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Microsoft's Slap at Samba

Rollie Hawk writes "Microsoft's latest attempt to reconcile with the European Commission's antitrust rulings against the company may result in another victim. It seems their offer, if accepted, will strike a considerable blow at a leading competitor in the realm of file and printer sharing. The popular open source suite Samba stands to be the recipient of a backhanded slap from Redmond if the offer stands and the European branch of the Free Software Foundation is taking it personally. Though Microsoft is offering to make some information regarding interoperability available to competitors, it's only under the condition that implementations are not open source. According to FSFE president Georg Greve, "the proposal specifically precludes the information from being used in a free software implementation, such as the Samba workgroup server software." How is Samba being specifically targeted? Greve argues this is because "Samba is the only remaining major competitor of Microsoft in this market.""

406 comments

  1. Admiration by Bifurcati · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You have to admire Microsoft's ability to turn what seems to be a damaging situation into something that might actually benefit them!

    1. Re:Admiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree. It's getting ridiculous how many posts not conforming to some sort of 'groupthink' are modded down, particularly anything negative against Apple.

      If you are one of those moderators who mods things you don't agree with down, please mod this post down too so that you don't spend that modpoint elsewhere. Thanks.

    2. Re:Admiration by ZephyrXero · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is why your operating system should be free (both freedom & beer). It's one thing to charge for an application...but without an OS, that computer is just a worthless hunk of metal and plastic. It's your computer, you should have complete control over it, not Bill nor Steve. It's only enevitable that people will eventually realize that the needs outway the want$...

      --
      "A truly wise man realizes he knows nothing."
    3. Re:Admiration by ZephyrXero · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's why I browse at -1. The modderation system is broken. But don't talk about it or you'll get modded down.

      --
      "A truly wise man realizes he knows nothing."
    4. Re:Admiration by geekee · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "This is why your operating system should be free (both freedom & beer). It's one thing to charge for an application...but without an OS, that computer is just a worthless hunk of metal and plastic."

      Without applications, a computer and an OS is still "just a worthless hunk of metal and plastic".

      --
      Vote for Pedro
    5. Re:Admiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a double-edged sword. Samba is the reason many of us tolerate Windows desktops, Windows Server being a money pit.

      If Microsoft succeeds in killing Samba the choice for us will be between deploying Windows Servers or replacing the Windows desktops.

      Take a wild guess....

    6. Re:Admiration by Soporific · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A little tense about this are we? The poster made an observation about the story, I don't see where the poster is being an apologist. I think you are off the deep end on this one.

      ~S

    7. Re:Admiration by ZephyrXero · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Don't twist my words... you know what I meant ;) That concept includes all your basic applications too (browser, media player, burning/ripping tools, etc), it's all basic stuff you need as opposed to an advanced accounting package that's specialized to your needs, or perhaps a videogame...that's when it's okay to charge, but the freedom aspect should always be there.

      --
      "A truly wise man realizes he knows nothing."
    8. Re:Admiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Surely a media player, and an internet browser are part of the operating system ;)

      Who know, perhaps in the future, even a hypervisor will be there.

    9. Re:Admiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahhh... And now your argument dies the death of a thousand qualifications...

    10. Re:Admiration by MPHellwig · · Score: 1

      MacOSX being the next on my server and desktop if I must replace XP/2003.
      I have users to serve the users are not there to serve me, it's my task to automate their repitive tasks and give them tools they can comprehend.
      And yes, the administrator is also a user to me, everybody can be replaced if organized well (including myself), though you could still miss them .

    11. Re:Admiration by eric76 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Microsoft is laughing at the court's ignorance and gullibility all the way to the bank.

    12. Re:Admiration by lordsid · · Score: 3, Funny

      unless you also mention something about being modded down then some smart mass will mod you up. just as I hopefully get modded down for this, right?

      --
      IMAGE VERIFICATION IS EVIL!
    13. Re:Admiration by zerbot · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I used to browse at -1 until the spammers made it hard to get through the good stuff in a reasonable time. I started reading at 0. But then this latest crap spammer started copying crap from one thread into another, it wasn't getting modded down, and it was taking too much mental processing separating the copied crap from legitimate replies. So now I'm reading at 1.

    14. Re:Admiration by ryusen · · Score: 1

      i kind of admired it the first couple times they did it.. now it's just old tricks...

      --

      I believe sex is highly over rated... unless it involves me
    15. Re:Admiration by CaymanIslandCarpedie · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I only wish this logic always worked. I think gas should be free 'cause without it my car is just a worthless hunk of metal and plastic ;-)

      --
      "reality has a well-known liberal bias" - Steven Colbert
    16. Re:Admiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually, no, I don't have to admire evil, no matter how efficient or effective it is. Evil is still evil, and never worth admiring.

    17. Re:Admiration by lastchance_000 · · Score: 1

      I take it you own your company? Because if I took Windows (and more importantly, MS Office) away from the executives for whom I've worked, their heads would explode. One, a fanatical Mac user, couldn't accept the differences between Mac and PC versions of Office.

    18. Re:Admiration by ZephyrXero · · Score: 1

      Gas is a limited resource, software is not. But I do think $2 a gallon is pretty outrageous...

      --
      "A truly wise man realizes he knows nothing."
    19. Re:Admiration by ZephyrXero · · Score: 1

      So your going with a flavor of BSD, other may go with a type of Linux...ease of use is relative.

      --
      "A truly wise man realizes he knows nothing."
    20. Re:Admiration by ZephyrXero · · Score: 1

      the Mac(BSD if it's OS 10.x) should interact with a linux server much more easily than with a Windows server... Their heads wouldn't explode (not counting the mac guy, but he's not really part of the argument) if you told them how much money they are saving and then hold their hands during the transistion from Windows and MS Office to Linux and Open Office. Once setup properly it's really not that different for the end user.

      --
      "A truly wise man realizes he knows nothing."
    21. Re:Admiration by ZephyrXero · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I guess this is something new in Europe? Corporations have been taking advantage of the US government for decades now...

      --
      "A truly wise man realizes he knows nothing."
    22. Re:Admiration by Geekboy(Wizard) · · Score: 1

      only $2/gallon? The place by my house is $2.79/gallon.

    23. Re:Admiration by TeraCo · · Score: 1, Insightful
      It's only enevitable that people will eventually realize that the needs outway the want$...

      What could you possibly need that relates to computing at all? Need food - check. Water - check. shelter - check. Big Booty Wrestling Vol 3 - .. I'll get back to you.

      --
      Not Meta-modding due to apathy.
    24. Re:Admiration by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1


      Nope.

      OTOH I have long advocated doing away with the distinction between OS and app - an app should just be something else the system knows how to do.

      Unfortunately, until we have conceptual processing and knowledgebases instead of apps, this is not feasible.

      --
      Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
    25. Re:Admiration by Inf0phreak · · Score: 1

      5.50$ per gallon here in Denmark (if my calculations are correct). Stop whining.

      --
      ________
      Entranced by anime since late summer 2001 and loving it ^_^
    26. Re:Admiration by ComputerSlicer23 · · Score: 1, Offtopic
      You should get out in the world more. $2/gal is pretty darn cheap worldwide (I know it's lots more expensive in Europes, I'm fairly sure it's more expensive in the Middle East). In fact, gas isn't currently more then 66% of the way to it's peak price accounting for inflation in the U.S.

      Name three liquids besides water that you can get cheaper?

      Gas is one of the worlds cheapest liquids period. Other then tap water, nothing even comes close (or it didn't until the recent run up in price). I still think a gallon of milk is about 2.50-3.00 (I don't pay any attention to the price, but I pretty sure it's over $2/gal). Pretty much anything else is more expensive by the gallon. Cleaners, Juice, heck even lots of bottled water is more expensive, soda is generally more expensive. Gas is cheap. Call me when it hit's $4-$5/gal. Then you might have a point. The problem with gas prices is that the U.S. Economy is so incredibly sensitive to it's price. Simple stuff like agriculture, is something like 90% based on the price of gas (between the fertilizers, transportation, and actual farm equipment, 90% of the costs come down to how much gas does it take to do that step). It'd be even cheaper without the taxes (I believe it's like 35-50% of the price of gas where I live is pretty much taxes).

      Kirby

    27. Re:Admiration by ZephyrXero · · Score: 1

      It's not about my 2 vs. your 5.50... I'm talking about relative pricing... Here, gas was only a dollar a few years back, so I would assume yours was only about 3.75 back then too. Apparently self-centeredness is not only limited to the US.

      --
      "A truly wise man realizes he knows nothing."
    28. Re:Admiration by mabinogi · · Score: 1

      No, without applications, an OS is an environment that provides services and hardware abstraction / access for those that want to write their own applications.

      Of course, you could always program to the bare metal, or write your own OS, so even that argument doesn't hold a lot of weight ;)

      --
      Advanced users are users too!
    29. Re:Admiration by hitmark · · Score: 4, Insightful

      forget about the code, what should be free are all present and future filetypes and network protocols.

      if those are free then anyone is able to build a competing product and the user can jump from one to the other with little or no problems. be it a open source or a closed source product...

      this could allso slove the problem of lost information based on it stored on formats that are no longer supported by any current application.

      i wonder, if someone found some old first gen ms office files on a floppy somewhere (if they even have a computer with a floppy drive) would they be able to read the content of them with current apps?

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    30. Re:Admiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It must be pleasant skimming over the ascii goatcx posts allong with the penis bird trolls. I used to browse at -1 but stopped because of the GNNA trolls and the Steven King is dead posts.

    31. Re:Admiration by ZephyrXero · · Score: 1

      Well that goes without saying... it's really not that different from the reasons you can't patent a mathmatical equation or algorithm.

      --
      "A truly wise man realizes he knows nothing."
    32. Re:Admiration by MPHellwig · · Score: 1

      Well, I don't need a gui, but my administrator and users might. They find the OsX gui more userfriendly then the various other gui incarnations.
      Since they already used to windows they get windows. I give them what they want, if they wanted linux, that is what they get. If I'm forced to switch the next best is OsX, I'm the servent not the master.

    33. Re:Admiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I used to browse at -1 until the spammers made it hard to get through the good stuff in a reasonable time. I started reading at 0. But then this latest crap spammer started copying crap from one thread into another, it wasn't getting modded down, and it was taking too much mental processing separating the copied crap from legitimate replies. So now I'm reading at 1.

    34. Re:Admiration by Stankatz · · Score: 2, Funny

      I have no idea what this thread is about because I browse at +5.

    35. Re:Admiration by Progman3K · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      >Gas is one of the worlds cheapest liquids period. Other then tap water, nothing even comes close (or it didn't until the recent run up in price). I still think a gallon of milk is about 2.50-3.00

      Only nobody drinks 40 gallons of milk per week...

      --
      I don't know the meaning of the word 'don't' - J
    36. Re:Admiration by inode_buddha · · Score: 1

      [re-post] Isn't it amazing how much attitude is reflected in engineering? Just IMHO, MS might have the brightest engineers etc. on the planet; but they'll be hobbled by the corporate attitude. http://www.blinkenlights.com/classiccmp/gateswhine .html [blinkenlights.com] I guess the world owes him a living. Notice the date on it.

      --
      C|N>K
    37. Re:Admiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have to admire Microsoft's ability

      Much like the way I admire how Stalin killed more Russians during WWII than the Germany army did.

      Come to think of it, I admire chairman Mao even more than Stalin since he killed more people than any other dictation in modern history.

      (THIS SCRIPT CHECK S U C K S!!!!!)

    38. Re:Admiration by dknj · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up! Mod this post funny!

      -dk

    39. Re:Admiration by issachar · · Score: 1
      self centered? You're the one complaining about the price of gas without reference to the basic reason for gas prices... supply and demand.

      The only rational for your complaint appears to be "I don't like paying that much" in different words.

      --
      . --- If you're looking for free e-mail you won't find it here! http://www.noemailhere.com
    40. Re:Admiration by ComputerSlicer23 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Good god man, move closer to work, or stop driving an A1M1. I drive a Ford F150, and only manage to go thru 10-15 gal a week. At one point in my life, I drank fairly close to that much milk in a week.

      I'm still not sure how much a family drinks has to do with the price of tea in china, or the price of gas in the U.S. Yes, it does in fact have economy of scale over most other liquids, but we are talking about gasoline here. It's a fairly high demand substance, which should drive the price up. It's not like it grows on trees. I'm fairly confident gas has a bit more processing done to it then Milk (why am I dreading the diatribe someone will tell me about pasturization). It's not like most of the gas or Oil in this country originates here. I'm guessing getting it from the Middle East to here, isn't cheap. I'm sure feeding and caring for my grandma's cow bessy isn't cheap, but I'm willing to bet, pumping oil out of the ground isn't precisely free either.

      Kirby

    41. Re:Admiration by issachar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's a nice idea, and I tried it. My experience may not be typical, but it didn't go over well. I suspect my experience is typical. The boss was fully aware of the costs, and made the decision to stick with MS. Basically, to an executive, nothing is more valuable than his time, and nothing is as easy to use (and therefore efficient with his time) that something he already knows how to use. Actually, I think that's true of a lot of people.

      --
      . --- If you're looking for free e-mail you won't find it here! http://www.noemailhere.com
    42. Re:Admiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Forty gallons a week is, what, 4000 mi/month? The US is only 5000 mi across! Where the fuck are you going?

    43. Re:Admiration by Kpt+Kill · · Score: 1

      and of that how much are govt taxes?

    44. Re:Admiration by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Gas is one of the worlds cheapest liquids period. Other then tap water, nothing even comes close (or it didn't until the recent run up in price). I still think a gallon of milk is about 2.50-3.00 (I don't pay any attention to the price, but I pretty sure it's over $2/gal).

      Quit comparing Gas to milk - the price of milk is artifically inflated by the US Govt so that dairy farmers won't all go out of business - if milk goes below $2/gal, the feds buy milk until it goes back above $2.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    45. Re:Admiration by rkcallaghan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I still think a gallon of milk is about 2.50-3.00

      Only nobody drinks 40 gallons of milk per week...

      And to be fair, milk is subsidized by our federal government. So its real cost is higher.

      ~Rebecca

    46. Re:Admiration by inode_buddha · · Score: 1

      He's going to work and making a living. Much like the rest of us.

      --
      C|N>K
    47. Re:Admiration by genus+babbage · · Score: 1

      give trolls and flaimbait a +modifier; makes for a much more interesting site

    48. Re:Admiration by pallmall1 · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is laughing at the court's ignorance and gullibility all the way to the bank.

      How true. Microsoft has not only taken advantage of the ignorance curve to create its monopoly, it also uses the ignorance of the courts to make the curve steeper.

      However, the one fact that I feel the European courts aren't ignorant of is that Microsoft is an American company. There's no way that the cradle of Machiavellianism will allow the flow of information within their nations to be dictated by a foreign corporation. The French may be capitulators, but the German's will never take it.

      --
      3 things about computers: they're alive, they're self-aware, and they hate your guts.
    49. Re:Admiration by sumdumass · · Score: 0

      supply and demand kinda take a back seat here. WELL actualy they don't but gas in america is a little different then in other countries.

      First most of the gas prices in other countries are taxes that america doesn't have. Second, in the majority of places in america there is no mass transit system or one that doesn't function with any efficincy. Most americans comute mor then 20 miles to and from work. Most europe countries have alternatives to driving your own car that actualy work. Third, because of epa(enviromental protection agency) regulations attempting to please the enviromental wackos as well as leaders of other nations, we recently tightended emissions requirments for gasoline and the result was that we forced alot of importers out of the market. Our supply verses demand is actualy artificial because of this. We could still import the gas and fix the fuel with additives but for some reason we are not allowed to. None of the other countries have done this and i don't expect them to do so in anytime soon. Fith, a good majority of the fuel prices in the US is because of speculation that was a once well regulated industry has been deregulated and we are now feeling the rath of brokers holding out for the most dollar.

      People are going to complain that we havn't built new refineries or we are too independent on foreign oil and thats the reasoning. In reality clinton changed the rules on futures and engergy and passed some insane requirments on fuel emisions that can only be obtained by reformulating the gasoline sent to the pump. While refineries havn't been built, existing ones have been expanded and converted from strickly military use to civilion use. This is more economical then bulding new facilities as well as gets the enviromental wackos somewhat out of the picture. All these other excuses are little more then people trying to hide the real issues so the common person cannot get a real view on the problems. Of course clinton was acting on good faith when his administration did these things. The fuel emisions was a responce to koyoto being rejected by congress and the deregulation was an attempt to continue good numbers in the stock market while prolonging or stopping the bust. Deregulation also opened the doors for several competing oil companies to merge and now there are only about 5 differet major companies in the markets in america today. Thats down almost 65% from the mid 90s were the $1.25/gallon fuel was selling for $1.05.

      In short, complaining that gas that sold for $1.25/gallon a few years ago is now selling for $2.45/gallon is completley legit. A few strokes of a government pen could change everythign back to how it was before. It can also be done without causing finacial damage to anyone except those making massive profits from it. I don't view gasoline as a vcr or Xbox in this day and age in america. It is more like a requirment to participate in society and should be treated more like electricity or natual gas. Sure there are people that don't have cars, they rent one when needed, ride the bus or subway when convienient or they are poor and don't participate in society much mor ethen being a drain form it. If there was actualy alternative to driving, i would see it differently but outside new york city and some of the seaboard cities, there nothing sustancial.

    50. Re:Admiration by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Actualy getting the gas or oil form the middle east to the US is cheap. The tranportation form the ground to market acounts for less the 10% of the cost on gas.

      As for supply and demand, Gasoline is almost as nessecary as electricity or heat in the winter. This stuff shouldn't be treated as such. There were regulations until the end of the 90's thet prevented it form being treated in the same way too. That changed and now we are paying for it (literaly). Most of our gasoline prices are artifial anyways. We re-regulated the feul emisions recently and stoped a large amount of gas from being imported. We have alowed the mojority of the oil companies to merge and be bought out so now there is less competition. We have deregulated the trading of the fuel and it isn't uncommon fo rthis to drive the price up higher then it would befor the deregulation. I'm all for going a step back and fixing this problem.

    51. Re:Admiration by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      "Actually, no, I don't have to admire evil, no matter how efficient or effective it is. Evil is still evil, and never worth admiring."

      I have to disagree.

      For example, I greatly admire Adolph Hitler for his public speaking skills.

      In fact he missed his true vocation; he could have been the greatest stand-up comic Germany has ever known...

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    52. Re:Admiration by advocate_one · · Score: 1

      10 to 15 gallons of petrol a week??? in the UK you would have to take out a mortgage to cover that... we now pay £4 a gallon and in US that would roughly be $7.30.. so at a minimum, you would be paying $73 a week on good weeks...

