuck 'em. They're doing something wrong.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  211. What was said, and what it translates to. by erik_norgaard · · Score: 1

    Danish quote from http://www.borsen.dk/dn/70135:

    Hvis jeg skal beholde mit udviklingscenter i Danmark, kræver det, at der kommer en afklaring på rettighedsspørgsmålet. Ellers flytter jeg det til USA, hvor jeg kan beskytte mine rettigheder, sagde Bill Gates ifølge Microsofts chefjurist Marianne Wier.

    Translation by native:

    "If I must keep my development center in Denmark it requires that the question of intelectual property is clearified. Otherwise I will move it to USA, where I can protect my rights" Said Bill Gates according to Microsofts chief layer Marianne Wier."

    NOTE: Bill Gates does not explicitly say that software patents must be permitted (although he probably means it) but that the situation must be clarified.

    OT: Everyone - pro and con - aggrees that the current situation is unclear, the disagreeing is about how to clear up things. The current proposal pretty much alignes legislation with US.

    And an extra quote by the minister of science which is just as scary:

    Original in danish from http://www.berlingske.dk/business/artikel:aid=5407 74

    Vi oplever gang på gang, at viden er meget let at flytte med, og derfor skal man hele tiden være opmærksom på, at et selskab som Microsoft også kan flytte viden fra Danmark rundt i verden. Når en så stor virksomhed placerer sin største udviklingsafdeling uden for USA i Danmark, og så følger op med endnu flere investeringer, er det noget, vi fra det offentlige skal honorere.

    Translation by native:

    "We continuoulsy experience that knowledge is easy to move and therefore one must continuously be alert that a big company like Microsoft can also move knowledge from Denmark to the rest of the world. When such a large company choosed to place it's largest development center outside USA in Denmark, and follows up by further insvestments, then this is something, we from the public sector must hoerate"

    Or, "of course we'll do whatever mr. Gates think is right."

    Cheers, Erik

    1. Re:What was said, and what it translates to. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When such a large company choosed to place it's largest development center outside USA in Denmark, and follows up by further insvestments, then this is something, we from the public sector must hoerate

      In English, that last word should be "whore at".

  212. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The point you're making doesn't apply. You're right; those 800 people shouldn't have control over his finances. But that's not what's going on. There's no way Bill Gates is going to abandon Europe as a market. The income, both actual and potential, is far too enormous. Whether or not software patents end up existing in the EU, it'll be a market for Microsoft.

    The way the law goes won't significantly affect their actions. He didn't say he'd CLOSE the company; he said he'd fire its current employees and do their function with different people in a different country. What he's saying is, if the law doesn't fall the way he wants, instead of pulling out of Europe, he'll continue to sell stuff but punish those 800 people and then blame it on the Danish government.

    It's not 800 people playing around with Bill Gates' finances; it's Bill Gates playing around with EU finances and laws.

  213. School-yard by Tony · · Score: 1

    Ah, yes. The defense of the school-yard bully. "I'm bigger than him, so I should be able to beat him up if I want, the little pansy."

    Nothing wrong with that at all. No-siree. Nothing wrong. In fact, it is so *right*, I am in awe of its rightness.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  214. It is a hoax. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://ekstrabladet.dk/VisArtikel.iasp?PageID=2835 50

  215. Fogh denies that this took place by Hektor_Troy · · Score: 1

    Danish article
    Rough translation (being a native speaker :)

    Fogh denies that Gates have threatened him

    The prime minister denies that Microsoft should have threatened to close Navision and move 800 employees to the US.

    Prime minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen (Liberals) denies that the founder of the worlds larges software company, Bill Gates, supposedly threatened him with closing Navision in Denmark and move the approximately 800 developers behind Denmarks biggest software success to the US.
    - He hasn't done that in any meeting with me. I can in no way confirm that description, not at all. It is not even something we discussed. No, Anders Fogh Rasmussen tells Ritzau.

    The prime ministers denial comes after Børsen tuesday could report about Bill Gates' threat, which was supposed to have been made at a meeting in november with Anders Fogh Rasmussen along with the minister of the economy and business Bendt Bendtsen (Conservatives) and the minister of science Helge Sander (Liberals).

    --
    We do not live in the 21st century. We live in the 20 second century.
  216. Denmark, Holland, USA, Navision, BillyG and Linux by theolein · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I used to admin a Navision db at the last place I worked at, here in Switzerland. I even did a training course at the Navison central in Lucerne. I aksed the boss of Navision Switzerland if they had ever had plans to port Navision to Linux, since Navision has been around a long time, from the DOS days, and also used to run on AIX and up until recently didn't even use the Windows GUI toolkit but had its own proprietry one. He said that Microsoft had told the various European regional CEO's of Navision that they were not even allowed to mention Linux, never mind think about porting it to Linux.

    Navsision is quite popular in Europe as it's very easy to install and admin, has a huge set of CRM and ERP modules and is small enough to be useful for companies of up to around 250 people or so. Navision was quite clever in their set up in that they have a network of so called Navision Solution Centers in Europe where customisation specialists sit around and write add on modules and customise existing db scripts for local businesses. Imagine if MySQL or PostgreSQL had a similar setup!

    This was Microsoft's way of gaining a foothold in Europe with the hope of competing eventually with SAP (Navision also has a larger db product called Axapta).

    Navision being Danish helped because Denmark (and Holland) have very much become the USA's bitches in Europe in the last few decades, probably because they thought they could use the USA to balance out the weight of their larger European neighbours.

    On the whole this has also worked out as Holland and Denmark are doing pretty well economically (They're also much smaller than their neighbours and thus much more flexible). The problem is that they have thus also become the USA's bitches to a certain extent in that their militaries and sections of their economies are more dependent on American good will than others. The JSF fighter fiasco where loads of countries get to pay for development of the fighter in return for industrial contracts which never materialised is a good example.

    This open extortion (blackmail isn't really the word) of a Danish national politician is what they get for their trouble. Microsoft would not do the same in Germany, for example, as the resulting scandal would kill Microsoft in Germany. (Let's leave Germany's economic mess out of this for now)

    This should be awake up call to Europeans that sucking up to large corporations, especially large foreign corporations, is like handing away your birthright in the long run.

    (Actually, I suppose this applies to all countries, really)

  217. Slef-made? by cyberformer · · Score: 1

    Once you strip away the official MS hype, Bill Gates is anything but self-made. Yes, he's a very shrewd businessman who understands software, but he got two helpful head-starts:

    1. His parents were millionaires. He wasn't some ordinary middle-class geek kid. His parents were able to send him to private school and buy him computer hardware that (back then) cost thousands of dollars.

    2. Microsoft got the DOS contract through nepotism. Bill's mother was a friend of IBM's CEO, on many of the same charity and corporate boards. That's why IBM bought the OS from Microsoft, not the company that actually developed it.

