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Microsoft Hit With 280m Euro Fine

Craig Mason writes "The BBC Reports that "Microsoft has been fined 280.5m euros ($357m; £194m) by the European Commission for failing to comply with an anti-competition ruling. The software giant was hit by the fine following a long-running dispute between the US firm and EU regulators. The move follows a landmark EU ruling in 2004, which ordered Microsoft to provide rivals with information about its Windows operating system. EU regulators also warned Microsoft it could face new fines of 3m euros a day.""

527 comments

  1. WOW! but.... by i_want_you_to_throw_ · · Score: 3, Insightful

    MSFT has a market cap of 230-something billion. Substantial? Not really.

    1. Re:WOW! but.... by ThePilgrim · · Score: 2, Interesting

      True but the EU has allready started to ratchet up the fine.

      If MS arn't in complience by the end of the month then the fine goes up another .5M euros.

      The EU can start bumping up the fine as high as it wants now it has aggrement with the member states.

      --
      Wouldn't it be nice if schools got all the money they wanted and the army had to hold jumble sales for guns
    2. Re:WOW! but.... by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I think the important point here is that the EU fined Microsoft and did not cave to pressure from the United States and interested third parties. There's no appealing this one. God bless the EU!

      Now the question is will Microsoft comply?

    3. Re:WOW! but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the exact amount of money is not the important factor here. microsoft is fined because they did not comply with the law, even when the court told them to do so. the big news here is that microsoft is not willing to abide laws.

    4. Re:WOW! but.... by freedom_india · · Score: 0
      Microsoft could pull out of Europe totally.

      Ballmer: "We have been trying real hard to bring civilization to the hordes in EU and what do we get in return? FINES !!! Bah !"

      "Enough ! Time for us to close shop and go on."

      "EU courts will be paid the fine in Windows CDs and Office CDs."

      --
      "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
    5. Re:WOW! but.... by jspectre · · Score: 1

      and this is something new? shocking?

      besides, in the US, MS now writes their own laws thanks to their lobbiests & "donations" to politicans..

      --

      abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz

    6. Re:WOW! but.... by Red+Flayer · · Score: 4, Informative

      Market cap is not the important figure here, since that doesn't represent the actual capital that MSFT has on hand, but rather the market valuation of their shares. It's the income statement you want to look at.

      For the FY ending 6/30/05, MSFT had a net income of US$ 12.2 billion. So, a fine of US $357 million IS significant -- it's roughly 3% of their net income.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    7. Re:WOW! but.... by mrchaotica · · Score: 0
      Microsoft could pull out of Europe totally.

      And the EU could invalidate (or confiscate) all of Microsoft's copyrights in the interest of the State(s).

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    8. Re:WOW! but.... by arivanov · · Score: 2, Informative

      The fine is as per old fine rules which caps it at 10% of annual turnover per year of misconduct which will be unpleasant for Microsoft, but can be sustained for a very long time. Even the disobedience fine is only 50% of the period of breaking the rules after the ruling which is painfull, but not lethal.

      Unfortunately the commission cannot apply the new rules which set a cap for the fine at 30% of backdated turnover and 100% of turnover past the violation. Now that level of fine would simply put any company out of business so even serial offenders like MSFT will have to sit up and notice.

      For more info see here: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/06/28/ec_fines_i ncrease/

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    9. Re:WOW! but.... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's still less than they ended up paying Eolas for patent infringement, however.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    10. Re:WOW! but.... by fabs64 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No... it's a regulated market, and the EU has quite a bit of say funnily enough.

    11. Re:WOW! but.... by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 1

      Eolas = 1 off payment, this Europe thing could be ongoing.

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    12. Re:WOW! but.... by milamber3 · · Score: 1

      Actually, I would think that with 10.2B shares outstanding http://finance.yahoo.com/q/ks?s=MSFT the fine of 280M could actually do some damage. They are expected to earn about 30 cent per share http://finance.yahoo.com/q/ae?s=MSFT. 280M Euro = ~ $357M US so dividing by the number of shares it comes out to a loss of ~3.5 cents per share. That's a 10% earnings miss for the quarter of record, something wallstreet could care about.

    13. Re:WOW! but.... by hey! · · Score: 3, Informative

      You're right that Market Cap is not the right thing to look at, at least in the short term. But income, while important, is not the full picture either.

      What you really want to do is look at the balance sheet and in particular at cash and cash equivalents, which are assets that can readily converted into cash on short notice. Also the cash flow statement. Cash is what determines whether you can meet your short term obligations, such as paying employees and vendors. Cash equals flexiblity and security. If you have cash on hand, you can weather a loss on your income statement. Likewise if you have healthy income, but it's in assets that cannot be liquidated, you can end up with a healthy income yet not be able to pay bills. Income is like food; if you don't have it, you're going to have to curtail your activities soon. Cash is like air: if you don't have it, you're dead right now.

      I once worked for a company that lost money for seven years straight. But it paradoxically grew all those years, in fact it continually lost money because it was plowing all its income into producing growth. The key was that the business genreated cash, and they could always pay last quarter's creditors out of this quarter's cash flow. The trick is to engineer a soft landing, because soon or later cash flow growth is going to falter, and the income statement buzzards will be roosting on your dying cash carcass.

      I haven't followed Microsoft closely in recent years, but historically MS is a business that generates loads of cash. Last time I looked, they had something like a billion and a half of cash equivalents on hand, and $350 million would represent something like 5% of their annual operational cash flow (not counting investments). It's enough on the income and cash side to make you sit up and take notice, but not a fatal blow. If they thought they could outmaneuver the EU regulators, they might well tighten their belts for a couple of quarters to end up in a stronger position later.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    14. Re:WOW! but.... by gclef · · Score: 1
      There's no appealing this one.

      Really?

      The software giant will appeal against the fine which follows a long-running dispute between it and EU regulators.
      (from The BBC article on the subject.)
    15. Re:WOW! but.... by dada21 · · Score: 0

      You have it backwards.

      The mad majority decided to give most of their individual and State's rights away to a central authority.

      The central authority now wields excessive and unconstitutional power.

      Of course powerful people will buy that power.

      Regulating lobbying (speech ) and finance (express) is only more unconstitutional; how about strongly curbing federal power. Say by 90-95%?

    16. Re:WOW! but.... by badonkey · · Score: 1

      For the FY ending 6/30/05, MSFT had a net income of US$ 12.2 billion. So, a fine of US $357 million IS significant -- it's roughly 3% of their net income.

      Make sure we're all clear that net income is their profit. This isn't going to impact their budget for anything, since it is, by definition, the money that's left over after all the bills are paid.

      This will come out of cash that piles up and gets distributed to shareholders in the future, and has zero potential to impact a current budget. It's also only ~10 days worth. Not such a big deal.

    17. Re:WOW! but.... by Red+Flayer · · Score: 3, Interesting

      FYI, I'm an accountant.

      Whether or not MSFT can pay the fine out of cash is moot (though they can), my point was that the significance of the fine is better explained in terms of the income statement than their market cap.

      As to your example of a growing company continually operating at a loss in order to self-finance growth capital... being cash positive is important (crucial even). But this business model is fatally flawed... the question is not if that company will go bust, it is when. It's like a Ponzi scheme -- you're dependent on growth to meet your cash requirements. 'Engineering a soft landing' -- do you mean changing allocation of cash from growth investment to paying down debt?

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    18. Re:WOW! but.... by tsa · · Score: 1

      That would be fantastic. Finally we would have computers in our university that Just Work, and not have to be reinstalled every so many months. The only problem would be that our SEM, e-beam, FIB and some other equipment then will not work until new software is written for it. Most of the other software we use also runs on other OS-es luckily.

      I wonder how long it would take a Western society to change to Linux / OS X if one day, suddenly, all MS software had disappeared from all computers.

      --

      -- Cheers!

    19. Re:WOW! but.... by bcattwoo · · Score: 1

      As one of the posters below points out, that 10% miss might be meaningful if it was the result of some unforeseen negative turn in MS's business prospects. But unless you think MS will be fined like this on an ongoing basis (or paying the fine will impact their ability to do business), there is no reason to expect that the earnings will not jump back to their previous level in the following quarter.

    20. Re:WOW! but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First off, what does market cap have to do with the ability to pay a fine? Market cap is the aggregate value of outstanding stock; it represents assets of the investors, not the company itself.

      Now let's pretend that Microsoft had $230B (USD) on hand. The fine is somewhat more than 0.1% of that, assuming it doesn't get increased. (As an aside, the fine is quoted in Euros... I'd say it's more like a $300M (USD).) So, would a single event taking 0.1% of your assets be significant? I bet you'd think so if it were your assets in question.

      It's become very trendy to spout off about how Microsoft has so much money that fines don't matter to them and they're above the law. It's also very ridiculous.

      Almost as ridiculous as a system that says "Do this or we'll fine you", then after you take measures that you say bring you into compliance, says "we're going to take a long time to decide if you're really in compliance, and if at the end of that we decide you haven't been, we'll fine you retroactively."

    21. Re:WOW! but.... by hey! · · Score: 1

      the question is not if that company will go bust, it is when.

      Well, obviously it's not sustainable. But while it shares certain features with a Ponzi scheme (e.g. you have to know when to get off the rocket), it's not necessarily the same because you aren't dealing with just moving cash around between investors.

      Engineering a soft landing' -- do you mean changing allocation of cash from growth investment to paying down debt?

      Exactly.

      The business in question generated lots of cash, and its major expense was producing sales growth. The losses weren't huge, and the biggest expenses could be readily cut. They could have weathered the storm, coasting on their cash flow, and they would have been into healthy positive income quickly.

      The key was to avoid hubris and greed which tempted you to put off fixing the problem just one more year. The growth in cash financed a lot of perks which wouldn't be there under a belt tightening regime. In the end, the little people, the ones on the lower end of the pay scale, they were the ones who got hurt. The people who engineered the debacle were ousted, but not after they'd acquired a fairly tidy little fortune. I'd seen the writing on the wall and left several months before it hit the fan.

      The business survived, contracting to slightly more than it's status quo ante size. Had they not waited until circumstances forced their hand, they could have kept a lot more of the sales volume gains and customer base.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    22. Re:WOW! but.... by nickco3 · · Score: 1

      You've got this backwards. All Microsoft products being withdrawn from Europe is the EU's nuclear option against Microsoft, *not* the other way around.

      Microsoft would probably survive such a move, albeit in some reduced form. Gates and Ballmer certainly wouldn't, the shareholders would have their heads on a pole.

      --
      -- Nick "Hallo this is Beel Gates, und I pronounce weendows as ... WEENdows"
    23. Re:WOW! but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly.

      Why don't MS just comply? Shipping an EU version of XP would be a piece of cake, they could even ramp up the price just to take the piss - we all know the the vast majority of morons would still buy it anyway. What does MS have to gain from wasting shareholder's money on bloody FINES? If MS wants to get into a pissing contest with the EU, they're gonna lose eventually, no matter how macho their corporate culture is.

    24. Re:WOW! but.... by Phillup · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Microsoft could pull out of Europe totally.

      And get the attention of every other country that uses their software, making it painfully obvious how stupid they've been by locking up their data in a format they don't have access to?

      I don't think so...

      You think ODF has a little momentum right now? This would litterally trigger warp speed!!

      --

      --Phillip

      Can you say BIRTH TAX
    25. Re:WOW! but.... by AcidLacedPenguiN · · Score: 1

      I think the news isn't that microsoft is not willing to abide by laws, the news is that they can actually be punished on them. It will be interesting to see how they react to this. Personally, I think a law abiding microsoft is better than a non-law abiding microsoft. We'll see if they can maintain their current market dominance by good practice and service, which is what every anti-microsoft activist has really always wanted right?
      I know some just want microsoft dead, but I bet the vast majority would be happy if microsoft was on top by being the best there is, and not by pushy, questionable, and morally bankrupt tactics.

      --
      disclaimer: I've been known to store numbers in my ass for which to dig out when quantities are required.
    26. Re:WOW! but.... by Phillup · · Score: 1

      True but the EU has allready started to ratchet up the fine.

      Have the EU actually gotten any MS money from all this?

      (I'm thinking there may be appeals, etc that MS can use to pull an SCO and not have to cough up a thing for decades)

      Just wondering...

      --

      --Phillip

      Can you say BIRTH TAX
    27. Re:WOW! but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All the prices around the world for MS products just went up to make up the loss. Dont think they will not do it? Think again. Everyone you know who uses MS products just had the price of their software go up. They have been ruled a monopoly in Europe and the US. So in econ terms being a monopoly means they can set price at the level that means max profit. Their fixed cost just went up. They will pass that cost along.

      So YEAAA EU for raising the prices all the rest of us have to pay. THANK *OH* THANK YOU.

      This is just a plain and simple smash and grab job of Microsofts money. The EU wanted some money. Now they got it. They will also find that they are paying more for their software suddenly in the next round of negotiations (MS will pay them of course). As guess what? The EU has more money to spend on this sort of thing. The marketing folks at MS will smell the blood in the water. But most of this money will end up right back in microsofts hands and THEN some...

      Why do I think it is a smash and grab? MS did exactly what the EU wanted no more no less. Then the EU comes back and says your not doing enough. Maybe they are doing enough maybe the are not. But look at the remedies that were put in place. Remove a feature from a product, and document some stuff. These were hand slaps to set in place a way to get more money later.

      Will this cause some people to switch to open source. Oh probably. But most people will just pay the pipper as it is simpler and what they have 'works'.

      Follow the money folks....

    28. Re:WOW! but.... by Conor+Turton · · Score: 1
      (I'm thinking there may be appeals, etc that MS can use to pull an SCO and not have to cough up a thing for decades)

      They have to pay the fine whilst they appeal. If their appeal is successful, they get their money back. THey were given a stay of execution of fine collection to give them a chance to fall in line but they refused to so now the fine is being collected.

      --
      Conor "You're not married,you haven't got a girlfriend and you've never seen Star Trek? Good Lord!" - Patrick Stewart
    29. Re:WOW! but.... by spun · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but modern day anarchists recognize that "The State" is old hat. Corporations are the new state. Oh, you can claim they are creations of the state, and they were, but face it, they are where the power is these days. Corporations control the state, not the other way around. Do away with the state without checking the power of the corporations and you have done nothing.

      But that's exactly what Marx predicted that capitalism would lead to. Too bad that Bakunin's prediction of what Marxism would lead to was equally as prescient. But just because you are anarcho-capitalist doesn't mean you have to discount the power of corporations and focus on the state. Power is power, whatever the name.

      Our present problems aren't the fault of a central state, they are a direct failing of the capitalist system, which itself is a natural outgrowth of unfair and unjust property laws. Property is theft, plain and simple: You fence off land and claim it as your own, you are stealing. It was once everybody's land, now it's just yours. How'd that happen?

      Here's an idea, rather than curbing a democratically controlled system (the state) in favor of one where money and power naturally concentrate in fewer and fewer hands, how about we do away with real property? Own your own home, clothes, tools, etc. but not land. Control land and natural resources democratically. Or at least put a solid cap on ownership. No one person needs assets worth more than 100 times what the poorest own, nor do they deserve it, nor will it motivate them more than they already are by their inner passions.

      I'm sure you are different, but most anarcho capitalists and libertarians I have known just want unlimited property rights with no responsiblities. They have kind of a "I've got mine, the rest of you can fuck off" attitude.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    30. Re:WOW! but.... by dada21 · · Score: 1

      Corporations control the state, not the other way around. Do away with the state without checking the power of the corporations and you have done nothing.

      I agree with the first part, but if you do away with the State-enforcement of the corporations "legal" monopolies, you won't have megacorporations in the vast majority of markets where they exist right now.

      Our present problems aren't the fault of a central state, they are a direct failing of the capitalist system, which itself is a natural outgrowth of unfair and unjust property laws. Property is theft, plain and simple: You fence off land and claim it as your own, you are stealing. It was once everybody's land, now it's just yours. How'd that happen?

      I don't believe that a fence is enough. If you can make your property better and maintain it, it should be yours. I don't see any possible way for an individual to make more than a few acres better with their own hands. If they hire other people to maintain that property, why would the landworkers do it when they could just stake out their own unmaintained land and "own" it through hard work? Govermments maintain property lines when it could be done in a more voluntary way. There will always be the need to defend yourself in some way, but I believe that defense can be better performed by like-minded people cooperative to defend one another, not through the force of government but through voluntary cooperation.

      The capitalist system did not fail -- it was State-mercantlism or State-marketeering that failed. Property is not theft unless government takes from one (or taxes one) to give to another. That is theft.

      No one person needs assets worth more than 100 times what the poorest own, nor do they deserve it, nor will it motivate them more than they already are by their inner passions.

      I disagree. Money is nothing more than a store of my time that I previously worked for another person. A person only hires me to perform a task or build a product that they can not do themselves in the same amount of time that I would charge them ('money'). If it costs you $50 to plant an orange tree, you'd rather pay me $1 for the orange -- that is $1 of "time" you saved that I now have. I can use that stored time to save ME time by paying someone else to perform a service or build a product.

      If I am 100,000x more productive than you are at a given task, why shouldn't I be able to acquire that time savings? By putting caps on items, you decrease the risk people will take because you're destroying the opportunity of reward. This is the failure of socialism -- they think they can put caps on rewards, but they don't put bottom-level limits on risk. The free market offers both, though, without government interference or mandates.

    31. Re:WOW! but.... by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      One problem with allowing criminals to keep their loot, if they would just promise to be good from now on, is that the financial leverage their ill gotten gains provides them is in itself an unfair advantage.

      If I steal from you, driving you into bankruptcy so that your children become beggars, and then 40 years later give back exactly the same amount I stole, is this fair? Or do I also owe for the interest? And what about pain and suffering?

    32. Re:WOW! but.... by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1
      Almost as ridiculous as a system that says "Do this or we'll fine you", then after you take measures that you say bring you into compliance, says "we're going to take a long time to decide if you're really in compliance, and if at the end of that we decide you haven't been, we'll fine you retroactively."

      So you think it would be better if the overall fines MS had to pay were less if the company's execs lie than if they tell the truth that they are still not in compliance?

      Honestly, it's ridiculous that Microsoft needs to be babysat in the first place.

    33. Re:WOW! but.... by XnavxeMiyyep · · Score: 1

      Well, if it DISAPPEARED, the switch would probably be relatively quick.

      --
      I put the 't' in electrical engineering.
    34. Re:WOW! but.... by milamber3 · · Score: 1

      I think that the street could easily react irrationally to a miss on earnings. You're looking at the situation very logically but there have been plenty of times that stocks have tanked on a miss when logically the next quarter should be just fine.

    35. Re:WOW! but.... by spun · · Score: 1

      Ah, good old dada21. Whenever I'm looking for a good argument, as opposed to getting hit on the head lessons, which is what most conversation here amounts to, you are one of the ones I turn to. :)

      Remember, there are natural monopolies as well as state sponsored ones, and in a capitalist system, all markets will eventually become monopolistic as money and power concentrate and corporations raise the barriers of entry. It's unavoidable.

      Now, I'm with you at least part way on working the land giving you a right to it. But you can't really work it by yourself unless you fence it off first. Gone are the days of unclaimed land waiting to be taken. 20,000 years gone, at least. The thing is, even before the land was improved by your work, it was being used as part of an ecosystem required for the lifestyle of indigenous peoples who probably had only a vague concept of ownership. So you take the land and start working it, but they still want to keep hunting and gathering there. What right do you have to keep them off? And where in the world would you ever have found land that wasn't already claimed and used in this way?

      What moral right do one group of people have to exclude another group from using land? Did that other group sign a contract saying they wouldn't use it? What happens to the people who don't own any land when all the land is owned?

      Unergulated capitalism failed. Lassez faire failed. We have regulations for a reason, because as bad as they are, the alternative has been proven worse.

      As for your argument regarding ownership caps, how in the world could you be 100,000 times as productive as someone else without a social system backing you up? Well then, it isn't really you that is productive, it is the system. If you want absolute rights to the fruits of your labor, you better make damn sure you aren't counting the fruits of someone else's labor as your own. That is the thing most anarcho capitalists forget. No man is an island. The good or bad that we do is the result of society and it's impact on us as individuals. Responsiblity is shared. Profit should be too.

      And what of inheritance? Why should one person be allowed to start out with advantages that others don't have, when that person contributed nothing of value? What you do to earn your dollar impacts all of us, and that gives all of us a moral right to say what you do to earn your dollar, as well as how many dollars you deserve to earn. What you seem to want is a world where you are free to do what you want without worrying about the impact that has on others, unless those others have the money and power to fight what you do economically or in court.

      We have a state, laws, and government so that we can have some say in what others do when it impacts us. If you don't like it, might I suggest living by yourself on an island where what you do really doesn't impact others? As a bonus, you will get to keep all the fruits of your labor. Not many people would realistically make that trade-off because they know that what they get from living in a cooperative society far outweighs the burdens. Again I will say, anarcho-capitalists and libertarians want the benefits of cooperative society without any of the burdens and they think the free market is the magic fairy dust that will get them to that never-never land.

      You yourself propose a cap on ownership, no more land than what one can improve with one's own hands. You just don't want to cap money. Well, without a cap on money ownership, how long do you think the cap on land ownership would last? Do a thought experiment and try to tell me how unlimited ownership of wealth would not lead to concentration of power, which would lead to concentration of ownership of real property, which would lead to a world where a small oligarchy owned 90% of everything and we all become their virtual slaves because we own nothing and have no way of supporting ourselves except by doing what they tell us. How exactly do you propose to keep that from happening?

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    36. Re:WOW! but.... by dada21 · · Score: 1

      Whenever I'm looking for a good argument, as opposed to getting hit on the head lessons, which is what most conversation here amounts to, you are one of the ones I turn to. :)

      I appreciate that. Most people think I am a profit-monger (because of advertising and affiliate links on my blogs), but my favorite form of profit is gaining information, experience and weapons to fuel debate! In fact, I give away nearly 100% of my blog income (from advertising) to the users on my blog forum. So if you're looking to debate some more and get paid for it, pop on over :) I love contrasting viewpoints and we need more regulars.