      --
      Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
    53. Re:Admiration by Petersson · · Score: 1
      Name three liquids besides water that you can get cheaper?

      Great Scott, that's easy!

      No.1 - Spring water. In my supermarket I can get cca 1 gallon of spring water (3 bottles each 1.5 litres) for about 1.2$.
      No.2 - Cheap beer. Cheaper than CocaCola or Pepsi. Cca 1 gallon of cheap beer (9 bottles each 0.5 liter) costs about 1.4$, excluding glass bottles. That explains lot of drunk tourists.
      No.3 - Normal beer. 1 gallon (9 bottles each 0.5 liter) costs about 1.9$, excluding glass bottles. That explains lot of drunk natives.

      And where? In homeland of Dr. Zelenka (Stargate Atlantis).

      --
      I'm not insane. My mother had me tested.
    54. Re:Admiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You just break the inspiration dude.

    55. Re:Admiration by dago · · Score: 1

      First, it's not the court, but the european commision (executive).

      Second, I still believe that the commisioner in charge is not that stupid. At least, we can give him the benefice of doubt, (s)he already pointed out that those conditions were important.

      --
      #include "coucou.h"
    56. Re:Admiration by FireFury03 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That concept includes all your basic applications too (browser, media player, burning/ripping tools, etc)

      How do you define what the "basic" application is? To a web surfer, the browser is a basic application, to a photographer photoshop is a basic application.

      I think your arguement about everyone wanting a free(dom) OS is flawed - techies want a free OS, most non-techies don't care since they don't have the skills to use that freedom anyway.

      Personally I don't see a problem with paying for a closed source application if you need it, so long as your data is stored in an open format. Of course, in my experience, FOSS software is usually great for most jobs and I have no real need to buy closed software. And from my techie point of view, I prefer FOSS because I can fix bugs and hack in new features myself, but for the average user this is a non-issue.

    57. Re:Admiration by FireFury03 · · Score: 1

      But I do think $2 a gallon is pretty outrageous...

      Here in the UK I pay about 85p/litre ATM... I'm sorry but fuel in the US is _cheap_.

    58. Re:Admiration by ZorbaTHut · · Score: 1

      No, you don't have to admire evil. You do have to admire technical skill. Would you seriously stop saying "wow, that supersonic plane, that's a marvel of engineering" the second someone flew it into an office building?

      Of course you're not going to say "wow, he's really evil, that's quite impressive" (well . . . I would, but that's another story.) But if someone's skilled at something that can be used both for good and for evil, you're perfectly within your rights to admire that.

      --
      Breaking Into the Industry - A development log about starting a game studio.
    59. Re:Admiration by rjshields · · Score: 1
      Without applications, a computer and an OS is still "just a worthless hunk of metal and plastic".
      No, it's a computer running an OS. Without the OS, the apps wouldn't run at all.
      --
      In this world nothing is certain but death, taxes and flawed car analogies.
    60. Re:Admiration by Feztaa · · Score: 1
      But I do think $2 a gallon is pretty outrageous...


      Here in the UK I pay about 85p/litre...


      Oh yeah? Well I pay a billion yen per hogshead, so quit your complaining!
    61. Re:Admiration by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      I think this is just what MS say they would like to do, so far as know the court has yet to decide whether they would allow it or not. I suspect they wont.

    62. Re:Admiration by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

      A web browser is anything but basic.

      --
      There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
    63. Re:Admiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One thing I would point out is that a US gallon and a UK gallon are not the same volume - US is about 3/4 of UK.

    64. Re:Admiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree that the Admiration of Evil is possibly the wrong word to use, but if your saying Microsoft is Evil itself then I would suggest you don't know the meaning of the word.

    65. Re:Admiration by caluml · · Score: 1

      It's sometimes a shame at how really intelligent people put their minds to "evil". But humans are just humans. Selfish.

      Slashdot requires you to wait 2 minutes between each successful posting of a comment to allow everyone a fair chance at posting a comment. It's been 46 minutes since you last successfully posted a comment

    66. Re:Admiration by 4of12 · · Score: 1

      The problem with gas prices is that the U.S. Economy is so incredibly sensitive to it's price. Simple stuff like agriculture, is something like 90% based on the price of gas (between the fertilizers, transportation, and actual farm equipment, 90% of the costs come down to how much gas does it take to do that step).

      You might have been able to get away with saying that back in the 1970's before the run-up in oil prices alerted Americans to the precariousness of their energy situation.

      As a result, now, after 30 years of forward-thinking energy policies we're in a so much better situation.

      [Please pardon the sarcasm; I'm just a little bitter and incredulous these days....]

      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
    67. Re:Admiration by halber_mensch · · Score: 1
      I think gas should be free 'cause without it my car is just a worthless hunk of metal and plastic

      This is more like being forced to pay for the method of transferring gasoline to your car if you want your car to go anywhere

      Imagine "Protocol to Transfer Gasoline to Motor Vehicle" (pumping gas) is a patented protocol, so no free implementation of the protocol can be made - you can't do it yourself for free. Only the licensed commercial protocol implementors (gas stations) can legally provide the implementation of the protocol that transfers gasoline to your vehicle (gas pump and pump jockey), and they of course will charge you a large fee for the use of their gas pumping algorithm.

      Should you be caught pouring gasoline into your own tank with a little red jug, you will be sued for IP theft and a swarm of lawyers will take your car, your house, and your children in retribution. And no, they don't care that you were stuck on the side of the road with an empty tank. There's no excuse for IP theft.

      --
      perl -e "eval pack(q{H*},join q{},qw{70 72696e74207061636b28717b482a7d2c717b343 637323635363534323533343430617d293b})"
    68. Re:Admiration by hardcode57 · · Score: 1

      In fact, no, I don't have to accord M$ any more admiration for chutzpa than i would accord to someone I caught robbing my home who attempted to pick my pocket while I restrained him.

    69. Re:Admiration by hardcode57 · · Score: 1

      It's also imperative to own your own power station: if you don't control you can't exercise complete control over the hardware you own.. Seriously, there are lots of good arguments for FOSS, but this one is weak.

    70. Re:Admiration by Raistlin77 · · Score: 1

      "I drive a Ford F150, and only manage to go thru 10-15 gal a week"

      You obviously don't do anything other than go to work and go home... you don't get out much do you?

      I live in Fort Lauderdale, FL, maybe 3 miles from where I work, and I easily go through 40+ gallons per week (I drive an 01 Dodge Ram). Most of the time I even work from home.

    71. Re:Admiration by legojenn · · Score: 1
      Hmm.....For comparison and me being silly:

      Denmark
      Area: 43,077 sq. km, (26,773 sq. miles) Greatest distances-east-west, 402 km; north south, 362 km. Coastline- 1,701 km (1,057 miles).

      USA
      Based on a mapquest search, from Grand Falls Maine to San Diego California, the distance is 5314.92 km.

      If you take a car with reasonable gas milage (for North America at least) 9L/100km, you would use 85L or 22.3 US Gallons of gasoline. At $5.50/gallon, it would cost 122.65 to cross Denmark.

      To cross the US, which is not the largest country in North America, you would use up 590L or 155 US Gallons. At 2.23 per gallon, (the price I paid in Massena NY last weekend) it would cost you 345.65 to cross the US.

      Therefore (faulty logic coming up), despite gas costing more in Denmark, it is still cheaper to use your can there because you don't have as far to drive.

      --
      I make a reasonable middle-class wage by going to work and not spamming blogs with scams.
    72. Re:Admiration by xtracto · · Score: 1

      Just for curiosity, you say in the UK you pay £4 for a gallon, Now, 1 imperial gallon is 4.5 liters ok?

      That means you are paying like £0.89 per liter right?

      Now for the interesting part (for me). This means you are paying like MX$19.866 * £0.89 = MX$17.68 Mexican pesos per liter (see xe.com for prices conversion)

      Let me tell you that seems incredibley really fucking expensive... In mexico the price of the gas is from MX$5 to MX$6.00 for liter. (that is like £0.3 x liter

      I am living in UK now (Liverpool) and everytime I saw the price in a gas station I just saw this .89 or .9x but I didnt know what was it about, and I was reluctant to believe that it was the price in pences for liter... but now that you confirm this I can conclude that I certainly wont get a car =oS.

      I would appreciate if you can confirm my calculations
      cheers.

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    73. Re:Admiration by Cyberdog00 · · Score: 1

      You are spot on.

      Many years ago it was priced in gallons - and people complained like. hell. Once it was priced in litres. it doesn't hurt so much.
      My car now takes £50 to fill the tank with 60 litres. It'll do me a week, just to work and back.

      A year or so ago there was a national strike over petrol prices - something like 90% of it is pure tax.

    74. Re:Admiration by CPUFreak91 · · Score: 1

      F-ing Microsoft. Now apple will probably follow and then two major OSes will be able to communicate to each other and leave the better free operating systems in the mud.

      --
      All Your Base Are Belong To Us!!! chown -r us ./base
    75. Re:Admiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd have to agree. interesting that what I noticied in the blurb was that samba was 'the last remaining competitor' is that because it's free ?

    76. Re:Admiration by mikefe · · Score: 1

      So you're basically saying that without the regulation free market effects are starting to work encouraging people to want alternatives...

      --
      There: Something at a specific location.
      Their: Owned by someone.
      Please make sure your english compiles.
    77. Re:Admiration by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

      What could you possibly need that relates to computing at all?

      Money to purchase all those things. I don't think banks can handle millions of peoples transactions a day without some processing power...

    78. Re:Admiration by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      No,I am saying that a system that functioned one way for t he majority of everyones life should continue to function in that maner. Changing the system and then shirking the elevated costs to "well it is cheaper then in other countries who still p[lay by thier old system" is just stupid.

      I think if it is encouraging anythign, it would be to take a good hard look at passing new EPA standards to determin if it will cost more to the consumer. Maybe even going a step backwards to rectify the issue. Gas price is one consumable that efects everyone. It has the potential to unite voters and elect people who will make gas cheaper even if that mean invading more arab countries to get oil from them.

      The sad part is the person getting hit the worst is the poor guy who needs to drive outside the inner city and slums to find work that pays better then fast food restaurants. Basicaly the enviromental wackos who pushed for cleaner fuels are keeping the little guy down so they can have thier idealist envioroment. It would be funny to find that it is actualy the big oil corps pushing for it knowing that it will knock the importers out of the business and they would get more money. I think when we have a system that allowed that to happen, it just needs to continue being regulated. not deregulated to prop up the existing companies stock prices. Then again maybe we should just tear up our remaining wildlife and start pumping iol from there.

    79. Re:Admiration by mikefe · · Score: 1

      I did not compare the gas prices in the US with anywhere else in the world.

      The fact is that the deregulation of the refinery companies has lead to actions that will help the switch to alternatives. That is market forces at work. Pure and simple.

      --
      There: Something at a specific location.
      Their: Owned by someone.
      Please make sure your english compiles.
    80. Re:Admiration by pebs · · Score: 1

      Without applications, a computer and an OS is still "just a worthless hunk of metal and plastic".

      I only need one application. A hex editor. The rest I can code after I have written my assembly compiler in machine language, my C compiler in assembly, etc...

      --
      #!/
    81. Re:Admiration by bluGill · · Score: 1

      If by here you mean the US, then you are wrong, Oil does originate here. Texas has a lot of it, as does Alaska. Most of our imports come from Canada and Venezuela (and presumably other South American countries, though I can't think of any others with oil). Only 15-20% of the oil used in the US comes from the middle east.

      Getting oil from the middle east is cheaper than you might guess, ships are very cheap to run, and nobody cares that it takes 6 months for the stuff to arrive, so long as a steady stream arrives. A pipeline is cheaper, yet though, and faster.

      In fact there is more crude oil under Canada now then there ever was in the Middle East. However oil from the middle east is cheap to pump. Much of that oil in Canada can't be pumped for less than $80/barrel or so. Oil is now selling for ~$50/barrel and everyone is complaining about gas prices! By contrast, int the middle east they can make money at $20/barrel.

      I'm not sure what the numbers are like for Europe. I'd guess they get most of theirs from Russia and the middle east. Though I know Norway at least has some offshore rigs that account for something. I'm not aware of any oil being pumped from Europe, but it wouldn't surprise me if there was some.

    82. Re:Admiration by ComputerSlicer23 · · Score: 1
      I don't believe I said no Oil originates here, I believe something on the order of 80-90% of our oil is imported (I thought Texas was mostly tapped out, but Alaska has a huge amount of oil). Hence I said "it's not like most of the Oil originates here".

      Technically speaking, one doesn't "pump" oil in Canada (at least if you are discussing the Oil Shoals, essentially Oil embedded in soil, which is what I've been told is the largest known supply of Oil in the world, there is also a lot of this in Scandanavian countries if I remember correctly). One processes the soil/rock/mineral and Oil is a by-product of the process. They are called the "Candaian Oil Planes" I believe. I don't believe it's "under" Canada, I believe a lot of it is literally just sitting on the ground, or is a mining/escavation issue, not a "drill" issue (it's not a liquid essentially). I've heard the number quoted as $30-50/barrel before Canda starts making money, however, I don't know if that is only a small percentage of it. There might be some that $80/barrel is correct (if you have a source for that number, I'd be interested in seeing it).

      The Alaskan Oil pipeline I believe can only supply 5% of the current US demand when running at peak capacity (which it almost never does). I had this argument with a friend recently who claimed that we could become Oil self-sufficient via Alaska. While they have the oil, we'd need a long time to expand the capacity to transport the Oil out of Alaska.

      I've been told that the single largest liquid Oil deposit ever found is supposed to be off the shores of California in an area the U.S. has the rights to. I think that's highly exaggerated, but the claim was that it was larger then all other known oil supplies in the Earth. The problem with it is that it's well below the depth at which we have equipment to deal with it. I'll have to go see if I can find the source for that stat. (It's in my e-mail, but I believe that e-mail is archived, so digging it up off CD will take a while).

      Kirby

    83. Re:Admiration by TeraCo · · Score: 1

      Citibank, is that you?

      --
      Not Meta-modding due to apathy.
    84. Re:Admiration by vsprintf · · Score: 1

      I live in Fort Lauderdale, FL, maybe 3 miles from where I work, and I easily go through 40+ gallons per week (I drive an 01 Dodge Ram). Most of the time I even work from home.

      You need a locking gas cap - or fewer of those Dodge Hemi dragster starts. I live 15 miles from work and don't use 40 gallons in a month.

    85. Re:Admiration by bakes · · Score: 1

      I always wondered about that. To get a litre of gasoline, you need to find some oil, dig it up, and refine it - all very expensive processes. To get a litre of milk, you need to squeeze a cows teats for a few minutes. And yet it's cheaper to buy a litre of petrol than a litre of milk.

      I think there's something in that for all of us.

      --
      Ho! Haha! Guard! Turn! Parry! Dodge! Spin! Ha! Thrust!
    86. Re:Admiration by bluGill · · Score: 1

      You implied that most of our oil comes from the middle east. I have no idea what amount is imported.

      I have seen many oil wells in Canada with pumps that look just like the pumps you see in Texas. They have a lot of pumpable oil. Though you are right that most of it is in sands that can't really be pumped.

      The cost to extract oil is a continuum, and changes both with inflation and advancing technology.

    87. Re:Admiration by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      I don't. Gas is cheaper by volume in most places than Milk, which I consider by far, much more important...

      Hard to make smoothies without it. :-D

    88. Re:Admiration by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      no you didn't compare the gasoline prices with anywere else in the world. Others did and we are not in some vacume so i addressed comments in some granparrent post.

      The fact isn't that people are actualy looking for alternatives now. They are saying stay out of my wallet at the cost of the enviroment. Right now there is a push to undo regulations that caused most of the recent hikes. This is a step backwards not forwards. The only people i see clamering for alternatives are the same ones that always were. Everyone else talking about it either misses the issue or wants to do away with the new regulations.

      As for a fact. The recent price increases don't actualy make people want alternatives either. It just makes them more viable. Before, the biggest sticking point of alternatives to fossil fuels was the cost involved. Alternative fuels cannot be produced and delivered to the public at a price that natualy competes with what is already availible. With the increased gas prices, these costs are more in line with what we are paying now. The problem is that when something viable actualy does come along, all the oil companies have to do is reduce thier proffit and lower cost making the price difference to extream to compete again. The price we are paying now is artificle because we have legalized a monopoly by allowing all the oil companies to merge. Do you understand this? It isn't a free market at all, we just let loose the straps holding the monopolies back.

      The deregulation of the refineries or energy industry isn't even the big factor in the prices we are seeing today. It is the increase regulation on fuel emisions. When the new fuels standards went into effect, it had eliminated a majority of our imports. Right now there is even a law suite going on because the new standards locks out certain countries just because of the country the fuels came from. If these regulations were repealed, the price of oil would significantly drop.

      Almost every one wants alternative/enviroment friendly fuels. What they don't want is the increased prices associated with them. If you could produce an alternative that was not only cleaner but cheaper, it wouldn't matter what the price of gas was. The fact is you cannot. Hydrogen and hybred cars are only a lng term fix. If every car produced today ran on hydrogen, it would still take more then 50 years to alimintate large scale gas sales. You cannot just remove the existing cars from peoples possession. The idea of increasing the price to make it so they cannot afford them onlt hurts the poor too. Even if all the power generators switched to somethign else, it would take more then 20 years to happen. Most of the facilities are already attempting some switched. Of course hydroelectric and nuclear are the 2 cleanest fuels but enviromental wackos will stop that from happening. The politicians know this and they aren't going to do much outside droping regulations so they can get re-elected.

    89. Re:Admiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Over 180 miles per weekday? That's nearly two hours each way. Who would willingly keep doing that?

      (Answer: almost nobody. Surveys show 1000-1200 mi/month as typical.)

    90. Re:Admiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people consume far more gasoline (30 gal/month) than milk (6 gal/month?), bringing economies of scale. Oil wells don't have to be fed, or tested by vets. Gasoline doesn't need small clean tanker trucks with a carefully maintained temperature, and you don't have to dispose of it and start over if it doesn't sell in a week or two.

    91. Re:Admiration by kwoff · · Score: 1

      Gas is a limited resource, software is not.


      Uh, yes it is.
  2. Same Ol' Same Ol' by MightyMartian · · Score: 3, Interesting

    As usual, Microsoft turns stinging defeat into a brilliant victory. I have but one question, however, how much of all of this does MS in fact actually own? I mean, all the base LANServer stuff was jointly developed with IBM, and I'm sure IBM wouldn't be too happy with MS trying to shut Samba down.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    1. Re:Same Ol' Same Ol' by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 1

      You answer your own question, Mr. Coward.