    1. Re:Slef-made? by linuxsutra · · Score: 1

      I say BS to your arguments. You are alleging being born to a rich family is mutually exclusive to being a self-made man. You can be born to a rich family and still be self made. He didnt inherit a running business from his father, he built it from the ground up. Secondly, if you see Robert Cringleys PBS show "Triumph of the nerds", you will see that the IBM lawyers said clearly that bill pointed them to Gary Kildall, but he was out flying and his wife wouldnt talk with them. Thats when they came back to Microsoft. So check you facts before you post.

  218. But the other .1 % . . . by hawk · · Score: 1

    And yes -- flashlights are torches. It's 99.9% certain that the person hearing the word will understand whether or not it's of the 'flaming' variety, based on context.

    My father was a garage mechanic in college. For a while, they also had a british mechanic.

    One of their problem customers came in complaining about a noise under her car. "Hold on, I'll go grab a torch and look."

    She took off, and never bothered them again.

    hawk

  219. Re:An argument that Gates actually committed a cri by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The problem here is that Microsoft is a monopoly with extreme influence. Different rules are needed for such an entity than a mom and pop operation.

  220. What happened before the denial... by Hymer · · Score: 0

    (2005.02.15@14:10 UTC+1)
    Socialdemokratiet (the 2nd. biggest party in Denmark, in opposition) and Prosa (comuterworkers union) went out and said that they will not cooperate in any way (they will not support the Patent Directive) if this story is true...
    btw. Didn't Nixon denie any knowledge of Watergate ?

    1. Re:What happened before the denial... by Hymer · · Score: 0

      Prosa is of course the computerworkers union...
      ...and the story is from Danish Compterworld Online...
      ...and wait, there are more... now there is a denial from Microsoft Denmark too...

  221. you mean to tell me that by edward.virtually@pob · · Score: 1

    gates is a amoral bag of slime? who would have guessed? pity the doj couldn't be bothered to, like, effectively punish him for ruining the domestic os and office software markets. oh well.

  222. Update: Microsoft releases denial statement by AFCArchvile · · Score: 2, Informative
    As covered in two sources, Microsoft's denial:


    But Klaus Holse Andersen, the European vice-president of Microsoft Business Solutions, denied on Tuesday that the jobs at Navision were ever at risk. "No, that is not what he said in the meeting," Andersen told ZDNet UK. "There is no plan for us to close down the site."
    --
    "Ancillary does not mean you get to rule the world." --U.S. Circuit Judge Harry Edwards, speaking to the FCC's lawyer
  223. Buy a gun by geekoid · · Score: 1

    if the people get into a situation where they have no practical way to stop an oppressor, then we must defend ourselves against the oppressor.
    Whether that oppressor is a government, a dictator, or a corporation.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    1. Re:Buy a gun by rogerz · · Score: 1

      You do have a way to "protect" yourself against a corporation: Don't buy their products/services.

      As for a government (dictatorship or otherwise), you're on to something with that "buy a gun" advice. Unfortunately, if you're really oppressed, it would pretty stupid to write that in a public forum such as this.

      --
      If humans are mostly water, and beer is mostly water, then humans must be mostly beer.
  224. A working definition of "natural human right" by Ideaphile · · Score: 1

    I'll just stick my nose in here long enough to define "natural human right". There is only one natural human right, and it is the right to own property. It is a natural right because we are born owning ourselves. This right is a logical necessity from two axioms: humans are a limited resource, and all humans have equal rights. It is therefore not possible to consider any other way to distribute the ownership of human beings except for each person to own himself or herself.

    The right to own oneself conveys all the other "rights" we customarily enumerate independently-- the right to be secure in our possessions; the right to enter into contracts, which gives us the right to own physical and intellectual property; the rights to speak the truth, assemble peacefully, and worship as we choose.

    You're correct that corporations have no natural rights, but the owners of corporations do. Corporate property and privileges are a simple legal abstraction for the rights of those owners. You should be able to see that if I have the right to make a profit, it doesn't go away because I'm part of a group of people using a company name to do business.

    . png

  225. This is news by geekoid · · Score: 1

    people need to be reminded of this kind of crap. On /., people get reminded when it's MS. On espn people get reminded when its a sports team, etc . . .
    it is wrong, bad for the people and people nede to be reminded of it.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  226. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by rushmobius · · Score: 1

    I cannot think of a single company that does not do this..

    NFL franchisee owner comes to a city, and basically says, build us a new stadium or we will choose another town.

    Companies get state and local gonverments to provide new zoning laws and tax cuts just so they won't relocate.

    The bottom line is simple....if you own item A, and want item B, why can't you leverage off of item A? Because its immoral to use the legal tools you have?

    So much for healthcare, where all those discounts are mainly driven off of the fact of leverage. 'We want drug X at price Y or we will have our memebers use a different drug!'

    So much for unions...'We want benefit X or we will shutdown your company causing you to lose revenue'

    While some these examples are extreme, why would a company want to do business in a country that will not look out for there best interests?

  227. Not hypocrite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good Point.

    The 'problem' (?) is that Slashdot tends to publish more stories about Microsoft than it does about other large evil companies, mainly because this is a tech site.

    This is why Microsoft's bad habits are mentioned here more often than, for example, Nestle's or Ford's.

    To complain about other companies would be off-topic, and would probably be modded down as so too.

  228. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by deaddrunk · · Score: 1
    Overall, the politicians should be ignoring Gates, but Socialism does funny things to the relationship between companies and governments.

    Like what?

    --
    Does a Christian soccer team even need a goalkeeper?
  229. Fogh denies... by Maskedman · · Score: 3, Informative

    Our prime minister has officially denied that Bill Gates supposedly "threatened" him.

  230. He is denying it!!! by insanely_mad · · Score: 2, Informative

    http://www.borsen.dk/dn/70178 - Det har han ikke gjort på noget møde med mig. Jeg kan slet ikke bekræfte den udlægning, slet ikke. Det har vi slet ikke været inde på. Nej, siger Anders Fogh Rasmussen til Ritzau. === That he did not do in any way with me. I can cannot confirm that assertion, not at all. THat is not something we discussed. No, says Anders Fogh Rasmussen to Ritzau.

  231. OT: Spelling by sepluv · · Score: 1
    Ye, I quite like the differences too a lot of the time, but some USan spellings are illogical.

    I cross my sevens and dot my zeros (and I think that is European not USan) but how do you cross a `Z' --are you talking about a small or a large zed (or zee) and a straight or a curved one?