      Now, I'm with you at least part way on working the land giving you a right to it. But you can't really work it by yourself unless you fence it off first.

      This is true, to a point. Understand that morally I am against leasing, rents and usury (I'm a Christ follower, so I am against borrowing of any kind when there is interest). I don't believe I can morally force YOU to not lease, rent or pay usury to another, though. In my mind, you can fence off, morally, as much land as you can maintain and protect. If you try to fence off more land than you can maintain and protect, you'll spend more time running around and battling for your land. So will the other guy. This is the basis for war -- someone wants more than they can rightly handle. I think the terms of war from an anarcho-capitalist viewpoint make the most sense: someone would rather risk life than try to work hard themselves.

      Remember, there are natural monopolies as well as state sponsored ones, and in a capitalist system, all markets will eventually become monopolistic as money and power concentrate and corporations raise the barriers of entry. It's unavoidable.

      Here is where I am forced to disagree. I do think that in a mercantlist system, such as the US, power does concentrate to large entities because of two HUGE problems: #1 the state can and does control licensing (business and skill) which creates artificial barrier to entry, and #2 the state can and does control money. If a poor person wants to save so they or their kids can start a business, they'll lose. Government fiat inflation makes savings worthless (even stock market investments are only up about 500% in 100 years, a terrible return on investment from my free market experience in all my businesses). Government creates power concentrations by offering the largest elite cronies the benefit of either money control ("banking") or fast and cheap access to money before inflation destroys it ("federally granted loans"). If a large company can access new fiat money before it is devalued, they'll win over the little guy who can not access the same money as easily or as quickly. I look at the fraud committed in the past 10 years by government leasing of gold reserves at 1% interest to the powerful elite (see the Chevreux report on the GATA discovered scandal). This is a HUGE collusion between big government and big-government-protected business. In a free market, we have to assume that money is also governed by the free market of supply and demand. This greatly reduces the power of the elite businesses. A huge business has huge bureaucracy even without government requirements -- a small business can often times beat out the large ones. I have restricted the growth of my IT business to 30% maximum a year for the past 18 years. I refused 2 offers to go dotcom, where some of my friends took the money. Those friends are bankrupt and I am still growing strong. I also put my savings into strong money (gold, silver and hard assets) rather than in fiat money or in stock market mumbo jumbo.

      What moral right do one group of people have to exclude another group from using land? Did that other group sign a contract saying they wouldn't use it? What happens to the people who don't own any land when all the land is owned?

      I wish I was on my laptop now (typing from my PDA at the mome

    37. Re:WOW! but.... by Dzonatas · · Score: 1

      Has it been said exactly where the overall flow of the money is going? I mean it is a US firm and the money got put into EU hands. Is this also a way for the EU to take US money? Microsoft may deserve it, but does that mean in return it should affect the US security?

    38. Re:WOW! but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft could pull out of Europe totally.

      That would be the beginning of the end for them. OS X/Linux popularity would skyrocket, Linux would become fit for the mainstream almost overnight, and most vitally of all, just about every piece of software would be ported to other systems immediately.

      They aren't that stupid. Sadly.

    39. Re:WOW! but.... by jxyama · · Score: 1

      I've always hated this stupid claim. If your net worth was $200k (probably about right for most /.ers who own a condo, say...) and you were told to pay $2,000 and $60 per month, that wouldn't bother you?

    40. Re:WOW! but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Understand that morally I am against leasing, rents and usury (I'm a Christ follower, so I am against borrowing of any kind when there is interest)"

      How can it be possible, except if you just don't think about consecuences of your own opinions?

      You already stated that money is a form to exchange and store time, didn't you?

      Well, when I lend you money I'm giving you time (you will be able to buy that house *now* instead of in an uncertain future). By your own reasonements, since I gave you time, you must owe money to me! If I lend you one grand, I'm giving you a grand that you will return me intact, *and* time that you will need to pay exactly as if I sell you an orange. Its only that the price for that time is not named "price tag" but "interest", just that.

      "In my mind, you can fence off, morally, as much land as you can maintain and protect."

      You sayeth! If I'm 100.000 times more productive than you how shouldn't I take 100.000 more money? But what can I do with all that money? Well, I can test if I find someone that decides that his time is more productively spent on, say, effectively *labouring* the land than putting fences, so I can pass him part of my time storage (money) in exchange for his land. From now on, he will labour the land peacefully, and I'll do my best so he can labour the most effective way. Of course I'll do, it's my land now!

      "Government creates power concentrations by offering the largest elite cronies the benefit of either money control ("banking") or fast and cheap access to money before inflation destroys it"

      What you seem to forget is that it's exactly the other way around! Since I'm powerful (by whatever means) I am already quite able to piss you off! Sooner or later ten people will decide you exchange their time for your money bribing you. You are there alone, in your "one-man" land. How do you expect to...

      Bah... that's simply ludicrous.

      If you just can't see two or three obvious things, you are already blind beyond salvation. I won't go any further.

    41. Re:WOW! but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One should compare with their net income from European Union Countries. It's pretty significant. The commission can run its office with that fine for quite some time till they find some one else.

    42. Re:WOW! but.... by dada21 · · Score: 1

      Well, when I lend you money I'm giving you time (you will be able to buy that house *now* instead of in an uncertain future). By your own reasonements, since I gave you time, you must owe money to me! If I lend you one grand, I'm giving you a grand that you will return me intact, *and* time that you will need to pay exactly as if I sell you an orange. Its only that the price for that time is not named "price tag" but "interest", just that.

      I agree with you 100% -- loans are currently what is driving many economies. On a moral consideration, I believe that the Bible is against buying what you can not afford right now. If I can't afford a home, I shouldn't have left my parents' house until I could. I believe that many people ruins their lives in chase of what they can't afford. I left home early but I bought my first (ghetto) condo at 18. I bought my first house at 21, and I've NEVER had a mortgage. My family was one of the poorest in our neighborhood -- it was through saving and working 3-4 jobs at one time that I saved enough to buy a home and never worry about a mortgage ever again.

      I believe that (paraphrased) "To the lender the borrower is a slave." I see very VERY little reason to borrow money. I do believe in a group of people working together to help make a business profitable. Shares over bonds. If someone in my family can't pay their rent or mortgage, they are free to live with me (and be accountable to me for their work actions during that time) right now. If someone at my congregation has problems paying their bills, I'll move them into my spare room tomorrow if they're willing to be accountable to me for their actions. I won't support a drug user (I'll help them kick the habit) or a spendthrift if they're not responsible for their actions. Yet I would never force others to follow my moral beliefs.

      You sayeth! If I'm 100.000 times more productive than you how shouldn't I take 100.000 more money? But what can I do with all that money? Well, I can test if I find someone that decides that his time is more productively spent on, say, effectively *labouring* the land than putting fences, so I can pass him part of my time storage (money) in exchange for his land. From now on, he will labour the land peacefully, and I'll do my best so he can labour the most effective way. Of course I'll do, it's my land now!

      You are 100% correct -- why not just hire people to maintain your land? From an anarcho-capitalist viewpoint, it IS acceptable. Yet from my moral viewpoint, it is more likely that the individual and his family will do a more efficient job of maintaining their own land that if I pay them to maintain mine. I'm not saying this is fact (although it turns out to be true more often than you realize!), but it makes sense from my experience. Give your kid a car and he'll ruin it more likely than not. Let your kid buy their own car and they'll treat it better, more likely than not. If someone can maintain their own land and own it, why would they work for your to maintain that land, unless what you pay them is more than they get out of their own land? Surely a few wealthy people can own more land than the poor, but in my viewpoint of anarcho-capitalism, the poor can own whereas in a democratic statist system, they rarely own anything and rent forever.

      What you seem to forget is that it's exactly the other way around! Since I'm powerful (by whatever means) I am already quite able to piss you off! Sooner or later ten people will decide you exchange their time for your money bribing you. You are there alone, in your "one-man" land. How do you expect to

      How can you bribe someone if there is no government-mandated monopoly to exercise force? There is no point in bribing someone if there is no government to bribe! If someone performs a job for an individual more efficiently, then HIRE them -- that isn't bribery. It is definitely NOT the other way around, bribery comes only when there is an unacceptable ability to use force against others. Why

    43. Re:WOW! but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why the hell should we care about your shitty little countries? If Europe starts trying to throw it's weight around they will find that the US doesn't have the greatest armed forces the world has ever seen for nothing. Let's see what Paris says when it's a smoking heap of rubble!

    44. Re:WOW! but.... by Karma+Farmer · · Score: 1
      Ah, good old dada21. Whenever I'm looking for a good argument, as opposed to getting hit on the head lessons, which is what most conversation here amounts to, you are one of the ones I turn to. :)
      If you think dada21 provides anything like a good argument, then you've been the student in far too many "getting hit on the head lessons."
    45. Re:WOW! but.... by Petrushka · · Score: 3, Insightful

      People keep bringing this lunatic idea up whenever this topic comes up. It's silly. Just remember this: it would be about as intelligent for Microsoft to pull its products from the EU as it would be for Microsoft to pull its products from the US. I.e., not very.

    46. Re:WOW! but.... by mengel · · Score: 1

      Basically, at this point MS has to pay the money. If they win the appeal, they might get it back...

      --
      - "History shows again and again how nature points out the folly of men" -- Blue Oyster Cult, 'Godzilla'
    47. Re:WOW! but.... by antek9 · · Score: 1

      It is not US money, it is Microsoft money, simple as that. You may call it the shareholders' money as well, but that would restrict it to US only money even less.

      --
      A World in a Grain of Sand / Heaven in a Wild Flower,
      Infinity in the Palm of your Hand / And Eternity in an Hour.
    48. Re:WOW! but.... by spun · · Score: 1

      "Good argument" isn't "Something I happen to believe in." It's also relative, and anyone who can present a cogent, reasoned argument on slashdot is something of a rarity. Not unique, certainly, or I wouldn't keep coming back, but rare enough. Am I convinced by his arguments? No, not really. Do his responses provide a fresh perspective towards my own thoughts? Yes, definitely. I like to engage in dialectic, where the goal is not for me to convince the other, nor them to convince me, but for us both to strengthen our mental map of the universe by seeing how that map stands up to an outside observer.

      I'm guessing you just don't like his philosophy. In that regard, he's far more moderate and reasoned than a lot of self professed anarcho-capitalists out there. At least he has the good graces not to call himself a libertarian. You do that and you have to PROVE to me that you aren't an idiot afterwards.

      So what is it? Is it "That guy can't string two connected thoughts together in a cogent fashion" or is it "I don't like the thoughts he's stringing together?" If it's the first, I disagree. If it's the second, well, buh-bye, and thanks for playing. Here's a copy of "Slashdot, the home game" you might enjoy.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    49. Re:WOW! but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you white?

      Do you know what that means?

      Do you know what language you artlessly crafted your little message in?

    50. Re:WOW! but.... by Karma+Farmer · · Score: 1
      I'm guessing you just don't like his philosophy...
      Interesting. You make an unsupported claim, and then spend the rest of your post following up that claim with irrelevant flamebait insults. If I didn't know better, I'd guess you're just dada, astroturfing yourself.
    51. Re:WOW! but.... by CrackedButter · · Score: 1

      You haven't ever considered moving out accounting and maybe doing something like banking instead of lion taming have you?

    52. Re:WOW! but.... by spun · · Score: 1

      What, me flamebait? Why I ne... Oh wait, yes, yes I do that all the time. :) Anyway, flamebait aside (And it WAS an aside, it's only at the very end. Rest of the posting indeed. One whole sentance of flamebait, eeeek! Run away!) I'm actually curious, do you just not agree with his arguments or do you think he doesn't put together a good argument?

      If I were dada, I wouldn't astroturf myself unless there was some profit to be made, (Haha, only kidding, dada... Or am I?)

      Anyways, it's not an unsupported claim. That is EXACTLY what I am guessing. I know, because I made the guess. See, there's that word, guess. Guess what it means? Bingo! You win the prize, yes it means, "I am thinking something unsupported by logical facts."

      What's so wrong about not liking someone's philosophy that you feel like my even mentioning it is some kind of attack on you?

      Here I go again, with the guessing and the flamebait: I'm guessing you couldn't come up with a good reply to my questions and tried to sidetrack the discussion with a red herring about my flamebait and unsupported claims.

      Seriously, WTF? Do you think he doesn't make a good argument, and can you back that up with an example? Or do you just not like the arguments he makes? Just answer the question, no more sidetracks about my flaming insults, we both know I do it, and anyways, you were the one butting in on a nice conversation with insults towards one side. Did you think I'd support your insults towards dada just because I don't agree with him?

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    53. Re:WOW! but.... by Karma+Farmer · · Score: 1
      If I were dada, I wouldn't astroturf myself unless there was some profit to be made, (Haha, only kidding, dada... Or am I?)
      LOL. You should just create an account named "Teve Torbes", so we can avoid these discussions.

      I'm actually curious, do you just not agree with his arguments or do you think he doesn't put together a good argument?
      Seriously, dada, your arguments are complete shit. The gaping christmas goat-sized holes in your reasoning have been pointed out more times than I can count. The logic flaws demonstrated in nearly every of your posts are either intentional (which would make this conversation humorous, but pointless), or they are inadvertent (which would make this conversation sad, but pointless).

      Either way, I really am wondering when you're going to get bored of the whole thing.
    54. Re:WOW! but.... by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      Not that it really matters for anything, but I can vouce that Spun and Dada are not the same person. Or at least, if they are it's an extremely well-constructed ruse. Dada has been on my Friends list since an interesting conversation I had with him a while back about theism, and as such, he gets +1 moderation in my preferences (not because I agree with him, which I often don't, but because he has some interesting ideas and tries to back them up well). Thus threads with a lot of him in them grab my attention, and I noticed the thread where he met Spun, who is also Friended.

      So, if this is a ruse it's been well executed in public and it's been going on for a while. Parsimoniously, I'm inclined to conclude that Spun and Dada are actually separate people. And even if they're not... the one person behind it seems pretty interesting to me, and I'm curious what his actual position is, if any.

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    55. Re:WOW! but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're implying that since USA descended from Europe, we must be lesser? Look, evolution doesn't work that way...

      Just because Europe came first doesn't mean it isn't filled with ignorant asshats.

    56. Re:WOW! but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What makes you so sure they lied when they said they'd complied? That implies that they knew they hadn't complied, and what makes you so sure of that? I'd guess you've never been involved in a regulatory compliance effort. Companies have only an opinion from their legal department to tell them if they're in compliance with a given regulation, and they acknowledge that they won't really know until the matter is tested in court.

      So again, what's ridiculous is that the test of trial was stretched out for over a year, and at the end MS was held liable for non-compliance during said drawn-out trial period.

    57. Re:WOW! but.... by spun · · Score: 1

      I'm not dada, and my position is (mostly) what I write. I sometimes take a slightly more radical position than I really feel, for effect, for testing of my ideas, and for moving the window of discussion (hey, if the Coultergeist can do it, so can I) but if anything that puts me further from dada's position. As when I argue that property is theft. My real position is more nuanced than that (as was Proudhon's position, not that people remember him for saying "The absolute right of the State is in conflict with the absolute right of the property owner," or "Property is inherently anarchistic." "Property is Theft" is a much better catch-phrase.)

      But dada's arguments make me think, so I'm disinclined to believe some guy calling himself "Karma Farmer" who jumps in the middle of a discussion with unsupported ad-hominems. The reasons I enjoy talking with people like dada, by which I mean thoughtful anarcho-capitalists, are twofold: one, they are a rare breed, with most of their ilk being Randroids or Libertarobots who just parrot back poorly understood arguments, two they hold a position similar to mine in some ways, but very different in others and so can provide a unique perspective on my own thoughts.

      Anyways, thanks for sticking up for me, forrest, though anyone comparing my posting history to dada's should have little trouble telling us apart, and I've was here for years prior to him. Not that I care what the likes of "Karma Farmer" think. I'd much rather have a conversation with someone like dada who makes me think than someone like him who just tosses baseless accusations into the middle of someone else's conversation without adding anything of value.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    58. Re:WOW! but.... by morie · · Score: 1

      Thank you for being an accountant. accountants should be able te be nerds just like als those techies around here. Just like lawyers, managers and marketeers. I made you a friend instantly

      Please tell me I'm right about this. Maybe then I will admit te be a marketeer myself...

      --
      Sig (appended to the end of comments I post, 54 chars)
    59. Re:WOW! but.... by Karma+Farmer · · Score: 1
      I sometimes take a slightly more radical position than I really feel, for effect, for testing of my ideas, and for moving the window of discussion (hey, if the Coultergeist can do it, so can I)
      The technical definition for what you do is "trolling." If you're fine with posting "for effect" rather than for discussion, and actively emulate the rhetorical style of Ann Coulter, then it hardly matters if you and dada are technically two seperate posters. You're the same side of the same coin.

      Although, I have agree that you and dada are probably two seperate people. Dada's slashdot personality is an infinitely more interesting troll than you are.
    60. Re:WOW! but.... by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      I'm an accountant by trade, a techie at heart. I save the programming for hobby stuff and for one-offing quick manipulations for the financials.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    61. Re:WOW! but.... by spun · · Score: 1

      Whatever. Trolling is trying to incite an angry reply. What I do is called dialectic, testing ideas out to see how they work in conversation rather than always thinking I'm right. The Coultergeist comment is a fricken joke, as if you couldn't tell that from the fact that I used the name "Coultergeist." I'm not emulating her style by any means, that should be obvious. But I do believe the window of acceptable discourse has moved far, far to the right of what it once was, and if I say things that are slightly more left leaning than I otherwise would in order to shift it back towards the middle, is that a problem? You won't even put your own position out there, all you can do is bad mouth others. Stylish.

      Anyways, I'm pretty sure you are the real troll here. You chose the name "Karma Farmer," which indicates a particularly trollish attitude towards the moderation system here. You jump in the middle of another conversation with ad-hominem attacks. You accuse others of trolling. You add nothing useful to the conversation and appeal to emotionalism. You have as many freaks as fans. All very trollish attributes. Yes, I think it is safe to say, IHBT, IHL. Unless you can contribute something usefull to the conversation, I've wasted enough time on you. Buh-bye.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    62. Re:WOW! but.... by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      But I have a hat that says "Lion Tamer" on it. I got it at Harrod's...

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    63. Re:WOW! but.... by Karma+Farmer · · Score: 1
      Trolling is trying to incite an angry reply.
      No, that's flamebait. Trolling is just trying to incite any reply.

      The Coultergeist comment is a fricken joke, as if you couldn't tell that from the fact that I used the name "Coultergeist."
      Ann Coulter frequently calls people juvenile names to dismiss their arguments. You called Ann Coulter a juvenile name to dismiss her arguments. This must be one of those "recursive" jokes that was all the rage among lisp programmers in the 70's. I'm sorry I didn't catch it earlier.

      But seriously, don't pretend like your conversations with dada are dialectic. The guy is a lunatic screaming at the dark. If you scream at him, he'll scream back. But it's like hitting tennis balls at a wall. It's a perfectly fine exercise, but don't confuse it for real tennis.

      Of course, a conversation with me is like hitting tennis balls to a dog.
    64. Re:WOW! but.... by spun · · Score: 1

      You're winning me over with your self-deprecating humor, despite my better judgement, so I might as well admit, yeah, I troll sometimes. But only targeted trolls against knee-jerk types who deserve it, IMHO. And if they don't bite and instead reply in a non knee-jerk fashion, I'll converse with them.

      I really can't do more than call Coulter names, logic doesn't work with her or her fans. Point noted about dada, but I'll reserve judgement. I don't think he's a total loon just because I happen to disagree with some of his ideas. Though, you can practice dialectic with a loon, just as you can practice tennis by hitting a ball against a wall.

      And yeah, conversations with you are like hitting tennis balls to a dog. The dog never gets tired of it. ;) And now I've forgotten what the hell I was even talking about. Oh yeah, property is theft, down with the State, uhhh, Libertarians suck? Was that it? Dang, where's the nurse with my meds?

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    65. Re:WOW! but.... by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1
      What makes you so sure they lied when they said they'd complied?

      I'm not so sure, but it should be Microsoft's responsibility to ensure that they're compliant, just as with any other court order.

    66. Re:WOW! but.... by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      Well, it's like this:

      Adam's an intelligent human. And, looking at society as cellular automata, he's usually right about anything he pops his two cents in about. Looking at society from an integrated cooperative strategy point of view (for example), though, a lot of his ideas fall apart. Too self-interested, you understand. Adam's a bit of a rugged individualist.

      Not that that's a bad thing; the world needs both perspectives (individualist and societist), as well as other aspects (like liberal and conservative) to work correctly. Almost any idea can be broken or work well depending on the position of the observer (even things like mutually beneficial trade break down when you get down to the individual level; in any change, someone loses).

      So, yeah: if someone constructs an argument that makes sense, but that you don't like - well, you can either shut it out or shift your perspective. Either way, calling someone an idiot for disagreeing with your 'obviously right' stance is blatantly pigheaded (not you, spun, but GP Poster).

      If the argument doesn't make sense (and you've tried - at least a little bit - to see how one could come to the opposing opinion), then feel free to make addendums, etc. in order to help the poor guy make sense out of his mislead life (no one in particular here).

      Unless, of course, you're trolling. Everyone needs to troll a litle now and again. Just don't make it your life.

      --
      110100 1101000 1101000 1100110 0 1101111 1101000 1100011 1
    67. Re:WOW! but.... by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      "If you think dada21 provides anything like a good argument, then you've been the student in far too many 'getting hit on the head lessons.'"

      Wait, this isn't trolling? Feh.

      --
      110100 1101000 1101000 1100110 0 1101111 1101000 1100011 1
    68. Re:WOW! but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you inferred that, indicating that you do, in fact, simply have an inferiority complex.