      --
      "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
    2. Re:Same Ol' Same Ol' by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 1

      Honestly you must be an idiot. I was agreeing with you, and it flew right over your head.

      --
      "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
    3. Re:Same Ol' Same Ol' by einhverfr · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Most of the base of both SMB/CIFS and DCOM is simply an adaption of the Open Group's DCE-RPC. So the answer is "Not that much."

      However, they may own enough of the aspects of it that make it difficult to interoperate directly with DCE-RPC or are involved in specific areas like login (with NT4-compatibility mode, for example) to make life somewhat annoying.

      IIRC, DCOM is basically a subset of DCE-RPC and omits the strong security stuff anyway.

      Finally, this is hardly a brilliant victory. I.e. Samba is hardly worse off today than it was before simply because this does nothing more than attempt to preserve the status quo.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  3. Our offer. by PopeAlien · · Score: 3, Funny

    Sure! we'll make the source code available as long as people aren't allowed to look at it, think about it or talk about it.

    1. Re:Our offer. by mpontes · · Score: 1

      No, they will only make the source code available to people with DRM enabled chips embedded in their brains.

      --
      Bored? Browse Slashdot with a +6 modifier for Troll comme
    2. Re:Our offer. by ShaniaTwain · · Score: 1

      No, they will only make the source code available to people with DRM enabled chips embedded in their brains.

      The best way to protect ideas is to never ever tell anyone about them.

    3. Re:Our offer. by Samurai · · Score: 1

      You're being sarcastic, but didn't they try to pull those sorts of shenanigans once? I seem to recall, a few years back, there was some sort of license agreement where, by looking at some Microsoft API, you weren't allowed to write code that used it or duplicated its functionality. Then someone managed to extract the files from the archive without using the standard installer, thereby bypassing the EULA and the restriction.

      I just hope that the EU is still sufficiently pissed at Microsoft that they won't allow this sort of thing. Then again, politicians are politicians, regardless of country or continent.

    4. Re:Our offer. by inode_buddha · · Score: 1

      Right. Flat Earth is ok as long as its profitable.

      --
      C|N>K
    5. Re:Our offer. by MegaFur · · Score: 1

      I think that depends on what you mean by "protect". If you mean, "prevent others from copying your idea and claiming it as zir own", then yeah, I agree.

      OTOH, if one were concerned about protecting the idea from dying through obscurity, then I would expect the best thing to do would be to write it down in a more-or-less immutable form, then spread the idea (in that form) all over the place.

      --
      Furry cows moo and decompress.
    6. Re:Our offer. by Suppafly · · Score: 1

      "prevent others from copying your idea and claiming it as zir own"

      I think you mean 'their own'. Their would be the correct pronoun for 'others'. Zir doesn't have a definition in the English language.

    7. Re:Our offer. by MegaFur · · Score: 1

      I was trying to promote the use of a gender neutral singular pronoun, but since I used "others", which is plural, I should have used "their". So... you're right, my bad. :-)

      --
      Furry cows moo and decompress.
  4. As the old saying goes... by Noryungi · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "When you have dinner with the devil, make sure you have a long spoon".

    If anybody at the EU Commission is still in love with Microsoft, that should wake them up. I hope.

    --
    The right to offend is far more important than the right not to be offended. (Rowan Atkinson)
    1. Re:As the old saying goes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was gonna say "When you have dinner with Microsoft, make sure to bring plenty of lube."

    2. Re:As the old saying goes... by T-Ranger · · Score: 5, Funny

      My prefered quote would be: "Having a meeting with Bill Gates is like going on a date with Mike Tyson: you should expect to get raped"

    3. Re:As the old saying goes... by zerbot · · Score: 1

      "Get in bed with Microsoft, expect to get screwed."

  5. Will it be rejected? by NetNifty · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Won't this proposal likely be rejected too then, seeing as IIRC a major reason the previous one was rejected was because it disallowed open source implementatins?

    1. Re:Will it be rejected? by BrynM · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Won't this proposal likely be rejected too then
      Which can be a win-win for MS. If accepted, they win. If not: "But you've turned down every proposal we've submitted. They've all been reasonable (at first glance)! The EU is just out to get us and stifle innovation." I wonder if there's a loophole that they're leading up to if no offers are accepted. Anyone know what happens then?
      --
      US Democracy:The best person for the job (among These pre-selected choices...)
    2. Re:Will it be rejected? by Nevita · · Score: 3, Informative

      Except that the EU has already said that the MS proposal is acceptable, and they are proceding to "market test" it. If people want to beat MS on this, they need to make sure those market tests fail.

      --
      Wise men learn more from fools than fools learn from the wise.
  6. Sad. by EvilStein · · Score: 1

    It's stuff like this that can keep Samba out of many places where it could be very handy, and instead allows a Windows Server 2003 box in.

    I hope the EU tells Microsoft off.

  7. The Dark Lord of the Sith by Colonel+Panic · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's interesting how Gates is looking more and more like Lord Palpatine in recent years. The chin especially looks similar. I expect that Gates will be wearing a hood soon.

    1. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by dyfet · · Score: 4, Funny
      Perhaps claiming he was horribly mutilated by FOSS activists, too? And what young FOSS hacker will he take as an apprentice?

    2. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by Chosen+Reject · · Score: 4, Funny

      He might be evil but that kind of comparison is just outright wrong. Please don't disgrace the Sith like that.

      --
      Stop Global Warming!
      Just say no to irreversible processes!
    3. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by erroneus · · Score: 1

      While I like the "borg" icon, maybe some clever person can paint a hood on Gates, pale his skin, make his eyes and his light saber red...? :) I know someone out there can do a great job of it.

      And by the way, does anyone have a larger version of the Gates-Borg picture? I think it'd make a nice addition to my desktop and cell phone's wall papers.

    4. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by Colonel+Panic · · Score: 1

      pale his skin,

      It seems to already be the right shade of pale; no photoshop (or Gimp) work needed there.

    5. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by spungo · · Score: 1

      I can picture him saying "Riiise, Lord Ballmer."

    6. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

      And by the way, does anyone have a larger version of the Gates-Borg picture? I think it'd make a nice addition to my desktop and cell phone's wall papers.

      Sure!
      http://carcino.gen.nz/images/index.php/04980e0b/44 356df7

    7. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what young FOSS hacker will he take as an apprentice?

      uh! uh! take \me, mr gates! im teh bestest! ive writen at last 689 difrent vb.net helloworld-programs and write profesionnal asp-pagers since 1998, wich is very long. also, im interested in different operative systems (windows 95, windows 98, windows 98SE, windows me, windows 2000, windows 2003, windows xp profesionnal). also, i raely whet my pents wehn i read anytihng about teh windows longhron, wich i suposse will be REALY graet!!!1!!

      if u choose \me, please mail me at NOSPAM aolgirl267@hotmail.com NOSPAM

      ps: i love u!! im not one of thus girls wich just say it becasue u r teh 2nd richest of teh wordl.

    8. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can picture him saying "Riiise, Lord Ballmer."

      Personally, I don't want to picture that.

    9. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by deaddrunk · · Score: 5, Funny

      Miguel D'Icaza

      --
      Does a Christian soccer team even need a goalkeeper?
    10. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    11. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by rpozz · · Score: 4, Funny

      I have absolutely nothing better to do tonight.

      http://img247.echo.cx/img247/1036/gateslord2rn.jpg

    12. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by BrynM · · Score: 2, Funny
      Here you go. Just whipped it up. There's two versions:

      DarthGatus01.jpg
      DarthGatus02.jpg

      The first one turned out the best.

      --
      US Democracy:The best person for the job (among These pre-selected choices...)
    13. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Havent you noticed Bills Jedi-like powers of mind-control?

      "We dont need to go to jail", "We shouldnt have to face any penalties or punishment even though we have been found guilty", "These arent the anti-trust violations you're looking for", and so on.

      Though he definately strikes me as a Sith Lord, with the all singing, all dancing Darth Chimpus as his apprentice.

    14. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by laresek · · Score: 1

      Really, for this to be funny, the parent should be modded up too.

    15. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 3, Funny

      Every time I hear people comparing Gates to a star wars villian, I think of some 30 year old wearing a star trek uniform in his parent's basement ranting against Bill. Thanks, PA!

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    16. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by jswalter9 · · Score: 1

      Come now, everybody knows that George Herbert Walker Bush is the Sith Master, and Dick Cheney is the apprentice.

      --
      Retired from software... maybe. Sort of.
    17. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by TigerTale · · Score: 1

      A replacement for Slashdot's venerable BillBorg?

    18. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by sbjordal · · Score: 0

      Uhm...does that not look like Rick Moranis in Spaceballs?? Weird

    19. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by Ricardo+Lima · · Score: 1

      And Everybody knows that George Walker Bush is Jar-Jar Binks!

      --
      Ricardo da Silva Lima
    20. Re:The Dark Lord of the Sith by mjh49746 · · Score: 1

      Oh, man that's so funny! (roflmao!)

  8. I'm baffled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Can someone explain to me how Microsoft sees itself in the position to make demands? They've been found guilty of anticompetitive behaviour and have been sanctioned accordingly. "Your honor, I offer to go to prison if I get 24/7 internet access, a laptop and a PS3." I'd be the laughing stock of the judicial system.

    1. Re:I'm baffled by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      You have forgotten that companies are better than we mere mortals. They last longer, are harder to punish, can morph and go dormant and still survive.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    2. Re:I'm baffled by MAdMaxOr · · Score: 1

      What's your market capitalization? ...That's what I thought.

      Apparently you've never heard of the Golden Rule: "He who has the gold, makes the rules."

    3. Re:I'm baffled by Kjella · · Score: 1

      The punitive (punishment) part of the conviction isn't even pocket money. If you look at the paragraphs Microsoft was convicted under, the limit is 2x$10,000,000.

      This is all about the corrective part of the conviction, looking to restore competition. It is not as if you are supposed to pay a fine for grabbing a monopoly, then get to keep it. It is supposed to act like in some forms of billiards, where you make a foul play, get a small penalty and the table is restored.

      Obviously, they can not turn back time. So this whole thing turns into a negotiation on how to achieve that effect. Since it is not punitative, Microsoft can argue at any point that "this isn't necessary" or "it should happen this way". The result is that they are essentially jumping from one means of holding their monopoly to another, with the courts always three steps behind. First there was IE, then WMP, soon "Trusted Computing" and so on.

      Kjella

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  9. just remember... by cahiha · · Score: 3, Insightful

    the European politicians asked European computer industry representatives for whether this was a good solution. And since most of them have just as much stake in closed, proprietary solutions as Microsoft, they all nodded in agreement.

    Microsoft loves this because they know they can kill any commercial competitor they like through either FUD or just buying them; they just haven't figured out how to kill competition from FOSS.

    FOSS advocates need to be vocal and clear that this is not an acceptable solution and that it will hurt competition and that it will hurt the economy.

    1. Re:just remember... by rpozz · · Score: 5, Informative

      Ermm.. nobody has agreed to it yet, it's just what MS proposed. Remember that there are companies like SUSE in Europe.

    2. Re:just remember... by The+Bungi · · Score: 0, Troll
      they just haven't figured out how to kill competition from FOSS.

      What competition? 'FOSS' has just barely begun making a small dent in some Microsoft markets. Or would you care to list some? I don't see people migrating to Linux/KDE/GNOME on the desktop en masse, I don't see OOo actually competing in any meaningful way with Office, there are no 'FOSS' games of any consequence, no high-end development tools with the exception of Eclipse, no... well, you get the idea. In the server space Linux is taking more market away from Unix (Solaris, HP) than Windows - if anything Windows is growing there as well.

      And all of these modest advances are happening only because big companies (IBM, Novell, Sun, Apple) are experimenting with open source.

      So where is this 'competition' that Microsoft has to fear?

    3. Re:just remember... by jeanicinq · · Score: 1

      the European politicians asked European computer industry representatives

      ...and, that is as far as it goes. Some countries and states do implement laws that require aspects of sources to be openly accessible. I don't want to point out specifics, but if you look you'll find the code, and there are some more actions in place to demand more open source within various legal systems. I doubt Microsoft would make such move to demand closed only source as a condition of use of standards because it would suddenly stop interoperablity with such countries and states. They, hence the countries and states, have no choice but to dump Microsoft completely if Microsoft demands such terms.

    4. Re:just remember... by purplebear · · Score: 1

      have no choice but to dump Microsoft completely if Microsoft demands such terms

      Looks like we now need a +1 "Should Be True" moderation.

    5. Re:just remember... by Jane_Dozey · · Score: 1

      Heard of firefox?

      Ok, so it's just ONE application that's been making some waves. However, microsoft appear to be getting more and more irritated by these OSS applications because the general public is becoming that little bit more aware of them. OSS apps don't have to make huge inroads on microsofts market share to make them threatening. After all, microsoft are a corporation out to make money. Having little competitors start to get a little attention is a dangerous thing. They *might* just get more popular...

      --
      Silly rabbit
    6. Re:just remember... by cahiha · · Score: 1

      'FOSS' has just barely begun making a small dent in some Microsoft markets. Or would you care to list some?

      Oh, you are so wrong. Without open source, Microsoft would already own the server, phone, and embedded spaces, but they are losing ground. And with open source's push for the desktop, Microsoft is in major trouble there as well.

      And all of these modest advances are happening only because big companies (IBM, Novell, Sun, Apple) are experimenting with open source.

      And what's your point? Microsoft has been playing dirty tricks with the industry for a dozen years. Now people are getting together and fighting back in a way that Microsoft cannot buy or cheat their way out of.

      So where is this 'competition' that Microsoft has to fear?

      Laugh while you can, monkey boy.

    7. Re:just remember... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > 'FOSS' has just barely begun making a small dent
      > in some Microsoft markets. Or would you care to
      > list some?

      Ever hear of Apache?

    8. Re:just remember... by The+Bungi · · Score: 1
      Heard of firefox?

      Yeah, Microsoft loses a ton of business to Firefox.

    9. Re:just remember... by The+Bungi · · Score: 1
      Microsoft would already own the server, phone, and embedded spaces

      And maybe they'd be sacrificing babies at midnight, too. All hail open source! Saviors of the universe!

      Laugh while you can, monkey boy.

      Hey, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 and 2004. They want their retard slashbot prediction back, if you would be so kind. Better throw 2005 in as well.

      Thanks!

    10. Re:just remember... by cahiha · · Score: 1

      And maybe they'd be sacrificing babies at midnight, too. All hail open source! Saviors of the universe!

      So, according to you, domination of a market segment by Microsoft is equivalent to Microsoft sacrificing babies. Well, I wouldn't go quite that far, but you said it.

      Hey, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 and 2004

      You lost me here. What are you trying to say?

      It will be a few more years before open source will really eat into Microsoft's core business (rather than just limiting growth and expansion), but believe me, it will happen.

    11. Re:just remember... by dedazo · · Score: 1
      You lost me here.

      I think he missed 'called'. As in they called.

      Quite apropos given your "laugh while you can" bullshit, which is laughable itself.

      Hope that helps.

      --
      Web2.0: I love when people Flickr my cuil and digg my boingboing until my google is reddit and I start to yahoo
    12. Re:just remember... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're just not up on your geek movies.

    13. Re:just remember... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you even read the post you replied to or was that a kneejerk reaction?

  10. Microsoft Shared Source Initiative by QuaZar666 · · Score: 1

    How is this different than anything else released under Microsoft Shared Source Initiative? everything else they have released stated that you can look, but can't share changes with anyone.

    1. Re:Microsoft Shared Source Initiative by Burz · · Score: 1

      As I understand it, no one looked at Windows code when they were writing SAMBA. The SAMBA group instead relied on published specifications and reverse engineering to make something that is compatible with Windows SMB.

  11. So what? by goldspider · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I thought people/companies were free (as in speech!) to release their code under whatever license terms they wish. Does "free as in Free Software" actually mean "whatever the FSF deems acceptable"?

    --
    "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    1. Re:So what? by goldspider · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      And whose rights is Microsoft violating? Are people/companies free to release their code under whatever conditions they please, but only as long as they placate those who feel entitled to a portion of the profit?

      You just go ahead and try to take someone to court based on a breach of an ambiguous, un-written, un-signed "social" contract. I wish you luck with that.

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    2. Re:So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Software Freedom is a moral right. The GPL that you're referring to is a manner in which copyright law can be circumvented by people interested in that Freedom.

      If you think the GPL has to do with taking away the rights of the software author you are completely and totally wrong.

      This is about keeping the users of software with MORE RESOURCES THAN THE AUTHOR from stealing from the author.

      "Free as in Freedom" is most certainly whatever the FSF deems acceptable. Coopting a phrase and twisting it to mean something completely different than what the original quotee intended is trollish, and is what makes you a Microsoft toad.

      If you didn't realize you were doing this then you are a stupid toad as well.

    3. Re:So what? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Since when does freedom include the freedom to decide about your own punishment? "Oh, you want me to go to jail? Ok, let's say I agree to not leave this planet."

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    4. Re:So what? by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      Whether you like it or not, Microsoft was convicted of using one monopoly to further their position in another market. As such, Microsoft is being punished. Now, this could mean Microsoft's exec would be thrown in jail. Or it could mean Microsoft would no longer be allowed to sell their products in the European Union. The EU decided punishment would be to release the specifications to their protocols such that competitors, such as free software, would be able to better able to compete against Microsoft; ie, it was the EU's way of indirectly punishing Microsoft.

      Now, you may completely disagree with the laws of the EU, and if that's so, I wholly heartedly urge you to try to change them if you're a part of the EU. If Microsoft has any power to do so, I'm sure it's punishing for such. Until that day comes, though, either Microsoft can face the punishment and continue in the EU market, or they can leave and risk their assets being seized to pay for the fines for non-compliance. In some ways, I personally wish the EU had simply disincorporated MS (if only in recognition) and left all the executives up to the mercy of external lawsuits--I'm against limited liability anyways.

      It is a right to speak. It is a natural right, at least in Europe, to copyright a work* and decide what is done with it. It's also equally a right to travel freely. All three of these rights can be restricted for a period of punishment after due process of law convicts someone of a crime. Obviously Microsoft has the choice to not cooperate. I just doesn't think it seems worth it to them.

      PS - While Microsoft is trying to frame the debate in terms of source code, the fact is that the EU's requirement is to release protocol specifications. It's also required to make sure that such is available at a reasonable fee to those who wish to receive a copy of the specification. IIRC, they also can't demand unreasonable royalties on use of the specification. Because open source and free software are competitors, this effectively means they can't charge royalties and the upfront cost can't be that much. It also means that in all likelihood that a BSD group will implement the specification and release it under the BSD, allowing everyone a free copy. There doesn't seem any way out of this short of violate the ruling and picking up shop. This is just another desperate attempt out of it.