    (Also, needless to say, I disagree with your argument that most people in America are not Americans. ;-) )

    --
    Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
    [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]
    1. Re:OT: Spelling by jabuzz · · Score: 1

      You cross a Z (both lower and upper case) by putting a horizontal bar through the diagonal. It is mathematical in origin, and it's purpose is to distinguish a handwritten Z from a 2. It is rather like the diagonal slash put through a 0 to distinguish it from an O. It is of course heavily used in handwritten physics which is usually mathematical in nature.

    2. Re:OT: Spelling by sepluv · · Score: 1
      You cross a Z (both lower and upper case) by putting a horizontal bar through the diagonal.
      Aah. I though you must mean that. I always use a z with a curly tail (with the tail bent back on itself and a sharp angle up top) to distinguish it from a both a `2' and a `3', and don't use upper-case `Z's in maths (but if I have to I would put a curly tail on an upper-case one (and make sure my 2's were rounded)).

      It is rather like the diagonal slash put through a 0 to distinguish it from an O
      That doesn't work for three reasons: a diagonal slash through an `o' is a letter in some European languages; in mathematics, it looks too like a theta, and some people use the slash for the `o' and some for the zero meaning it just exacerbates the ambiguity.

      That's why I use a dot on zeros, which has the advantage that it is unambiguously a zero and is also the method used to distinguish the two characters on a computer screen.

      --
      Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
      [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]
    3. Re:OT: Spelling by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "I cross my sevens and dot my zeros (and I think that is European not USan) but how do you cross a `Z' --are you talking about a small or a large zed (or zee) and a straight or a curved one?"

      I meant the crossing z's and 7's were European. I do all my writing in uppercase block letters, so, no curling of letters for me....my handwriting has gotten so bad, even using block letters, that about the only time I handwrite is to write a check here and there...only time I use cursive writing is signing my name...

      I guess what I was saying...this USan term is a new one...don't know where it came up, but, I certainly am bugged about it. I'm not an USan. I'd prefer to be known as an American by nationality, which I have been since birth until this recent new term has come about. I would equate USan = A United Stateser . Just doesn't sound right.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  232. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by Hope+Thelps · · Score: 1

    You mean the ones Gates himself employs?

    Yes, exactly. It is not right or moral or ethical to threaten to sack people in order to gain leverage over others. It doesn't matter whether the person you're trying to pressure is the parent or the child or the government of the person you're threatening to fire, this is clearly wrong. If he doesn't like their work, fine, but if he just wants to use them as targets for pressuring others then that is vindictive, petty and WRONG.

    --
    To summarise the summary of the summary: people are a problem. ~ h2g2
  233. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Yes, his mother was personal friends with someone high up in IBM who was in a position to make the OS decision for the new IBM PC architecture. Right place, right time... through luck of birth.

    Remember that he also has admitted to dumpster-diving for other people's code ("pirating") and he used time on university-owned mainframes after he'd dropped out of school.

    http://philip.greenspun.com/bg/

  234. How can we "invest" in Poland and Denmark? by lkcl · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How can we repay the Polish and Danish governments - in _real_ terms - involving patent-free software?

    ideas, anyone?

    1. Re:How can we "invest" in Poland and Denmark? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Write OSS that has Polish and Danish language versions?

    2. Re:How can we "invest" in Poland and Denmark? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tell them about OSS alternatives to fx. Navision C5, Financials, Attain and Axapta... this is what's keeping many small end medium companys to MS platform...

    3. Re:How can we "invest" in Poland and Denmark? by janwedekind · · Score: 1

      The daenish government/banks can give them startup funding to interface/merge their software and offer services with Compiere. Consolidation usually ends with an open-source project anyway.

  235. Translation of Danish article by ahoset · · Score: 3, Informative

    This is a translation of the article at Børsen.

    The founder of the world's largest software development company, Bill Gates, is now ready to close Navision in Denmark and move the approximately 800 developers behind Denmark's largest software success to USA.

    This was made clear by the Microsoft boss when he met with prime minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen, minister of economy and business Bendt Bendtsen, and the minister of science Helge Sander in November.

    The threat may become reality if parts of the IT business succeed in blocking a disputed EU directive about software patents that means the world for Microsoft to have passed. Approval of directive has repeatedly been delayed by the opponents' effective lobbying.

    "If I am to maintain my development center in Denmark, the rights question must be settled. Otherwise I will move it to USA, where I can protect my rights," Bill Gates said according to Microsoft's chief legal counsel Marianne Wier, who also took part in the meeting with Anders Fogh Rasmussen.

    Bill Gates acquired the Danish development department that is based on the fusion of the two IT companies Navision and Damgaard for about 12 billion kroner [approx $2.1 Bn] in 2002.

    It has not been possible to get prime minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen to elaborate on how he reacted to the strong message from Bill Gates.

  236. Good schools in Denmark by Teun · · Score: 1
    To further strenghten our position as a nation of researchers and scientists, we have one of the most expensive but crappiest primary school systems in the western world - which is one thing, but the fact that anyone refuses to do anything about it

    But even your own minister of social affairs sends her children to a school of the German minority in the south.

    You can do something about it!!

    --
    "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
  237. hey, i don't agree with it at all.. by cybrthng · · Score: 1

    I'm not a fan at all of Business setting policy or acting like this, i'm just stating a fact and being blunt about what business is.

    It's horrible when tax dollars are used to subsidize places that don't do anything but collect profits for investors..

    It's horrible what Microsoft stated..

  238. Not quite as big a threat in Denmark by hung_himself · · Score: 3, Informative

    It's not the US...

    Losing your job doesn't mean risking bankruptcy if you become sick and there are very generous social programs in Denmark to ease the transition from one job to another. I'm not saying being laid off is not a big deal but it is lower on the Richter scale. So because the Danes are less dependent on corporate largesse, they can also more easily ignore this type of corporate blackmail (albeit at the cost of higher taxes for some...)

  239. The Inq. by di0s · · Score: 2, Informative

    I find The Inquirer to be humorously ironic (bordering on hypocritical) since they bash Microsoft and even refer to them as "The Vole", yet they use IIS/ASP.Net. Their Linux/FOSS articles are sparse at best, which obviously means they know squat about the subject.

  240. Surely.. by Mr2cents · · Score: 1

    ..if you package it all in one big bundle it could be cheaper?

    --
    "It's too bad that stupidity isn't painful." - Anton LaVey
  241. illegal debuggers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Debuggers, illegal? Stallman called that one in his dystopian short story The Right to Read

    1. Re:illegal debuggers by Oestergaard · · Score: 1

      I know he called that one. That doesn't make me feel any better though...

      I think I should clarify that;

      Debuggers are not illegal as such - they are only illegal to *use* for most purposes, with the notable exception of "research".

      So you can argue we're bending the law more than breaking it, by using debuggers for, eh, debugging our own products. Same with disassemblers.