      MS has been ordered to do something. They haven't done it. The EU is now imposing a fine for them not doing it. If MS doesn't pay the fine and comply with the original order, the fine will escalate. If they don't pay that fine, other punishments will follow. MS might not like the order or the fine, but those are the terms of business in the EU market. They are free to withdraw from market if they are unwilling to comply with those terms.

  2. 2 days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Acording to wikipedia, it will take them 2 days to recover it. Big deal.

    1. Re:2 days by baadger · · Score: 1

      link?

    2. Re:2 days by owlnation · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, it is a bit more of a deal than just the face value.

      Mud sticks. The EU has declared that MS should be punished for breaking the law. This does also negatively affect the MS brand by reducing consumer confidence and encouraging corporations to think twice.

      Admittedly that's still not yet enough to really really hurt MS, but it will sting a little more than it looks.

    3. Re:2 days by Whiney+Mac+Fanboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Are you sure?

      I presume you're refering to figures on this page that puts MS's net income at US$12.25 billion (EU 9.63 billion) - Around 26m euros/day.

      So, it would take them a little over 10 days to recover it, furthermore, you're comparing the fine for a single region to their world wide profits.

      Its a pretty big deal, not just the cash, but the possibilities for further fines (or harsher penalties).

      --
      There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
    4. Re:2 days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It will take alot longer for their stocks to recover.

    5. Re:2 days by Tx · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Paying the fine doesn't release them from having to comply with the ruling. They now have to pay the fine and comply with the ruling, otherwise further fines or sanctions are possible.

      --
      Oh no... it's the future.
    6. Re:2 days by laffer1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not only that, but they have to spend quite a bit of money on vista and office development and later advertising. They've dropped massive amounts of money into xbox products. It may have a small impact on their advertising budget for vista initially.

    7. Re:2 days by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      What is worse for Microsoft is the loss of reputation. They sent their lobbying cowboys to Brussels and these guys got it all wrong. Astroturf is not suited as a longterm strategy. Recently the European Parliament passed a resolution which "urges the Commission to promote a socially inclusive knowledge-based society by supporting, for example, free and open source software and licensing concepts like the General Public License (GPL) and the Public Documentation Licence (PDL);" This is no love letter to Richard Stallman but a clear indication how fed up they are with MS lobbyists. I think the Microsoft staff which handled the case needs to get fired. They made every mistake that what possible and were totally ignorant to diplomatic messages by DG Competition. Now media is quoted that Kroes said "no companies may act above law". It is intresting to see that the asperger community in MS legal department does not get these messages. They still think they could play their tricks. Btw: When you have a problem with Microsoft's anticompetitive action (Ms does not let you execute Foxpro runtimes etc.) why not report it to the Commission?

    8. Re:2 days by Phisbut · · Score: 1
      I presume you're refering to figures on this page [wikipedia.org] that puts MS's net income at US$12.25 billion (EU 9.63 billion) - Around 26m euros/day.

      So, it would take them a little over 10 days to recover it, furthermore, you're comparing the fine for a single region to their world wide profits.

      And you're confusing income with profit. 10 days of income will indeed pay for the fine, but during those 10 days, they have other bills to pay, like salaries, taxes, electricity, and whatever they need to keep their infrastructure running. If they put all their revenue for 10 days into paying the fine, then they get behind on all those payments. I don't know how much profit they make per day, but it is way less than 26 million euros.

      --
      After 3 days without programming, life becomes meaningless
      - The Tao of Programming
    9. Re:2 days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm pretty sure "net income" == "profit" - that's what "net" means.

    10. Re:2 days by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      And you're confusing income with profit.

      Actually, no, they got it right. You are confusing income with net income (which is profit).

      "The income statement adds up all of the company's revenue, subtracts its expenses and gives you the bottom line -- a.k.a. net income."

      I don't know how much profit they make per day, but it is way less than 26 million euros.

      For the last three years, MSFT has shown a net income of
      $12,254,000,000 (2005), $8,168,000,000 (2004), $9,993,000,000 (2003),
      which when divided by 365 gives
      $33,572,602.74/day (2005), $22378082.19/day (2004), $27,378,082.19/day (2003)
      and at 1 U.S. dollar = 0.783024039 Euro, this converts to
      26,288,155.00/day (2005), 17,522,576.30/day (2004), 21,437,696.50/day (2003)
      which is *not* "way less than 26 million euros" per day.

    11. Re:2 days by RxScram · · Score: 1

      The key term is NET INCOME, which is profit.

      (from businessweek.com) - "Net income is the difference between a company's total sales and its total costs and expenses."

      So, in other words, this is the money Microsoft has left over after paying all of those other bills, and paying the fine over 10 days would not put them behind on any other payments.

    12. Re:2 days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wrote the parent post, and I just made it up. You stupid niggers.

  3. About time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I notice that the amount MS has been fined has nearly halved since the original ruling, but that the ongoing fine it's threatened with has changed to 3million/day, from 2million/day.

    1. Re:About time by Zyprexia · · Score: 2, Informative

      The fine is based on the period december 16th, 2005 till june 20th, 2006. Microsoft had till December 16th to fullfil the requirements of the EC. Remember that this fine is added to the original fined 497M in 2004. And the EC is still counting until Microsoft has delivered all required documentation, but the ticker now says 3m per day. I don't believe there's a deadline set yet.. But i wouldn't be suprised if that would be set anywhere around December 20th 2006 (6 months as of june).

    2. Re:About time by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      Well for this one, at least, there is a close date. 31th July 2006. If at this date MS doesn't comply, the fine will be $3M/day.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  4. Irony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The EU calling Microsoft "anti-competitive".
    Fortress Europe sure has some balls.

    1. Re:Irony by D.B.+Tits · · Score: 3, Insightful

      so, you must be living in the United States of Protectionism?

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

      Oh please. The level of protectionism between the US vs. the EU isn't even close. The United States of Protectionism sounds more like Europe. When it comes to free trade, the US is probably the most free and competitive in the western world.

    3. Re:Irony by Blue+Warlord · · Score: 1

      No, I come from the United States of Buy Courts

    4. Re:Irony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a stupid and uninformed comparison.

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

      [i]When it comes to free trade, the US is probably the most free and competitive in the western world.[/i]

      HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA. Let me rephrase that: HEHEHEHEHAHAHAMUAHAHAHAHAHA.

    6. Re:Irony by xnt_hehe · · Score: 1

      Yea? Didn't the US ignore their obligations under NAFTA and continue
      the protect their softwood lumber industry from Canadian imports, in the
      face of the fact that NAFTA and the WTO both deemed the US action to be
      contrary to the NFTA trade agreement?
      Free trade with the US works as long as the US gets the best deal; otherwise the protect.

    7. Re:Irony by D.B.+Tits · · Score: 1

      A lot of my friends work on commercial ships. They are not allowed to ship cargo into the USA. Also, most EU airlines are not allowed to fly to destinations inside the USA. I would also like to point out the equal trading agreement that has been made between the USA and Australia. I think the Australians can agree that the USA is competitive... On the other hand, the EU is much worse in the agricultural protection (and some other markets). I think the USA and the EU are equally evil in the protection of their internal markets. They just protect other marketsegments.

    8. Re:Irony by joper90 · · Score: 1

      hahaha.. STFU.. you are killing me

  5. Speedbump? by gentimjs · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Does a guy driving a hummer really notice a 1-inch speedbump? Microsoft's CFO will probably be laughing as he draws the fine from pettycash.....
    Add a few zeroes on the tail end, then we'll see if they notice.

    1. Re:Speedbump? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Does a guy driving a hummer really notice a 1-inch speedbump?

      yes when he hits it at 80mph, it will rattle his teeth and probably launch him to the ceiling.

      It's persepctive. A ferrari testerosa will feel it at 5 mph, the hummer will feel it at 20+mph

      the ferarri is much more expensive and better built.

      SO are you equating microsoft with a large lumbering overpriced and slow vehicle that is horribly inefficient?

    2. Re:Speedbump? by Darkman,+Walkin+Dude · · Score: 1

      The fines aren't meant to destroy MS forever. They are just a warning shot across the bow. They have increased to $3 million per day, and will continue to increase until the shot across the bow changes to full ramming speed. Its not nice to fuck with continents.

    3. Re:Speedbump? by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

      SO are you equating microsoft with a large lumbering overpriced and slow vehicle that is horribly inefficient?

      Duh.

      --
      "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    4. Re:Speedbump? by xantho · · Score: 1

      Hell, from the way some people drive those monsters, you'd think a bug hitting the windshield would cause an earth shattering explosion.

    5. Re:Speedbump? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > the ferarri is much more expensive and better built.

      When contemplating a road hazzard?

      I think not.

      The road hazzard will shred the Ferarri and barely dent the Hummer.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    6. Re:Speedbump? by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

      Petty cash?? Naaah, just flip BillG's sofas over and shake 'em.

  6. Worrying thought... by tygerstripes · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What happens if they don't pay?

    --
    Meta will eat itself
    1. Re:Worrying thought... by JanneM · · Score: 5, Informative

      What happens if they don't pay?

      What happens when anybody doesn't pay an outstanding court-ordered fine? Likely they'd just freeze their assets in Europe until it's paid. In extremis they'd sell off assets to cover the amount.

      Don't forget, this is a court-ordered fine - a punishment - upheld after an appeal. Nonpayment really is not an option. It will not come to that of course; just imagine what such an action would do to their credit rating and reputation.

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
    2. Re:Worrying thought... by ThePilgrim · · Score: 1

      The EU gets a caught order to seize Microsoft assets to the value of the fine.

      + Intrest

      + Court costs

      + Recovery fees

      --
      Wouldn't it be nice if schools got all the money they wanted and the army had to hold jumble sales for guns
    3. Re:Worrying thought... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget, this is a court-ordered fine - a punishment - upheld after an appeal.

      I wouldn't call it a court ordered fine, as such. It's the EU Commission acting as a regulatory agency, that imposed the fine. It has been upheld by a court though.

    4. Re:Worrying thought... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The way western governments work when you ignore their orders is that they will simply escalate the conflict until it is settled. This will go past more courts, all kinds of pressure, and could theoretically go right up to seizing assets, putting people in prison, or even violence. I doubt that Microsoft would let it get that far though...

    5. Re:Worrying thought... by Gadzinka · · Score: 2, Insightful
      What happens if they don't pay?

      The same thing that happens when Citizen Joe doesn't pay. Couple of notices, first from authorities, then from collection agencies. Then freezing of assets. If it still doesn't help, liquidation of assets, or company.

      Robert

      --
      Bastard Operator From 193.219.28.162
    6. Re:Worrying thought... by Facekhan · · Score: 1

      There was an editorial I read around the time this case was ruled on (The Sociopath You Work For) where one comment about how hard it is to get a megacorp to obey the law was along the lines of 'there is not much a government can do to make Microsoft do what it doesn't want to other than send in the troops.)

      In this case though, if MS doesn't pay the EU can move to sieze their bank accounts and/or other assets within Europe or of course they could send in the troops. MS will certainly stall and try to get the fine reduced cause a few more million in legal fees don't quite compare to hundreds of millions of euros, but I get the feeling that the EU regulators are tired of the shenanigans and are basically saying to MS, "this is not the US where companies can defy the state, we will kill you, literally kill you if you don't obey"

    7. Re:Worrying thought... by Lord+Kano · · Score: 3, Funny

      How many cigarettes do you think you could get for selling the ass-virginity of a Microsoft Europe exec in prison?

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    8. Re:Worrying thought... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      How many cigarettes do you think you could get for selling the ass-virginity of a Microsoft Europe exec in prison?


      *Wiping coffee from monitor*

      Thanks, asshole! That made my morning though. ;)
    9. Re:Worrying thought... by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Simple. The EC declares Microsoft in contempt, leevies a larger fine. Files a complaint with the WTO, files a complaint with the U.S. FTC and SEC. The fine continues to accrue interest.

      Microsoft still doesn't pay. The WTO complaint fails. FTC/SEC blow off the EC.

      Fine grows larger. EC confiscates Microsoft Europe's assets. Most likely, some nations (like perhaps China/Russia) confiscate some Microsoft assets as well, paying a portion to the EC.

      Microsoft still doesn't pay.

      EC prohibits Microsoft from doing business in Europe. EC strips Microsoft's European copyright, permitting free distribution of MS products. As you may or may not know, ISPs in Europe are closed related to the government. What would happen next would be nothing other than a full-off declaration of War on Microsoft by the EU, with ISPs blackholing WindowsUpdate in favor of a EuropeanUpdate site (with WGA removed), massive investment of capital by the EU into developing alternative systems, and million upons millions of Linux and/or OS X systems brought online within a year, all bearing the EU's seal of approval.

      Don't believe me? Europe's already done something similar with GSM. While that wasn't quite as antagonistic, Europe isn't afraid to build its own analog, at considerable expense (see the Galileo global satellite system). The EU will protect it self, economically, and in terms of security. They'll "steal" Windows if need be, and Europe will happily develop its own OS, most likely, in my estimation, a heavily sponsored version of Linux (SuSE or Mandriva).

      --
      WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
    10. Re:Worrying thought... by cylcyl · · Score: 1

      Hmmm... they might seize the MS license generator and generate license to sell. Cheap MS licenses for everyone! :)

    11. Re:Worrying thought... by jelle · · Score: 1

      "Microsoft still doesn't pay. " -> [snip] -> "EC prohibits Microsoft from doing business in Europe."

      Not necessary. Combined European governmental software purchases from Microsoft quite possibly are still larger than the fine, and I don't think that MS will stop signing contracts with them (that would really give Linux a gigantic boost). Stopped (rerouted) payments from those purchases will balance out the fines just... fine...

      "EC strips Microsoft's European copyright, permitting free distribution of MS products."

      IMHO, those last 6 words will never happen, and not just for the reason above...

      --
      --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
    12. Re:Worrying thought... by Phillup · · Score: 1

      What happens if they don't pay?

      They officially confirm the existence of a backdoor in MS products and demand that all copies in their country be disabled immediately?

      --

      --Phillip

      Can you say BIRTH TAX
    13. Re:Worrying thought... by Azeron · · Score: 0

      For god sakes, you really shouldn't get worked up because MS decided to put a web browser and a media player in their OS. If they didn't, they would be the only consumer OS in the world without it. If MS has to cripple it's OS and give away its source code for you to compete, than really your OS belongs in the Special Olympics, not on people's desktops

      As for europe decalring war on MS. I would suggest not doing that. The US tends to get angry when you try to bully and steal from one of our companies, which happens to be co-owned by millions of Americans. declare war on 1 of us, you declare war on all of us.

    14. Re:Worrying thought... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously it is an extreme example, it is unlikely MS will ever let it get that far as it would be an extremly black mark on the company. Countries can do such though if you push that to much though, but even MS isn't that brave/insane, considering how they are seemingly busy now in making the required documentation.

    15. Re:Worrying thought... by spun · · Score: 1

      First, what a convicted monopolist is allowed to do and what regular companies are allowed to do are different. If MS was any old company it would be fine for them to bundle. However, MS has used bundling to leverage monopoly in one market to dominate other markets, which is illegal, and why they were stopped.

      As for the EU declaring war on MS, MS would never be stupid enough to pull out in the first place. They would lose billions, investors would panic, exec's stock would plunge, every country but the US would wake up and smell the tyranny. They would never again risk using a proprietary OS from a foreign corporation.

      As for the rest of your comment, you have no idea how realpolitik is played. Here's a hint: the US is not that powerful. We can't afford to take on fricken Iran or North Korea right now, you think we would step to the EU?!? Get a clue.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    16. Re:Worrying thought... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >EC strips Microsoft's European copyright

      Can't happen; it would break major treaties.

    17. Re:Worrying thought... by Deliveranc3 · · Score: 1

      That's what you suspect, I however am searching the TSX (Toronto Stock Exchange) for bounty hunting corperations.

      P.S. Shadowrun is AWSOME!

    18. Re:Worrying thought... by Azeron · · Score: 1, Funny

      Convicting someone of being a *oh horrible* monopolist is like convicting Tyra Banks of being "too good looking", thus must not be allowed to wear make or the latest fashions because is unfair to the morbidly obesse who could only make a living strutting themselves on the catwalk if you get rid of all the pretty girls.

      Rediculous example? Not really. Being a monopolist is just as subjective and rediculous as being "too pretty" in a world where you can download a free OS with all the bells and whistles right off the internet at any time. Sure MS plays rough, but if you want to be able to compete against competitors like linux (various distros) who give away thier work for free, you are not going to pull any punches. Nothing MS has done warrents Millions of dollars in fines, because all they have done is "out compete" the competition. It is not like they shot someone, or engaged in any crimiinal activity. And before you say something is illegal = something being criminal, get a clue. If MS was charged with a crime, they would have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt. Instead they were charged with violating an civil law, which is just perponderennce of the evidence.

      If you think that for a moment, that the US government is going to idly stand by while Europe invalidates MS's copyrights in Europe, you have another thing coming. You could see the US invalidating every single european copyright in the US, which would destroy the European Software industry.

      But if it really comes to blows, the US would not have to fire a shot. Just cut off the oil spigot and europe will have to surrender. likewise we could just just all trade between Europe and the rest of the world since we control the world's oceans.

      So much for europe's third way.

    19. Re:Worrying thought... by spun · · Score: 1

      You don't really understand how the free market works. Here's a hint: it's not a free market if someone is using their monopoly power in unfair ways. In order for us to maintain our free market system, we need to keep that from happening.

      MS did more than out compete the competition. We have rules governing fair competition. For instance, would you say it was out competing the competition to poison their executives? No? Why not? Oh, we have laws against that? Well, we have laws against unfair use of monopoly power for the same damn reason.

      The US would never invalidate all EU patents and bring on the mother of all trade wars in order to protect one US company. There would have to be more at stake. The US doesn't control the oil spigots. We also do not control the oceans! You have a very warped view of the world and the US's importance in it. Stop belivieving the propaganda and try looking with your own eyes.

      But if thinking that the US is the bestest most powerfullest country in the whole world and could take on the rest of the world with one hand tied behind it's back compensates you in any way for your other shortcomings, you just go on believing that.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    20. Re:Worrying thought... by molarmass192 · · Score: 1

      you really shouldn't get worked up because MS decided to put a web browser and a media player in their OS

      The problem isn't that they included a browser and media player in theur OS, it's that they INTEGRATED their OWN browser and media player in their OS to specifically to stiffle competition. If they sinply included, not integrated into the OS, Firefox and Real, then this would be a non-issue. No Linux distro integrates add-ons like this. There's an argument that OSX might but even there, is Quicktime intergated into the OSX kernel or GUI to the extent that IE or WMP is ... maybe ... but I doubt it.

      As for your war comment, that's priceless. So what if the EU declares all out war on MS ... it will only benefit Apple, Novell, Redhat, Sun, IBM, etc. Do you honestly think reps and senators not from Washington state are going to shed a tear for MS when their local constituents stand to benefit most from something like this?

      --

      Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws-Plato
    21. Re:Worrying thought... by debrain · · Score: 1
      Simple. The EC declares Microsoft in contempt, leevies a larger fine. Files a complaint with the WTO, files a complaint with the U.S. FTC and SEC. The fine continues to accrue interest.


      It's not quite that simple. :-) Just an interesting note - The WTO is a government-government body, designed to resolve international trade disputes, to help governments find ways to reduce tarriffs (taxes) on imports and increase global trade. It only has jurisdiction between nations. The ruling against Microsoft is domestic court ruling of the EU. In addition to Microsoft not having standing to file a complaint with the WTO, the WTO has no jurisdiction to overturn an EU court's ruling (subject to compliance with EU treaties, notably for the WTO, the GATT et al.). However, there is no enforcement mechanism through the GATT, save permitting 'legal' sanctions by the 'victim' state against the 'guilty'. To file under the WTO, Microsoft would have to convince the US government to file on their behalf.

      What will most likely happen is the EU will come to a negotiated compromise with Microsoft. Microsoft wants to stall, and is apparently willing to pay for it. They will likely propose settlement at a fraction of the amount owed. Alternatively, if Microsoft plays the hard-bargaining positional game, they will likely end up having their accounts frozen, credit rating demerited, and income garnished, in addition to other consequences. If they choose to go down that road, they will probably turn to the USA for a solution. It is possible that they could argue that this judgment is an unfair tarriff on their software importation into the EU in violation of the national treatment aspect of the GATT, but that is a weak argument, in my humble opinion. The reason the EU courts found Microsoft anti-competitive have their own merit, not based upon (at face value anyway) whether Microsoft is domestic or foreign corporation. Again though, it would be effective at stalling.

      While not quite technically perfect, I think you are quite on the money in terms of the tone portrayed of stubborn and aloof defiance and stalling by Microsoft.
    22. Re:Worrying thought... by Azeron · · Score: 0

      Posining Someone = Putting a Web Browser on your OS

      "Here's a hint: it's not a free market if someone is using their monopoly power in unfair ways"
      uh huh, and what does fairness have to do with the "free markets"? Life at times is very "unFair" especially when you are competing for market share. As long as you are not shooting people, engaging in fraud, extorition or other nefarious activity, your activities are protected under the US Constitution. Law is not about making life "fair" or ensuring "compensation", its about protecting property and personal liberty, everything else is a perversion of law, most likely bought and paid for by the special intrests who want to make it illegal for their competitor to win.

      And this 1 company as I mentioned before is owned by MILLIONS of Americans. I don't think they will just shrug thier shoulders and say "oh well", they will demand punitive action against the EU, so the question for the EU would be, "Is IE worth starting a trade war over?"

    23. Re:Worrying thought... by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Maybe I'm the only one, but I'm starting to think that all these fines the EU levies against Microsoft are the result of some kind of governmental jealousy. After-all, does the EU have any software companies that can compete on an even footing against Microsoft? No? Well, we can't beat them... so let's fine them.