      *Note: If this situation were happening in the US, the courts could just revoke the privilege of copyright. In the US, the Constitution is what establishes the power of Congress to legislate the privilege of copyright; such is obviously even more shakey ground than the EU.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    5. Re:So what? by bit01 · · Score: 1

      I thought people/companies were free (as in speech!) to release their code under whatever license terms they wish.

      Convicted monopolists operate under stricter rules than others. M$ likes to pretend it's just another software company. That's nonsense when it controls so many de-facto software standards.

      ---

      It's wrong that an intellectual property creator should not be rewarded for their work.
      It's equally wrong that an IP creator should be rewarded too many times for the one piece of work, for exactly the same reasons.
      Reform IP law and stop the M$/RIAA abuse.

    6. Re:So what? by m50d · · Score: 1

      Not when you're being punished for a crime you don't. If it was up to MS they wouldn't be releasing it at all.

      --
      I am trolling
  12. Is this thing final? by erroneus · · Score: 1

    I thought there was something else that needed to be done before the EU would accept this settlement. But geez... a SETTLEMENT in a criminal case after being found guilty? Unimaginable. (Prior to being found guilty is common though)

    I hope the targetting of Open Source is rejected. If you want to write code and share it with people you should be allowed that freedom. Not having documentation hasn't STOPPED the SAMBA project... it just takes longer and is a bit more problematic when it comes to ironing out bugs and keeping up with the changes.

    Microsoft won't stop SAMBA this way. ... they shouldn't be able to get away with this... let's hope Microsoft gets the beating they deserve somewhere down the line.

    1. Re:Is this thing final? by PCM2 · · Score: 2, Informative
      a SETTLEMENT in a criminal case after being found guilty? Unimaginable.
      That may be your first clue that this wasn't a criminal case. Sun Microsystems brought a complaint to the Commission of European Communities claiming that Microsoft's business practices went against EU treaties. Hardly the same thing as being tried for robbery or murder. You can read the details of the case for more.
      --
      Breakfast served all day!
    2. Re:Is this thing final? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you forget how the US case ended? They lost that too, were ordered split-up, shortly later a new whitehouse was elected and suddenly the ruling was overturned, and a 'settlement' was reached that was nothing more than a tap on the wrist for Microsoft, and at least a slap in the face for DOJ prosecutors.

      And all they had to do to achieve that, is to convince one person that if Microsoft is not doing well, the entire economy will tank.

  13. Huh? by Quantam · · Score: 1

    Maybe somebody can clarify, because it seems a bit ambiguous to me. Is this a prohibition against using the MS stuff in free programs, or in open source programs? There's a significant difference. I could see it being at least halfway reasonable if MS didn't want their stuff published in open source software (thus making it public knowledge), but it would be rather irrational to ban its use in free closed-source software as well.

    --
    You have tried to support your argument with faulty reasoning! Go directly to jail; do not pass Go, do not collect $200!
    1. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem being that the settlement requires that information to be public knowledge. The only thing this does is kill Samba.

    2. Re:Huh? by orlanz · · Score: 2, Interesting

      ...(thus making it public knowledge),... Ummm, I think that is the whole point. The EU wants those interface protocols (not code) to be completely open for everyone to use just as freely as MS is able to. Its another matter to lose ownership and have it fall into the public domain.

    3. Re:Huh? by wastingtape · · Score: 1

      I was wondering this as well. From the article...

      "The proposal specifically precludes the information from being used in a Free Software implementation, such as the Samba workgroup server software..."

      Note the use of capitalization on Free Software. The question is are they referring to free as in beer or speech. Maybe it's intentionally ambiguous.

    4. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      could see it being at least halfway reasonable if MS didn't want their stuff published in open source software (thus making it public knowledge)

      Making public the details of a network filesystem that operates over cleartext on public networks? How strange is that? If you claim that they won't be able to compete because of that, then how can they justify charging $200 for an operating system, of which the only apparent value is the single bit of network filesystem that they can't open or lose sales? There are lots of free network file systems available.

      In fact, there are lots of free operating systems available. The only thing keeping Microsoft in business is their proprietary nature and their current lockin. Keeping secrets from their customers is the only thing keeping them in business. What kind of morality is that?

    5. Re:Huh? by Quantam · · Score: 1
      In fact, there are lots of free operating systems available. The only thing keeping Microsoft in business is their proprietary nature and their current lockin. Keeping secrets from their customers is the only thing keeping them in business. What kind of morality is that?

      lol. Very nice framing, as you just provided Microsoft with the moral high ground. What kind of morality is that? Well, the way you've said it, it's do or die: the most universal form of morality there is. If that isn't justification to do it, I don't know what is.

      --
      You have tried to support your argument with faulty reasoning! Go directly to jail; do not pass Go, do not collect $200!
    6. Re:Huh? by Knuckles · · Score: 1

      Uh, well, just that corporations don't "die" as such. They may go out of business, and they should if they do more harm than good.

      IMHO the application of personal rights to corporations was an incredibly stupid idea. Well, it may have had justification initially, but nowadays it should just be done away with

      --
      "When I first heard Daydream Nation it quite frankly scared the living shit out of me." -- Matthew Stearns
  14. This was predicted. by argent · · Score: 1

    When the terms of the settlement were announced several people brought up the way they could be used against open-source software and Samba was frequently mentioned.

    Why is anyone surprised?

  15. Re:first post yea ha by Phantombantam · · Score: 0, Redundant

    The only thing more pathetic than an FP troll is one which didn't even get first post. Now, not only Are you a jerk, but you're an idiot as well. Anyway... Do I smell a catfight between samba and microsoft?! Meow.

    --
    42
  16. So? by pavera · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Has Microsoft shared interoperability info in the past? Sure if this is accepted it won't make the Samba team's job any easier, but its not going to make it harder than it already is. These guys are amazingly good at reverse engineering MS's stuff. Sure it would be nice if the EU made MS give away the keys to the castle, but really do we need it? All this doom and gloom is completely unfounded.

    Samba hasn't had this data in the past, and they've managed to write a darn good SMB/CIFS server. This won't end the Samba project by any means.

    I'm not saying MS shouldn't have to share the data, I'm just saying if they don't it won't be the end of the world

    1. Re:So? by sum.zero · · Score: 5, Insightful

      once this data is out there it will become much harder [impossible?] for the samba team to say they reverse-engineered the protocols as opposed to receiving the information from a licensee in violation of ms' rules...

      then samba is considered tainted and is open to injunction against distribution.

      just my dos centavos.

      sum.zero

    2. Re:So? by stevey · · Score: 5, Interesting

      According to at least one of the Samba developers documentation wouldn't be useful anyway:

      "There can't be a specification that's worth anything," says Jeremy Allison, joint lead of the Samba Project.

      "The source code itself is the specification . The level of detail required to interoperate successfully is simply not documentable - it would produce a stack of paper so high you might as well publish the source code."

      (Source - Found via the Implementing CIFS book)

    3. Re:So? by Xtifr · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely right, but I think the point is that MS has been ordered to provide this information in order to encourage competition, but they are blatantly and deliberately trying to lock out the only viable existing competition.

    4. Re:So? by devilspgd · · Score: 1

      Wait a second though. If A licences something to B (licensee), and B gives a copy to C in violation of the license, C hasn't done anything wrong.

      In order for "A" to do anything, they'd have to prove that a transaction took place between "B" and "C" that violates the license. "A" cannot simply say "'C' magically got this knowledge, it must be 'B's fault"

      --
      Give a man a fish, he'll eat for a day, but teach a man to phish...
    5. Re:So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A Samba guy once said... "The level of detail required to interoperate successfully is simply not documentable"

      I call BS! It's a network protocol for file sharing, not a rocket control system, people. And besides, Samba already interoperates with SMB, doesn't it? It might not be a _clone_ of all of SMB's functionality, but interoperability is not the same thing as equivalency.

    6. Re:So? by oxygene2k2 · · Score: 1

      yep, a rocket control system is cleanly designed and implemented (you better hope so, at least!), while SMB/CIFS grew over two decades with about 20 different implementations with partially different behaviour and the need to interoperate (all windows versions incl. some patch releases, OS/2, ...)

      things get _terribly_ messy that way

  17. Samba rules! by Foktip · · Score: 0, Troll

    Why does Microsoft even care about windows networking? Windows net"working" is so incredibly, horribly bad, i've been yearning for a windows version of Samba to come out just so i can have decent response times, and adequate reliability.

    And network speeds/cpu speeds keep getting faster! Its just unacceptably slow, and they keep making things worse (SP2, etc.). QUite frankly, ive lost faith in Microsoft to program anything effecient.

    Oh yeah, Samba rulez!

    1. Re:Samba rules! by HermanAB · · Score: 1

      It has been done in the past: http://smithii.com/?q=node/view/23

      --
      Oh well, what the hell...
    2. Re:Samba rules! by william_w_bush · · Score: 1

      hes got a point man, i've been waiting forever for someone to put out a new nfs for windows client, the unix acl model is a lot more flexible from my pov than the windows model, and unless youre streaming a big file over an FD eth switch the performance is god-awful.

      --
      The first rule of USENET is you do not talk about USENET.
  18. Re:I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Troll

  19. Re:I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Look, Bill, let me explain something to you. The purpose of a government is to protect people from forces that are more powerful than themselves and which will harm them. Gangs. Nuclear terrorists. Wildfires. One of those things is monopolies: companies that have a stranglehold on a necessary commodity. We have laws that prohibit companies that hold a monopoly from behaving in certain ways. Preventing interoperability with competing products in a universal network is one such behavior. If MS had 50% of the market, SAMBA wouldn't have a case. But they have more than 90% - a technical monopoly.

    If you have trouble with the big words, ask Melissa to explain them to you.

  20. You do know... by ImaLamer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That you are going to really hear it now?

    You somewhat have a point, but it overlooks the purpose of a corporation. The State of Washinton gave Microsoft a corporate charter, with the idea that they would produce something of value and perform a service for the state (ie: its citizens). Let's ignore the fact that this is an overseas matter for now.

    To say that we should protect corporations from losses due to alternative products would be disasterous. We are supposed to demand that Microsoft works in our best interest (as long as they have that charter) and we are not supposed to think of theirs. I know this isn't how things are; but how there were and how they should be.

    1. Re:You do know... by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
      The law is Not there to help criminals protect the procedes of their crimes.

      Personally, I am a European think MS should be stripped of its Intellectual Property Rights completely. Not because of the fact that I am forced to waste an enormous amount of my life dealing with Windows related security problems - although I think that European law is supposed to protect us from companies selling this kind of sh*te, but because of the criminal acts they have used to get themselves into the world domination they have now.

      MS is a far bigger threat to the average world citizen than Al Quaida and Bin Laden - and where are the SWAT teams when you need them? Oh, Yeah, the US Government sold its soul to the devil!

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    2. Re:You do know... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Oh, Yeah, the US Government sold its soul to the devil!

      Patently false. The devil was voted in. Well, we think he was, but we are not really sure of that.

  21. Re:I don't understand... by Ucklak · · Score: 1

    Because you can't remove the competing programs from the operating system.

    The EU doesn't like the fact that you can't remove IE and you can't remove Windows Media Player from Windows and that it's already installed from out of the box.

    --
    if you steal from one source, that is plagiarism, if you steal from many, well, that's just research.
  22. Fine by me. by jhfry · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So now a non-oss company of SAMBA team members makes one closed source binary that contains only the necessary functions and sells the rights to distribute the binary for $1 to SAMBA. All of the tools that utilize that binary are still open, and any functionality that REQUIRES knowledge of the MS code, must be implemented in that binary. MS is happy, the Linux world is happy, I'm happy. Not as thrilled as if they would allow OSS to use this info, but still happy!

    --
    Sometimes the best solution is to stop wasting time looking for an easy solution.
    1. Re:Fine by me. by Locke2005 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Closed binaries from a single source would make it much more difficult to port Samba to new architectures. x86 users would be just fine, but anybody that wanted to run Samba on, say, a Cell Processor running Linux would be forced to wait for the "non-oss company" to support it.

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    2. Re:Fine by me. by jhfry · · Score: 2, Informative

      Assuming that the developers of the closed binaries were not interested in supporting multiple architectures. My vision is that they would a private volunteer org that supports the SAMBA project... the developers would be slected from those developing samba now, and would be restricted to contributing to the closed source portion to prevent the OSS tools from being comprimised by their knowlege of the MS protocols.

      --
      Sometimes the best solution is to stop wasting time looking for an easy solution.
    3. Re:Fine by me. by Quantam · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Heh. The future of open/closed source interoperability.

      --
      You have tried to support your argument with faulty reasoning! Go directly to jail; do not pass Go, do not collect $200!
    4. Re:Fine by me. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      How about making a public company which has everybody in the world on its board of directors, and only distributes the code internally?

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  23. Re:I don't understand... by whoever57 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Why a commercial company should be forced to dismantle and hand itself over to open source.

    Simple: Microsoft has clearly established and abused a monopoly and there is no efficient market for the type of software sold by Microsoft.

    Governments in a capitalist society have a duty to ensure efficient markets in those areas that are not natural monopolies (and to ensure natural monopolies are not abused).

    Think of this as punishment for Microsoft's past abuses of its monopoly if you will, or think of it as governments acting to regulate companies that operate in a manner that is detrimental to a free market and hence to their citizens.

    --
    The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
  24. What does it matter? by Ridgelift · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't see how this will affect Samba. They've never had access to how SMB/CIFS works in the past, how will not having access to it now affect them?

    If anything it shows how strong Linux & F/OSS is. I'd say it's more of a compliment rather than an insult.

    1. Re:What does it matter? by NitsujTPU · · Score: 1

      Uhmm.

      It's definately NOT a compliment.

      There are many facets. MS could argue that licensees of its proprietary information providing source code to work with such information create a scenario in which a plethora of competing products could quickly and easily be created, interoperating with their closed standard.

      The fact that Samba was reverse engineered doesn't turn this into a compliment at all.

      Now, what I would argue is that if the Linux community really wanted to hammer a point home, a third party solution that does not rely on SMB/CIFS be developed and deployed on a number of platforms, including Windows, and become a major contender.

    2. Re:What does it matter? by TravisWatkins · · Score: 1

      Now, what I would argue is that if the Linux community really wanted to hammer a point home, a third party solution that does not rely on SMB/CIFS be developed and deployed on a number of platforms, including Windows, and become a major contender.

      Well, RedHat did just open up Netscape's directory server...

      --

      "But I'm still right here, giving blood and keeping faith. And I'm still right here."
    3. Re:What does it matter? by DaveCar · · Score: 3, Insightful

      IMHO the title of TFA is misleading.

      "The proposal specifically precludes the information from being used in a Free Software implementation, such as the Samba workgroup server software."

      This is a long way from (a logical conclusion that) "Microsoft Wants To Ban Publishing of Samba". Well, OK that might _want_ to, but it only precludes free/open projects from using their specifications.

      The SAMBA team have not used published standards (because there weren't any) so far, so it should make no difference. Now, admittedly they might try to imply some breach of NDA or whatever after stuff is published, but that is conjecture. Stating this as an a-priori fact in the title is misleading.

      Should we not make some kind of effort to at least appear to be balanced and not start name calling before the fact?

    4. Re: What does it matter? by OverflowingBitBucket · · Score: 1

      Should we not make some kind of effort to at least appear to be balanced and not start name calling before the fact?

      If someone with an established history of violence pulls back to swing a punch at you there is no expectation that you wait for the hit to connect before you defend yourself.

      Microsoft have shocking credibility in this area and are not entitled to the benefit of the doubt.

  25. No, you don't understand, obviously. by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's not like Samba could be commercially harmed by Microsoft's actions.

    Oh SURE they can! They can simply sue Samba devs for "using our specifications illegally as stated in blahblahblah".

    The samba devs would have to prove that they did NOT in fact read the specs. Frankly I don't know how this is different from software patents.

    1. Re:No, you don't understand, obviously. by cvd6262 · · Score: 2

      They can simply sue Samba devs for "using our specifications illegally as stated in blahblahblah".

      Exactly.

      Many of you will remember the Kerberos fiasco. MIT demanded that MS release their changes to Kerberos or stop using the name, so they released the spec as a .zip with a EULA saying that you could only share it with your employees, blah, blah...

      Some slashdotter copied the text straight into his post, with the subject line of "To all my employees..." MS eventually threatened /. to remove the post. Register Article

      What is interesting is that Jeremy Allison, of the Samba team actually posted very quickly asking /. to remove the post as having the spec on a popular F/OSS site could cause legal issues for the team.

      --

      I'd rather have someone respond than be modded up.

    2. Re:No, you don't understand, obviously. by Runagate+Rampant · · Score: 1

      Isn't it also possible that Microsoft hope that a 3rd party will do a BitMover style closed source SMB implementation for Linux.

      Such a product could, potentially, provide better compatibility with Windows, by leveraging access to MS specifications. And it would legally have to remain proprietary closed source.

      This would effectively drive a wedge between "Free Software" and "Open Source".

      And ultimately if this 3rd party ever outlived its usefulness Microsoft could snuff it out like all those previous proprietary competitors.

  26. Re:Competitor by HermanAB · · Score: 4, Informative

    It isn't a copy of MS technology. It is a copy of DEC and IBM technology, with a few mods so it will also work properly with MS technology...

    --
    Oh well, what the hell...
  27. Re:I don't understand... by poopdeville · · Score: 5, Informative

    People have incorrectly assumed that Samba must implement the methods described in these patents. In fact, the methods described in these patents are quite inappropriate for a Unix/POSIX CIFS implementation such as Samba. It would not even be possible to implement the methods described in these patents in a portable POSIX application. Instead, Samba treats the SMBreadbraw and SMBwritebraw protocol elements in the same way as all other elements of the CIFS/SMB protocol. This means that Samba should be completely unaffected by the existence of these patents. Microsoft claims that Samba is infringing anyway.

    --
    After all, I am strangely colored.
  28. Re:I don't understand... by deaddrunk · · Score: 1

    As long as they produce a superior product their profits are not in any danger. However they don't have a right to make a profit.

    --
    Does a Christian soccer team even need a goalkeeper?
  29. Microsoft FUD again. by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 4, Insightful
    As the author of the now infamous "Longtooth Posts" here on Slashdot, I was, for a moment, extremely tempted to post one right here. (Version 3.0 is almost complete, for those of you who are waiting.) BUT this story about Samba, which is a tool that I use all the time and have installed in at least a dozen different companies, strikes close to home, and I must reply seriously.