      In any case, the law was not intended to outlaw software development entirely, it was only intended to outlaw software development that the MPAA did not endorse.

      You know, when laws like this pass, I have this hope deep inside me, that the responsible politicians were bribed. Because, if they were bribed, there would be a rational explanation and a good reason (however immoral), as to how the law could pass.

      If we assume that they were not bribed, that would make incompetence the only explanation. And that scares me - to think that someone with that amount of influence and responsibility could be incompetent to such levels. That scares me.

      I hope simple greed did it. Unfortunately, I am most likely mistaken.

  242. Let's play a game by Catbeller · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In response to the "so what?" posts, let's play a game:

    Suppose I, catbeller, in my civilian life, told a representative of Microsoft that I would personally unemploy, say, his family members by making a couple of phone calls, barring his cooperation in paying me a few million dollars, and signing a few contracts granting me much power.

    How long until the armored black farmboys smash my door down with a ram? How long would I be in FMITA prison?

    But Microsoft can do it. And no one is responsible. The corporation has civil rights as an individual, but has no civil obligations. Even if a crime is somehow proven, no one goes to jail, not for theft of billions, Enron style, or death of thousands, Dupont/Bhopal style.

    All power and priviledge, no responsibilty for its own actions. The very thing that makes conservatives quiver: no consequences for individuals for their own actions. Fake corporate "persons" front for real people committing real crimes. The current setup is organized crime.

    I've come to the conclusion that corporate personhood is a concept that has to be eliminated. People should answer for their crimes. If Bill made the decision to extort the Danes, then he should have to answer for it at a trial after extradition from the U.S. But in the real world...

    1. Re:Let's play a game by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some Enron executives did get jail time, and more probably will over the next few years. Some of those who escaped Enron, were later caught in simpler frauds at smaller companies and are doing time for those crimes (which went through the court system more quickly).

      Bhopal would have resulted in a trial for corporate manslaughter or similar offences if it had taken place in some countries, including the UK and US, and had suitable public interest existed.

      It's sad but true that if you pay someone $5 for 12 hours work in the US, it's a crime. If you do it in China it's a pay rise. If you kill fifty workers with a toxic gas release in Portugal, your company will be crawling with cops and government officials trying to find out if it was really just an "accident" or if you broke the law. Kill 50 workers in China, and you'll be unlucky if you have to pay death benefits. But hey, a couple of hundred years ago those people weren't employees, they were slaves, and you could kill them at will. Things do get better, but not over night.

  243. Of course not. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How can Microsoft writes buggy softwares if they are held responsible to the people?

  244. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by mandos · · Score: 1

    But working for Bill Gates' company is not a natural human right, so what is objectionable about this? Just because he is wealthy (and he's a self-made man, remember), those 800 people suddenly have control over his finances?

    Two things, first, William H. Gates III is completely self made? Ok. Sounds odd, but I'll let other's google this one.

    Second: You are right, no one has a right to a particular job. However, rarely has threatening to take something away if criteria X is not met been considering a good bargining / trading tactic. Instead, the reverse, offering to do something for someone if criteria X is met has always been used.

    For example: If you give me that house I'll give $100,000. That sounds like a normal deal. Whereas, saying "If you support this thing I don't want (i.e. software patents), I'll lay off 800 of your citizens" doesn't sounds like or represent normal business / trade activities. It sounds more along the lines of "Pay may $100 'insurance' to make sure your knees don't get broken." Although not as overtly illegal, it's the same tactic, and no one likes it being done to them.

    --
    Mike Scanlon
  245. whoa there buckerooo.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you're speaking of THE kommander-in-chief!!!!!!!! ;-)

  246. uh.. by bmajik · · Score: 1

    Think again.

    Given that i _work_ in the Microsoft Business Solutions group, i can speak partially to why Navision was purchased.

    I quite assure you, the logistical considerations when collaborating with co-workers that are 12h or more time shifted from you are not trivial, not to mention some language/cultural differences that take a while to work out.

    The acquisition of navision, solomon, great plains, etc to form MBS was done because MS had no offerings to speak of in the business/finaicials/ERP space, not to gain employees in Denmark, Ohio, and North Dakota.

    Besdies, micrsoft already has employees in most of the world, via its services and sales organization.

    Your theory is completely ridiculous.

    --
    My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    1. Re:uh.. by Nikker · · Score: 1

      Suuuuurrrrreeee buddy,

      You talk like you signed the deal yourself "i can speak partially to why Navision was purchased." well did you? Really?

      You work in the "Business Solutions group",you sell copies of 2003 server. At least try to tell us your CEO of department.

      You quote a position within the company like you recieved it in an email. Well what did they email you with today? Nothing, ya thats right. Did you get the email to green with the CEO's ? Did they also chat with you about the future of other acquisitions ? NO

      I just had to bite on this one you come across as some one who has a nextdoor neighbour that knows someone ....

      Anyway to make it short I think your just full of it but then again evreyone is entitled to their own opinion

      --
      A loop, by its nature, continues. If that didn't make sense, start reading this sentence again.
  247. 17:00 DK time = 08:00 Seattle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just wonder if it is a coincidence...
    Denial was sent 17:00 danish time

  248. Canada too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's unfortuate but this kind of crap is quite common in Canada too.

  249. From the Copenhagen Post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Copenhagen Post is an english language weekly with daily news updates. The story is at: http://www.cphpost.dk/get/85894.html.

    US software producer Microsoft is trying to blackmail the Danish government by threatening to move Navision to the United States, an IT consumer organization says

    IT tycoon Bill Gates threats to close down Microsofts Danish subsidiary is sheer blackmail, the IT organization Digital Consumer Denmark said on Tuesday.

    At their meeting in November, Gates reportedly told Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen he would move Microsofts Denmark-based Navision business software unit to the United States if the European Union did not accept a directive securing Microsofts intellectual property rights in Europe.

    Digital Consumer Denmark is one of the most active pressure groups lobbying against the directive.

    The organizations chairman, Peter Mogensen, said Microsoft was trying to use Navision, one of Denmarks biggest software successes in the US, and the companys 800 employees to force the directive through the EU.

    "This is pure blackmail," Mogensen said. "Patents do not have anything to do with where you develop software. Especially not for a company as big as Microsoft. Regardless of where the EU implements software patents, Microsoft will not get better protection by moving Navision to the United States. Bill Gates is using Navision for blackmail - but his threats have no connection to the results hes after."

    Mogensen said the patent directive would cost much more European IT jobs than the 800 developers' positions at Navisions headquarters in Vedbæk, and suggested that the Danish government should not succumb to Gates pressure and accept the directive.

    The EU Commissions directive proposal was rejected by the European parliament on February 4, but can still be accepted by EUs Minister Council on Thursday.