    24. Re:Worrying thought... by spun · · Score: 1

      Using monopoly powers unfairly is the same as fraud or extortion, it is against the law. This is economics 101, man. You can't have a free market without protection against monopoly. We, the people, get to decide what our laws should be. We have decided that monopolistic practices are against the law. Ergo, what MS did is against he law. If you don't like it, write your congresscritter or go found your own country and decide what your own laws will be. You may not like it, but that's the way it is, and trying to argue that what MS did is okay is pointless. They broke the law that we the people made, and they will be punished. End of story.

      MS is owned by far more than just Americans, it is a global company. But MS would never shoot itself in the foot by failing to comply with any sovereign nation's judgements. Once the put itself above the law, no other country in the world would ever trust them with their computing resources again.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    25. Re:Worrying thought... by Azeron · · Score: 0

      "Using monopoly powers unfairly is the same as fraud or extortion, it is against the law."
      Who deicdes whats whose a monopoly, and what is and what is not fair? Or as Junvenille put it, "who watches the watchers?"
      Actually the answer is pretty simple, those who buy or threaten the government. Just look what happened in France when they tried to make it legal to fire someone under the age of 27.

      "This is economics 101, man"
      No this isn't about exonomics, this is about freedom and liberty. About the right to decide whether you can put a web browser in your OS regardless if what yur competitors want.

      "You can't have a free market without protection against monopoly."
      Monopolies are not neccessarily bad. Last time I checked the government was a monopoly, perhaps you are suggesting we have competeing governments so loosing parties can have this own government too?

      "We, the people, get to decide what our laws should be"
      No you have representative who decide what the law is, although in Europe they are not directly elected for the most part

      "You may not like it, but that's the way it is, and trying to argue that what MS did is okay is pointless."
      Thats, fine but the point of the comments are about the EU declaring war on MS, and what the consquences would be. And if the US decides to retaliate, you wil have understand they we have the right to do so as well, as it is our country, and it will be our laws. Europe will just have to live with the fact that it is not onmipotent.

      "MS is owned by far more than just Americans, it is a global company. But MS would never shoot itself in the foot by failing to comply with any sovereign nation's judgements. Once the put itself above the law, no other country in the world would ever trust them with their computing resources again."

      I myself use a Mac. If people don't like MS, they should simply change instead of trying to control someone else's property.

    26. Re:Worrying thought... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      No this isn't about exonomics, this is about freedom and liberty. About the right to decide whether you can put a web browser in your OS regardless if what yur competitors want.

      This is about freedom, and liberty: the public's, not Microsofts'. You can't have it both ways.

      Either the public has to intervene, intercede, and grant special rights to corporations in exchange for a healthy economy: or it doesn't. You can't say that we have to pay taxes to support small business grant money, give businesses special tax breaks not given to privately held assets, grant businesses special bankrupcy protection (ie. they don't have to pay their debts!), grant corporations independent rights of the people who own them, and THEN turn around and say that the public doesn't get a say in what the corporations they're paying to support can do. You can't grant corporations the right to sue, to hold it's officials harmless in cases of malfeasance, to sidestep the normal order of law, and THEN say that the public can't hold them to the rules that the public wants. The public shells out a lot of money to keep these companies running in a way that's good for the economy: and in return, they get to stop the corporations from doing things that are bad for the economy.

      You can't have it both ways. Either we bail out corporations, and we hold them accountable to a minimum standard of public good, or we don't. Microsoft got all the advantages, so it has to take the bad with the good. It's too late to say "I don't want to follow the same laws as everyone else! I should be a special case!" No. Every company gets the same treatment under the law; and using your advantage in one area to create a monopoly in another is not allowed.

      Monopolies are bad. You have to pay the monopoly price, or you can't get what you want. There is no other person you can get the resource from, and sometimes you need that resource. (eg. "Pay what I tell you for water from this oasis, or you can't drink")

      Leveraging a monopoly from one area into another is even worse (eg. "Pay what I tell you for water from this oasis, and agree neve to trade with anyone but me, nor to give away goods or accept for free goods that I've once sold, or you can't have any water". Oh, and it's over 100 degrees outside, and you'll die without a drink. Sound like slavery yet?)

      Monopolies are bad, M'kay?

      Microsoft, by the way, is guilty of breaking the law, and not just the pathetic "browser bundling". There was the issue of fraud: they lied to their customers in order to get sales when they reported that DR-DOS "wouldn't work" with Windows. The fact is, Microsoft explictly detected and sabotaged the combination; and treated anyone who suggested that they had, in fact, acted directly against their own customers as a liar, and an anti-Microsoft zealot.I know; I remember; I was there in the 1980s, and I watched them do it.

      They lied when they said that Microsoft was running IIS on their own web servers, when the http logs clearly said "Apache". They lied when they said there was no outage during a period when I personally saw downtime. They lied when they published an encycopedia, Microsoft Encarta, that claimed "Microsoft invented the mouse". They lied when they sent out shrink wrapped "license agreements" which claimed "by opening this package, you [will have] agree[d] to the license contained inside" (not legally binding, since the terms aren't known). They lied in court, when they produced a rigged demo for the court, then had to back down and admit that it wasn't actually possible. They lied to the press when they hired "independant" people on Microsoft payroll to write pro-Microsoft articles. They lied when they hired "independant" consultants to compare irrelavent aspects of Microsoft and competing products, so that they can write articles that claim "Microsoft is faster [at an irrelevant task] than competitor!!!".

      Microsoft lies. If

    27. Re:Worrying thought... by Azeron · · Score: 0

      "This is about freedom, and liberty: the public's, not Microsofts'. You can't have it both ways." How can the public be free when individuals aren't? "Either the public has to intervene, intercede, and grant special rights to corporations in exchange for a healthy economy: or it doesn't." I never said the government has no role in the private realm. If you read my posts carefully, you would have noticed I outlined a role for the government that very essential to the economy. BTW, what you put forward is what we call a false dichotomy. I am talking about a boundary between personal liberty and government control, a boundary that was clearly crossed when MS is being charged with being a monopolist for including a browser in their OS, which is rediculous. "You can't say that we have to pay taxes to support small business grant money, give businesses special tax breaks not given to privately held assets, grant businesses special bankrupcy protection (ie. they don't have to pay their debts!), " Business are privately held assets. Any tax on a business is a tax on an asset owned by an individual. Often the owners of business pay more than 2x on taxes for the SAME INCOME, while individuals only have to pay taxes once. every dollar that microsfot pays out in dividends will be taxed 2x. Bankruptcy laws give everyone in our country to brush off uncollectable debt, and start fresh. Are you against Bankruptcy Laws? " grant corporations independent rights of the people who own them, and THEN turn around and say that the public doesn't get a say in what the corporations they're paying to support can do." the public has every right to step in and intervene, stop buying thier products and services. trust me, they'll stop. water does not flow uphill. " You can't grant corporations the right to sue, to hold it's officials harmless in cases of malfeasance, to sidestep the normal order of law, and THEN say that the public can't hold them to the rules that the public wants. " I really have no clue what you are saying here, but if I had to guess I had a response it would be along the lines, of "just because the public wants something, doesn't mean it should have it". there is a line between public desire and private liberty that should never be crossed, otherwise you end up like the athenians who were swayed into diaster by sophists. "You can't have it both ways. Either we bail out corporations, and we hold them accountable to a minimum standard of public good, or we don't. Microsoft got all the advantages, so it has to take the bad with the good. It's too late to say "I don't want to follow the same laws as everyone else! I should be a special case!" No. Every company gets the same treatment under the law; and using your advantage in one area to create a monopoly in another is not allowed." I'm not for special treatment, rules, tax breaks, or any other kind of favourable treatment, corporation or private citizen. I certainly don't think we should spend the public treasury on bailing out any corporation or individual. I think the bargin you want is the devil's bargin. "Monopolies are bad. You have to pay the monopoly price, or you can't get what you want. There is no other person you can get the resource from, and sometimes you need that resource. (eg. "Pay what I tell you for water from this oasis, or you can't drink")" I would say "don't live in the desert", and you won't have to pay exorbant prices for precious and limited resources. Because of that monopoly price, it forces people to conserve thier consumption so more people can live off of it. Are you not for conservation? "Leveraging a monopoly from one area into another is even worse (eg. "Pay what I tell you for water from this oasis, and agree neve to trade with anyone but me, nor to give away goods or accept for free goods that I've once sold, or you can't have any water". Oh, and it's over 100 degrees outside, and you'll die without a drink. Sound like slavery yet?)" If you want to be dry, I suggest getting out of the rain. I think you didn't realize w

    28. Re:Worrying thought... by kylef · · Score: 2, Informative
      Don't forget, this is a court-ordered fine - a punishment - upheld after an appeal.

      No, this fine has absolutely NOT been appealed yet. This is a NEW (additional) fine imposed after the Comission declared noncompliance with the 2nd half of the original 2004 ruling. You can bet that Microsoft will absolutely appeal this fine, especially if they really did have 300 full-time employees working on compliance for the past 6 months, and the original "non-compliance" feedback for this documentation was not delivered until September 2005.

      Dr. Barrett has actually stated that he is pleased with the documentation he has seen from this task force. His testimony could bolster Microsoft's appeal about compliance regarding this fine. If you aren't happy with a result, you absolutely must give the entity enough time to correct the perceived problem. Microsoft is doing this, to the independent auditor's satisfaction. Fining them now is like telling a criminal to shape up, and just as they start to obey, you throw them in jail anyway.

    29. Re:Worrying thought... by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 1

      Oh, I think they're gonna pay ;-)

      I was just responsing to a commenter who was wondering what would happen if MS didn't pay (just flat out refused).

      I don't think MS could stand against the E.U.

      --
      WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
  7. Hooray!!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At last.

  8. Which fine is high enough? by Blue+Warlord · · Score: 1

    It seems so far Microsoft isn't really worrying over a fine of 1.5 million/day, this makes me wonder what amount of money is needed to make it an issue they want to comply with. Any ideas?

    1. Re:Which fine is high enough? by MarkByers · · Score: 1

      It seems so far Microsoft isn't really worrying over a fine of 1.5 million/day, this makes me wonder what amount of money is needed to make it an issue they want to comply with. Any ideas?

      This would work: 1.5 million lines of Windows source code per day will be uncopyrighted (is that a word?) and effectively made Open Source in Europe each day until they comply.

      I bet it would take them about 2 days to get all the documentation written under those conditions.

      --
      I'll probably be modded down for this...
    2. Re:Which fine is high enough? by lanswitch · · Score: 1

      Maybe it's no longer important whether microsoft pays up. They have lost Europe as a market.
      Right now I can choose which linux company i want to work for, but there are few opportunities for windows sysadmins. My guess: most of the companies here are either migrating to Linux, or looking into it.

    3. Re:Which fine is high enough? by Ramble · · Score: 0

      Yay, the EU magic pixies are going to magically sieze the source-code and release it. I mean, who cares if this is highly illegal, and will damage the economy on a massive scale?

      --
      "Oh boy"
    4. Re:Which fine is high enough? by jejones · · Score: 1

      Sure. Double it every day of continued noncompliance. Seems appropriate for a software company...

  9. Bah, its worth it. by surefooted1 · · Score: 1

    I think that it is worth $3 million a day to keep your OS closed, don't you?

    1. Re:Bah, its worth it. by baadger · · Score: 1

      They don't have to open the OS to avoid the fines, just provide a bundle of information on it to keep the EU happy. I doubt even after this bundle is delivered it'll be enough

    2. Re:Bah, its worth it. by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      It's 3 million per day now, but there's absolutely nothing stopping the EU from raising that to an arbitrarily higher figure.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  10. Not holding my breath by smchris · · Score: 1

    But being Microsoft, I assume they would pay in pennies and demand a receipt?

    1. Re:Not holding my breath by Ekhymosis · · Score: 1

      If I'm not mistaken, a while back a man paid a huge fine in 1 dollar increments. He thought it was pretty clever until the judge told him to count it to verify it all. Needless to say, he had to hire a few people to help him count the stash and got screwed even more. If anyone has the link or knows what I'm talking about, feel free to jump in. Memory is slowly fading.

      --
      Fighting over religion is like seeing whose imaginary friend is best.
    2. Re:Not holding my breath by MarkByers · · Score: 1

      I don't believe it. Can't he just quickly scan it and say, 'OK, I've counted it'.

      Unless they double-check how can they prove that he hasn't counted it?

      --
      I'll probably be modded down for this...
    3. Re:Not holding my breath by Amouth · · Score: 1

      that is exactly what i would have done

      --
      '...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
    4. Re:Not holding my breath by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      Stupid.

      All he should have done is to count say, $100, weight the pile, then shovel the required amount. Add a few extra coins for good measure.

    5. Re:Not holding my breath by Juggler9 · · Score: 1

      No, they'd pay in Microsoft coupons good for more software

      --
      Someday we'll all look back on this and plow into a parked car.
  11. Big Whoop by thelonestranger · · Score: 1

    If you belive what they say in the newspapers Billy Gates makes $7 Million in the 8 hours he's asleep so it shouldn't take him to long to make this back. The phrase "drop in the ocean" springs to mind.

    --
    To err is human. To forgive is not company policy.
  12. wow by joe+155 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    what a small slap on the wrist which is small even by the standards that the EU set themselves, typical, the fine should have been over 1.8 bn euros if they'd done what they said (about 3m euros a day backdated to 2004)... why so small?

    --
    *''I can't believe it's not a hyperlink.''
    1. Re:wow by fritsd · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's backdated to december 2005 IIRC

      --
      To be, or not to be: isn't that quite logical, Slashdot Beta?
    2. Re:wow by MtViewGuy · · Score: 1

      I think Microsoft will pay that US$357 million given their massive cash reserves and settle this thing out of court.

  13. Debundling WMP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What exactly was the motivation behind this? All the named alternatives that Microsoft are supposedly suppressing are crippleware (like Quicktime) or adware/spyware(like Real). Why shouldn't they be allowed to ship their OS with a free, albeit crap, media player?

    1. Re:Debundling WMP by WhodoVoodoo · · Score: 5, Informative

      The idea is that the EU claims (rather correctly, and you'll see why this is not an issue) that MS used it's desktop monopoly to attempt to gain a monopoly in the media player market. They were then forced to unnbundle WMP, which they did in Windows N. Also to pay that original fine we already heard about last year.

      Now here's where you lost the trail; the contention now is NOT ABOUT WINDOWS MEDIA PLAYER. It's about underlying windows APIs that the EU claims MS is leveraging to use their DESKTOP os monopoly (which is okay) to shoehorn their way higher up in the server space. What they required MS to do was provide their competition with information about the windows OS that would let competing products interoperate as smoothly as microsoft products.

      It's kind of a convoluted, complicated, and misreported case. The EU commision is saying "Look, you can't hide these details about your desktop os just so nobody can make a (whatever server) as good as yours, you can make the whatever server, but your competitors need to have equal footing. SO tell them how (whatever) works."

      theres a bunch more, 12000 pages of docs, source code sharing (under a restrictive license competitors must pay for, this is more complicated due to the possibility of DMCA claims) etc.

    2. Re:Debundling WMP by dvice_null · · Score: 1, Informative

      What word in the sentence "monopoly" you don't understand?

    3. Re:Debundling WMP by thechristelegacy · · Score: 0
      It's kind of a convoluted, complicated, and misreported case. The EU commision is saying "Look, you can't hide these details about your desktop os just so nobody can make a (whatever server) as good as yours, you can make the whatever server, but your competitors need to have equal footing. SO tell them how (whatever) works."
      Here's what I don't understand. I agree that Microsoft's business practices are wrong, but if they as a company design something that is of a higher quality of another company, why should they be forced to give over the details of their design? I bet the top restraunts of the world don't give away their recipees to competing restraunts that serve the same kind of food.
    4. Re:Debundling WMP by WhodoVoodoo · · Score: 1

      Antitrust laws are VERY counterintuitive seeming. See, what the EU is saying is that MS has APIs in it's Windows Desktop OS that only microsoft knows how to use. Since everybody uses Windows on the desktop, this allows microsoft to put out an XYZ server that talks to the desktop OS (like exchange or something, I don't know exactly which APIs are in question.) while other companies have no idea how the XYZ works. They're telling MS to tell people how to use parts of the OS so microsoft won't have the advantage of being the only person to know how to make these XYZ servers.

      As it stands (or stood depending on how you look at it) people could still make these XYZ servers, but they have to spend a whole lot of time figuring out how windows does XYZ before they can come to market (SAMBA), and by then microsoft could shut them out by beating to them to the punch very easily.

      It's not about MS putting out something great, it's about letting others put the same thing out with equal footing. This way companies will be required to make the best software to take over the market instead of possibly just being a defacto monopoly because nobody else can do it, which is good for the overall software climate if you ask me.

    5. Re:Debundling WMP by Kadin2048 · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's because they have a monopoly -- all the restaurant/automobile/whatever analogies in the world don't matter, if you don't factor in the anti-competitive aspect of the monopoly. If Microsoft were smaller, they wouldn't be having a problem; it's only because of their extremely dominant position that they have to follow special rules, because otherwise it would be impossible to compete with them.

      If you were a niche OS vendor and didn't want to share information on the inner workings of your system, so that you could make more money selling a highly-integrated application stack, that would probably be OK. It becomes anti-competitive when you have such an absurd proportion of the market that it's basically impossible for any company to compete with you, unless they make products that run on your OS. In that case, by keeping the details to yourself, you can suppress realistic competition indefinitely.

      Since this suppression of competition hurts the market in general and is bad for the consumer, I think the EU and other regulatory bodies are more than justified in doing whatever they think is necessary in order to remedy the situation. In this case, they're not going after the monopoly itself (as some of the proposed solutions to the US anti-trust case did) but after the behavior that suppresses competition itself: basically acknowledging that Windows is the de-facto standard and will be for some time, and requiring that Microsoft stop tilting the playing field in their own favor.

      --
      "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    6. Re:Debundling WMP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Yes, If (say) Ford had 90%+ of the car market and only let you fit 'Ford Brand' stereos. So in other words it's a totally fatuous comparison and you're an idiot.

    7. Re:Debundling WMP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      ...next they'll be fining car manufacturers for selling cars with a specific brand of stereo/sound system and being anti-competitive.

      Your knee-jerk argument doesn't really hold up. Let's try some slight modification and see if we can get it to work, eh?

      Imaging one car manufacturer was responsible for producing 95% of the cars in circulation and aggresively used its position to limit the availability of cars from other manufacturers or the emergence of new manufacturers.

      Imagine they not only bundled their own brand stereo with the car, they made it virtually impossible to remove the stereo system without causing severe damage to the car, so that even if you were to install an additional stereo you'd have to keep the original stereo.

      Now imagine the car manufacturer starts using its imense wealth and market position to persuade content providers to release music encoded in a format only the above stereo can play (or charging hefty license fees to the smaller car/stereo manufacturers if they want to use this technology themselves to actually be able to play music).

      Finally, imagine the car manufacturer went out into the world and used its wealth to influence political decisions in their favour to help them maintain an effective stranglehold on the market and, at the same time, insidiously "educate" people while they're still at school into thinking that only one car manufacturer can give them what they need.

      Hope that helps.

    8. Re:Debundling WMP by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

      Because the customers pay for the OS. The OS is a tool to control your computer [e.g. load tasks, provide files, networking, etc].

      When Microsoft hides the OS API so that they can use it and others can't they're effectively selling you half a tool. By not letting competitors use the entire OS that MSFT sells you they're taking away YOUR CHOICE to choose the tools you want. The question is who knows how good the competition can get, because MSFT won't properly document the product they sell you won't know.

      That's what I don't get about monopolyogists [people who apologize for monopolies], these anti-monopoly cases are about giving YOU choice. Not about making money [well indirectly] but it's really about YOU. I mean literally YOU, mr. joe sixpack who uses the computer to read emails and whatever. Not Mr. millionaire running Oracle but YOU. The government wants everyone to have a chance to compete and with that competition you get to choose the better product.

      Sure MSFT may have better tools/servers today [though I question that] but that's only because they hold back the competition by hiding parts of the OS and misdocumenting other assets.

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
    9. Re:Debundling WMP by master_p · · Score: 1

      But what APIs is Microsoft hiding? for what I know, all their APIs are published online on MSDN.

    10. Re:Debundling WMP by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      ...except I can get pretty comprehensive documentation on any Ford, including any information I need to replace that "specific brand of stereo". That and Ford is hardly in a position to control their particular market.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    11. Re:Debundling WMP by jesuscyborg · · Score: 1

      There have always been secret undocumented API calls and other esoteric features with Windows. For example, one secret API call I uesd back in the Windows 9x days allowed me to hide my program from the Control+Alt+Delete program list.

      I suppose the problem is that the EU suspects or knows that Microsoft is coding their bundled products to leverage secret preformancing enhancing features of the operating system.

    12. Re:Debundling WMP by amliebsch · · Score: 1

      It's because they have a monopolyI am sick and tired of this horseshit platitude. Windows is not by any reasonable definition a monopoly. Do valid, usable alternatives exist? YES. Do people use them? YES. Is Microsoft forcibly preventing people from using alternatives? NO. The fact that so many people can go on and on about how "Microsoft is D-O-O-O-MED!" and "OSX cleans Windows' clock!" while simultaneously mouthing bromides about Microsoft being an unaccountable monopoly proves that Orwell was right about the ability for people to hold self-contradictory thoughts.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    13. Re:Debundling WMP by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      The problem is that despite the theories about taking over the server space via a desktop monopoly is that it hasn't happened and there's little evidence that it ever will. The effect today is that attacking MS is decreasing competition in Europe in the server space. Since this EU issue was first proposed by MS's competitors, decreased competition or payment of protection money by MS has always been the goal. Given the amount of money that MS has paid out, the strategy is working.

      The EU is effectively acting as these companies agent and EU citizens have derived no benefit from it.