    This is a bunch of bullcrap. The Samba team did not have that information available. In fact, the protocols and codes were reverse-engineered to obtain interoperability.

    But let's say, for just a minute, that Microsoft somehow wants to pull Samba into this ridiculous web of deceit. Nobody said that this has been approved already. And if enough people raise hell at the EU, this will be turned down. Besides, when someone points out that the EU undoubtedly uses Samba in possibly thousands of EU government computers (at various levels in government), this will get turned down extremely quickly.

    Microsoft can continue to turn defeats into stunning victories, but the tighter they close their fists, the more computers slip through their fingers. And there will be a day when no computer in the world runs anything with the name Microsoft on it. I guarantee it. Many empires that were bigger and more powerful than Microsoft are now but a footnote in a history book. Where is the Roman empire? I don't care if it lasted a thousand years before it fell. Microsoft will not be so lucky, especially as they piss off increasing numbers of individuals, companies, and even governments with their business practices, prices, and defective products. And even if Samba is somehow supposed to be banned from the EU, there are billions of people all over the world, and thousands of Samba programmers who live outside the EU, and rest assured they will continue to use and develop it anyway.

    1. Re:Microsoft FUD again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      The roman empire still exists, and is infact one on the biggest orgainastions in the world. You may have heard of them, they just elected a new Caesar a few weeks ago. They are currently commonly reffered as roman catholics

    2. Re:Microsoft FUD again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Wow, you know really nothing about the romans, their religion, and their relationship to the catholic church, do you?

    3. Re:Microsoft FUD again. by dustmite · · Score: 1

      I think the "bottom line" regarding Microsoft products, that will get to them in the long term, is that they are far more expensive than such products need to be. Everyone knows they're locked in, everyone knows they're paying too much, and eventually companies and economies as a whole will collectively realise that they can lower costs and increase wealth in the long term by investing in alternate solutions that are not so badly overpriced.

    4. Re:Microsoft FUD again. by CPUFreak91 · · Score: 1

      Thanks man! You've really set me straight!

      --
      All Your Base Are Belong To Us!!! chown -r us ./base
  30. All but Samba is the same of... by famazza · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Asking to allow competition with all but its main competitor.

    What is all this about? Isn't it about allowing competition?

    --

    -=-=-=-=
    I know life isn't fair, but why can't it ever be un-fair in MY favor!?
    1. Re:All but Samba is the same of... by Ryan+Stortz · · Score: 1

      I've got an idea on how to get around it...

      Samba will continue development, get together all it's code contributers, and officially licence a version of Samba to a non-profit that they set up. Which will maintain a version of Samba that includes the information Microsoft released as a result of the settlement...then charge like $0.13 or something along those lines.

      I'm sure RMS would throw a fit, but he is so radical his opinion is almost irrelevant.

      --
      Bugs are just features that have been fixed.
  31. Sure by The+Bungi · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    And maybe The US government can talk to Airbus about releasing some of their proprietary secrets to Boeing. Sounds like that would be a good deal.

    Whatever else, this stupid meddling and back and forth by the EU (give us your netowrking protocols, IP be dammed! no, you can't ship an OS with a media player, RealNetworks will get an ulcer! we rock!) is going to come back and bite them one of these days.

    1. Re:Sure by lachlan76 · · Score: 1

      If Airbus's proprietary secrets were making them a monopoly, and they chose to abuse it, then that would be a good deal.

    2. Re:Sure by drakaan · · Score: 1
      Aside from that being a bad analogy...well, that's pretty much the whole problem, isn't it?

      Airbus and Boeing are similarly-sized competitors, so anti-trust issues are just not there.

      Here's a better analogy. If Airbus was an airline seat manufacturer, and Boeing made their own seats for their planes, then the US government might talk to Boeing about allowing Airbus access to portions of the airplane schematics where the seats attach to the cabin. They might also mandate that Boeing offer their customers the option of not having seats pre-installed in the airplanes the customers bought...

      Now, that being said, the issue of whether that's a good thing or a bad thing remains. If you're a die-hard capitalist, you might believe that Airbus (the seat manufacturer) should make better seats at a price that caused Boeing's customers to purchase them and replace the "free" seats they got and paid for the cost of from Boeing.

      If you're an average person, you might think that the US govt. doing what I hypothesised is fine.

      If you're somebody who loathes capitalism and the idea of competition driving the market, you might think that the government should go farther and force Boeing to install Airbus-supplied seats on a percentage of their airplanes, regardless of their cost or suitability.

      Something to think about.

      Personally, I think that MS should be allowed to keep whatever it develops in house proprietary and closed (for as long as people will buy into that model), and that they should react to the pressures placed upon them by Open Source Software and Open Standards Definitions as they see fit (with the caveat that I believe copyright should be the only protection for software products, not patents).

      --
      "Murphy was an optimist" - O'Toole's commentary on Murphy's Law
  32. One dollar by mariox19 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Putting aside criticism of a decision that would support this suggestion from Microsoft, what's to stop the Samba people from incorporating and "selling" their product for $1 (or Euro, or whatever), if the stipulation is that free software can't make use of this?

    It would of course require a change in license. But, apart from developers who have a moral objection to terms like this and would no longer work on the project, wouldn't it still be a viable project? Would people no longer be willing to work for free on "dollar-ware" -- especially if the idea is to beat Microsoft at its own game?

    Maybe the project would fork: Samba would continue to more or less reverse engineer, and a new project could make use of Microsoft's publication.

    This is just a thought. Please, no flames!

    --

    quiquid id est, timeo puellas et oscula dantes.

    1. Re:One dollar by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      Really, you don't want to charge a dollar. What you want to do is charge $1 for access to the FOSS library. So, you send your dollar to a FOSS advocacy organization, and you have licensed all software from their "library" of software. It's called bundling, right? Of course, MS knows how hard it is to stop piracy, so if someone downloads and runs the FOSS software without paying their fee, there might not be much they can do about it.

    2. Re:One dollar by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 2, Informative
      I believe you are confusing free as in beer and free as in freedom. MS does not want free (as in freedom) software to even exist. Anything they (MS) propose to offer that has a catch regarding free software means that free (as in GPL) software could not use it. Charging a nominal cost will not solve anything.

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
    3. Re:One dollar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      according to the US courts, the expectation of reciprocal sharing of copyrighted material is the equivalent of monetary renumeration.

      Of course, they were on about sharing music because the RIAA wanted to be able to make sharing for free afelony, which requires money over a certain ammount to change hands. However, this still holds here. So it really isnt free.

  33. First of all, isn't Samba Australian? by lildogie · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Secondly, if Europe decides to f**k themselves by shutting out Samba, the rest of the world will just have to enjoy the free software while Europe bends over for Microsoft.

    That ought to get a few delegates run out on a rail.

  34. Apple, Unix by porkface · · Score: 1

    Doesn't MacOS X use Samba? Microsoft has more to think about before they take down Samba than just the Open Source movement.

    If Microsoft keeps trying to force companies to choose, the list of arguments against Microsoft will only get longer.

    1. Re:Apple, Unix by naelurec · · Score: 1

      Apple have written their own SMB/CIFS server. They don't use Samba.

      Are you sure??

      [xserver:/usr/sbin] root# uname -a
      Darwin xserver 6.8 Darwin Kernel Version 6.8: Wed Sep 10 15:20:55 PDT 2003;
      root:xnu/xnu-344.49.obj~2/RELEASE_PPC Power Macintosh powerpc

      [xserver:/usr/sbin] root# ps -ax | egrep "(smb|nmb)"
      437 ?? Ss 0:04.35 /usr/sbin/smbd -D -l /Library/Logs/WindowsServices/Wi
      439 ?? Ss 1:18.42 /usr/sbin/nmbd -D -l /Library/Logs/WindowsServices/Wi

      [xserver:/usr/sbin] root# smbd -V
      Version 2.2.3a (build 26)

      Doing a man smbd shows the following:

      This program is part of the Samba suite.

      Looks an awful lot like samba to me.. atleast that version of Mac OS X..

  35. Re:Competitor by rpozz · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's down to Microsoft's good grace that it still exists at all.

    From what I understand, Samba was created through reverse engineering, and the main reason MS hasn't sued is because basically, they can't - it's a product designed solely for interoperability, and any case would (hopefully) be thrown out.

  36. i should add... by sum.zero · · Score: 1

    that i am referring to feature/functionality additions made to samba subsequent to the release of the interoperability info.

    sum.zero

  37. Re:I don't understand... by turbidostato · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "If MS had 50% of the market, SAMBA wouldn't have a case"

    Even in that case Samba would have a winning case.

    You have ALWAYS to allow for interoperatibility; if you don't like it, just don't play the game. Bill Gates is free to take his money and smoke it if he wants (well, even literally, I think that in the States firing a money note is not considered "destroying federal property" now), but if he wants to "build thingies" that interoperaty with anything else, he should allow for anything else to interoperate with hims.

    Even in the USA with such corporate-favouring laws you should have present the "Lexmark case". I don't think Lexmark holds 50% of any bussiness, still they lost regarding the "unofficial" tonner marketeers.

  38. According to the link... by jhfry · · Score: 1

    in the orginal post:
    http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2005/jun0 5/06-06EUFactSheet.mspx

    MS is complying by "enabling two paths by which the WSPP protocols can be used by companies whose business model includes software distributed in open source form"

    I'm sure that these paths don't include Linux binaries or release of the source code... but it doesn't appear that they are completely against open source implementations, just against releasing their source.

    Why the hell not just give us some extremely detailed specifications to ensure compatibility... Linux developers managed to write a TCP/IP stack that follows standards better than MS's... lets see Linux Dev's create a windows compatible server that follows their own specs better than they do!

    --
    Sometimes the best solution is to stop wasting time looking for an easy solution.
    1. Re:According to the link... by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      Well, according to the Samba devs, the functional implimentation of SMB/CIFS in Samba is superior to that of several windows versions: it will interoperate with various Windows versions and itself without problems, whereas Windows of various versions will not as often.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  39. Re:I don't understand... by sloanster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why a commercial company should be forced to dismantle and hand itself over to open source.

    Hullo? The monopolist is not being asked to hand over any code. They are being asked to simply provide the information neccessary for competitors to inter-operate with microsoft windows.

    Please explain how that amounts to microsoft "dismantling itself"

  40. Poll Suggestion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The death of Microsoft will come from:
    1) Starvation
    2) A Thousand Cuts
    3) One Massive Lawsuit

  41. Re:I don't understand... by orlanz · · Score: 2, Informative

    [i] Why a commercial company should be forced to dismantle and hand itself over to open source.[/i]

    It isn't being ordered to do that. MS is a monopoly. Not necessarely illegal, but hurts the consumers just the same. In order to mitigate that unnecessary damage, monopolies are usually regulated.

    In this case, the EU doesn't want this company, especially since it is foreign, to hinder any competition in the market. MS does that, or has the power to do that, very well with its control over proprietary protocols and desktop dominance. The EU wants to dismantle this control to create an even playing field, so that anyone (including open source) can implement their own tools to use those communication channels as well as MS. The hope is that the market will foster more competition and thus benefit the consumer.

    They aren't ordering MS to turn over all its code and copyrights. Just the way they setup (not implemented) certain communication components.

    Of course with Politics out and above swinging maddly, they probably shot a bit high. They learned from our DOJ, if you shoot at the target, MS will nudge it just enough to miss. The EU is shooting really high and hoping after all the delays, back and forth mumbling, and what not, the arrow will at the least hit the edge of the target.

  42. A simple solution by cmburns69 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Charge $0.01 for a very liberal license to use samba. That keeps it non-free, and allows it to be used anywhere.

    --
    Online Starcraft RPG? At
    Dietary fiber is like asynchronous IO-- Non-blocking!
    1. Re:A simple solution by jridley · · Score: 4, Interesting

      License fees:
      This is not free software, it is licensed per site. In order to use this software, you are required to pay one cent per site. For the purposes of this license, a site is defined as a planet with people on it.

    2. Re:A simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Do you offer any volumn discounts?

    3. Re:A simple solution by jridley · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Thank you for your inquiry. If you wish to deploy this software on uninhabited planets, the fee is discounted by 50%. Craft in space are considered covered by the license for the planet of the port they are registered in in the case of passenger and cargo ships, or the planet they were launched from or most recently made landfall on in the case of research vessels and probes.

    4. Re:A simple solution by finkployd · · Score: 1

      *sigh* this is yet another example where English just doesn't quite work right. This is not about free as in cost, it is free as in "libra". It sucks that the same word is used to mean both vastly different concepts. Charging would not make a bit of difference when the issue at hand is the availability of source code and the license used.

      Finkployd

    5. Re:A simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Charge $0.01 for a very liberal license to use samba. That keeps it non-free, and allows it to be used anywhere.


      Is that so? Then why not go the whole way and give it away for free(as in beer) in a non-free (libre) licence.

      You really want me to remind you about BitKeeper?
    6. Re:A simple solution by ydrol · · Score: 1
      Don't forget to ask about our rebate special.

      We also have Samba on finance package. Buy now, and pay off the balance by June 2015.

    7. Re:A simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahh crap, we owe more for the mars rovers! Damn fine print! And speaking of uninhabited, how 'bout we split the difference and go 75% on mars until we're sure, ok?

  43. So what's new? by geekee · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Samba didn't get any help from MS before, and now they still won't. Didn't stop them before.

    --
    Vote for Pedro
  44. Re:I don't understand... by Xtifr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    > Why a commercial company should be forced to dismantle and hand itself over to open source.

    Dismantle? Dismantle?? What kind of drugs are you on? Providing documentation is not the same as being dismantled! And as for why, well, you might as well ask why a private citizen has to go to jail. It's because they were convicted of a crime and are being punished. I mean, duh!

    > It's not like Samba could be commercially harmed by Microsoft's actions.

    Geeze, even for slashdot, this is a silly comment. Hasn't the "free speech, not free beer" quote been posted about a million times? Of course Samba can be commercially harmed by Microsoft's actions! Vendors like IBM, HP, Sun, Red Hat, Novell, and yes, even SCO sell Samba. Just because none of them have exclusive rights to the code does not mean it's not a commercial product! Locking out Samba harms dozens, maybe thousands, of companies, as well as consumers, for the private benefit of just one company. That is the definition of antitrust.

    HTH, HAND

  45. Re:I don't understand... by deanoaz · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Anti-trust action can be a harsh solution.

    Look at the case against Alcoa Aluminum back in the 1940's (or possibly 50's). They were not carrying out any predatory practices against their competitors, just innovating better and faster ways to make and deliver aluminum.

    Because they did it so well, they left their competitors in the dust and dominated the market.

    The U.S. government forced them to give their trade secrets to their competitors and make major adjustments to their pricing and marketing to allow their less-worthy competitors to profit and gain market share.

    So, the precedent is there for the same kind of thing to happen again.

    "If you give someone a program, you will frustrate them for a day; if you teach them how to program, you will frustrate them for a lifetime." - Unknown

    --
    If 'the people' in Amendment 2 are 'the state' then Amendments 1, 2, 4, 9, and 10 benefit the state, not you.
  46. How does this change anything? by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

    The Samba team has done perfectly well so far reverse engineering SMB with no assistance from Microsoft. This just means business as usual for them. Of could come up with a mandatory authentication mechanism that can't be reverse engineered, but this would break backwards compatibility with all previous versions of SMB as well.

    --
    I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
  47. "Shared Source" wasn't court-ordered by Xtifr · · Score: 1

    subject line says it all.

  48. Re:I don't understand... by Phoenix+Rising · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Samba itself can only be harmed if Microsoft uses this declaration as a wedge to enforce what it sees as its rights to a proprietary protocol (that they (a) didn't originally create, and (b) published a couple of RFCs about).

    But... Sun and IBM and RedHat and HP and Novell, who all use the Samba server in their OS offerings to compete with Microsoft, will definitely be harmed by this decision if it stands.

    As to why a monopolist aggressor should be forced to dismantle itself, a corporation is an artificial entity created to serve the needs of the citizens; in relatively recent times, a corporation is a demi-person. If we can inflict significant penalties (most of a person's life) for crimes, what is irrational about forcing a monopolist to disclose protocol documentation?

    --
    Let us live so that when we come to die, even the undertaker will be sorry -- Mark Twain
  49. Re:I don't understand... by dubious9 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    **slaps head** The yoda misquote aside...

    big business should be protected from open source because it wipes out their profits without any commercial gain and impacts taxable income!

    Like IBM, Redhat, and dozens of other businesses out there right? Oh, those don't count? Even for businesses that don't have a direct stake in OSS, there's a huge capital advantage because it allows businesses to shift capital away from non-core expenses. ie. they're not wasting money on software. Thus businesses as a whole are strengthened becuase of OSS. Only the relatively few boxed software companies will feel the pinch. The rest do better.

    --
    Why, o why must the sky fall when I've learned to fly?
  50. Re:first post yea ha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyway... Do I smell a catfight between samba and microsoft?! Meow.

    There's one thing more pathetic - a user who adds one worthless on-topic sentence to the end of his troll post in a desperate attempt not to lose any karma.

  51. Re:I don't understand... by T(V)oney · · Score: 1

    Precisely.

    Furthermore, being able to sell the product commercially is completely irrelevant. Samba never has been and probably will never be a commercial project. The problem is that Samba will be effectively dead if this is allowed to pass. If they release information about their Samba implementation, Microsoft has but to say "hey, those Samba guys are using our information in an open-source project!" and Samba would be no more in Europe.

  52. Lic. vs public domain by hhawk · · Score: 1

    it makes since that they would agree to license the info to other for profit company rather than release the protocals into the public domain... I mean that would be good for us and their customers, but clearly it would be bad for them.

    It's "their property" and forcing them to give it away is hard even for most governments. Forcing them to license it to some 3rd (for profit) organization isn't evil...

    Just doens't help us., esp. with DCMA...

    --
    http://www.hawknest.com/
    1. Re:Lic. vs public domain by PigIronBob · · Score: 1

      Rot, they're selling an operating system so the onus is on them to provide their interfaces (not the code) to anyone who wishes to communicate to that system. This is the way computing USED to work They are not in a position to dictate ANYTHING, interoperability is interoperability, you can not include or preclude anyone, that's why they were taken to court in the first place!

      --
      You never catch me alive
    2. Re:Lic. vs public domain by hhawk · · Score: 1

      We are agreed that is why things and how things used to work.. They want everything a tort or a contract and they probably want to be able to sue any virus maker or any one else who doesn't tow their party line for using that interface... Clearly they don't want open standards in the since of non-royal based and/or truly open spec (w/ out EULA).