  250. Wrong assessment by Dmitri_Yuriescu · · Score: 2, Informative

    He didn't just try, apparently he succeeded very well!

    Yesterday I watched the Danish news on TV. They told the story as you know it and a little more. Before moving on to todays next topic, the speaker assured everyone that of course the Danish government will 'fight for the jobs', meaning acting Bill Gates puppets in EU.

    Thuesday the 27th there will be a demonstration in Bruxelles against the law MS (and other very large companies) are putting on us.

    1. Re:Wrong assessment by Dmitri_Yuriescu · · Score: 1

      Talking to me? The right wing government was - in my opinion - NOT put there by the people, but by large businesses. Personally I DID vote against them, be sure of that. Both the law and the way they try to enforce it on the people have no place in a functional representative democracy.

  251. NEWS: Minister of state rejects the story by gnalle · · Score: 1
    From danish radio

    The minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen rejects that Bill Gates the founder of the biggest software company in the world have threatened him by closing Navision and moving the 800 developers of Denmarks greatest software succes to the US.

    He hasn't done this on any meeting with me. I cannot confirm this way of putting, not at all. We haven't spoken about this, not at all, says Anders Fogh Rasmussen to Ritzau.

    The rejection by the minister of state arrives after last tuesday when the newspaper "Børsen" told of a threat given by Bill Gates in November on a meeting with Anders Fogh Rasmussen, minister of economy and commerce Bendt Bendtsen and minister of science Helge Sander.

    Apparently the threat were to become reality if parts of the IT-branch succeeded in blocking a controversial EU-directive about software patents, which has been delayed time after time by the effective lobby work of the opponents.

    Sorry about my horrible english

  252. Re:This thread is a little one-sided. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are quite right... and you are of course prepared to live in a world where the only breakfast product is Kellogs Cornflakes, the only available computer is a PC, all software is from Microsoft, the only car is from Ford (and is only available in black), etc, etc... that future seems to me like a SF movie...

    Sorry pal... they are only interested in making money... whatever it costs... and they are not interested about your or my opinion... and they will eliminate all competition at any cost (look fx. at the Digital - Compaq - HP merger)...

  253. Ridiculous by Baldrson · · Score: 1
    You may be the first person to claim that it is implausible to categorize Microsoft as a monopoly. Even Gates didn't move for dismissal of the major antitrust actions against Microsoft on the grounds that such lawsuits were frivolous.

    Indeed, the broad acceptance of that premise is precisely why I looked up the Sherman Act. On that premise, the Sherman Act is plausibly applicable. Microsoft is attempting to use its overwhelming presence in the marketplace to further entrench that presence.

    1. Re:Ridiculous by cosinezero · · Score: 0

      I didn't say MS wasn't a monopoly (they're not, tho; or is linux not an option?)... what I said, rather clearly, was that threatening to close a factory has zero to do with antitrust law unless it is to stifle competition, which it is not. There's no crime here.

  254. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by born_to_live_forever · · Score: 5, Insightful

    All right, this is where I step in...

    Just to get the preliminaries out of the way: I am a Dane and an historian. That means that, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, you should assume that I know what I'm talking about here.

    Now, the parent of this thread presents several hypothetical ideas regarding this (although they look more like assertions, given the tone of the post):

    1) One would expect Microsoft's ploy to "blow up in their faces".

    2) The Danish PM Anders Fogh Rasmussen could respond by adopting non-MS software in government departments, as a retaliatory measure.

    3) Anders Fogh Rasmussen might conceivably do so.

    4) "Danes are not noted for caving in to agressive ultimatums".

    Those are the points I'm going to address.

    Short version:

    No. Never in a million years. Forget it. End of story.

    Long version:

    The flights of fancy presented above represent a glorious mix of misinformed wishful thinking. While I suppose I ought to be quite flattered by the picture they paint of Danes, the fact is that they are, historically and contemporarily/politically, simply untrue.

    Let me respond to each of these points individually:

    1) One would expect Microsoft's ploy to "blow up in their faces".

    Why? When has Microsoft (or any other major corporation) ever suffered a serious and permanent backlash from using strong-arm tactics? Small setbacks, yes - but what reason would Bill Gates have for believing that such an outcome is in any way likely?

    2) The Danish PM Anders Fogh Rasmussen could respond by adopting non-MS software in government departments, as a retaliatory measure.

    No. The Danish PM doesn't have that sort of comprehensive influence over government purchasing policies. Certainly, he could push for legislation in such matters, and instruct his cabinet to push for adoption of non-MS solutions within their ministries, but even if he were likely to do so (which he isn't, see point 3) the time frame for a switch-over would be long. The wheels of bureaucracy grind slowly.

    3) Anders Fogh Rasmussen might conceivably do so.

    No, he wouldn't. In fact, I don't hesitate to use the word "inconceivable" in that context. Rasmussen is a liberal-right ("liberal" in the Danish context meaning "laissez-faire capitalist") politician, and his entire political career is built on the conviction that free market forces and less government are the panaceas whereby all economic and social evils will be eradicated. In fact, I think he actually believes that. For ideological reasons alone, it is highly improbable that he would do so.

    Leaving aside the ideology, Fogh Rasmussen would be a pretty irresponsible public official if he chose the path of outright confrontation. Such a move could (and would) be interpreted by the U.S. as a form of protectionism, and become the opening move in a trade war. No responsible PM would involve his country in such a situation. He'd be more likely to knuckle under.

    4) "Danes are not noted for caving in to agressive ultimatums".

    It pains me to say this, but this is relatively untrue. Although Denmark has sometimes resisted ultimatums (such as the British demand that Denmark surrender her navy in 1801), the fact is that any confrontation has eventually led to the Danes capitulating and giving the foe what he wanted. We didn't invent the term "appeasement", but by damn, we live it.

    The parent post cites the Danish evacuation of the Jews in 1943 as an example of Danish refusal to cave in - but the evacuation was largely carried out by private individuals. The government was not involved in any significant degree. In fact, when Denmark was invaded in 1940, the government rapidly chose to capitulate and enter into a policy of cooperation with the Nazis. Honestly, the only reason Denmark was not treated as a collaborator nation after t

    --

    - Peter Ravn Rasmussen

  255. I... by fonky · · Score: 1

    I for one, welcome our American corporations.

  256. Re:Patents cripple innovation? by idsofmarch · · Score: 1
    You can't patent books, artwork or music you tool. That's called copyright. Nor can you patent a guitar. You don't understand the differences between public domain, copyrights, or patents.

    So, please be quiet you goddamn coward.