    14. Re:Debundling WMP by Faluzeer · · Score: 1

      It is not about giving over the details of the design, it is about publishing sufficient details so that competitors can interoperate with your products. It is not as if Microsoft is the only company that has ever had to publish API's for Inteoperability...

      During the early 90's Novell was the dominant force in the LAN Server Market. Microsoft took advantage of the API's that were published / provided by Novell (for the purpose of interoperability) to write their Gateway Services for Netware, this service allowed the NT server (NT 3.51 and 4) to effectively emulate a Novell Server and was designed to ease the migration of users from Novell Netware to Windows NT.

    15. Re:Debundling WMP by WhodoVoodoo · · Score: 1

      Yes, but $1.99 is close enough to two dollars for you to drop that penny, isn't it?

    16. Re:Debundling WMP by jelle · · Score: 1

      "I am sick and tired of this horseshit platitude. Windows is not by any reasonable definition a monopoly."

      US federal law does not have a 'reasonable dfinition of a monopoly'?

      November 1999, "A federal judge declared Friday that Microsoft Corp. possesses monopoly power in the market for PC operating systems and harmed consumers through its anti-competitive behavior"

      http://money.cnn.com/1999/11/05/technology/microso ft_finding/

      The current administration overturned the verdict ('break up'), but not the ruling above...

      --
      --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
    17. Re:Debundling WMP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OnStar has an exclusive contract with GM only. Ford and others lost many sales because they did not have an alternative. And GM bundled OnStar with most of their product lines. Sound like a "monopoly" to you? And, ahem, what did Ford and others do? Yes, contract with other new developers to provide a similiar service. Aw, but that would be a free market response to consumer demand, and it worked just fine. Now, you tell me which is harder to deploy: an alternative OS (which any CS undergraduate should be able to develop on his own) or deploying a bunch of satellites and integrating new hardware for cars?

      Oops. The parent's analogy of a stereo system with your reckless application of a monopoly fits. Now who's the idiot? Or the child?

    18. Re:Debundling WMP by amliebsch · · Score: 1

      US federal law does not have a 'reasonable dfinition of a monopoly'

      No. It is not reasonable. The law is unreasonably vague, rests on unreasonable moral premises, and is unreasonably abitrarily enforced.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    19. Re:Debundling WMP by Captain+DaFt · · Score: 1

      To keep picking at the analogy (Oo, that's gonna leave a scar!), it's more like Ford has 90% of the market, and would only let Ford owners fill up at Ford Petrol stations by using a proprietory petrol cap/nozzle combination.

      In this case, Ford would be utilizing its monopoly in vehicles to leverage into the petrol industry, much like MS is using its monopoly to leverage into... well damn near everything.

      --
      The U.S. really needs an English to Wisdom dictionary.
    20. Re:Debundling WMP by Just+Another+Poster · · Score: 1
      Because the customers pay for the OS.

      Well, your actually paying for a license to use their OS.

      When Microsoft hides the OS API so that they can use it and others can't they're effectively selling you half a tool. By not letting competitors use the entire OS that MSFT sells you they're taking away YOUR CHOICE to choose the tools you want.

      They are not "taking away your choice". You can use Linux.

    21. Re:Debundling WMP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the definition is vague, how can you tell that it is unfairly applied?

    22. Re:Debundling WMP by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      Actually even the US courts found MS guilty of abusing their monopolistic position. Do valid, usable alternatives exist? YES. Are they technically superior? Some would say yes. Do people use them? Very very few. Did MS forcibly prevent people from being able to purchase computers w/o MS products? Yes, according to US courts. If you purchased a computer w/o MS, odds were that you still paid for the MS product because of the OEM's contract. The power to force OEMs into those contracts is not illegal, but to actually use the power to force them is.

    23. Re:Debundling WMP by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      But note the qualification "in the market for PC operating systems". It was necessary to carefully carve out a part of the OS market in order to make the charges stick. Now in order to make the EU charges stick, the market has been expanded in full. If the desktop and server markets were really disjoint as the US courts assumed, there would be no way MS's desktop "monopoly" could have any effect on the server market.

      The inconsistencies are unimportant however, because the goal of the US and EU efforts was to enrich MS's competitors and this goal has been achieved.

    24. Re:Debundling WMP by jelle · · Score: 1

      They ruled MS has a monopoly for PC OS's, and the monopoly was abused for unfair competition in the market of server OS's (by not disclosing the interface details of their PC OS's, therefore making hidden functionality in their PC OS's that could only be used by their server OS's), which is what the whole EU case is all about.

      There is no inconsistency, and no conspiracy either.

      --
      --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
    25. Re:Debundling WMP by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      You're missing the point. The only reason that hidden functionality in Windows has anything to do with servers is that they are really part of the same market.

      As for the origin of the EU legal effort, do you claim that it wasn't initiated at the request of MS competitors?

    26. Re:Debundling WMP by jelle · · Score: 1

      "You're missing the point. The only reason that hidden functionality in Windows has anything to do with servers is that they are really part of the same market."

      You're missing the point that Windows became a monopoly because they were on all the PCs, and when MS started their server business they had to displace the big iron servers, and did so by making the PCs talk better to their servers than the servers from the competition. And because MS had a monopoly on the PC and not on the server, that is monopoly abuse.

      --
      --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
    27. Re:Debundling WMP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Imaging one car manufacturer was responsible for producing 95% of the cars in circulation

      How did that happen? Oh, that's right, the "victims" are responsible for this situation, because they continued to buy cars from that manufacturer, despite the strong, dissenting opinion of a vocal minority.

      aggresively used its position to limit the availability of cars from other manufacturers or the emergence of new manufacturers.

      "Aggressively", as in, without any coercion? Thus, anyone can produce new cars if they want, so long as they are willing to pay the high capital costs? Also, I take it that "limit the availability of cars" here means refuse to help competitors increase the availability of cars?

      Now imagine the car manufacturer starts using its imense wealth and market position to persuade content providers to release music encoded in a format only the above stereo can play

      And, to complete the analogy, suppose that a competing line of cars is available to consumers for free, and these cars have many features that can you can customize (including the stereo). Plus, there is a huge amount of content (such as music) available for these cars. But people don't switch to the free cars because the cars produced by the manufacturer with 95% of the market share are "good enough".

      What's the problem again?

    28. Re:Debundling WMP by DarkDragonVKQ · · Score: 1

      To actually complete the analogy the car manufacturer with immense wealth has secured practically all the companies' support meaning the only way to use a companies' product you must use that car manufacturer's products. Doesn't make it so easy to switch now huh? It's like XBOX's situation in Japan. In order for it to sell it needs Japanese games. But because it has pratically none it doesn't sell. But all Japanese games are made by Japanese companies. And they don't want to take the plunge or risk because XBOX hasn't proven itself. But how can it prove itself if it doesn't have the games. And back and forth and back in forth it goes.

      --
      "I thought what I'd do was I'd pretend I was one of those deaf-mutes" ~ Laughing Man - GITS:SAC
    29. Re:Debundling WMP by master_p · · Score: 1

      But there is no significant API hidden by Microsoft. Even all the hidden functions (which are not that many) are published on the web by third parties.

  14. From the BBC site: by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 5, Interesting
    FROM OTHER NEWS SITES
    Telegraph EU fines Microsoft ,280.5m - 30 mins ago
    Guardian Unlimited EU hits Microsoft with 280.5m antitrust fine - 34 mins ago
    MSNBC Microsoft calls EU fine unjust - 37 mins ago
    vnunet.com EC slaps 280m fine on Microsoft - 38 mins ago
    The Register Commission beats Microsoft with ,280m stick - 41 mins ago
    You can almost believe in bias free journalism, can you? :)
    --
    It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
    Be yourself no matter what they say
    1. Re:From the BBC site: by JohnFluxx · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I went to the MSNBC website to check. They do have that story, but a fairer comparision would be the story that was posted a few minutes before it:

      Microsoft fined 280m over EU antitrust ruling

    2. Re:From the BBC site: by baadger · · Score: 1

      ...thats just exclusive reporting, not a lack of bias. To report that Microsoft find the fine unjust is to report that they have been fined. Good for MSNBC.

    3. Re:From the BBC site: by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      He didn't claim the BBC didn't try to sway opinions, did he? :)

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    4. Re:From the BBC site: by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1

      I went there to check, too. The "Microsoft fined 280m over EU antitrust ruling" article seems to be quick, syndicated news. The Microsoft calls EU fine unjust is headline news at the international business section.

      Also, information about how BBC links to external articles: here.

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    5. Re:From the BBC site: by jZnat · · Score: 1

      It's a well-known fact that Microsoft has no influence on MSNBC nowadays.

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
    6. Re:From the BBC site: by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Live by the brand, die by the brand. If brand marketing is not important, why do they spend so much time doing it? If it is important, how do they expect me to overlook the fact that NBC sold out to Microsoft?

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  15. They're claiming it's a "clarity" problem? by CurtMonash · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Like, "our documentation wasn't good enough", or "those commissioners are too dumb to understand we don't deserve to be punished?"

    The real problem, of course, is that Windows is such a huge hairball -- as Scott McNealy so aptly put it -- that they don't really know how to unbundle. Complying with the law is just as late as everything else is.

    But before we all bash them too too hard -- where, again, are the usable Linux desktops that we'd like to have to replace Windows???

    --
    To err is human. To forgive is good system design.
    1. Re:They're claiming it's a "clarity" problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But before we all bash them too too hard -- where, again, are the usable Linux desktops that we'd like to have to replace Windows???
       
      Nowhere. Same reason Gimp and Blender will never compete with Photoshop and Max in their current form - the OSS community sucks at usability. Until they stop regarding command lines, quirky interfaces, obscure shortcuts, user unfriendly documentation and manual installs as some kind of badge of honor, the vast majority of Open Source products will always be condemned to niche status

    2. Re:They're claiming it's a "clarity" problem? by zotz · · Score: 2, Funny

      [But before we all bash them too too hard -- where, again, are the usable Linux desktops that we'd like to have to replace Windows???]

      On my computers?

      all the best,

      drew
      (da idea man)

      --
      FreeMusicPush If you want to see more Free Music made, listen to Free
    3. Re:They're claiming it's a "clarity" problem? by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      But before we all bash them too too hard -- where, again, are the usable Linux desktops that we'd like to have to replace Windows???

      If there was a plug-in replacement OS, then there wouldn't be a monololy, or any need for this. MS has stifled competition for decades, it's amazing there is anything viable left at all.

    4. Re:They're claiming it's a "clarity" problem? by ThePilgrim · · Score: 1

      But before we all bash them too too hard -- where, again, are the usable Linux desktops that we'd like to have to replace Windows???

      One of them is running on my PC at home

      --
      Wouldn't it be nice if schools got all the money they wanted and the army had to hold jumble sales for guns
    5. Re:They're claiming it's a "clarity" problem? by MarkByers · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But before we all bash them too too hard -- where, again, are the usable Linux desktops that we'd like to have to replace Windows???

      Give us the documentationthen we will write you your Windows replacements!!! What do you think this whole case is about???

      --
      I'll probably be modded down for this...
    6. Re:They're claiming it's a "clarity" problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dunno, Suse and Ubuntu are pretty damn nice nowadays =)
      I've never used Linspire, but I know it's been trying to do all that too.

    7. Re:They're claiming it's a "clarity" problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      where, again, are the usable Linux desktops

      I'm using one right now. If anything, replacing my desktop with Windows or MacOSX would result in me being _extremely_ pissed off (could probably tolerate FreeBSD+KDE, though...). There IS NO "one size fits all" desktop. Linux is "ready for the desktop", has been for _years_ now. I really don't care if you'd rather use windows because it's what you learnt first (I learnt AmigaOS first, as it happens). You might like to eat at McDonalds, too. Don't try and tell me linux "isn't usable on the desktop", becuase it fucking well is, I've been using it since the 1990s, when KDE folk were still willing to say openly that the "K" stood for "Kool".

    8. Re:They're claiming it's a "clarity" problem? by Geccie · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Exactly. Microsoft is a CONVICTED MONOPOLY that uses its monopoly position to suppress / prevent competition. One of their methods has long been to extend and abstract standard protocols. In the server / desktop space, they are trying to leverage the desktop monopoly into a server monopoly by hiding protocols needed for authentication, data storage, etc. Thus the EU commission has ruled that M$ must publish the protocol necessary to communicate with the desktop systems. This is due to the fact that M$ created / stole / modified / extended the desktop communication protocols!

      What will it take to bribe / suppress / crush these people in Europe.

    9. Re:They're claiming it's a "clarity" problem? by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, the documentation and source code at issue in this case, combined with the licensing that the EU is letting Microsoft get away with, won't result in any real competition to Windows.

      At best, it might result in some competition to other Microsoft products that are highly-integrated: maybe next year's Lotus Notes will be better in comparison to Exchange, for instance. Or RealPlayer in comparison to WMP.

      The only thing the documentaiton is going to do is let other big software vendors write more tightly-integrated software for the Windows platform. It won't help create a Windows alternative, an in the long run, might actually hurt, since writing programs that are tied to particular quirks of Windows might make them less platform-agnostic and harder to port.

      The licensing that all the docs and source is going to be released under is going to be very restrictive, and if anything is a danger to efforts like ReactOS and Wine, since it makes it more likely that they'll get accused of stealing code, and increases the number of people who can't touch projects like that because of the possibility that they've seen Microsoft's trade secrets under NDA/restrictive-license in the past.

      The only "good" to come of all this, in my opinion, is the huge PR disaster for Microsoft. The fact that it might lead to "better," by which I mean more tightly-integrated, Windows applications is less of a benefit than it is a hazard. Frankly, anything that makes Windows suck less is bad, if you dislike Windows.

      --
      "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    10. Re:They're claiming it's a "clarity" problem? by larkost · · Score: 2, Informative

      Just a note: You cannot be convicted of having a monopoly... that is not against the law. And it is up to a judge to simply find that you have a monopoly that can happen during a trial and is not a big deal. What is against the law, and Microsoft has been convicted of both in the US and in Europe is that they illegally used that monopoly to hurt or prevent competitors.

    11. Re:They're claiming it's a "clarity" problem? by Guysmiley777 · · Score: 1

      On my computers?

      Would you mind sharing? The installations I've tried don't replace Windows.

      --
      Coding with assembly is like playing with Legos. Coding an application in assembly is like building a car with Legos.
    12. Re:They're claiming it's a "clarity" problem? by zotz · · Score: 1

      Well, what I do is use something like cfdisk to remove the windows partitions and then repartition. That way, when I install linux, windows is replaced. ~;-)

      Honestly, I know thta is not really what you are asking, but that really is the answer.

      Look. I have been linux only on my desktops since the late 90s sometime. I have not looked back.

      I suggest that you install something like ubuntu and see if you can't find more than enough things to do on your computer to fill up more time than you have in a day. You may miss some things but you gain other things. It can be done.

      all the best,

      drew
      (da idea man)

      --
      FreeMusicPush If you want to see more Free Music made, listen to Free
    13. Re:They're claiming it's a "clarity" problem? by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      ... they don't really know how to unbundle. Complying with the law is just as late as everything else is.

      The provision they are failing to comply with is not bundling, it is tying. It is using secret, undocumented protocols in both the server and desktop products.

      But before we all bash them too too hard -- where, again, are the usable Linux desktops that we'd like to have to replace Windows?

      You are completely misconstruing the EU's ruling. They are not being punished for having a monopoly on desktop OS's. They are being punished for illegally advantaging their server OS using their desktop OS monopoly. There are plenty of usable Linux servers and fewer are being used because of the illegal action.

    14. Re:They're claiming it's a "clarity" problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SuSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 10. Oh and in a few months we'll have a Lotus Notes client for Linux. So that would take quite a few desktops in every european company. And if necessary, Open Source developers will translate it to whatever language is required, which propietary OS's don't do....

  16. Haha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder what Steve Jobs is doing...

  17. Easy by gentimjs · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The same thing that happens whenever a big company doesnt pay a fine. Absolutly nothing.
    Since you cant put a corporate entity in jail, and current structures are such that shareholders and executives face few legal penalties for the actions of the corporation (rather than thier own personal actions, such as in the enron ordeal) there's little real incentive for them to actualy pay up.

    1. Re:Easy by tygerstripes · · Score: 4, Interesting

      This is my point. What would be the consequences of such inaction? Basically, the EU is seen to be powerless against mega-corporations. The law is subject to corporations, not the other way around. M$ would be perceived as above the law in the EU! Big, big trouble...

      The only way the EU could actually enforce this would be to threaten, essentially, trade sanctions. But how heavily is the government, industrial and home market of every EU country saturated with M$ products? So they can't even impose anything worth a damn without incurring massively detrimental consequences themselves.

      Think this through, seriously. It's frightening.

      --
      Meta will eat itself
    2. Re:Easy by gentimjs · · Score: 1

      I agree, its very upsetting. I'm sure MS will pay just to maintain apperances (again, not like they'll even notice a petty 280 million...) but if they just didnt pay ... not refused to pay, but just didnt pay and didnt explain the non-payment .. the EU has very small teeth going after a corporate entity, and especially a foreign one...

    3. Re:Easy by oneandoneis2 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Stopping MS selling anything new in Europe wouldn't disable any of the current MS installations - They could sanction MS without hurting themselves much.

      I think it'd be more poetic if they just revoked MS's copyrights and declared Windows "freeware", tho - chairs would wind up hurled into orbit when that one got announced ;o)

      --
      So.. it has come to this
    4. Re:Easy by Homology · · Score: 1
      The same thing that happens whenever a big company doesnt pay a fine. Absolutly nothing. Since you cant put a corporate entity in jail, and current structures are such that shareholders and executives face few legal penalties for the actions of the corporation (rather than thier own personal actions, such as in the enron ordeal) there's little real incentive for them to actualy pay up.

      EU can bar the company from doing any business in EU, or severly restrict what it does. I'm sure that EU has a range of options from the do-nothing to the draconian, if it so choose.

    5. Re:Easy by tygerstripes · · Score: 1

      Heh heh.
      Oooh, I hope there's someone at Brussels reading this thread, getting ideas...

      --
      Meta will eat itself
    6. Re:Easy by mrchaotica · · Score: 2, Interesting
      But how heavily is the government, industrial and home market of every EU country saturated with M$ products? So they can't even impose anything worth a damn without incurring massively detrimental consequences themselves.
      You know, the only thing that allows Microsoft to sell software in the EU to begin with is the fact that the EU enforces their copyright for them. The easiest thing would be for the EU to declare that all of Microsoft's products are Public Domain -- then they can keep using it all they want while incurring massive benefits (no more need to buy licenses! Woohoo!) instead.
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    7. Re:Easy by mgblst · · Score: 1

      They can't really declare it freeware. What happens when Microsoft did comply, how can you just take that back. Will it mean that everybody who has copied it will now by in breach of copyright? Will it mean that Microsoft loses copyright on all it's products until it realeases new ones. It is a nice idea to think about, but infeasable.

    8. Re:Easy by KokorHekkus · · Score: 1

      Actually. MSFT has a corporate presence in the EU since it's very hard to do any serious business without it. It's called Microsoft EMEA (EMEA == Europe, Middle East, Africa) and has its own board of directors who of course are responisble for following local laws. Compare with an EU company having an subsidiary in the US, it doesn't shield the company from US laws just because there is an out-of-country ownership of the subsidiary. If MSFT refuses to pay then they will have a very good chance of piercing the corporate veil and going after those directors who authorize the non-payment (after appeals being exhausted etc).

    9. Re:Easy by CowboyBob500 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Since you cant put a corporate entity in jail...

      In the EU you can, sort of. Certainly in the UK, the board of directors are held directly responsible for the actions of the company. For example, there is a charge of "corporate manslaughter" here where the directors of a company can be put into prison for manslaughter if it can be shown that any deaths were caused by the actions of the company.

      Put simply, if MS do not pay the fine, then the minute Bill Gates, Steve Ballmer, or any of the top brass set foot in the UK (and most likely other parts of Europe too), they would be immediately arrested for non-payment of fines.

      Bob

    10. Re:Easy by CaptnMArk · · Score: 1

      *.eu better block windows update then :)

    11. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The EU would likely threaten first. Actions such as this would be a one-last-effort to get Microsoft to comply and pay up. By that time if Microsoft still has not complied, then the EU can only assume that Microsoft know what they are doing and any/all ramifications of non-compliance.

    12. Re:Easy by KokorHekkus · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Even simpler, they'll just go after the Microsoft EMEA board of directors. Microsoft EMEA is the corporate entity responsible for business in Europe, Middle East and Africa (hence EMEA) and they have their offices in Ireland.

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

      I think it would be more poetic for MS to give Europe the proverbial finger and pull all the licenses, then start suing people for illegally using their software. Start seeing how EU regulators like it when they get sued because they are then using software illegally.

      Fucking money grubbing pieces of shit....

    14. Re:Easy by fireboy1919 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The only way the EU could actually enforce this would be to threaten, essentially, trade sanctions.

      This just isn't true. It's much easier to seize assets of a large corporation than it is for an individual. They can just take the money.

      Who controls the banks and credit agencies in Europe? (here's a hint: it rhymes with "la snoverning hodies."

      Even if Microsoft stopped using Europe as a place to store their money (which they really can't do if they're going to have any people over there - they need a place to store payroll/etc), any money headed *to* Microsoft can be intercepted and replaced with a deduction in Microsoft's debt.

      Of course, if the fine is repeatedly levied it becomes a sort of trade sanction, doesn't it?

      Except that instead of taking a cut of each dollar MS makes, they're just going to take all of it until the daily fine quota has been filled...which likely means that they're going to be bleeding Microsoft's EU holdings dry after a pretty short time.

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
    15. Re:Easy by mrchaotica · · Score: 2

      Ah, yet another example of how DRM and Treacherous Computing are evil: they allow copyright holders to circumvent the law (and not just this instance, but also wrt Fair Use in general).

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    16. Re:Easy by Oersoep · · Score: 1

      ....or they could just freeze their funds instead.