      --
      http://www.hawknest.com/
  53. Re:I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is modded down for being flamebait???!?! What a pathetic piece of moderation for a reasonable comment.

  54. Re:I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why a commercial company should be forced to dismantle and hand itself over to open source.

    The EU is not dismantling them. They are trying to make the operating system used on 80-90% of all computers world wide use an openly specified networking protocol. That's all. If government and big business are going to trust Microsoft, why can't they see the specs? The government, being a large customer of Microsoft, is actually in quite a reasonable position to demand this from them. As reasonable as anyone can be against a multinational corporation with essentially no control.

    It's not like Samba could be commercially harmed by Microsoft's actions

    As far as I know there are some paid developers of samba. If, by legal hook and crook Microsoft is able to successfully sue them for implementing their standard, even if they've only reverse engineered it, then samba might become illegal, stopping the project and ending the paid jobs, hence *commercial* harm.

    big business should be protected from open source because it wipes out their profits without any commercial gain and impacts taxable income!

    Why do we care so much about big business again? They don't care about us, and government is just a tool to obtain equal and fair treatment for everyone, not just big business. They don't actually "drive the economy" or any such nonsense, that's just figures on paper somewhere. People do all the work producing goods, and buy all the goods, too. There's no "big business" anywhere actually doing anything other than running inefficient beaurocracies.

  55. Could we PLEASE move into the 21st century? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How is that not illegal?

    Companies that deal in "hardware" are sued over stuff like this.

    You're not allowed to dictate the end use for your product. Gun manufacturers can't require you to sign a license that dis-allows you from commiting a crime with it. Or modding it. Or taking it apart. Or anything. They can refuse support (to a limited degree).

    This "cyber" crap needs to stop. Software is NOT literature. Source code *may* be: it's protected by copyright. But the RESULT of source code is simply a very low mass product.

  56. Re:I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't understand why a commercial company should be forced to dismantle and hand itself over to open source.

    Evidently you don't understand plain English, either, or you'd know that nothing of the sort had even been proposed.

    All that's been proposed is that a commercial company should be forced to reveal enough of its secrets to enable open source to interoperate with it. Quite how you think this would harm Microsoft's profits, I'm not sure.

  57. Re:"EDITORS" OF SLASHDOT: YOU MAKE ME SICK... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    well that was a pretty damned well thought out troll, several links, half decent text too. too bad your links are to irrelevant things, i guess you fail. oh and btw, don't link to spears, she is 10 times smarter than youll ever be you dumb fucker

  58. Re:I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    how many times to people have to tell you Spock didn't say that Yoda did

  59. Easy solution... charge a penny for Samba by carlivar · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Perhaps Samba should start charging a penny for the software. And ignore "piracy". And oops, mess up the CVS firewalling and permissions so that everyone can get at the code.

    --
    Vote Libertarian
    1. Re:Easy solution... charge a penny for Samba by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Samba should start charging a penny for the software. And ignore "piracy".

      I know you jest, but I bet people might not actually mind paying for software that only cost a penny. That would cut down on piracy right there.

    2. Re:Easy solution... charge a penny for Samba by jorts · · Score: 1

      If the "cost" of Samba were 1c, they could still give out free copies - many commerical products are given out for free, e.g. to reviewers. They could give a free copy to any user of their FTP or websites (or any of their affiliates - i.e. mirrors). Or they could charge $0.01 for a licence to distribute it.

    3. Re:Easy solution... charge a penny for Samba by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      In case anyone decides to take this idea seriously...

      Samba is an open-source project, various pieces of which are copyrighted by many different individuals, each of which has licensed their bit of code under the GPL. The GPL does not permit the sort of restrictions you're thinking of (you can charge for distribution, but not for the software itself, which must remain under the GPL and thus freely copyable by anyone whether they've paid for it or not).

      In order to release Samba under a different non-GPL-compatible license, you would need to obtain permission from each and every copyright holder individually; otherwise, you're infringing on their copyright, which is just as illegal (and arguably much more immoral) as violating Microsoft's patent license.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  60. Re:I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    a corporation is an artificial entity created to serve the needs of the citizens

    And all this time I thought it was shareholders and profit!?!
  61. Tastes Like Shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is why your food should be free (both freedom & beer). It's one thing to charge for an fork...but without food, that cutlery is just worthless hunks of metal and plastic.

    1. Re:Tastes Like Shit by ZephyrXero · · Score: 1

      Food is a limited resource...software is not.

      --
      "A truly wise man realizes he knows nothing."
    2. Re:Tastes Like Shit by shmlco · · Score: 1
      Food is a limited resource...software is not.

      Fine. YOU try finding decent developers...

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    3. Re:Tastes Like Shit by ZephyrXero · · Score: 1

      The developers benefit from having a quality OS for their own use...

      --
      "A truly wise man realizes he knows nothing."
    4. Re:Tastes Like Shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >The developers benefit from having a quality OS for their own use...

      So when are the OSS dorks going to put one out?

    5. Re:Tastes Like Shit by shmlco · · Score: 1

      Doesn't help if they're supposed to be developing for OSX or XP. They need to be eating their own dog food.

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    6. Re:Tastes Like Shit by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      In many countries a basic quantity of food is available for free to those who can't afford to pay for it.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    7. Re:Tastes Like Shit by Skjellifetti · · Score: 1

      In many countries a basic quantity of food is available for free to those who can't afford to pay for it.

      Still not free. As Heinlein once noted, they have to charge extra for the beer to cover the cost.

  62. Whay can't FSF/OSS play this game too? by absinthminded64 · · Score: 1

    Has Samba gotten enough market share to distribute their own Windows client? I know Samba offers ease of deployment and enables it's own rapid growth by working with MS so well but can't SMB be improved upon? If I want to compromise a windows environment the first thing I would do is capture SMB packets to get the MD4? challenge/response. Microsoft has already proven their ability to emulate or buy everyone else's technology (Remember the Internet King? Hats off to Matt G.!). How are we any different? Did they buy NDS and call it AD? Would there have been an AD without NDS? I think working with SMB is important to gain more markget share but how long do we JUST emulate MS? Microsoft's ego would prevent them from 'adopting' better open source technologies long enough for OSS to gain significant market share. For so many years the only hit for "Linux" on Microsoft's site was how to use the /MBR switch for FDISK.

  63. Re:Coward moderator, answer the damn question! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The moderation of goldspider's three posts clearly demonstrates the groupthink that exists on Slashdot.

    Anyone who deviates from the group-held mantra is punished for the deviation. Slashdot claims to be about things being "free" but this is obviously a hypocritical statement - moderators love shutting people out of the discussion for merely expressing a different opinion.

    Shame on the moderator(s) who didn't have the guts to reply and instead chose to muzzle an unpopular opinion. Shame.

  64. You are an idiot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Britney Spears is the ugliest and stupidest mofo whore. She kissed Madonna du dykeke on stage, and she'ld lust after a jungle-bunny just to sit on that nigger crotch turd. Everyone knows she's a Spear chucker looking for another spear-chucker.

    Don't bite the messenger, asshat.

    1. Re:You are an idiot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...parent trashing Britney being written with one hand as poster masturbates to her latest viddy with the other, no doubt,

      (I could bloody care less about Britney, as she's not worth the trouble, BTW.)

  65. Is all as it seems? by daviq · · Score: 1

    Just because Microsoft and Gates appear to have a good moment doesn't mean it will last long. But then again, it is lasting long until Longhorn comes out. For a deadline to release in 2003, Microsoft shows that they can make something last long. Now Jobs has his own dashboard widget counting down the days until Longhorn. Long live Samba.

    --
    Go to the w3.org and put Slashdot.org through the validator.
  66. Work with us? by slack_justyb · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's funny how earlier MS said they wanted to work with the F/OSS community. It's things like this that provide reason why no one should trust MS.

    1. Re:Work with us? by dustmite · · Score: 1

      Approaching a smaller enemy under the pretense of cooperation is classic "divide and conquer" strategy. The intended effect is to split a currently united enemy, into two divided camps that now instead oppose one another and disagree on how to proceed. Typically some percentage will be tricked and will argue "MS is turning good, we should work with them", while the rest will yell "no it's a trap, stay away". Then the two weakened sides would spend their time arguing against one another, instead of working together against the common enemy, who of course just continue with unethical "business as usual".

      I don't know how effective the strategy can be against OpenSource though, as OpenSource coders are not really some group with centralised leadership united together under a common ideological banner; most are just coders hacking away relatively obliviously, and doing what they're doing because they enjoy it, because of the recognition, and/or because they're being paid to.

    2. Re:Work with us? by mikefe · · Score: 1

      One dept can hate FOSS while another dept can love it, and contribute. MS is not singular.

      --
      There: Something at a specific location.
      Their: Owned by someone.
      Please make sure your english compiles.
  67. Wrong: Samba is not a "Competing" Product by thelizman · · Score: 2
    Microsoft's latest attempt to reconcile with the European Commission's antitrust rulings against the company may result in another victim.


    Nope.

    It seems their offer, if accepted, will strike a considerable blow at a leading competitor in the realm of file and printer sharing.


    You're repeating yourself, and it's still no.

    The popular open source suite Samba stands to be the recipient of a backhanded slap from Redmond if the offer stands and the European branch of the Free Software Foundation is taking it personally.


    Repeating yourself again, using imagery to reinforce it, and again...no.

    How is Samba being specifically targeted? Greve argues this is because "Samba is the only remaining major competitor of Microsoft in this market."


    Samba is not a competitor to Microsoft. Samba does not run on Microsoft Windows. Microsoft does not sell or market it's SMB protocols separately from Windows. Microsofts SMB protocols have not been ported to any other operating system on which Samba runs.

    Microsoft refusing to open source their protocols and methods does not disadvantage the Samba project, principally because nothing has changed anyway. Samba arose from reverse engineering SMB messages sniffed out on a network. And Samba engineers will continue to improvise, adapt, and overcome like they always have. That adaptability is what makes OSS better than proprietary solutions.

    Now go back to sleep, chicken little.
    1. Re:Wrong: Samba is not a "Competing" Product by VidEdit · · Score: 1

      I doesn't matter if Samba reverse engineered the protocols or not. What matters is that Microsoft can *say* that any future functionality to Samba came from Microsoft's specs and use that to sue Samba out of existence, ala SCO. (Sure, SCO hasn't won, but only because IBM has deep pockets, unlike the Samba team...)

      --
    2. Re:Wrong: Samba is not a "Competing" Product by Lord+Crc · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Samba is not a competitor to Microsoft. Samba does not run on Microsoft Windows. Microsoft does not sell or market it's SMB protocols separately from Windows. Microsofts SMB protocols have not been ported to any other operating system on which Samba runs.

      I think you could claim that Samba is a competing product, in the sense that SMB is built into Windows, and thus you might replace a Windows installation with another OS + Samba if all you use that Windows installation for is file and print serving, which a lot of Windows boxes do.

    3. Re:Wrong: Samba is not a "Competing" Product by Al+Dimond · · Score: 1

      And what could Microsoft do to prove this? Force them to hand over all their source code? Or the communications between Samba developers? At least the SCO suit could force something out of IBM et al.

    4. Re:Wrong: Samba is not a "Competing" Product by VidEdit · · Score: 1

      You don't have to win a law suit to ruin someone. You only have to out spend them--which is easy to do if you are going up against a group of volunteers. Microsoft could demand all communications with anybody, and they could halt the development and distribution of Samba with an injunction, even if they had a near nonexistent case.

      Microsoft has a history of using lawsuits to its advantage. They even are so blatant as to use what are supposed to be losing settlements to actually increase their monopoly power, as they have done in this case.

      Why would you want to underestimate Microsoft's malice? You must know and admit your enemies strengths if you ever hope to win against them--and yes, Microsoft is the enemy.

      --
    5. Re:Wrong: Samba is not a "Competing" Product by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1

      Well, then you guys shouldn't have demanded that the protocol specs be released.

      As the Talking Heads would say, "Watch out! You might get what you're after!"

      --
      -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    6. Re:Wrong: Samba is not a "Competing" Product by ydrol · · Score: 1
      Samba is not a competitor to Microsoft. Samba does not run on Microsoft Windows. Microsoft does not sell or market it's SMB protocols separately from Windows. Microsofts SMB protocols have not been ported to any other operating system on which Samba runs [samba.org].

      The bigger picture is clearly, people can, and do, swap out windows file servers for Linux ones. This affects MS revenue in this area. Without Samba it just woudn't happen.

    7. Re:Wrong: Samba is not a "Competing" Product by thelizman · · Score: 1

      Microsoft can do that now.

      This...again...changes nothing.

    8. Re:Wrong: Samba is not a "Competing" Product by thelizman · · Score: 1

      In which case you would use file and print services for unix on your Windows platform. But anyone saavy enough to set up linux workstations running Samba is saavy enough to setup a linux file/print server running samba, nfs, lpd, cups, et al.

    9. Re:Wrong: Samba is not a "Competing" Product by Lord+Crc · · Score: 1

      But anyone saavy enough to set up linux workstations running Samba is saavy enough to setup a linux file/print server running samba, nfs, lpd, cups, et al.

      Uhm? Sounds like you got it the other way around. Imagine all your machines are using Windows (horrible, yet common :). You have a PDC, you have a file / print server, which the workstations use via normal Windows shares. In this case, Samba could compete with the file / print server as you could set it up to directly replace a Windows file /print server and not doing anything on the clients.

  68. Meaningless by Coward+Anonymous · · Score: 1

    The CIFS protocol along with MSs implementation of Active Directory/LDAP/Kerberos is sufficiently understood by the Samba team as well as other people that MS's antics don't make much of a difference.

    The real reason MS doesn't want to share information about the CIFS protocol is that it would expose their shoddy engineering for all to see ;)

    1. Re:Meaningless by superpulpsicle · · Score: 1

      I sat here for hours reading everyone's post. It took a long time before someone finally mentioned M$ is afraid to show their code. I was just waiting for an inferior-engineering type comment.

    2. Re:Meaningless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, they did tell the anti-trust investigation people that they didn't want to open code because it's too insecure...

    3. Re:Meaningless by Coward+Anonymous · · Score: 1

      First a public health announcement: you should not spend hours reading slashdot comments.

      Do you want concrete examples? I can provide them.

      Example one:

      All CIFS messages are byte misaligned. In other words, instead of 2 byte or 4 byte words being properly aligned on a 2 or 4 byte boundary, they are typically at an _odd_ offset. Why is this important? Most CPUs do not support accessing unaligned words so the compiler needs to generate extra instructions to reconstruct the word (in effect fetch the bytes individually and reconstruct the word in a register). End result is that instead of a single instruction to load the word into a register, the compiler generates many instructions to load the one word.
      Intel's x86 ISA is one of the few that does support unaligned word access at the cost of a CPU cycle penalty. So your performace still suffers because of poor MS engineering.

  69. That explains the "Red Screen of Death" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just like a Jedi openly going over to the Dark Side turns in his old lightsaber for a red one, now that M$ has openly declared itself evil, the blue screen of death has turned red!!!

    And just like in Star Wars, the only folks in the whole damn universe who couldn't tell who the evil person manipulating events was were the idiots running the government....

  70. Same thing can be said by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    about linux. There will be a day when no computers in the world will run linux. And if you care about Samba, it just shows that you're Microsoft's bitch. I seriously pity you.

  71. The slashdot story. by slack_justyb · · Score: 1

    And just for anyone wondering here is the slashdot story about it. http://linux.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/04/29/ 221235&tid=109&tid=1&tid=106

  72. I bet you wan't to read this post. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You aren't really reading at 1 if you read this. I have found that clicking distrupts my reading, so I'm back at reading at -1. Posted AC to got a 0.

  73. asshat, listen up by Your+Average+Joe · · Score: 1

    every UNIX vendor uses Samba. If MS can destroy Samba then all he UNIX shops have to buy a Windows server to serve files for a few of the PeeCees... Including Mac OS X shops. ;-)

    --
    Your Average Joe
  74. NFS for windows? by tacocat · · Score: 1

    OK, I have an obvious question.

    If the SMB method of networking file servers and print servers is hopeless, has anyone considered making an alternative for NFS? Essnetially doing the End Round maneuver on these asswipes? As an example for comparison purposes, you can get plug-ins to the Explorer that give you access to FTP sights in a similar manner that you would access a network drive. Can something like this be accomplished for the NFS protocol?

    Similarly for LPR/CUPS to close out the functional space that SMB occupies. I probably forgot some other aspects of Windows networking, but I haven't really used it since Windows 95 so I'm not one in the know.

    1. Re:NFS for windows? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Microsoft themselves offer an NFS client and server as part of their "Services for Unix" download.

  75. easy solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Make samba a commercial product, and when you pay the .25 cent cost for it, you also receive the source code and full rights to do whatever you want with that code.

  76. you LOSE! good DAY sir!!! by mbius · · Score: 1

    the proposal specifically precludes the information from being used in a free software implementation

    In other words, if you're going to improve our code, we reserve the right to purchase you in the future.

    --
    you can have my violent video games when you pry them from my cold, dead hands.
    Prime UID Club
  77. Re:I don't understand... by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Why a commercial company should be forced to dismantle and hand itself over to open source.

    This is similar to the IBM anti-trust suit in the 1980s where IBM was using different connectors on their models to prevent third-party companies from making compatible hardware. The court forced IBM to use the same connectors for all models in the same family. Some of these connectors became defacto standards for serial and parallel interconnectivity. Microsoft needs to be held to the same standard for software interoperativity.

  78. Re:I don't understand... by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

    His handle is "Sheetrock" - as in, "smart as..."

    --
    Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
  79. Re:I don't understand... by Valar · · Score: 1

    Jesus. Christ. YHBT. HAND.

  80. Open Letter to Hobbyists by inode_buddha · · Score: 3, Informative

    http://www.blinkenlights.com/classiccmp/gateswhine .html I guess the world owes him a living. Notice the date on it.

    --
    C|N>K
    1. Re:Open Letter to Hobbyists by Urusai · · Score: 1

      So when's he gonna hire those ten good programmers and flood the market with good software?

    2. Re:Open Letter to Hobbyists by inode_buddha · · Score: 1

      I would say, as soon as the programming matters more than anything. Heck he's already got a few thousand good programmers, AFAICT.

      --
      C|N>K
  81. Not that easy... by Black+Perl · · Score: 1

    It doesn't matter how much they charge (or don't), because the restriction is on whether the source is open or not. Samba, or anything GPL or with GPL code, cannot close its source or even offer a closed-source version, and Microsoft knows that. Of course this is simply a proposal, and the EU could refuse or require that file service protocols be GPL-compatible.