    --
    Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
  257. Patents are monopolies by Baldrson · · Score: 1
    And the original article clearly said Gates said he would make good on the threat:
    if the country opposed the European Union's proposed directive on software patents.
    Microsoft is one of the worst exploiters of the patent system. Patents are monopoly rights over areas of technology. The originators of patent law were individual ivnentors who would have been apalled at how it is being abused by enormous corporations to "restrain trade and commerce".
    1. Re:Patents are monopolies by cosinezero · · Score: 0

      Are you serious? Are you to tell me that anti-trust law is in place to tell a company they can't NOT have a business in a country? Nothing in anti-trust law forces a company to exist somewhere they don't want to be. Nothing. A company can threaten to leave if conditions aren't met ALL THEY WANT. It happens all the time and is perfectly 100% legal and ethical.

    2. Re:Patents are monopolies by ScottKin · · Score: 0

      Exactly!

      Look at how many businesses move across the US in order to locate their businesses where the "business climate" is more favorable, expecially due to tax laws.

      Is it illegal for a company to change locations so that they don't have to follow a particular set of laws? NO! If so, you can say good-bye to Offshore Oursourcing!

      --
      I don't give a rat's behind about "karma" here or anywhere else. Don't like what I have to say here? Deal with it!
  258. CORRECTION (Oh dear) by born_to_live_forever · · Score: 4, Informative

    It took me about ten seconds after posting for a little niggling voice at the back of my mind to tell me that I'd better check my facts. The following paragraph in my preceding post is completely wrong:

    The "true hero", as such, of the evacuation was not, in fact, a Dane - it was SS-Obergruppenführer Dr. Werner Best, the German administrator in charge of "cooperation" with the Danish government. When he learned of the plan to seize the Danish Jews (who had previously been left alone, to avoid antagonizing the Danes), he surreptitiously gave warning to his Danish contacts, who passed the word along. The entire evacuation operation was carried out largely without any government participation. I know it seems strange, even fantastic, to consider an SS man the "hero" of any situation - but nevertheless, such is the case.

    Turns out, my memory had played a trick on me and I'd swapped a couple of names. True to the classic image of SS men, Werner Best was not a good guy. In fact, he was the individual who recommended implementing the "resolution of the Jewish problem in Denmark". Although his overall behaviour with regard to occupied Denmark was lenient, he certainly was not a good guy.

    The actual hero of the day was Georg Duckwitz, of the German Embassy in Copenhagen. He was responsible for matters dealing with shipping, and he gave warning of the impending operation to Danish contacts.

    *sigh*

    Oh well, I suppose that mess-up sort of undermines my credibility - though I do think that I should get credit for issuing an immediate correction.

    In any case, this little historical quibble has no bearing on the actual matter of Fogh Rasmussen's likely response to MS strong-arm tactics. But then again, you probably don't need me to tell you that politicians tend to cave in to pressure from big business...

    --

    - Peter Ravn Rasmussen

  259. lobbying by pekkak · · Score: 1

    No, it's not extortion either, it's called lobbying. Pass the law X and we will invest money to create Y jobs in your electoral district, otherwise we'll have to take our business elsewhere. Happens all the time.

    --
    What are we going to do tomorrow night? The same thing we do every night, Pinky. Try to take over the world!
  260. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, he is threatening to move it to the United States where he feels a better climate for his business may exist.

    No, he is threatening to move it to the United States in an attempt to manipulate the law.

  261. Set fire to them... by born_to_live_forever · · Score: 1

    Prime Minister: Set fire to them?

    Your hommage to Monty Python aside, it might interest you to know that this particular phrase echoes an event in Danish history when, yes indeedy, the Danish government caved in to strong-arm tactics.

    In 1801, a British fleet under Admiral Hyde Parker and Admiral Horatio Nelson met the Danish fleet in the Battle of the Roadstead of Copenhagen. The battle was hard-fought on both sides, but the British were slowly gaining the upper hand. Not fast enough to satisfy Nelson, though. He was under pressure of time, having already been signalled by his superior, Admiral Hyde Parker, to cease hostilities - an order he (in)famously ignored, by placing the telescope to his blind eye, thus pointedly not seeing the signal flags.

    Nelson sent a message to the Danish Prince Regent (the later Frederik VI) who was observing the battle from a vantage point near the harbour. The letter (which is in the Danish royal archives) told the Prince Regent in no uncertain terms that, unless the Danes immediately gave up the battle, Nelson would order the burning of the Danish batteries (ships being used as fixed gun emplacements, partially submerged in the harbourmouth) which had been taken as prizes during the battle.

    The battery ships in question had been outfitted with British skeleton crews, and the Danish sailors had been chained belowdecks.

    In effect, Nelson was offering the Prince a threat that he would murder several hundred helpless POWs, in the most vicious manner conceivable, if the Prince didn't give in.

    Predictably, the Prince did.

    --

    - Peter Ravn Rasmussen

  262. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, exactly. It is not right or moral or ethical to threaten to sack people in order to gain leverage over others.

    A threat is a promise of wrongful destructive action. If I say I will punch your nose in or kick your dog, it is a threat. If I say that I'm taking the lawnmower I lent you back because I don't like the way your family treats me, it isn't threatening or wrong.

    The distinction you fail to make is that Gates' "threat" isn't a promise of action, but a promise to withdraw the support he himself is providing. When Gandhi withdrew his consent in order to gain leverage, was he "threatening" the British? Was it vindictive, petty and wrong?

  263. Outland circa 1993 by dar · · Score: 1

    The first thing I thought of when I saw this topic was the Outland cartoon circa 1993 where Bill Gates is trying to convince a woman to go on a date with him.

    "I'll buy you Norway."

    Her response?

    "Ok. But no kissing."

    --
    My other Slashdot ID is much lower.
  264. Headline is misleading by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Saying you don't want to do business in a country because you don't like its laws is not blackmail, and is not even extortion. People here threaten to move out of the US all the time because they don't like what the US govt is doing.

  265. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by sangreal66 · · Score: 1
    No, he is threatening to move it to the United States in an attempt to manipulate the law.
    And? Its a competitive marketplace. If Denmark's laws don't provide the business climate he is looking for, why should he keep his business there? It is no different than saying if you don't lower corporate taxes we'll take our business elsewhere.
  266. Danes will only delay the inevitable... by quarkscat · · Score: 1

    because either (1) MSFT gets its way and the EC
    approves software patents (and then MSFT does
    the layoffs in 18 - 24 months), or (2) MSFT
    doesn't get software patents in the EC (and then
    KMSFT retaliates with immediate layoffs.)

    The Danish government is in a position more
    commonly called a "Hobson's Choice". And they
    are essentially screwed either way. There is,
    however, a third choice: (3) tell MSFT to get
    stuffed regarding software patents, and then
    fine MSFT another $500 Million USD for illegal
    and immoral monopolistic practices. Seems that
    with the third option, MSFT still has the Danes
    over a barrel with their pants down around their
    ankles, but they would at least get some
    compensation out of the deal.