    17. Re:Easy by bit01 · · Score: 1

      Windows Disengenuous Disadvantage can track all copies. There'd be no problem tracking/blocking any new copies the day after such a ruling was reversed.

      ---

      I'm not worried about the use of DRM. I'm worried about the abuse.

    18. Re:Easy by schon · · Score: 5, Interesting

      They can't really declare it freeware.

      Of course they can. Assign a value of $X to the copyright of a single product, then the EU just assumes the copyright for it in lieu of the debt, and releases it at no charge. Seizure of assets happens all the time with real property - why is it so hard to think that it could happen with virtual property?

      What happens when Microsoft did comply, how can you just take that back.

      If MS paid the fine, do you think that the EU will be giving the money back if/when they comply?

      It's a punishment, they're not supposed to get it back.

    19. Re:Easy by mysticgoat · · Score: 1

      The members of the EU are sovreign entities. They can declare MSFT an outlaw and take all kinds of measures against it, including appropriating its intellectual properties and putting those in the public domain.

      MS would be hurting world wide if it became legal for EU businesses to copy, sell, and export CDs of Windows XP or MS Office 2003... After looking at MSFT financials, this could probably be done without serious damage to the world marketplace, since MS has not invested very much into the infrastructure that it sits on.

      Perhaps it is going to take that kind of clue-bat to get some people in the software industry to wake up and realize that it isn't nice to play screw-you with the rules of the marketplace.

    20. Re:Easy by oliderid · · Score: 1

      We aren't talking about Microsoft US here. We are talking about its European branches. Microsoft doesn't work with importers for decades. They have branches, these branches are controlled by the US headquarter directly (through shares) or undirectly (a holding in a fiscal friendly country). The EU isn't threatenning Microsoft Seattle. The EU is threatenning its various European properties/assets. Basically They can do whatever they want to enforce their decision. They ask member countries to enforce their decision (they are bound to do so). Their decision may be to freeze/resell the company assets. Split the MS European branches into several units. Basically the EU has the power of a state, EU members states will do the dirty job. They will be just like any citizen who didn't pay his/her fiscal debt/fines. No one (Volkswagen, Schneider, Allianz to name few corporations who had to face the EU recently) has ever dared to push the EU to that limit. No politicians could intefer with the EU. The EU is a bureaucratic monster made by various treaties and completly independant once it has received its orders from the council of ministers (one of them is to favor competition and to track unfair practices). Olivier

    21. Re:Easy by plopez · · Score: 1

      Followed by constant whining and threatening by Dubya and friends over how 'unfair' it all is to oppress those poor oppressed mega corporations and mega billionaires.

      --
      putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
    22. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Within Britain, "EMEA" has another meaning. It means "East Midlands and East Anglia" ..... which is Cambridgeshire, Derbyshire, Essex, Leicestershire, Lincolnshire, Norfolk, Northamptonshire, Nottinghamshire, Warwickshire and Suffolk. Basically the bit that sticks out opposite Wales, all the way to the middle.

    23. Re:Easy by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      Except in most of Europe, (1) no licence is required to use software since that is part of your Statutory Rights of Fair Dealing, and (2) the Microsoft EULA is unenforcible anyway since it is at odds with other Statutory Rights (like local courts having jurisdiction). And of course, being governments and and all that, they could always change the law just to make sure. Then they won't even be using the software illegally, and Microsoft won't have a leg to stand on.

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    24. Re:Easy by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      If Ms stopped to sell its products in Europe then the EU would bow down, no question. But what would follow next would be a program to combat the strategic dependency. So this is no rational strategy.

    25. Re:Easy by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

      '' The same thing that happens whenever a big company doesnt pay a fine. Absolutly nothing.
      Since you cant put a corporate entity in jail, and current structures are such that shareholders and executives face few legal penalties for the actions of the corporation (rather than thier own personal actions, such as in the enron ordeal) there's little real incentive for them to actualy pay up. ''

      The only thing that would happen if Microsoft refused to pay is a few letters sent to all the banks where Microsoft has accounts, a few letters sent to all their customers (like Dell) telling them where to send their money instead of to Microsoft, a hundred bailiffs turning up at Microsoft offices in Munich, London, whereever, and confiscating all the office equipment (and if you think you could have security stop them then the next thing coming will be hundred bailiffs and hundred armed policemen).

    26. Re:Easy by init100 · · Score: 1

      which likely means that they're going to be bleeding Microsoft's EU holdings dry after a pretty short time.

      I think that Microsoft has pretty large holdings in the EU. If we disregard any physical property, remember that the EU member state Ireland is a regional distribution center for Microsoft, channeling large amounts of Microsoft's income because of their low corporate taxes for US corporate subsidiaries. IIRC, Microsoft Ireland does not only serve the EU, but also other European countries, and possibly other countries as well. So I think the EU has ample of opportunity to seize Microsoft financial assets.

    27. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, what a witty comeback. Don't try to refute any of the points or anything.

      I hereby award you the "DID NOT!" prize for ad-hominem attacks.

    28. Re:Easy by init100 · · Score: 1

      If Ms stopped to sell its products in Europe then the EU would bow down, no question.

      I think that it is the other way around. If media reports are correct, the EU has theatened to ban Microsoft from selling Windows Vista in the EU if the do not follow the EU judgements.

    29. Re:Easy by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      Agreed. I think a problem is that the concept of law and property where once based on general principles. In order to foster a prefered enviornment artifical psuedo-property laws were passed that are arbitrary. The conflict arises when people want to assume that these arbitrary, one might say whimsical, laws represent general principles and should thus be the same everywhere, universally. They aren't. This seems "unfair".

    30. Re:Easy by sjames · · Score: 1

      Basically, the EU is seen to be powerless against mega-corporations. The law is subject to corporations, not the other way around.

      That perception is exactly why not paying the fine is a huge risk for MS. The EU would be forced to take drastic action (such as asset seizure) to save face.

    31. Re:Easy by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      No, this was exaggarated, in fact produced by Microsoft PR itself.

      The Commission was officially asked by MS whether they would also keep an eye on Vista and they confirmed that (otherwiese it would have be interpreted as a self-committment or agreement on non-investigation). Then Ms sent out the PR that Vista was threatened.

      The goal is to depict EU antitrust officials as radicals bent to destroy Microsoft and defend the interests of European competitors. Now, this is not true.

      You know, Comical Brad ruins the public affairs reputation of Microsoft by playing silly tricks, Microsoft is not SCO. We want it to keep alive.

      The main problem of Microsoft's PR in Brussels is that they talk as if they were in the position to negotiate with the authorities. I call it deception of the stock market.

  18. the EU victim by zziggy · · Score: 1, Informative

    "The judgment also called for Microsoft to debundle its Windows Media Player from its Windows operating system, and slapped the software firm with a record fine of 497m euros. " "Microsoft has been fined 280.5m euros ($357m; £194m) by the European Commission for failing to comply with an anti-competition ruling." fines... 497... 280 - did they pay anything? will they? ... it will take time.... plenty of time... they'll try to market this as being the new victim of EU...

    1. Re:the EU victim by hankwang · · Score: 1
      497... 280 - did they pay anything?
      Yes, they paid the 497 in full back in 2004.. Quote: [EC spokesman] Mamer indicated that it was not unusual for companies to pay cash to cover such a penalty, and said about half of all organizations paying fines to the EC do the same.
    2. Re:the EU victim by HuckleCom · · Score: 0

      I guess I don't understand why the EU can control what's provided in an operating system, can somone explain this to me?

      Last time I checked - an 'operating system' is a suite of utilities, tools and other gadgets on top of a kernel to provide a basic means of productive computer use.

      Somebody straighten me out !

  19. Can they pay with licenses? by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 1

    94 million redeemable copies of XP/Office/Visual Studio should be good ;)

    --
    liqbase :: faster than paper
  20. So what? by 8127972 · · Score: 2, Funny


    1. 280 million Euros is a drop in the bucket for M$.
    2. They will delay, stall, and avoid paying for as long as possible.
    3. When #2 fails, they will magically announce that they are in compliance.
    4. ?????
    5. Profit!

    --
    This is my opinion. To make sure you don't steal it, it's covered by the DMCA.
    1. Re:So what? by chiskop · · Score: 2, Funny
      Unforunately, it's more like:
      1. Profit!
      2. 280 million Euros is a drop in the bucket for M$.
      3. Profit!
      4. They will delay, stall, and avoid paying for as long as possible.
      5. Profit!
      6. When #4 fails, they will magically announce that they are in compliance.
      7. Profit!
      8. ?????
      9. Profit!
    2. Re:So what? by gi.net · · Score: 1

      280 million in not that much compared to the fines from other lawsuits.

    3. Re:So what? by giorgiofr · · Score: 1

      While your analysis is quite correct, overall, I can't help remind you that 1. the "2nd world" does not exist, 2. the EU was quite rich last time I checked and had the highest quality of life, 3. the Euro is beating the Dollar to a pulp.
      But as I said, everything else is correct.

      --
      Global warming is a cube.
    4. Re:So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Steal underpants
      2. ????
      3. Profit

    5. Re:So what? by organgtool · · Score: 1
      Maybe getting Microsoft to stall is the EU's plan.

      1. Fine Microsoft a fairly reasonable sum of money
      2. Watch the value of the Euro continue to climb over the USD while Microsoft delays
      3. Profit!
    6. Re:So what? by Some+Bitch · · Score: 2, Informative
      Form a group with your fellow 2nd world countries.

      What do the former Warsaw Pact countries have to do with this?

      First world = NATO (roughly).

      Second world = Warsaw Pact (again, roughly).

      Third world = countries no-one really cared about at the time.

  21. Gates' reply by BlackCobra43 · · Score: 1, Troll

    Ballmer, hand me my personnal checkbook.

    --
    I never spellcheck and I freely admit it. Save your karma for more worthwhile "lol erorrs" replies
    1. Re:Gates' reply by hotdiggitydawg · · Score: 1

      Checkbook? Hah! He could find that much under toe cushions of his sofa.

    2. Re:Gates' reply by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man, rich people get all the nice things, my couch barely even has seat cushions, much less cushions for my toes.

    3. Re:Gates' reply by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're just another stupid slashdot troll. Everything anti-MS is, of course, modded insightful or informative.
       
      You're biased, and you're incorrect. Totalitarian tool.

    4. Re:Gates' reply by BlackCobra43 · · Score: 1

      Incorrect? So Gates COULDN'T take a small chunk out of his 58 billion personnal worth to pay a "measly" 400 mllion? I think you need to think long and hard about who is an incorrect troll here.

      --
      I never spellcheck and I freely admit it. Save your karma for more worthwhile "lol erorrs" replies
    5. Re:Gates' reply by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Ballmer, my wallet is in my front pocket."

  22. Higher fines possible by bobbo69 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    From the FT: 'Under European Union competition rules companies that fail to comply with a Commission ruling can be fined up to 5 per cent of their daily worldwide turnover.

    In Microsoft's case this would be about $5.5m-a-day.'

    http://www.ft.com/cms/s/c55bc756-1047-11db-8f6f-00 00779e2340.html

    I would imagine that there would be stiffer penalties (i.e., non-financial aimed at curtailing MSFT's ability to trade in the EU) available if MSFT continued to defy the commission. If there were not this would be a de facto admission that companies can break the law in the EU with impunity if they are rich enough. I very much doubt the commission would tolerate that state of affairs.

  23. Most of the fine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    ... is earmarked for spending on chair-proof windows ;)

  24. Who gets the money? by FooAtWFU · · Score: 1

    Who exactly gets the money? Lucky them. Surprised they don't levy fines like this more often.

    --
    The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    1. Re:Who gets the money? by Tarantulus · · Score: 1

      The french, it's always the french

      --
      flamebait? me? never.....
    2. Re:Who gets the money? by langarto · · Score: 1

      The money goes to the EU budget, but does not increase it. That means that individual states have to pay less, hence less tax pressure for their citizens.

    3. Re:Who gets the money? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Since the fines are related to Microsoft not releasing documentation on things like SMB, I would like to see a few percent of the money go to projects that reverse engineer these protocols. I can imagine that paying half a dozen developers each to work on projects like Samba, OpenOffice.org, AbiWord, etc. would have a significant impact on Microsoft's willingness to open the documentation.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    4. Re:Who gets the money? by alewar · · Score: 1

      from the FAQ:

      Where does the money go?

      The penalty payment is paid into the EU Budget. It does not increase the Budget, but reduces the contribution from Member States. The fines therefore reduce the overall tax burden on individuals.

    5. Re:Who gets the money? by sauron_of_mordor · · Score: 1

      Are you kidding? I think more likely the member states will just keep it and claim a good year....

  25. Where does the money go? by InsaneLampshade · · Score: 1

    Surely i can't be the only one wondering where all this money goes if/when Microsoft pay. Who gets to keep it? What is it spent on?

    1. Re:Where does the money go? by D.B.+Tits · · Score: 3, Informative

      Well, the EU is comparable to a Federal Government. The money will be added to the total EU budget.

    2. Re:Where does the money go? by mcwop · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I hope they use it to switch away from MS products, and not give it right back to MSFT by upgrading to Vista.

      --

      "I don't think it's selfish, to eat defenseless shellfish." -NOFX

    3. Re:Where does the money go? by dapyx · · Score: 1
      The money go the European Union budget, who uses it for stuff like:

      Common Agricultural Policy (agriculture subsidies)

      regional development (for the development of poorer regions within the EU, like the new members from Eastern Europe)

      rural development (infrastructure for rural areas)

      research

      --
      I'm sorry, the number you have dialed is an imaginary number. Please rotate your phone 90 degrees and dial again.
    4. Re:Where does the money go? by EnglishTim · · Score: 1

      The money will be added to the total EU budget.

      In other words, the biggest chunk of it will go towards subsidising farmers as part of the Common Agricultural Policy. Great.

    5. Re:Where does the money go? by D.B.+Tits · · Score: 1

      For quite some time the EU and the european governments are running programs to promote the use of OSS. The programs are not really effective as till now, but at least they raise awareness that there are alternatives for MS products. I work in a large university hospital in The Netherlands. The IT-department here wants to change from Novell to Windows 2003. That's quite an issue here, because the Board of Directors feels that a (semi-) public institution should take the lead in implementing alternatives to MS. A lot of local governments are making the switch to OSS, supported by the national government. So there is a good change that some of this money will be used for strengthening the market position of non-MS products.

    6. Re:Where does the money go? by D.B.+Tits · · Score: 1

      Yes. Normally I'm not into French-bashing, but we can and should blame the French for that. They are blocking any reform on the Common Agricultural Policy.

    7. Re:Where does the money go? by sendai2ci · · Score: 1

      Actually no, the money will be included into the EU budget. Which will not increase the budget, but will instead reduce the amount that EU members contribute.

      So barring a successful appeal, this will mean a tax break for EU citizens.

    8. Re:Where does the money go? by strider44 · · Score: 1

      No it won't. According to the FAQ that's been seen in a few comments here, the EU budget won't change, but the member states will need to contribute less than they would have. In other words, the average tax of Europeans should go down by approx 0.6 euros.

  26. Credit rating? by MarkByers · · Score: 4, Funny

    just imagine what such an action would do to their credit rating

    Ohhh I never thought of that. It will be a really huge problem for Microsoft if they ever need to purchase some new company cars but the bank won't loan them the money...

    How will they cope?

    --
    I'll probably be modded down for this...
    1. Re:Credit rating? by Kadin2048 · · Score: 5, Informative

      I know you're joking, but large companies really do have a "credit rating" -- it's called their bond rating or bond score. They don't just go to a bank and borrow money, they basically write their own fiat currency (bonds) and sell them to raise capital. Depending on the perceived health of the company, the bonds are perceived as more or less risky.

      I don't know Microsoft's offhand, but I'm betting it's pretty good...not that they need to raise capital, with the amount of money they have sitting around.

      --
      "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    2. Re:Credit rating? by JanneM · · Score: 5, Informative

      It also affects their ability to do certain types of business. Refusing to pay a fine like this automatically adds them on various blacklists that at least a lot of governmental agencies and large corporations do follow and means they'd be ineliglible for contracts with those organizations.

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
    3. Re:Credit rating? by zerosix · · Score: 1

      M$ needs no loans, there "credit score" is useless. They could be paying ca$h for the next decade!

      --
      Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former. ~Albert Einstein
    4. Re:Credit rating? by dave1g · · Score: 1

      Microsoft has $0 Debt so their credit rating wouldn't matter. Typically when your credit rating goes down you have to increase the interest you pay on your debt so that it will sitll be an attractive investment to otehr people risk vs reward type stuff

  27. Bigger fines/stiffer punishments by Ekhymosis · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I agree with the folks that posted about the whole "drop in the ocean" or "280 million euros is barely a dent" arguments. Until the EU hits them with even bigger fines or stiffer penalties, all MS is going to do is whine and moan and complain and stall stall stall and occasionally release whatever the EU demands.

    It's not really hurting them financially, but maybe all these fines will a.) start adding up and b.) start making average people pay attention to how MS is screwing other companies up. But chances are, the average person doesn't care about MS's tactics, all they want is their damn computer to work, politics be damned. And that is why, at the end of the day, MS wins. (Mayhaps that made no sense, but it's late and I'm dead tired)

    --
    Fighting over religion is like seeing whose imaginary friend is best.
    1. Re:Bigger fines/stiffer punishments by db32 · · Score: 1

      The average person thinks Bill Gates is a supergenius god of computers. The average person worships the fact that he has so much money, and uses his bank account as a measure of how important and admirable the guy is. Every time I fix someones computer or fix some big IT issue I get people comment about me being the next Bill Gates, or my kids growing up to be the next Bill Gates and it makes me sick. The man is a sham, he is incredibly immoral, and I don't believe for a second that all of his 'charity' is any more than cheap PR because he knows people are catching on. The time/money he spends on charity would be like me tossing a nickel in a homeless guys cup and expecting to get Time Person of the Year for it.

      The money worship that goes on these days makes me sick...all he is is a very good and very rich theif and scam artist. Even more sickening is listening to people defend his antics as "You would do the same if you had that kind of money" or "so what? He still has more money than you will ever see".

      --
      The only change I can believe in is what I find in my couch cushions.
    2. Re:Bigger fines/stiffer punishments by Kijori · · Score: 1

      I think some of your criticism is a little harsh. According to WP, Bill has a net worth of $46bn and has given over $29bn to charity through his foundation in the last 6 years. His fortune is expected to increase to $50bn this year. So, to change your analogy, this isn't like you dropping a nickel in the homeless guy's cup. Based on the average American yearly income of $43,527 (Source: census.gov), this is the equivalent of you giving the homeless guy $315,570. Perhaps this is an unfair comparison, but it's more accurate than likening it to one nickel.

    3. Re:Bigger fines/stiffer punishments by jejones · · Score: 1

      So what? Are you saying that the end justifies the means?

    4. Re:Bigger fines/stiffer punishments by Kijori · · Score: 1

      I was responding to a criticism of Gates' donations to charity as insignificant; they aren't.

      However, to take the bait, yes. I believe that in this case the end does justify the means. I don't believe that Microsoft's abuse of its monopoly position is right, but I do believe that very little of that $29bn would have gone to the poor if it hadn't first gone to Gates. At the end of the day, if all the money he earnt eventually goes to charity, what you've got is effectively a tax, with all the proceeds going to the poor. I don't see that as such a terrible thing.

    5. Re:Bigger fines/stiffer punishments by ajs318 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Giving away money to charity that you should never have had in the first place, does not make it O.K. Any charitable organisation with any bollocks should refuse the money Gates is offering, just on general principle. I know there are a few groups of people that I'd rather starve to death than accept food from .....

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    6. Re:Bigger fines/stiffer punishments by Kijori · · Score: 1

      Like it or not, Microsoft made the money. I don't think there's a more moral thing for Gates to do with it than to fight disease and feed the poor. If you don't want to eat, that's your prerogative, but don't try to foist your ideals on those that actually have the choice to make.

    7. Re:Bigger fines/stiffer punishments by db32 · · Score: 1

      Uhm, I am assuming you have an extra digit in there becuase otherwise your numbers really don't make sense. However, to counter...go look up the tax laws surrounding the rich and corporations. Most of 'the rich' have an income FAR below what kind of money they actually have to spend. It is derived from manipulation of tax codes and what not. Corporations get to spend their money BEFORE taxes, people get to spend their money AFTER taxes. So...as long as you can write off your purchases as business expenses...and damn near everything under the sun can be written of as a business expense...you get to buy all your stuff before taxes hit...so you spend all the money you can on business expenses (legit or questionable) so when the tax man comes by...you have minimal money to be taxed. This is the same reason why the lower end of the economic population pays so much of the taxes, the upper end has the laws supporting them artificially pushing them downward in the tax brackets.

      Also...I can almost gaurontee in that $29bn in charity dollars....a huge chunk was not in cash or any other liquid asset. It was in Office XP donations to schools so they would have to buy Windows...or maybe even Windows...so they would all have to become trained Windows users instead of learning Linux or Mac in school. Also...every cent of that donation figure is also used for tax purposes :). So...he gives tons of crap software away, enfocing his lockin, gets tons of free publicity on "see he isn't really bad", and gets a hefty tax write off. But he only did it out of the goodness of his heart....he only mercileslly crushes his competitors and steals their technology...he wouldn't have other motives for donations...

      --
      The only change I can believe in is what I find in my couch cushions.
    8. Re:Bigger fines/stiffer punishments by Kijori · · Score: 1

      Uhm, I am assuming you have an extra digit in there becuase otherwise your numbers really don't make sense

      Using my figures Bill has income $4bn/year and gave $29bn, meaning the total gift was 7.25 times his income. If the average income is $43,527, then the equivalent hit is $315,570. Noting that I admit that my figures are likely to be off the mark (see below) and that his gift was spread over 6 years, this still serves to rebut the presumption in the ggp that this is like 'giving a nickel'.