    --
    bp
    1. Re:Not that easy... by Ryan+Stortz · · Score: 1

      If they get everyone who contributed to agree to licence the softoware, then it can go proprietary. The copyright holders can licence it however and as many times as they want.

      --
      Bugs are just features that have been fixed.
  82. Doesn't hurt samba at all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The samba development team will do what they've always done: reverse engineer the protocol.

    APIs are for sissies.

  83. Not to mention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Samba devs provided testimony to the European Commission on this issue, and was thus part of what made the EU commissison rule this way in the first place.

  84. My Capit-al, Capit-ain! by vmfedor · · Score: 1
    Microsoft has committed some, shall we say, dubious business practices and are entitled to all the lawsuits being levied against them. I feel they should pay restitution for the crimes they've committed.

    However, all this "boo-hooing" in the Open Source community about Microsoft is slowing progress and gives everyone a bad name. If the open source community (and specifically Linux) want to compete with Microsoft, it's my opinion that they just have to make better, more appealing software. Obviously something isn't "better" if it's offered completely for free and is still dwarfed by something that costs lots more out of the box. Linux developers need to concentrate harder on the "user friendly" and "ease of use" parts of their operating systems just as hard as they're concentrating on adding new features and tweaking. Linux can't compete because it is, right now, still very arcane to the vast majority of computer users, including many IT employees. Windows just has more things a USER wants, and while it isn't the most secure/stable operating system out, that's why people use it. People love that it comes with support for just about anything that they can plug into their computer, and just about any popular application runs on it.

    Right now the gap in useability doesn't make up for the money people would save if they'd switch to Open Source. It is well on its way and has seen incredible growth in the past few years but right now it's pointless to comment on how much or how little it gets used versus an operating system that you CAN'T POSSIBLY COMPARE TO. Just because they both offer the same features doesn't mean they are comparable products. Microsoft creates a more appealing package to the user, which is what Open Source needs to do. It has stability and security going for it, it's just not user friendly enough!

    This post isn't meant to be "pro-Microsoft" or "anti-Open Source." I'm just calling it like I see it. What does everyone else think?

    --

    I like my women how I like my sugar.. granulated.

  85. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  86. Excuse me while I "spend a penny" by Prototerm · · Score: 1

    Somehow, I don't think the Samba team would appreciate being associated with going to the loo.

    --
    "My country, right or wrong; if right, to be kept right; and if wrong, to be set right." --Senator Carl Schurz (1872)
  87. Re:I don't understand... by badriram · · Score: 1

    Sorry but Opensource is not a competitor. However Redhat, Novell etc. are. They can always if they want buy a license, pay MS cheap/for free (depending on what MS agreed with EU) and implement and release on top of linux. That means in no way is MS restricting competitors at all.

    Sorry the requirement of people here that it has to be compatible with opensource is stupid. This is because GNU is not technically open, it has a lot of restrictive clauses. Opensource is a philosophy and NOT a competitor or company

  88. so much slapping by pintomp3 · · Score: 4, Funny

    i'm bill gates, bitch!

    1. Re:so much slapping by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't You mean bill gate's Bitch? :)

  89. What a load of tripe by Keeper · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It doesn't preclude "free" implementations. It requires the addition of a notice to any software which consumes it (similar to how the GPL requires you to include the GPL with copies of your software, or software you derive and distribute).

    This requirement makes it GPL incompatible, but hardly precludes free implementations.

    1. Re:What a load of tripe by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Yes, but in source or software? The GPL does not require you to actually display it in the application (remember, you need not even accept the license to use the software). If this clause is something like the old BSD advertising clause, yes it is incompatible. Probably quite intentionally too.

      Kjella

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    2. Re:What a load of tripe by Keeper · · Score: 1

      It requires a notice to be 'prominately' displayed in the source code, licenses, and documentation distributed with an application. This is similar in nature to the BSD advertising clause, and is incompatible with the GPL as it imposes a restriction on what someone down the line can do with the software.

      While the paranoid may claim that it is there for the sole purpose of being incompatible, it is actually there to protect everyone's interests. The last thing you would want is to pick up a piece of GPL software, use it in a commercial application, and get sued for it.

    3. Re:What a load of tripe by Alsee · · Score: 1

      While the paranoid may claim that it is there for the sole purpose of being incompatible,

      Of COURSE the sole purpose is to be incompatible.

      it is actually there to protect everyone's interests.

      It is actually there to serve Microsoft's interests and harm other interests. Which is why Microsoft is trying to stick those terms in there and the EU antitrust litigators are opposing it.

      The last thing you would want is to pick up a piece of GPL software, use it in a commercial application, and get sued for it.

      The very purpose of the antitrust remedy is for people to be able to use competing applications. It is Microsoft attempting to ADD IN terms granting them an ability to sue people and subvert the legal remedy.

      Without that deliverately introduced incompatibility no one would ever be sued for using the GPL application. It is the incompatibility creating the suability.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    4. Re:What a load of tripe by Pecisk · · Score: 1

      It DOES precludes Free Software, which by definition can't be tained by such requirements. And that is what's matters because reality is that most "free implementations" are BSD/GPL based.

      Don't try to paint something white when you see that is almost impossible.

      --
      user@ubuntubox:~$ stfu This server is going down for shutdown NOW!
    5. Re:What a load of tripe by m50d · · Score: 1

      It's still allowing the four freedoms, it's still meeting the open source definition, it can still be included in Debian. Claiming this isn't free is like claiming releasing it under GPL wouldn't be free because then it couldn't be used in BSD-licensed programs.

      --
      I am trolling
    6. Re:What a load of tripe by Keeper · · Score: 1

      It is actually there to serve Microsoft's interests and harm other interests. Which is why Microsoft is trying to stick those terms in there and the EU antitrust litigators are opposing it.

      So you would rather have patents owned by Microsoft integrated into OSS software, and later on not be able to tell which OSS software has incorporates MS patents and which ones don't? Sounds an aweful lot like something MS could spread a whole boatload of FUD about ...

      The very purpose of the antitrust remedy is for people to be able to use competing applications. It is Microsoft attempting to ADD IN terms granting them an ability to sue people and subvert the legal remedy.

      The legal remedy requires that MS make certain things available with reasonable terms. It does not require them to give it away to everyone for free. You may wish it did, but it doesn't.

      Without that deliverately introduced incompatibility no one would ever be sued for using the GPL application. It is the incompatibility creating the suability.

      Microsoft owns the IP. You need a license to use their IP to be compliant with IP laws. The EU isn't re-appropriating Microsoft IP and putting it into the public domain.

      The GPL was deliberately designed to exclude contributions not owned by the community. The community doesn't own Microsoft IP. This is exactly what the GPL is designed to do in this case.

    7. Re:What a load of tripe by Alsee · · Score: 1

      The legal remedy requires

      No... Microsoft is trying to haggle a settlement to add restrictions. The government has rejected that, and has said they are going back to the judge on Microsoft's noncompliance in this area.

      Microsoft broke the law. Again. For about the twelve hundreth time or so. They are attempting to place limitations on the remedy (not even a punishment for criminal acts or a penalty for criminal acts, but merely a remedy to restore illegally suppressed competition), and Microsoft wishes to twist and turn it to their advantge.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  90. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  91. No, no, you've got it all wrong! by OldManAndTheC++ · · Score: 1
    Gates is Vader, not Palpatine, as this bit of dialogue from Episode V made clear:

    Darth Gates: Linus, I am your father!

    Linus Skywalker: Nooooo! That's impossible!

    Darth Gates: Search your feelings - you know it to be true!

    --
    Soylent Green is peoplicious!
  92. What's the problem here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even if Samba is subject to this agreement? Sell Samba as uncrippled "shareware" and charge a single dollar per copy. Site licenses for $1.50. Each license includes free upgrades for eternity. Poof! Problem gone. Right?

  93. but, ah, dude... by toby · · Score: 1
    Where is the Roman empire? I don't care if it lasted a thousand years before it fell. Microsoft will not be so lucky,

    I agree with the empire analogy: they're going to vanish - but doesn't it bother you that they took so much of our damn cash first? Through extortion, elimination of choice, etc, no less. Imagine what a better place the world would be if that cash wasn't being funneled to the last guy on earth who needs it. For his mediocre product (and that's being polite).

    If there is one company that could afford to produce quality, it's M$. And they never will. Where's the incentive?

    I won't be happy until the software "industry" no longer reduces the majority of people to hapless, shaken down dupes.

    --
    you had me at #!
  94. Keep hoping by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >f anybody at the EU Commission is still in love >with Microsoft, that should wake them up. I hope.
    Unlikely.
    The american system sees all its politicians and policy makers being bought (legally) through lobbyists (the polite way to say bribery).
    The EU is run by bureaucrats.
    Which is worse?

    Personally, I think its worse to have some guy from three countries over whose only allegiance is to his job security to watch over your countries interest,...I dont trust our own politicians to look after my interests, Im gonna trust a foreign politician who is even less accountable than ours?

    Ask the europeans what they think of the (expensive)EU bureaucracy.

    Terry

  95. The needs of the many outweigh the selfish! by tobybot11 · · Score: 1

    I have nothing more to say then this is just plain ridiculous. Specifying the public domain as the competition, the enemy in an antitrust ruling? I bet the crony at Microsoft who thought this thing up is thinking he is "pretty smart". Little does he know the backslash that's coming for such impudence.

  96. Re:roman empire by 42.5 · · Score: 1

    OT but...

    exactly.

    The Roman empire blended Christianity with Roman mythology and became the holy roman empire that later become the catholic church.

    --
    Non illegemati carborundum est!
  97. What market? by mrbooze · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Samba is the only remaining major competitor of Microsoft in this market."

    Uh, what market is that? File serving? EMC, Network Appliance, SNAP, and others might challenge that. Maybe I really just don't understand what "market" is being referred to here.

  98. Why not just go completely Open Source... by Ghengis · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Why not just write an open source "Samba Service" for windows which will provide the same functionality without relying on the "Inner Party" (redmond) to provide a closed solution. As an added bonus, you won't have to wait for a "hotfix" or "service pack" when security issues arise.

    --

    "The best laid plans of mice and men gang oft agley..." - ROBERT BURNS

    1. Re:Why not just go completely Open Source... by quelrods · · Score: 1

      In fact this already exists. Read up on AFS. Not only does it provide the same services that samba or NFS provide it does so ENCRYPTED and can be used remotely across the net! It has full support on FreeBSD, OpenBSD, windows, and linux afaik.

      --
      :(){ :|:&};:
  99. Re:I don't understand... by inode_buddha · · Score: 1

    Nobody is asking a commercial company to dismantle itself and hand itself over to open source. All they are asking for is thoroughly documented API's. That does not require code. And BTW what makes SW so special as compared to any other industry?

    --
    C|N>K
  100. Why is Samba a conflict? by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    It seems that if the settlement says they have to open up the software to competitors then they should embrace Samba. The fact that it is open source doesn't impact one bit, the opening of the software to competitors. If anything, it guarantees it.

  101. Obviously, you don't... by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    Why a commercial company should be forced to dismantle and hand itself over to open source.

    It would be antitrust if they forced another company to do this. Why isn't it antitrust if they're forced to do it by an immensely powerful entity?

    It's not like Samba could be commercially harmed by Microsoft's actions. They're giving away their product for free! If anything (and I'm not saying this makes sense either) big business should be protected from open source because it wipes out their profits without any commercial gain and impacts taxable income!


    It is because of antitrust that they are being forced to do this. Applying a remedy to a monopoly isn't a violation of antitrust, it's to level the field.

    Samba wouldn't be harmed commercially, but any product that used it wouldn't be able to do so anymore, so they would be harmed.

    Big business is built on open source. In the case of Microsoft, exactly where do you think the tcp/ip, dns, and the rest of the internet came from? It was all publicly funded research and published as such. Guess what, that's open source (just not GPL).

    So the question should be, why should big business get to profit and have commercial gain of research that was funded by the public through taxes?

  102. No: the commission doesn't have a choice here by kylef · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This has already been discussed at length by the industry analysts last week when the EU indicated that it was likely to accept Microsoft's proposal. See http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/zd/200506 02/tc_zd/153327.

    There were effectively two requirements resulting from this case: Selling a version of Windows without Media Player, and Licensing the technology behind its Server protocols.

    It's the latter case that the EU can't do much about. Microsoft wants to charge a per-copy license fee for implementations of its Server protocols. The EU's ruling requires Microsoft to license the protocols, but explicitly allows the company to charge fees for the licenses. OSS projects hate this "per-seat" license because it doesn't work with their model of giving away copies without even keeping track of how many are in existence. So the OSS community is lobbying the EU Commission to reject ANY per-seat license fee, because it destroys their ability to use such a license.

    Unfortunately for the OSS community, the EU Commision doesn't just represent OSS groups: it also represents all the makers of proprietary software throughout Europe. And these proprietary software vendors actually support Microsoft's position here.

    See, per-seat licensing is an extremely common way to sell software; revenue is generated in direct proportion to the popularity of your product. These proprietary software vendors are scared at the thought that any company should be forced to give up this form of sales because it is "incompatible with OSS competition." So when the EU shops around this Microsoft proposal to industry leaders, most commercial software companies will probably indicate their satisfaction with Microsoft's per-seat license proposal. They certainly don't want to set up any legal precedents for future run-ins with Open Source competitors claiming THEIR license fees are "unfair."

    1. Re:No: the commission doesn't have a choice here by einhverfr · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In general I agree with your sentiments. However it raises a fundamental issue of antitrust law. (IANAL, etc)...

      In this case you have Microsoft, convicted of largely destroying the competitive marketplace, is now specifically precluding the one competitor they do have from using their documentation. THis is not a question of the fairness of per-seat licensing fees IMO, but rather a question of fostering a competitive marketplace.

      What I would like to see the EU do here is produce an opinion which says something to the effect that per-seat licensing is not acceptable here simply because there are no viable competitors left outside of the open source implimentations, and that such a judgement cannot be generalized to other companies where some semblance of competition still remains.

      The problem is that this proposal is specifically designed to protect Microsoft's monopoly in these areas. Furthermore, you have another issue in that such licensing fees could be further used to subsidize the sale of WIndows, thereby allowing them to drop their prices at will in order to destroy competition (hey, it would still be sold above cost once those licensing fees are applied against it).

      THis is not a good idea. But I agree that it should not be generalized too much. The market is not ready right now for too much pressure to be placed on closed source vendors as a whole....

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    2. Re:No: the commission doesn't have a choice here by temcat · · Score: 1

      Look, all this applies only to a convicted monopolist. I somehow doubt that 99,9% of these software companies have chances to become one.

  103. Re:I don't understand... by hey+hey+hey · · Score: 1
    The purpose of a government is to protect people from forces that are more powerful than themselves and which will harm them.

    I see you don't know very much about Goverments.

  104. Re:I don't understand... by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1

    Since when did Microsoft have "90%" of the server market?

    --
    -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
  105. EU...not US by jonwest101 · · Score: 1

    If the EU accepts this, that does not mean Red Hat, IBM, etc can't sue for anti trust practices in the US and I believe the smart people at those companies can win. Hell someone proved MS was in violoation of anti-trust in the first place.

  106. Re:I don't understand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who claimed that? We are talking about client market.

  107. Re:I don't understand... by pallmall1 · · Score: 1

    Sorry but Opensource is not a competitor.

    You've got it wrong. Open source most definitely is a competitor; it competes for my desktop, and does so very well. Just because it is unburdened by outrageous licensing terms and costs does not mean it has no value.

    If Microsoft is going to reside on the internet, they've got a responsibility to make their systems compatible with other systems using the same network. Otherwise, as a direct result of their monopoly, they would become defacto owners of all networks, controlling access to the data on all Windows machines connected to the network, regardless of the data owners wishes.
    Imposing fees and/or stifling conditions on alternative systems to access data that the data owner may wish to share freely only benefits Microsoft. It's known as "double-dipping." If the aforementioned data owner is using a Windows machine to serve his data, that owner has already paid a fee to Microsoft, and Microsoft should not be entitled to charge or otherwise burden third parties.

    --
    3 things about computers: they're alive, they're self-aware, and they hate your guts.
  108. Re:I don't understand... by devilspgd · · Score: 1

    Unless I'm mistaken, Microsoft isn't preventing interoperability.

    There is a difference between actively preventing interoperability, and not providing interoperability.

    In this case, Microsoft is simply refusing to publish API information to make interoperability easier, but they don't appear to be trying to prevent interoperability with the competition.

    --
    Give a man a fish, he'll eat for a day, but teach a man to phish...
  109. Re:Coward moderator, answer the damn question! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're pissing into the wind, my friend. This kind of moderation is actively supported by the people who run this joint. The OSDN isn't in the business of promoting balanced discussion - they're in the business of waging a propaganda war.

  110. Re:I don't understand... by Jussi+K.+Kojootti · · Score: 1
    "If MS had 50% of the market, SAMBA wouldn't have a case"

    Even in that case Samba would have a winning case.

    You have ALWAYS to allow for interoperatibility;...

    Now you're mistaken. Of course companies are allowed to create proprietary solutions. Government-forced interoperability is only possible (or acceptable) in special circumstances, such as a monopoly.

    Lexmark didn't have a patent on their toner chips and the reverse engineering that the competition did turned out to be perfectly legal even under the DMCA. If the cartridge-printer communication had been so complicated that it could not have been reverse engineered, I believe Lexmark would still be the only one selling toner for their printers.

  111. Leave samba behind by forgoil · · Score: 1

    Samba isn't especially great to begin with, regardless if we are talking about the protocol or the software. Why not simply make something WAY better (zeroconfig might play a role in it as well) and make that compatible with windows. Turn the table around, and start inventing instead of trying to be compatible with windows. Remember OS/2?

  112. Completely illegal move by MS? by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

    This would be struck down immediately if MS would have said "Okay, we'll open up if as long as nobody charges less for it than we do.". Why would it be different if they happened to exclude people based on how much they charge for their product?

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  113. Re:I don't understand... by rm69990 · · Score: 1

    From the Preamble of the GPL: Finally, any free program is threatened constantly by software patents. We wish to avoid the danger that redistributors of a free program will individually obtain patent licenses, in effect making the program proprietary. To prevent this, we have made it clear that any patent must be licensed for everyone's free use or not licensed at all. And a clause from the GPL: 7. If, as a consequence of a court judgment or allegation of patent infringement or for any other reason (not limited to patent issues), conditions are imposed on you (whether by court order, agreement or otherwise) that contradict the conditions of this License, they do not excuse you from the conditions of this License. If you cannot distribute so as to satisfy simultaneously your obligations under this License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you may not distribute the Program at all. For example, if a patent license would not permit royalty-free redistribution of the Program by all those who receive copies directly or indirectly through you, then the only way you could satisfy both it and this License would be to refrain entirely from distribution of the Program. In other words, if that patent arrangement with MS did not allow, say, Mandrake to also redistribute the software, then Novell and Red Hat have just violated the GPL and have lost their rights to distribute SAMBA. Please research before speaking.