  267. Microsoft is Denying this - link ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Update: Microsoft denies this, "Contrary to reports in the Danish media today, Microsoft stated that there are no plans to close the Microsoft Development Center at Vedbaek, Denmark. Microsoft remains committed to Vedbaek as a development center, as evidenced by the appointment of Klaus Holse Andersen as leader of the Microsoft Vedbaek campus and the opening of the Microsoft Technology Center for EMEA (Europe, Middle East, Africa) ISV Development in November 2004. The campus at Vedbaek continues to thrive, and Microsoft expects to add additional developers in 2005." via Boing Boing
    H'mmm In other news Man caught with pants down denies he owns trousers -

    http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2005/feb0 5/0215VedbaekStatementPR.asp

  268. Common Sense? by rollinthunda0ne · · Score: 1

    OH MY GOD! I can't believe that gates did that and oh my goodness am I typing on his tool for more money and oh my goodness aahhh!!!!!...

    Oh, wait... it's from the National Inquirer? AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.... Yea...

    You have to remember, the National Inquirer also posted a story that George W. Bush announced that the moon was Russia's fault. It's not exactly TIMES or anything - I wouldn't trust it for a second.

    By the way, if it were true that Gates did that, it really wouldn't suprise me. He's evil. He stole my iPod.

  269. Update on the case by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Prime Minister Anders Fogh denies the allegation flatout, but the paper (Børsen) that published this story maintains it's true.

  270. Dear Mr. Gates, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "If I'm to keep my development center in Denmark, then it's a requirement that the question of rights becomes resolved. Otherwise, I will move it to the USA where I can protect my rights"

    Stop refering Software Patents as your right. It may be a right of yours in the U.S. but in the European Union this legislation has not being approved, as a result, your so called 'right' does not exist in the E.U.

  271. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But working for Bill Gates' company is not a natural human right, so what is objectionable about this?
    . . .
    People do not have a right to be employed by Bill Gates, and if it will be such a disaster economically if he pulls out of an area you'd think the politicians would be bending over backwards to suit his demands -- seeing as how their livelihood is apparently utterly dependent on Mr. Gates' presence in their area of political control.


    It's unfortunate that people seem to confuse capitalism, which is a nice system, with knee-jerk pro-coporate rationalisations.

    In free-market economic terms, Gates' behavior (if true as reported) is quite objectionable: making economic decisions in return for political favors distorts the market place, hurting everyone. You either end up with a company wasting resources by closing a plant that should have stayed open, or market rules being re-written to favor one specific company/industry and distorting the market that way.

  272. oh come on by ggez44 · · Score: 1

    we all dislike MS, but quoting stories from the inquirer? that's low

  273. Divide and conquer by newhoggy · · Score: 1
    In the same way that corporations can hurt individual workers more than their workers as a whole, Microsoft can hurt individual states much more than it can hurt the EU as a whole.


    It's time states in the EU consider standing in solidarity with each other rather than be knocked off one by one.

  274. maybe i'm not making this clear enough by bmajik · · Score: 1

    Back in the year 2000 or so, Microsoft completed the acquisition of a few ERP/business software companies, including Great Plains and Navision.

    See, MS decided they wanted to start to play in that space, so they just acquired a few companies that already had established product lines.

    These aquitisions were incorporated under the company "Microsoft Business Solutions", which is a sub-company of Microsoft (i.e. my paycheck says "Microsoft Business Solutions", not "Microsoft")

    I work for Microsoft Business Solutions. Prior to that, I worked for Microsoft proper (my check used to say "Microsoft")

    At no point in my career have I been involved with selling Windows 2003 Server, apart from maybe saying things like "gosh, this windows 2003 server sucks a lot less than windows 95, maybe you should consider upgrading?"

    In anycase, when i was in Redmond from 00 to 03, I was a tester working on Visual Studio. Since 03 I've been in Fargo, ND (where the former Great Plains company was based), working as a tester on the Microsoft Business Framework, the underpinnings of the next round of business applications from the "newly formed" Microsoft Business Soluations group, which consists of people/technologies of the former products of Great Plains, Axapta, Solomon, etc.

    If you were to go and look for press releases put out by MS on who they were acquiring, what those companies products were at the time, etc, you'll see that everything I am saying about MBS and the aquisitions checks out.

    You can think what you want to, but what you're describing has no basis in reality. I don't know what else to tell you.

    --
    My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
  275. What a fucking twit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The topic of this thread is more proof that CowboyNeal is a total fucktard.

    Per The Inquirer article"

    "THE NOSOFTWARE Patents site is reporting that Bill Gates told the Danish prime minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen that 800 jobs would go if the country opposed the European Union's proposed directive on software patents.

    It quotes a report in Danish newspaper Børsen, which alleges that Gates told Rasmussen and two other Danish ministers last November that 800 jobs at Navision would go unless the EU passed the directive.

    The ginger group also alleges today that the CEO of Philips put pressure on the Dutch government to support the proposed directive."

    This is just like the "my-girlfriend's-brother's-cousin's-girfriend heard this guy at the store say" heresay, and is so FUCKING full of shitty suppositiona and conjecturata that it would FUCKING CHOKE Stallman - that is, if you can choke a human pig.

    CowboyNeal, you're a FUCKING GIT! GET OVER YOURSELF! You've screwed-the-pooch once too many times!

    1. Re:What a fucking twit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The story is from Børsen, they've got it from Marianne Weir (employee of Microsoft Denmark) and tried to get a confirmation of it from pm. Anders Fogh Rasmussen, he first told them that he didn't have any comments...
      The case escalated (not only here on /. but also in Denmark) and the opposition and the computerworkers union got pissed off at 14:00 (UTC+1)... the reaction from pm. and Microsoft arrives after 17:00 (UTC+1) which is 08:00 in Redmond... coincidence ? I think NOT...

      If it really didn't happen why could pm. not say so when Børsen contacted him ?

      When the story escalated why wait another 3 hours before denying it ?

      Could a Microsoft lawyer (Marianne Weir) really have misunderstood this ?

  276. Re: Princess ex Navision -- unHoly Sh!t by SteelLynx · · Score: 1

    She actually did not work there for very long. And with all the media circus that shows up whenever a royal person does anything it's unlikely that she talks much with her old co-workers.

    And I do believe there's some (unwritten, perhaps) rule about the royal family not interfering in politics. Except, of course, that our queen has a number of official duties when new laws and governments are introduced.

    --
    It's 19:11:42. Do You Know Where Your Meat Body Is?
  277. Fuck you, asshole. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank you for responding to my post with an off-the-cuff fallacy, instead of intellectual honesty or respectful discourse. Your mother must be proud.