      However, to counter...go look up the tax laws surrounding the rich and corporations. Most of 'the rich' have an income FAR below what kind of money they actually have to spend. It is derived from manipulation of tax codes and what not

      This is true, although I suspect the real figure would still give you a fairly high donation. Good point.

      Also...I can almost gaurontee in that $29bn in charity dollars....a huge chunk was not in cash or any other liquid asset. It was in Office XP donations to schools so they would have to buy Windows...or maybe even Windows...so they would all have to become trained Windows users instead of learning Linux or Mac in school.

      This one's not true. Every cent of it was cash, and this is only his donation to the Gates foundation. I think we need to draw a line between Gates himself and MS; Gates has made large pecuniary donations out of philanthropy, Microsoft has donated to maintain its market dominance. No doubt you will tell me that the donations are not based in philanthropy. If so, point me to a reference explaining how it benefits him, in some concrete way. I think the fact that he's stepping down from a controlling role in the world's largest software company shows at least a modicum of sincerity.

      Also...every cent of that donation figure is also used for tax purposes :). So...he gives tons of crap software away, enfocing his lockin, gets tons of free publicity on "see he isn't really bad", and gets a hefty tax write off. But he only did it out of the goodness of his heart....he only mercileslly crushes his competitors and steals their technology...he wouldn't have other motives for donations...

      As I mentioned, he isn't giving software away. I'm not sure that he has any real need for publicity, but it's true that this move is good PR for him. The tax write off will be negligible compared to a $29bn donation, especially given the tax avoidance methods that are available to him that involve much less of a gift. And finally, I don't disagree with the fact that his business practices were unethical, I just maintain that he isn't using the proceeds entirely selfishly.

    9. Re:Bigger fines/stiffer punishments by db32 · · Score: 1

      Your original post said 46 billion and 29 billion which is barely over 0.5 not 7.25. But if the figures are 4 billion and he donated 29 billion...well we are sort of back to the question of how do you donate more money than you have? Unless he is donating other peoples money and he is the only one mentioned due to his already high public profile.

      As far as benefiting him and MS I would also argue that everyone associates Bill Gates with Microsoft regardless. The same way Walt Disney is permanently associated with Disney the company. So in most peoples minds its one in the same. Most people have no idea that he has stepped down, or what his position is, other than overlord of MS.

      I have learned from dealing with a great many people like him, sincerity is rarely true. I have tried really hard to give people the benefit of the doubt, but when people that are so good at manipulating others do nice things...its generally part of the manipulation, and not a real desire to be nice. I could be wrong...but life experience has pretty much shown me the capabilities of people who are power hungry and manipulative, even when it doesn't work, and they are beaten...they still try to manipulate rather than turn over a new leaf. (Disclaimer, I don't believe most people are this type of person at all...I'm just saying the ones that are like this all pretty much behave the same) Sweet as can be to your face...the second you turn around thinking "ok good, he learned his lesson, he will be goo*URK*" and you lose :)

      Its going to take alot of public apologies and admissions of guilt before I ever believe he is doing much of anything to be the nice guy.

      --
      The only change I can believe in is what I find in my couch cushions.
    10. Re:Bigger fines/stiffer punishments by Kijori · · Score: 1

      I was dealing with income, not net worth. That's why I had 4bn and 46bn.

      Perhaps he's not being sincere, perhaps cynicism is right again. But it would be nice if it's genuine - and so far, I think it looks like it is.

    11. Re:Bigger fines/stiffer punishments by db32 · · Score: 1

      I think it only looks genuine if you ignore everything else he has done. The man has an incredible ego. A old friend of mine was a big time Gates fanboy, had his book and everything. Went on and on about the stuff in the book...the man is definetly full of himself. He really behaves as if he was stuffed into one too many lockers as a kid and this is his revenge on the world for not liking him then. Outside of the monetary and PR he stands to gain from the donations...it makes everyone else think he is important and "like" him.

      It really would be nice if it was genuine, but honestly...the man still lives in a giant mansion, has everything he could ever want many times over...and has multiple world governments by the balls with Office. He is not changing his lifestyle much to donate. I have FAR more respect for the family that gives a couple hundred a year and actually has to make meaningful personal sacrificies in their daily lives to do it. Charity is not about the dollar ammount, charity is about sacrificing some of your well being for the well being of someone else.

      --
      The only change I can believe in is what I find in my couch cushions.
  28. The european Competition Commission press release: by Xamataca · · Score: 1
    Today's Decision concludes that as of 20 June 2006, Microsoft had still not supplied complete and accurate interoperability information as required by the March 2004 Decision. Microsoft's obligations in this regard are clearly outlined in that Decision, both in terms of the result to be achieved, and in terms of what Microsoft must do to achieve that result. These obligations were specific and have not changed: it is for Microsoft to produce usable documentation.
    Complete press release here: http://europa.eu.int/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do? reference=IP/06/979&format=HTML&aged=0&language=EN &guiLanguage=en/
    --
    ***Game Over***Insert Coin***
  29. Enough is enough by MadSweeper · · Score: 1

    What would happen to the world if Microsoft said "Ok, enough's enough. 'Frig' you all!" and shuts down! They all have enough money to live comfortably for the rest of their lives (and then some). I think that a lot of people rely on MS software...
    Eventually you get fed-up with the fly that buzzes around your head and you kill it.

    1. Re:Enough is enough by 91degrees · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What would happen to the world if Microsoft said "Ok, enough's enough. 'Frig' you all!" and shuts down!

      The people who made the decision would get sued by their shareholders, employees and their customers simultaneously.

    2. Re:Enough is enough by Opportunist · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Nothing. It's simple as that. Nothing would happen, immediately.

      Of course, there would be a huge vacuum in the end user OS market. But then, there's nobody that keeps you from copying your OS. People would probably not be able to activate their WinXP anymore (unless someone writes a, then legal, crack/patch for it), so they would probably step back to Win2k. Copy it, it's legal (the one holding the rights is "dead". Because if there was someone who picked up the rights for the systems, the whole point would be moot since he would also be responsible to keep the system running).

      For the next 3-4 years, people would 'survive' on the old systems. They're good enough to exist for a little longer. And then other OS manufacturers will step in. Apple will certainly try to push into the market, now that they have the ability to run on x86 systems. Linux distributions will try to expand their market share, trying to break into the low-end user market. Sun might try a stunt to get out of the hole they're in. And of course IBM would certainly try to regain some of their business partners.

      So I'd say if MS just said "fu.. you, I quit", the result would be a bomb in the IT sector, markets and stocks would go bonkers for a few days or even weeks, but I doubt there would be any real fallout.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    3. Re:Enough is enough by mrxak · · Score: 1

      I agree. It's not like every copy of windows and office and whatever else will suddenly cease to function (unless Bill Gates has put backdoors in everything just for this very reason!!!) and people will just go about their business for a while with no trouble. It would probably be a very gradual shift, and since there's who knows how many computers and boxes of software in every retailer's storage all around the world, people could still buy Microsoft products for a while afterwards too. Apple really is the logical choice to take over, since they've got Bootcamp to hold people over as software programmers start switching over to other OSes. They'd have to seriously expand their operation though to meet new demand. I hate to say it, but I really wouldn't expect a major Linux awakening.

    4. Re:Enough is enough by Oersoep · · Score: 2, Funny

      The OSS community would gain an army of slow working non-documenting bug writing members.

    5. Re:Enough is enough by LaughingCoder · · Score: 1

      Apple will certainly try to push into the market

      Yipee! We will all get to pay double or triple for our OSes then! Seriously, for such a nasty monopoly, I think most rational people will agree that charging $89 for an OS (retail) is pretty reasonable. Take Microsoft out of the mix and prices go through the roof, in my opinion. Ditto for the hardware, unless another player emerges as a dominant enough force to prevent the HW vendors from reverting to the "good old days" when nothing was compatible so you were a captive customer. you want a spreadsheet that runs on our systems? Sure, that'll be $10,000!

      --
      The more you regulate a company, the worse its products become.
    6. Re:Enough is enough by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Well, my guess is that without MS in the fold, the consumer market would split in half between Apple and Linux, the business market would be a playground for IBM and, to a lesser degree, Sun.

      Apple would cover those that want a "simple" computer that does the job. A machine that is stable, has an intuitive interface and where you don't need a Ph.D. in CS to get a connection to the 'net. People that don't care about servers or "doing their own thing", who want to use the computer as a tool or toy.

      Linux would be something those people turn to who want to go "deeper" with their computers. Who want to play around, want to run their own servers, want to toy with new software.

      The business sector would most likely remember how IBM made "their" machines in the 70s and 80s, and they would revert back to them and look to them for a new business system. Sun might want to take a share of the server market there, but I'd guess IBM would either swallow or squish them.

      In short, the biz world would return into the firm grasp of Big Blue, the consumer market would revolve around Apple and its shiny toys.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    7. Re:Enough is enough by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

      '' What would happen to the world if Microsoft said "Ok, enough's enough. 'Frig' you all!" and shuts down! They all have enough money to live comfortably for the rest of their lives (and then some). I think that a lot of people rely on MS software... ''

      About two hours later there will be an hour long phone call between Michael Dell and Steve Jobs. One week later either all Dell computers ship with Linux, or they ship 50 percent with Linux and 50 percent with MacOS X, or they will all be able to dual-boot. Apple will invest about $100,000,000 in OpenOffice and in twelve months, the MacOS X version will run better than Microsoft Office ever did.

    8. Re:Enough is enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The day after Microsoft shuts down we shall see the crack against product activation. No microsoft -> no more updates. No more updates -> stable version to hexedit. Hexedit -> no more product activation.

    9. Re:Enough is enough by eyewhin · · Score: 1

      MS shutting down would not hurt the end user very much. There is plenty of software on the market that makes MS Windows useful. Windows, in an of itself, is technically an OS. There are replacements for all MS software--Office, compilers for programming languages, games, etc.... The really great thing about something like MS shutting down would be access to information that could benefit other OS's--file system spec's,, for example. It is never going to happen that MS shuts down, but the dream must live on! David

  30. well.. by BlackCobra43 · · Score: 1

    the same things that's happened every other time they ignored a ruling - some judge ups the ante and slaps a slightly larger fine on them. Ballmer throws a few chairs, Gates sheds a single tear, and we are back to square one.

    --
    I never spellcheck and I freely admit it. Save your karma for more worthwhile "lol erorrs" replies
  31. Erh... something runs wrong here. by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Interesting

    EU: MS, you're fined 1.5 M a day.
    MS: Ok.

    (pause a year)

    EU: MS, you didn't pay, you're fined 2.5m a day.
    MS: Ok.

    (pause a year)

    EU: MS, you still didn't pay, you're fined 3.5m a day.
    MS: ok.

    Is it me or ... I mean, hell, if I didn't pay a speeding ticket I'd be in jail before this year is over, not next or some decade. What's a fine good for if the one fined doesn't bother paying?

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    1. Re:Erh... something runs wrong here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if I didn't pay a speeding ticket I'd be in jail before this year is over

      Where you live that may be the case. In most EU countries, you would not go to jail over it. You could string the courts for years, but eventually you would have to pay, or some of your assets would be seized.

    2. Re:Erh... something runs wrong here. by mrxak · · Score: 1

      A judge could simply order the removal of all Microsoft products from stores. A fine and no income at all from EU countries would probably catch their attention.

    3. Re:Erh... something runs wrong here. by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      If they don't pay, then effectively, the EU just send the bailiffs in and start physically carrying Microsoft assets out of the building.

      In practice, of course, this phenomenon is more likely to manifest itself through ordering banks to confiscate MS funds in the first instance.

      Arresting a few directors would probably get things moving, too.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    4. Re:Erh... something runs wrong here. by Nagus · · Score: 2, Informative

      EU: MS, you didn't pay, you're fined 2.5m a day.

      Wrong. They did pay the previous fine of some 490M EUR. They now get a daily fine because they still haven't complied with the court's ruling from that trial.

      You're making it sound as if the imposed fines had no effect. Admittedly, they haven't had the desired effect (which is compliance with the court's ruling) yet, but they are effective in bleeding (and thereby penalizing) Microsoft.

      --
      Wenn ist das Nunstruck git und Slotermeyer? Ja!... Beiherhund das Oder die Flipperwaldt gersput!
    5. Re:Erh... something runs wrong here. by SimonInOz · · Score: 1

      One can only hope fines go more like this ...

      $1 the first day
      $2 the second day
      $4 the third day ...

      Now that's going to hurt .. in a while.

      --
      "Cats like plain crisps"
    6. Re:Erh... something runs wrong here. by Andrewkov · · Score: 3, Funny

      They should fine Microsoft 640 million, that should be enough for anyone.

    7. Re:Erh... something runs wrong here. by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      a while?
      In a month, they've already been charged $(1Bi-1).

      --
      110100 1101000 1101000 1100110 0 1101111 1101000 1100011 1
    8. Re:Erh... something runs wrong here. by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Is it me or ... I mean, hell, if I didn't pay a speeding ticket I'd be in jail before this year is over, not next or some decade.

      Well, is that if you didn't respond to it at all, had the judgement made against you, then the warrant for your arrest? That's not just "not paying" it, that's the equivelent of Microsoft never even showing up to court. Next time, contest the ticket. Plead "not guilty." Subpoena the record of the cop, the cop's boss, and the cop's partner. Get discovery on the car he was driving, the laser/radar unit, and such. Ask for extensions. When you lose, appeal. Ask for more extensions. In about 5 years, you might be forced to pay the fine under penalty of jail, but chances are that the state will give up before you do. Of course, spending $10,000 will get you out of a ticket most of the time, but then, is it really worth it? Microsoft is hoping that someone will give up, like they did in the US, rather than hold them to the fines. It works well for speeding tickets.

    9. Re:Erh... something runs wrong here. by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      *smirk*
      "here" is not the US. When you get a speeding ticket here, you better pay. It only gets worse if you don't. The cop saying "He did it" is enough to make you guilty, proof or not.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    10. Re:Erh... something runs wrong here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      They should fine Microsoft 640 million, that should be enough for anyone.
      Andrewkov wins.
  32. stalling costs court money also by 192939495969798999 · · Score: 1

    Don't forget that for M$ to stall costs them money in legal fees, etc. as well. It is a very slow bleed, but enough drains like this and they will be in trouble. A 200+ million dollar antitrust type fine definitely is difficult to explain away to shareholders!

    --
    stuff |
    1. Re:stalling costs court money also by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A 200+ million dollar antitrust type fine definitely is difficult to explain away to shareholders!

      Not if you explain it by saying "Thanks to our aggresive anti-trust practices, we're now in a position where we can make 200+ million in a couple of days maximum - compliance would severely affect our earning potential".

      Most shareholders think with their pockets.

    2. Re:stalling costs court money also by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      But this is happening in Europe, where no money changes hands before the verdict is accepted -- or else it would be considered perverting the course of justice.

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
  33. Double Standard by Kamujin · · Score: 0

    Am I the only one who finds it the least bit ironic that while the EU fines MS for bundling application, Apple is bashing MS with comericals bragging about how it bundles MORE software? I guess having no marketshare gives you the right to extra competative advantage?

    1. Re:Double Standard by mccalli · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Am I the only one who finds it the least bit ironic that while the EU fines MS for bundling application, Apple is bashing MS with comericals bragging about how it bundles MORE software? I guess having no marketshare gives you the right to extra competative advantage?

      Yes, I noticed that. However, the comparison is actually "Mac vs PC", not "Mac vs Microsoft". I can't buy a PC from Microsoft, I can buy a PC from Dell. Or HP. Or Fred down the road if I give him the cash to build one.

      Dell, HP and Fred-down-the-road can bundle whatever applications they like. Years ago a lot of budget places used to bundle Lotus Smartsuite to keep their prices down vs bundling Office. So the comparison is valid. And yes, having no marketshare does rather free you from monopolist rules because, pretty much by definition, you're not a monopolist.

      Cheers,
      Ian

    2. Re:Double Standard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the difference between apple bundling applications and microsoft bundling applications is that the stuff that apple adds doesn't become tied to the OS. you can safely remove Safari from any mac, but internet explorer is mutated and mangled into windows. please try and do some research next time :)

      abstractism

    3. Re:Double Standard by Kamujin · · Score: 0

      According to my research, there are more Web browser choices for Windows, then their are for Mac. You can easily select any of these as the default browser for your system. Now if your point is that you cannot remove every file and DLL that Internet Explorer uses, I would suggest that this limitation exists for just about every system that uses shared libraries. If your not sure what I am refering to, please do some research on the "DLL" ("Lib" file in Linux), I think you'll see that this whole "can't remove" argument is actually another double standard being applied to MS. Thanks

    4. Re:Double Standard by LarsG · · Score: 1

      Dell, HP and Fred-down-the-road can bundle whatever applications they like.

      Fred-down-the-road can, but big OEMs like Dell and HP usually have bulk windows license agreements that have lots of restrictions on what they can bundle or modify (e.g., can't bundle Firefox and set it as default browser).

      --
      If J.K.R wrote Windows: Puteulanus fenestra mortalis!
    5. Re:Double Standard by mh101 · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's not Mac OS X that bundles more software, it's the Mac computer. To compare apples to apples (no pun intended), you'd need to be comparing an iMac to a Dell or Compaq PC. All the big apps that the commercials brag about are actually part of the iLife suite, that Apple includes in when you buy a Mac. In the event that the EU doesn't like Apple including iLife with all new Macs, they can easily comply and include a mail-in coupon for a free copy of iLife or something like that. It's not like the apps are tightly integrated into the OS and they'd complain that they can't remove iPhoto without breaking the entire OS.

      As far as apps that are bundled with the OS, it's mostly all just small utilities (font book, activity monitor, calculator, etc.), OS features (Automator, Dashboard, etc.), and then the only larger apps are Safari, Mail, and iChat. And if you don't like them, you can simply drag them to the trash can and they're gone forever, unlike another popular OS from Redmond. IIRC, iTunes isn't even included as part of the OS but rather part of iLife (but is also a free download).

      --
      Duct tape is like the Force. It has a light side, a dark side, and it holds the universe together.
    6. Re:Double Standard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While this isn't a true comparison, you've also got to look at the lack of software companies offering competing products for OSX.

    7. Re:Double Standard by master_p · · Score: 1

      But it is Apple that bundles more software with its O/S, not Fred.

    8. Re:Double Standard by Amerame · · Score: 1

      Bundling practices are only illegal if done by corporation in a dominant position on the market of the tying good (OS here) to increase its market shares on the tied good market (media players). Which is the case for Microsoft, and not Apple who's the underdog. Basicaly you're much more free of your commercial practices if you're in a competitive market or not in a dominant position.

    9. Re:Double Standard by Kamujin · · Score: 0

      Silly me, I thought the "monopolist" rules we suppoed to keep MS from abusing its marketshare dominance, I didn't realize they were meant to help its competition.

    10. Re:Double Standard by mac.man25 · · Score: 1

      The difference is that you can't uninstall MS software when it's bundled with Windows. On a Mac, if you don't want iTunes, delete it. Just the same with any other Application bundled with Mac OS, if you don't want it, trash it.

    11. Re:Double Standard by troels · · Score: 1

      iTunes, iMovie, iDVD, iPhoto, GarageBand, and iWeb (i'm sure i missed some) are not bundled with the O/S but with the computer. You wont get them if you buy a copy of Mac OS X. So it is Apple the computer manufacturer and not Apple the operating system maker that does the bundling.

      Of course this difference is academic to people buying a new system, but it does matter to people upgrading their software.

    12. Re:Double Standard by Kamujin · · Score: 0

      So? You can use other programs just fine. Just because IE shares DLL's with other parts of the OS and is tightly integrated, doesn't mean you can't use Firefox (as numerous Firefox users will proudly demonstrate) Your also missing the point of my original post. While the EU sues MS to create complexity and force them to create unnecessary install/uninstall options, Apple is running an add campain slamming for MS with their assertion that Mac's are "ready to use out of the box".

    13. Re:Double Standard by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 1

      You really don't know what you are talking about.

      You can't boot Windows without loading IEHTML. You can boot Linux (or OS X) without loading Gecko, KHTML, Webkit, or whatever.

      Glibc != IEHTML. There's no reason that a particular Web Browser's toolkit should be required to start an operating system, and, indeed, when you use Windows Embedded, its not.

      It's not about numbers of shared libraries used by each component. It's about the _fact_ that IE's rendering engine is a required part of Windows, regardless of whether or not you ever choose to use IE.

      --
      WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
    14. Re:Double Standard by LiquidRaptor · · Score: 1

      However to compare something a bit more similar, compare kde to windows, kde requies gecko to be running to use it's file explorer. So are they breaking the rules too?

    15. Re:Double Standard by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      Apple is not a monopoly. MS is. Apple is allowed to do it. MS isn't.

    16. Re:Double Standard by swillden · · Score: 1

      Am I the only one who finds it the least bit ironic that while the EU fines MS for bundling application, Apple is bashing MS with comericals bragging about how it bundles MORE software?

      You're probably not the only one, but a little understanding of anti-trust law kills the irony.

      I guess having no marketshare gives you the right to extra competative advantage?

      The other way around, actually. Having a monopoly restricts your competitive options, ensuring that your smaller competition has a chance to get in the game. Apple can compete aggressively just like any other normal company. Microsoft, being a monopoly, has to restrain itself or get slapped down by the courts (sometimes, anyway).

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    17. Re:Double Standard by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 2, Informative

      The difference is that you can't uninstall MS software when it's bundled with Windows.

      You are incorrect. The difference is MS is bundling products with a monopolized product while Apple is not (probably). I say probably because if Apple is found to have a monopoly on portable music players (they have 70% or so now) then it is illegal for them to bundle other products with it (iTunes). Of course several courts are now investigating this issue. Apple and MS are both held to the same standard, most people are failing to understand what that standard is.

    18. Re:Double Standard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except here, they are bundling the software with their OS...which just so happens to only work on their hardware (legally).