  114. Re:I don't understand... by rm69990 · · Score: 1

    Sorry, should have previewed. The comment should look like this.

    From the Preamble of the GPL:

    Finally, any free program is threatened constantly by software patents. We wish to avoid the danger that redistributors of a free program will individually obtain patent licenses, in effect making the program proprietary. To prevent this, we have made it clear that any patent must be licensed for everyone's free use or not licensed at all.

    And a clause from the GPL:

    7. If, as a consequence of a court judgment or allegation of patent infringement or for any other reason (not limited to patent issues), conditions are imposed on you (whether by court order, agreement or otherwise) that contradict the conditions of this License, they do not excuse you from the conditions of this License. If you cannot distribute so as to satisfy simultaneously your obligations under this License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you may not distribute the Program at all. For example, if a patent license would not permit royalty-free redistribution of the Program by all those who receive copies directly or indirectly through you, then the only way you could satisfy both it and this License would be to refrain entirely from distribution of the Program.

    In other words, if that patent arrangement with MS did not allow, say, Mandrake to also redistribute the software, then Novell and Red Hat have just violated the GPL and have lost their rights to distribute SAMBA. Please research before speaking.

  115. Let me explain... by OwlWhacker · · Score: 1

    The only harm this could do to Microsoft is to weaken the power of its illegal monopoly. Of course, this was supposedly already weakened by the outcome of the anti-trust case a few years back, although they're now aware that the sentance was ineffective.

    Moving on...

    The HTML file format is open, along with plenty of others. The FTP protocol is open, along with plenty of others. Microsoft uses these without any harm to its business.

    Microsoft's closing of its file formats and protocols only serves to lock others out. This is made worse due to its monopoly position.

    Concerning your suggestion that big business should be protected from Open Source: you're saying that you'd sacrifice the freedom of many so that a single company can make loads of money?

    I'll tell you something, small to medium sized businesses should be protected from Microsoft, because it muscles into successful markets via its monopoly, and wipes out their profits for its own commercial gain.

    When Microsoft can no longer make money from its saturated markets, it muscles into other markets, killing off or hurting other businesses.

    Do you think that Microsoft should have this power, or that we should have fair competition?

    Do you want to aid a single company, or aid millions of cash-strapped companies who would benefit from Open Source software?

  116. The Issue is not Samba but Generic by Coeurderoy · · Score: 1

    Actually SAMBA is only a visible example.

    But clearly if the EC accept this it would actually means that the ONLY tool against the progressive expantion of M$'s monopolist position would be severely blunted.

    On the long run as long as M$ has their command of the end user PC they can get any market they want, it may take time, it may need intermediary steps, but NO propritary source company has any chance to really compete on the long run.

    Accepting interoperability and forbiding to make it Open Source is a way to make sure that all "competitors" need to use their business model, and in M$'s business model the "biggest wins" since it can allways affort to dump the price until they are the only game in town.

    So hopefully it will not work, if it does it would mean that we will have to create a fund to develop "public domain" "closed source" gateways.
    It would be an interesting test of the strength of the community, but above all it would be an hassle and a total waste of time.

  117. Irony by HogynCymraeg · · Score: 1

    The whole point of them being in the feckin dock in the first place is because of anti-competitive practices, with open source being highlighted as a victim of this. Now Microsoft are suggesting this? If the courts say "Yes ok" to thid then the whole thing is about kickbacks. Plain and simple.

  118. Re:SuSE is european? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SuSE is property of Novell.

  119. Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory? by wyoung76 · · Score: 1
    That's where I remember the quote from, and I'm not so sure that many other people know it anyway.

    Interesting that Wonka chocolates were loved by everyone in the world, and were far and away the most popular chocolate, but no one knew anything about the inner workings of the factory.

    In the end though, even those secrets became known.

  120. OS/2, how well we knew thee by wyoung76 · · Score: 1
    And yet, despite being so innovative and technically superior to Windows at the time, it still failed to capture the market.

    We should try to learn from the mistakes of the past, and not be cursed to repeat them time and time again.

  121. i like this sentience the most: by necromcr · · Score: 0

    Numerous changes to the text of the licenses to provide greater clarity and flexibility

    Notice the word flexibility. We all know what that means, do we? Upcomming era of:
    MS: "you werent allowed to do that!"
    USER: "What? I did nothing wrong!"
    MS: "Oh yes? Well, read EULA and be careful for the sentience might deviate by a margine set by Microsoft"
    USER: *duuh*

    --
    No more I say.
  122. Re:SuSE is european? by oxygene2k2 · · Score: 1

    still considerable german workforce and with a decade of history as a german company.
    and there's mandriva in france..
    hm.. trolltech (norway) might be interested in some win32 protocols, too

    and no, apart from SAP we don't have that many big software companies over here

  123. The answer to this is... by vhogemann · · Score: 1

    To adopt an Open Standart, one that doesn't have anything to do with Microsoft.

    I must admit that SMB make it easy to share files, but it is flawed, it belongs to Microsoft and they make it a moving target. And it's the only widely used and avaliable solution out there, NFS doens't count since it don't work with Windows.

    There are already some efforts to bring something new to the file-sharing arena, like Novell's iFolder that uses WebDAV to share files... and have Linux, Windows and MacOSX clients.

    We need more options.

    --
    ---- You know how some doctors have the Messiah complex - they need to save the world? You've got the "Rubik's" complex
  124. That bloke from REM more like by ltrm · · Score: 1
    I always thought Microsoft chairman Michael Mills was slowly turning into REM bass player Bill Gates....

    You be the judge http://www.remrock.net/remrock/gallery/picture.php ?jpgFile=rem/rem_95_01.jpg&picWidth=555&picHeight= 419/

  125. Re:Why not .... Lazyness of end user ? by what+about · · Score: 1

    It is a world of instant gratification a user wants to:

    - Use immediatly the new computer/server, do not want to download/install extra stuff (amazingly they however install lots of spyware)

    - Have the same user interface. If they are used to Windows file manager they wants the same look. (But some of them are happy to try the new bells from Microsoft and some others are still using windows 3.11)

    Maybe the trick is to market the thing as "you have to do only ONE thing", so, in this case, it would be "You have to install only one program" and the program is the same on both client and servers and is installed in all machines ?

    I wonder if there is a way to have people to think about "consequences" for their choices instead of just looking at instant gratification.

  126. Make Samba commercial, charge me $1 for it... by crivens · · Score: 1

    Make Samba commercial, charge me $1 for it, and I'll license out copies to others for no charge.

  127. I don't expect the comission to accept this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since this is what the EC wants to avoid in the first place, it will simple not accept it. Then MS still is nowhere.

  128. Re:Will it be rejected? And by whom? by davecb · · Score: 1
    If it is being "market tested", then the folks who are the testers should object.

    Companies/OSs using Samba include
    IBM AIX
    /Debian
    Red Hat
    SHI Irix
    Mandriva
    Novell and SuSE
    H-P
    Sun (Solaris and Cobalt)
    American Megatrends' StorTrends NAS
    Applianceware Optifacio
    EmergeCore Networks
    FreeBSD Systems
    and others. Are any of these on the list of "testers"?

    --dave

    --
    davecb@spamcop.net
  129. You got to be kidding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Samba a serious competitor to Microsoft, what have you been smoking???

  130. MS specifically excluding Samba from their proposa by glacote02 · · Score: 1

    1) Microsoft is a convicted recividivist in monopoly abuse. Not a competitive company. Special rules apply to monopolies.

    2) Microsoft's argument that they are obliged to turn over code is both false and beheaded by their insisting on excluding Samba and not Sun nor Novell.

    3) This very matter is of prime importance as it will set a precedent. For the first time in history you had an anti-trust authority specifically recognizing that a monopolist erected artificial and anti-competitive barrier to entry to its competitors. This is very very great news. Think to all other protocols (Exchange, MSN, etc.) and file formats (WordML, WMA). If the ruling stands before the Court then the software patents is way weaker because anti-trust regulations have the very power to authorize competitors to violate a patent to enact inter-operability - even if this provision is not in itself added to the european software patent bill.

    4) Microsoft understands this and will fight to hell against this very small portion of the proposed settlement.

    5) There are very bright and educated people in charge of this case at the EC Merger Task Force. They have been able to understand the problem and to explain it to the highest hierarchical level. This is an extremly impressive achievements considering the complexity of the subject and the usual compter-illiterateness of those.

    6) These very people will stand firm - so will Microsoft. The only remaining points IMHO are: a) wether the Court of justice will buy the "they force use to divulgate valuable trade secrets" or "they shall not exclude their last remaining competitor from inter-operability". b) wether the United States will make it a political matter of US vs Europe.

    b) is unlikely IMHO given the strong competitors to Microsoft in the US and the current Boeing vs Airbus battle.

    a) is possible but note that the EC was smart enough to include the wording "provided they are not specially innovative" in their mandate to provide specifications. This should let them the best luck in Court.

    My point is: there are bright people in charge and Microsoft will most probably lose this one. My belief is that Microsoft basically underestimated the abilities of the EC and thought that the real battle was in the US. They were wrong.

  131. personally.. by pjr.cc · · Score: 1

    while samba is the closest thing in the open source area in the form of a competitor to ms (in its own territory). Its really becoming less and less of a competitor all the time. can we spell active directory... most big corporates i've work in have either ads or (to a very much lesser extend) novell. in none of them have i been allowed to add a samba server as a ads member, and thats where it really hurts. In smaller companies, you can get away with samba, but i've always found trying to map between unix and windows is so painfull. But, thats whats so wrong with the whole situation, ms should be FORCED to open up any and EVERY protocol they are using, not just for O/S reasons, but for everyone who wants to make money trying to make a competitor in one of ms's (increasinly) large circle od self-dependence. To me its like if ford made gas tank nozzles so that you could only fill up at shell, both of them would be sued into non-existence, yet ms get away with this on a daily basis. Its sickening.

  132. microsoft and samba by chrisranjana.com · · Score: 0

    So legally microsoft is going to win over open source ! hmmm don't know what to say !

    --
    Chris ,
    Php Programmers.
  133. IDL descriptions useful by edxwelch · · Score: 2, Informative

    Very interesting artical. It also says that the IDL descriptions would be extreemly useful. If Microsoft was only concerned about sharing the source code then they would be happy to give these so called IDL descriptions.

    "There is information that the Samba developers want to see: the IDL descriptions for remote procedure calls. These underpin tasks such as adding users, and adding quotas and shares, and Samba developers have successfully decoded them over the wire. But it's hard work.

    "These IDL descriptions are *key* for providing interoperability with Microsoft clients," wrote the team in a submission to the EU commissioners earlier this year. "If these IDL descriptions were published, open and equal interoperability with Microsoft products would be greatly enhanced (although still not perfect)."

    Allison says the Samba team has requested the IDL definitions from Microsoft annually, most recently at the 2001 CIFS conference, without success."

  134. Re:Admiration? by pluther · · Score: 1

    I dunno about that. I know several companies, including the rather large one I currently work at, that rely heavily on Samba. There's no way we're getting rid of our several hundred Unix (Solaris, HPUX, & Linux) servers, so if new versions of Windows desktop won't talk to them, we may have no choice but to switch to Linux for our 20,000+ desktop systems. Such a switch would be tremendously expensive (in terms of time to do the switch and training for end-users), but probably less so than purchasing PC/NFS and a new version of Windows for every system. And management might finally see that there's a big payoff in long-term maintenance costs. As for software, we're already using a lot of Java-based systems for our in-house apps, so all we need to run it on a workstation is a good web browser. Openoffice can replace MS-Office without losing document portability (in fact, gaining some since they'll be readable from Unix as well). Email, desktop publishing, database, calendaring, project planning, software configuration management tools, etc., all have Linux equivalents (often, such as with the Rational suite, the same software, from the same vendor).

    --
    If the masses can keep you down, you're not the Ubermensch.
  135. Re:Coward moderator, answer the damn question! by acceleriter · · Score: 1

    1. Post flamebait.
    2. Pretend to be someone else and post a message as AC protesting flamebait moderation.
    ???
    4. Profit!

    --

    CEE5210S The signal SIGHUP was received.

  136. bad analogy award goes to... by WebCowboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's one thing to charge for an fork...but without food, that cutlery is just worthless hunks of metal and plastic.

    That argument makes no sense at all. For one thing, people CAN and SHOULD be able to offer free and "Free" food. My mother obtained strawberry plants--at no cost--form a fellow parishoner many years ago. They have since thrived and MULTIPLIED and now mum's strawberry patch is too large for her to manage. She put many plants in the compost but gave some to me so I could grow them in the back yard. The ladies out there also sell fresh strawberries, pies and preserves at farmer's markets in addition to giving away stuff to friends.

    There you have it--the biological version of "peer-to-peer file sharing". There is no law against the "unauthorised duplication and/or distribution of strawberries" that a large corporation can use to restrict individuals or potential competitors from making strawberries. International dumping laws are the closest thing, and they only apply to governments and large companies who sell at a loss to deliberately eliminate a competitor.

    Microsoft is trying to be like Monsanto--who has new breeds of oilseeds and grains and is trying to use the patent system to restrict and control a natural process. Neither is right in doing that. Microsoft's solution around CIFS is like Monsanto saying "we'll publish the information on our roundup-ready Canola, but that co-op of Saskatchewan farmers or that university research group cannot ever make a royalty-free version to compete with our variety".

    In both situations I think this is damaging to society--especially in ther case of agriculture. Food is much too important to be the proprietary domain of a molopolistic enterprise. While software is not an important basic need for people, it is nonetheless a vital part of the global economy, so I believe Micorosft's proposed remedy is entirely insufficient. It holds a monopoly over a protocol that enables information exchange important to the functioning of most business systems. MS has demonstrated in the past it cannot be trusted with SMB/CIFS as it has made changes to deliberately break reverse-engineered systems. Microsoft should've been ordered to relinquish control of the protocol to a standards body like ECMA/IEC/IEEE/ISO...and prohibited from applying restrictions of use which are obviously targeted at preventing their main competitor from operating under the terms of its own choosing.

  137. Re:roman empire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Okay, even more off-topic, but the most famous quote about the Holy Roman Empire is that it was neither Holy, Roman, or an Empire.

    What used to be called the Holy Roman Empire is what you would now call Germany. If we really need to identify a successor to Rome it would have to be the EU, or some abstract entity that is France+Germany

  138. +5 Insightful, Mod Parent Way Up! by ZephyrXero · · Score: 1

    Great analogy :)

    --
    "A truly wise man realizes he knows nothing."
  139. The EU comission does not represent entities. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Well, not companies or NGOs.

    They are suppossed to represent goverments which in turn represent citizens.

    The should be evaluating what is the best for the prosperity and good governance of the citizens of the EU, no who benefits amongst sofware companies, FLOSS proponents or any other *interested* party.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  140. The force strong in you is. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    The Dark Side of the force win should not.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  141. That is irrelevent by thelizman · · Score: 1

    Samba will still exist. People will still move to *nix/BSD running Samba because the initial cost is cheaper (and by many estimates, TCO).

    This changes nothing.

  142. Malice? by thelizman · · Score: 1

    If you're going to argue Microsoft engaging in SLAPP, then do so. But to characterize them using their market position to their own advantage is a) revealing your own ignorance and b) pure propaganda.

    And please...get a dictionary...look up monopoly. This is rediculous.

  143. incorrect by sum.zero · · Score: 1

    if C is accused of receiving a copy from B and using it in product D, then A can get an injunction against C distributing D while the 'facts' are sorted out in court.

    iirc, the onus is then on C to prove that they did clean room reverse-engineer D. in detail.

    sum.zero

  144. FOSS by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Personally I don't see a problem with paying for a closed source application if you need it, so long as your data is stored in an open format. Of course, in my experience, FOSS software is usually great for most jobs and I have no real need to buy closed software. And from my techie point of view, I prefer FOSS because I can fix bugs and hack in new features myself, but for the average user this is a non-issue.

    Like you I'm not against proprietary or closed software. In some cases closed software is better and in other FOSS is better. For instance while GIMP is good it still doesn't have all the capabilities of Photoshop. If I could I'd work on improving gimp but I'm a much better photographer than programmer, which is funny because programming is my current major and I've never worked as a professional photographer nor majored in it though I have taken classes.

    Falcon
  145. I do think $2 a gallon is pretty outrageous... by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    You don't want to live in Canada, Europe, a nd most places outside of the USA. If I recall right when I was last in Canada about 3-4 years ago I paid about $3 a gallon, which is still cheaper than prices in Europe. Actually with higher gas prices maybe more people will think before they get that gas goozling SUV.

    Falcon
  146. gas additives by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    We could still import the gas and fix the fuel with additives but for some reason we are not allowed to

    What additives are you going to add to gasoline, other than ethanol that is? There are known health risks with additives, MTBE for instance is a known carcinogen and has contaminated ground, drinking, water in California.

    Falcon
    1. Re:gas additives by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Any oxigenator additive. Basicaly thats what MTBE is and there are several others availible. California didn't have much dificult finding a replacment to thier MTBE problem.

      Right now it is cheaper to just reformulate the gasoline durring the distilation proccess. Using additives measn making half the profit they would normaly make. Instead we lock these fuels out of the country to allow the prices skyrocket so fewer companies can make even more profit.

      I'm all for taking the enviromental protections away, drilling all the oil in alaska (wich can be done enviromentaly responcably), and whatever else it takes to make fuel cost go below $1.45/gallon again. I think fuel prices might be a deciding factor in the next election. If not deciding factors, they will at least have an increasing role in who gets elected.

  147. Re:first post yea ha by Phantombantam · · Score: 0

    No argument there.

    --
    42
  148. MOD PARENT UP!! by guitaristx · · Score: 1

    Microsoft is abusing their monopolistic privileges by using anti-competetive tactics with the SMB protocol, and the parent is a perfect example of how this relates using a tangible example.

    --
    I pity the foo that isn't metasyntactic
  149. Canadian oil by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    In fact there is more crude oil under Canada now then there ever was in the Middle East. However oil from the middle east is cheap to pump. Much of that oil in Canada can't be pumped for less than $80/barrel or so. Oil is now selling for ~$50/barrel and everyone is complaining about gas prices! By contrast, int the middle east they can make money at $20/barrel.

    Much of that oil is from the Oil Sands in Alberta. To process, extract, the oil from the sands requires a lot of water which is then contaminated. The oil also needs a different refining process than what is done in the US now.

    Falcon