  278. Check your facts! by born_to_live_forever · · Score: 1

    The social democrats control whether software patents have a majority or not in the danish parliament.

    Be honest: you just invented that little "fact", right? You pulled it out of thin air and, without bothering to check it in any way, offered it up as truth.

    If you'd bothered to check, you'd have learned that the Social Democrats, in fact, have no such majority. The current government of Denmark is composed of PM Anders Fogh Rasmussen's party, Venstre (literally, "Left", though this is an historical holdover - the party platform is laissez-faire capitalist) and the Danish Conservative Party.

    Together, these two parties do not have a majority in the Folketing, the Danish parliament, but with the support of their allies, the extreme-right xenophobic Danish People's Party, they can muster an absolute majority in the Folketing.

    The Social Democrats are helpless to do anything about that. They don't "control" anything, sadly.

    --

    - Peter Ravn Rasmussen

    1. Re:Check your facts! by infolib · · Score: 1
      Be honest: you just invented that little "fact", right?

      No I didn't. Please note that the Danish People's Party votes against the government in this matter. If you hadn't flamed me before checking your facts I might even have dug out a link on that for you.

      Jeg tror du skylder mig en undskyldning Peter :-)

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced libertarian utopia is indistinguishable from government.
    2. Re:Check your facts! by born_to_live_forever · · Score: 1

      All right, I'll admit you've done more research than I credited you for - and I'll give you a full apology if and only if the Danish People's Party actually opposes the VK government on this issue.

      However, I find it unlikely that this is going to be the case. The DPP is far more interested in its core party platform of xenophobia than in a fairly esoteric matter such as this one. It is highly probable that they will give in on their resistance, in return for government support for one of their core issues.

      However, if they do vote against, drop me a message, and I'll be glad to stand you to a beer somewhere in Copenhagen (seeing that you study physics at KU, we probably have an overlapping circle of frineds and acquaintances). Although I'll admit that it will feel funny celebrating the DPP having done something right, for once in their misbegotten existence.

      --

      - Peter Ravn Rasmussen

    3. Re:Check your facts! by infolib · · Score: 1
      I'll give you a full apology if and only if the Danish People's Party actually opposes the VK government on this issue.

      How about "they have been opposing the VK government for a long time" ? I suppose I can take it in danish since we're the only ones in this discussion:

      DF var modstandere i EU-parlamentet i '03. Tjek FFII's scorecard efter 1.-behandlingen i Europarl i september '03. Sammenlign Camre (DF) med Riis-Jørgensen (V).

      DF var modstandere før EU-valget i sommers:
      Kenneth Kristensen (DF) udtaler: "DF er imod softwarepatenter" her (Fra juni '04, tjek også Camre og Messerschmidt)

      DF er modstandere i Folketinget:
      Den danske regering har ikke længere opbakning i Folketinget til støtte for patenter på software.
      Det er situationen, efter Socialdemokraterne på grund af valgkampen har trukket sin støtte tilbage. [...] Alternativet for regeringen ville være at støtte sig op ad Dansk Folkeparti, som man gør i en lang række andre sager, men her er ingen hjælp at hente.
      - Vi er modstandere af patenter på software, og det er vi stadigvæk uanset, hvad Socialdemokraterne gør.
      her (24/5 '05)

      Denne seneste afstemning i Europa-udvalget har været med til at forhindre at kommissionens såkaldte "kompromis-forslag" blev vedtaget i Ministerrådet. Dermed har EU-parlamentet fået tid til at kræve processen genstartet, et stort skridt fremad ift. at skulle ændre i det meget ensidige forslag med absolut flertal ved en 2.-behandling.

      Du kan jo give en øl hjemme - der kommer jeg jo alligevel.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced libertarian utopia is indistinguishable from government.
    4. Re:Check your facts! by born_to_live_forever · · Score: 1

      Du kan jo give en øl hjemme - der kommer jeg jo alligevel.

      Som sagt, gerne - hvis Dansk Folkeparti holder fast i deres nej.

      Det tror jeg ikke, de gør - de har større fisk at fange. Husk på at Camre er lidt hen i retning af én af "landsbytosserne" i partiet. Han er ikke i toppen af partiet, og toppen har en anden hoveddagsorden, én der i det væsentligste er indenrigspolitisk.

      Nåmenaltså: Vi sér på det igen, efter det er afgjort nede i EU. Hvis Fogh Rasmussens rædselsregimente har været nødt til at indtage en anti-softwarepatent-position p.gr.af DF, så skylder jeg dig helt klart en pils i Caféen?. Det er også længe siden, jeg sidst har været der.

      OT: Forresten så jeg lige, at gode gamle Jens-Martin Knudsen var død, 74 år gammel. Hvor trist. :-(

      --

      - Peter Ravn Rasmussen

  279. Re:Two minutes hate time already? by randomencounter · · Score: 1

    As far as the Danes are concerned, he is threatening a shutdown. If Denmark was such a bad place to do business, why'd he buy a business there to begin with?

    --
    Forget diamonds, copyright is forever.
  280. That guy represents ALL libertarians? by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1
    I think most libertarians would say that the government should not have any influence over the economy, so there would not be any reason to bribe the government in the first place. Plus, lots of people make self-serving demands - "AARP will say you're against old people if you don't..." or "if you vote for gay marriage, we will 'suggest' that you're an athest to our congregation" and we manage to get by. Is this really that different?

    Second, IMHO, voting is just a way to keep people from getting completely screwed by the government, not a panacea for the common man. At least in my country, it's more like "one person, one small chance of affecting who gets elected, and that chance is based on how homogeneous the state you live in is (and usually it's a forgone conclusion)".

    More to the point, what exactly is the line between "do what I say or the jobs get it" and "if other countries have a better environment for my business, I'm likely to move there"?

    Lastly, it's easy to criticize when you aren't offering any ideas of your own (other than "they're in cloud cuckoo land"). So what would you suggest as an alternative?

    -Yndrd1984

  281. Probably looking to close navision anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    A similar strategy was used to push voters to join the EU (by 0.5%). Sharp suits came out from Stockholm to all the local office and told the assembled employees that failing to get into the EU would mean that they would all lose their jobs.

    Sweden did by a tiny margin vote to join the EU and those same offices were closed two weeks later and all the staff fired. The suits were going to close them anyway.

    Bill's probably looking to close Navision anyway, but such a move would be unpopular so he needs to conjure a scape goat.

  282. pure linux FUD on /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This article/topic is below /. standards. /. linux pros advocate freedom of open source.

    How about freedom of chosing where to live,
    what store to shop at, and most importantly where to locate your overseas business offices?

    How can /. be consistent when /. readers repeatedly advocate not supporting a particular business, or buy a particular book because the people involved in it support a political party /. readers dislike?