      Now, I hope everyone starts suing Apple for being an anti-competitive monopoly with the whole iPod/iTunes thing...Force them to open up the ITMS and iTunes protocols for all media players to work with.

      After all, it's the same fucking thing that the US and EU are telling MS to do...so it's only fair that Apple get fucked the same way.

      In the end, MS should just pull the licenses from the EU, wave bye bye, then sic their lawyers on everyone, every company, and the EU governing body, who is now illegally using Windows. Then start collecting the fines for each day of use, etc. See how they like it.

  34. Interesting by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So a company can, at max, be fined 5% of its income.

    I, on the other hand, can be fined for amounts that exceed my income by a few 100 percent.

    I'd sue. If I could afford it.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    1. Re:Interesting by Emil+S+Hansen · · Score: 1

      Afaik turnover is NOT the same as profit. Profit is what is left of your turnover when you have payed all you expenses, and in most areas of business 5% profit is quite good, and in some areas a typical profit rate can be as low as .1% in which case a 5% turnover fine would be devastating.

      http://www.computerworld.com/news/2004/story/0,112 80,96840,00.html hints that micrsofts profit is around 30%, so 5% isn't gonna kill them.

      --
      Will work for bandwidth!
    2. Re:Interesting by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      Turnover is how much money comes into your company plus how much money goes out of your company. Profit is how much money comes into your company minus how much money goes out of your company. Profitability is the ratio of profit to turnover.

      Turnover is just a measure of how active your business is in the market, since every transaction you perform, whether spending or earning, contributes to it.

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
  35. Tomorrow's news: by Tribbin · · Score: 1

    Microsoft sentenced to death.

    --
    If you mod this up, your slashdot background will turn into a beautiful sunset!
    1. Re:Tomorrow's news: by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      Do you mean that they will recieve a fatal sentence or that they will recieve an unreasonably large number of nonfatal and potentially conflicting sentences?

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  36. Market cap means little by Flying+pig · · Score: 4, Informative
    Market capitalisation is a joke number, meaningful only to people who do not understand the most basic economic laws. At any time only a small percentage of a company's shares is traded, and the price reflects the "scarcity value". Market capitalisation is based on the ludicrous idea that the worth of a company = number of shares issued * current trading price.

    In fact, as with any situation where supply is (actually) relatively inelastic, if the supply side suddenly increased the price would drop dramatically. If Bill wanted to sell all his shares on Monday, how much do you think he would get for them? A lot, but nothing like the current price. The shares would be suspended as they started to go into freefall. Goes for houses, goes for Rembrandts, goes for shares. At one time during the Tokyo land price boom, Tokyo was capitalised at more, I believe, than the entire real estate of the US. Would you have swapped the US for metropolitan Tokyo?

    Microsoft's market capitalisation is unimportant and meaningless; what matters is the effect of ongoing fines on their day to day operations, the market perception, and the buying decisions made by large institutions who will be reading all about it in the FT, Handelsblatt etc.

    --
    Pining for the fjords
    1. Re:Market cap means little by suffe · · Score: 1

      Joke number? Will I agree with some of your points, it's worth to remember that the people holding the non-traded stocks actually think Microsoft is worth MORE then their market capitalisation, hence they are not selling their stocks and they are thus not traded. The day an investor thinks the company he is holding stock in is overvalued is the day he sells. Of course, this might not be true to Bill, but in general it gets pretty close to the truth.

      --

      Karma: 2.71828182846 (Mostly due to small, fun pills)
    2. Re:Market cap means little by The+Mayor · · Score: 1

      What about arbitrage? Basically, if a stock goes into freefall for no apparent reason other than a change in supply/demand for stock trades, then the value of their shares would be lower/higher than the value of the company. This is a classic case of arbitrage, and will eventually lead to an arbiteur to buy (if it is undervalued) or short (if it is overvalued) the stock. If the company is significantly undervalued, an arbiteur might decide to purchase a significant portion of the outstanding shares and attempt to divide the company into pieces & sell it off. This is what a corporate raider does.

      What is a fair value for a company's shares? This is a subject of great debate. However, based on a statistical analysis I did comparing a slew of the more common ways of valuation for a company, I found that the most accurate valuation method is FCF (Free Cash Flow)--basically, count up all of the company's future free cash flow (i.e. sort of like profits, but based on true cash flows, not on accounting profit) discounted for inflation, and subtract the company's net liabilities. A one-time fine will reduce the value of the corporation by the amount of the fine plus any perceived impact the fine will have on future free cash flows (i.e. the fine will likely hurt the image of the company, and therefore reduce future sales), and will impact the proper valuation for the company. So far this morning, since this fine was announced, the price of the stock has dropped $0.358. Multiply this by the number of outstanding shares (10.20 billion), and you get a financial impact of something like $3.65 billion. Of course, this isn't the only thing impacting the company's business (a 20% chance of Vista not shipping also plays a part). But, to say that Microsoft's market capitalization is not affected by this ruling is naive at best, and outright wrong at worst.

      Supply and demand do have short term impacts on share price. But, in the long run, the arbiteurs will restore the share price back to normalcy. The more liquid the market, the quicker this process of restoration will occur. Market capitalization is not a joke number, since the owners of a company's stock get to vote to control/guide the corporation.

      --
      --Be human.
    3. Re:Market cap means little by Thorsten+Timberlake · · Score: 3, Funny

      Would you have swapped the US for metropolitan Tokyo?

      Well... The japanese are a bit weird... But yes, definetely :P

    4. Re:Market cap means little by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Market capitalisation is based on the ludicrous idea that the worth of a company = number of shares issued * current trading price.

      Market capitalisation is very useful for valuing companies. For instance, if you believe a company is going to make $1 a year, how much should you pay for the entire company? Well, if your required rate of return is 10%, then you could justify paying up to $10 for the company. In other words, given the amount of income you believe the company will make in the future and your required rate of return, it follows logically that you believe the market capitalisation of the company should be $10.

      You can use that number to guide your trading decisions. For instance, if there are 10 shares outstanding, you could justify paying up to $1 for each share. If there are 20 shares outstanding, you could justify paying up to $0.50. It would be ludicrous to base your purchasing decisions on the share price alone, without taking into account the number of shares issued. If you take both the share price and the number of shares into account, then the number you end up with is called "Market capitalisation". That's all there is to it.

      In fact, as with any situation where supply is (actually) relatively inelastic, if the supply side suddenly increased the price would drop dramatically.

      The supply that matters here is the number of shares outstanding. It really doesn't matter if there are 5 shares or 5000 shares on the market, if the seller's minimum price is $1. However, usually when a seller tries to sell a massive number of shares on the market, it's because their demand for their own shares is far lower than the rest of the market, and thus their minimum price is much lower as will.

      As in your example, if Bill Gates wanted to sell all of his shares on Monday, it's probably because he wants to get rid of them fast; in other words, he values cash far more than the Microsoft shares. The other sellers take advantage of this. Once his shares have been bought, the price will return to its original value (unless the market has changed its valuation of Microsoft because its chairman has indicated a huge lack of faith in the company by selling all of his shares).

    5. Re:Market cap means little by wfberg · · Score: 2, Interesting

      First,
      But, to say that Microsoft's market capitalization is not affected by this ruling is naive at best, and outright wrong at worst.
      that's not what the grandparentposter said. He said that market cap is not a good indicator of how impactful a fine is. For example, it might affect existing credits adversely, increasing the cost of existing lines of credit as their credit rating drops. That's an effect unrelated to market cap, and related more to things like the actual assets and cashflow.

      Anything and everything can and will influence the stock quotes themselves, and influence market cap, including whether the weather is nice or not, if some trader is having a good day, etc.

      For a lot of companies market capitalization says next to nothing. Think about companies that float 20% of their stock, with 80% remaining in private hands. The public will never hold a controlling interest, some one looking to take over the company will never buy up open market shares; the stock's price simply doesn't influence the fundamentals much, let alone the actual price paid for company ownership.

      What about arbitrage? Basically, if a stock goes into freefall for no apparent reason other than a change in supply/demand for stock trades, then the value of their shares would be lower/higher than the value of the company. This is a classic case of arbitrage, and will eventually lead to an arbiteur to buy (if it is undervalued) or short (if it is overvalued) the stock. If the company is significantly undervalued, an arbiteur might decide to purchase a significant portion of the outstanding shares and attempt to divide the company into pieces & sell it off. This is what a corporate raider does.
      Now we're headed in "invisible hand of the market" territory; which isn't as flawless as you suggest.

      I'll give an example where this simply won't work. Consider the largest owner of commercial real estate (shops) in, say, The Netherlands (Maxeda). Maxeda's assets, its real estate, are worth more combined than its marketcap! Madness, you'd say! The invisible hand of the market should correct this outrage! Either Maxeda is worth more, or a corporate raider should split the company up and sell it in parts.

      The problem is, that as soon as you try to liquidate ALL of Maxeda's assets, you're looking for one (or a handful) of companies that need its real estate, and that want to operate shops on there. The problem of course is, that such parties cannot be found. In fact, if you could find a company that would buy all the real estate, they would then have to open up shops in them. Then you're left with a company with the exact same real estate with more or less the same shops in them. How likely are they to do better than Maxeda itself? Given the cost of selling their real estate; not. Corporate raiding cannot save Maxeda.

      Of course the point here is that the real estate is probably valued fairly; but only if you expect to sell those shops one at a time. If you look at the valuation of your own home, you might find reference to an amount of time the valuer would expect your house to be for sale, before it sells at its valuation price.

      The same goes for market cap, as the grandparentposter eloquently explained; if you suddenly dump every share on the market, you won't get a good price for them - and it's doubtful the price would recover. Conversely, if you try to do a hostile takeover of a company, expect to pay a premium over the market value, like Mittal recently did to acquire Arcelor. There was no magic arbitrage going on there that made sure Mittal paid the right price; in fact, they probably paid too much, but they expect to make good on that by using their controlling interest to do new and exciting things. And that is merely a gamble.

      (Another example; airliners. Airlines have HUGE amounts in assets. A corporate raider should surely split them up and sell the assets. But those assets are airplanes. And the only way to make money from airplanes is to operate.. an airline! To non-airline companies those assets are worth exactly $0 of their money. Good luck raiding them.)

      --
      SCO employee? Check out the bounty
    6. Re:Market cap means little by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the stock's price simply doesn't influence the fundamentals much

      Price never influences fundamentals. Rather, price is set by supply and demand, and demand for a stock usually takes into account the fundamentals of a company (investors who don't take fundamentals into account will pay the price for doing so).

      Maxeda's assets, its real estate, are worth more combined than its marketcap! Madness, you'd say!

      No, that simply means the market is taking into account the law of diminishing marginal utility. In other words, I'll pay more for my first house than I will for a second house, and I'll pay even less for my third house, and so forth. But real estate is different from stocks. If I own one stock of Microsoft, is a second stock really worth less? Is the second stock really less useful to me than the first one?

      The same goes for market cap, as the grandparentposter eloquently explained; if you suddenly dump every share on the market, you won't get a good price for them - and it's doubtful the price would recover.

      The reason you wouldn't get a good price is because dumping every share on the market implies that you want to sell them quickly, and therefore you will give in to a lower price if you must in order to complete the sell. If, however, you are patient, then you will get a good price as long as the market valuation of your shares doesn't fall for other reasons. We often don't see this in the real world, however, because sellers who dump all of their shares on the market usually are willing to agree to a lower selling price. Thus, it is the seller's reduced demand for his own stocks and his increased demand for cash that allows the market price to temporarily fall.

      As for "it's doubtful the price would recover", Warren Buffet would disagree with you, and I think he's proven the worth of his investing style. Slashdotters might mod you up to +5, but that doesn't say very much about their investment knowledge.

    7. Re:Market cap means little by The+Mayor · · Score: 1

      My concept of "fair value" for a corporation is the net present value of their future free cash flow, plus their assets, minus their liabilities.

      that's not what the grandparentposter said. He said that market cap is not a good indicator of how impactful a fine is. For example, it might affect existing credits adversely, increasing the cost of existing lines of credit as their credit rating drops. That's an effect unrelated to market cap, and related more to things like the actual assets and cashflow.

      So, since the fine affects the credit [rating] adversely, according to you, this affects their cost of credit, and therefore impacts cash flow. Well, lo and behold, my concept of "fair value" says the market capitalization should drop to reflect their cash flow. So, the market cap *is* affected. In fact, my basic argument is that the market capitalization becomes a good proxy for the impact of the fine.

      Anything and everything can and will influence the stock quotes themselves, and influence market cap, including whether the weather is nice or not, if some trader is having a good day, etc.

      And if the market cap (i.e. share price) gets out of whack because a trader accidently puts in a sell order for 10M shares instead of 10 shares, then this will present an arbitrage opportunity. Arbiteurs look for these events and *will* correct this. Arbitrage does fix this, although the fix isn't instantaneous (as those who believe in perfectly efficient markets would have you believe). How fast it gets fixed is a function of the liquidity of the market. The more liquid the market (i.e. the greater the # of buyers and sellers, and the greater the volume of trading), the faster the correction will occur.

      I'll give an example where this simply won't work. Consider the largest owner of commercial real estate (shops) in, say, The Netherlands (Maxeda). Maxeda's assets, its real estate, are worth more combined than its marketcap! Madness, you'd say! The invisible hand of the market should correct this outrage! Either Maxeda is worth more, or a corporate raider should split the company up and sell it in parts.

      The value of the corporation is not a function of thier net assets alone (also known as their book value). As I said before, the FCF valuation method shows that it is a funciton of their net assets plus the net present value of their future free cash flows. If a company is trading below book value, then I can fathom a number of reasons this might be the case. First, the accounting value of the assets may be incorrect (this is basically what you are saying regarding Maxeda...splitting the company up & selling it off won't return the accounted value of the assets, because the accounting value is greater than the liquidation value). Second, the company might be hemorrhaging free cash flow. If an arbiteur sees this second case (as Kirk Kerkorian does with GM), the arbiteur might decide to take a large minority interest and change the management so that it won't hemorrhage cash (as Kerkorian is doing with GM), or the arbiteur might decide to split up the company & sell it off. In either case, the goal is to prevent erosion of the asset value that results from negative cash flows.

      The same goes for market cap, as the grandparentposter eloquently explained; if you suddenly dump every share on the market, you won't get a good price for them - and it's doubtful the price would recover. Conversely, if you try to do a hostile takeover of a company, expect to pay a premium over the market value, like Mittal recently did to acquire Arcelor. There was no magic arbitrage going on there that made sure Mittal paid the right price; in fact, they probably paid too much, but they expect to make good on that by using their controlling interest to do new and exciting things. And that is merely a gamble.

      In the case of Mittal and Arcelor, the Mittal family believes that acquiring Arcelor presents opportunities for new future cash flows that would not be poss

      --
      --Be human.
  37. PLEASE MOD PARENT UP by fritsd · · Score: 1

    .. because it's only 2 lines, but exactly explains the whole point of this court case, clearly, without the FUD. thanks!

    --
    To be, or not to be: isn't that quite logical, Slashdot Beta?
  38. The CEO's comment... by owlnation · · Score: 1

    CEO Steve Ballmer was unavailable for comment at his Geneva hotel room today, however in the early hours of this morning Swiss police discovered this...

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/mar-s/3148634/

  39. They won't pay by porkThreeWays · · Score: 1

    Not only will they not pay, they still won't comply. Why do I think this? Because this is what happens every damn time! For once I'd like someone to grow some balls and follow through. I've yet to see a major announcement against Microsoft actually followed through with. Whether it be the EU, United States, Mass, Germany, and pretty much every other company or government make a declaration against Microsoft.

    They will appeal it until their ears bleed. *sigh* I guess that's the way the world works. Big business doesn't have to pay EVER. Did you know Exxon still hasn't paid fines for the Exxon-Valdez?

    --
    If an officer ever threatens to taze you, say you have a pacemaker.
  40. MSFT:"Here's 300 million. Keep the change..." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Chump change... :)

  41. Anti-Market, Pro-State: Ridiculous! by dada21 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Microsoft should ignore these imbeciles.

    First, the State's anti-freedom IP laws prevent reverse-engineering of Microsoft code. This is why the market can't provide more competition. No company should have to share trade secrets that make them more competitive and keep prices down.

    Second, the fines go to the State! This is warlordist racketeering and threat.

    Third, competitors complaining were fairly vanquished because consumed are happy with the current market -- the demand for the competitions' products is low.

    Duh.

    1. Re:Anti-Market, Pro-State: Ridiculous! by alewar · · Score: 1

      thanks god Europe != USA

      Keep that in mind.

    2. Re:Anti-Market, Pro-State: Ridiculous! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't have thought this one through, have you?

      How do corporate secrets keep prices low? They do make a company profitable, but hardly competitive. On the contrary, they keep the competition off the playing field. Why do you think the armaments industry in the states --- sorry, I believe you like to think of it as "defence" industry --- is so darn inefficient? $600 toilet seats and $450 hammers are the funny part, but have a closer look at the JSF story and the disappeared millions in Iraq, it's enlightening reading.

      Microsoft's competitors were vanquished because the playing field wasn't level, not because customers didn't like their products. Either they were beaten by dodgy sales tactics (remember DRDOS?), by incomplete documentation of system calls, by artificially created incompatibility between systems (closed file formats, ...). Or they were simply bought over. This has nothing to do with "the invisible hand of the market"; customers voting with their dollars. This is abuse of monopolistic power, pure and simple. And that's what the ruling is about.

      Finally, in Europe the judiciary enforcing the law does not benefit in the least from fines. And the legislators are fairly elected. And lobbying^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hcorruption is illegal. Fines are therefore in place because on the whole the population stands behind them. Certainly of you'd do a poll amongst Europe's population you wouldn't find many respondents opposed to the ruling! How is this racketeering?

    3. Re:Anti-Market, Pro-State: Ridiculous! by dada21 · · Score: 1

      How do corporate secrets keep prices low? They do make a company profitable, but hardly competitive. On the contrary, they keep the competition off the playing field. Why do you think the armaments industry in the states --- sorry, I believe you like to think of it as "defence" industry --- is so darn inefficient? $600 toilet seats and $450 hammers are the funny part, but have a closer look at the JSF story and the disappeared millions in Iraq, it's enlightening reading.

      When a corporation has a talent that they can use to provide a service for a customer, it is in their best interest to keep that information secret -- it causes a decrease in the supply of that service which in the SHORT run increases prices. This is where the confusion usually comes from. The problem with trade secrets is that you MUST be able to keep them secret in order to restrain supply and raise prices. In almost every situation, the secret will leak out, whether through reverse engineering, duplication or a better solution being found. Only through competitive forces do these things occur -- government is there to prevent reverse engineering, duplication and in some cases the finding of a better solution. Copyright and patent laws restrict the first two from happening, regulation and licensing restrict the third from happening.

      The defense industry is 100% government-created. It would not exist in a free market in any way, shape or form. This is cronyism at its finest.

      Microsoft's competitors were vanquished because the playing field wasn't level, not because customers didn't like their products. Either they were beaten by dodgy sales tactics (remember DRDOS?), by incomplete documentation of system calls, by artificially created incompatibility between systems (closed file formats, ...). Or they were simply bought over. This has nothing to do with "the invisible hand of the market"; customers voting with their dollars. This is abuse of monopolistic power, pure and simple. And that's what the ruling is about.

      I support Microsoft in the DRDOS situation -- no one was forced to buy Microsoft's DOS unless they wanted to. No company should be forced to restrict how they offer their product. In my businesses, I often times ask my customers to sign non-compete agreements when they use my software/labors for a certain price point. Microsoft is free to contractually obligate their customers to do the same. What protected Microsoft's MS-DOS versus DR-DOS was _GOVERNMENT_ restriction on the market -- namely patents and copyright. Without patents and copyright, DR-DOS would have no problem selling a better and cheaper product. Government created the mess, not Microsoft.

      Why should Microsoft document system calls in THEIR product? Microsoft was NOT A MONOPOLIST, except where the State gave them that right through copyrights and patents. You're debating your own position there, friend.

      Finally, in Europe the judiciary enforcing the law does not benefit in the least from fines. And the legislators are fairly elected. And lobbying^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hcorruption is illegal. Fines are therefore in place because on the whole the population stands behind them. Certainly of you'd do a poll amongst Europe's population you wouldn't find many respondents opposed to the ruling! How is this racketeering?

      Because it threatens a company and a group of individuals' rights to maintain trade secrets. Market forces are made bad by EU's overbearing pro-monopoly agenda (copyright, patents, regulations and licensing). Customer happiness goes up when competition goes up, but the EU has become one of the most anti-competitive marketplaces and Europe will suffer in the next 5-10 years because of it. Mark my words, the EU is on the verge of doom if they don't deregulate their markets. The US is in a similar situation.

    4. Re:Anti-Market, Pro-State: Ridiculous! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Thank you for agreeing that trade secrets are bad for competition. True, copyright, licencing and certainly patents prevent competition. Which is why the anti-monopoly laws curb their power when they outlive their purpose. But complete deregulation, as you seem to advocate it, is not the solution, it's complete madness. If you take away copyright, you take away any incentive anyone might have to publish. If you take away patents and licencing in general you take away any incentive to innovate. Government is not evil, it's a huge protection and a necessary burden.



      What gave MS its edge vs. Digital was the deal with PC makers to buy MSDOS for all their PC's, whether they installed it or not. So if a customer wanted DRDOS he had to pay for MSDOS as well.



      Deregulation is what gave California its power outages and England it's shortage of tap water. What you need is not deregulation, it's BALANCED regulation. Protect innovation, production, implementation, commerce, etc. until the players become too rapacious and the disadvantages outweigh the benefits. Which why patents have a limited lifespan, btw.



      Why should Microsoft document system calls in THEIR product? Microsoft was NOT A MONOPOLIST, except where the State gave them that right through copyrights and patents. You're debating your own position there, friend.



      This had nothing to do with the state, it was the deal with the hardware manufacturer(s) (and the fact that the hardware manufacturer had to honour their contract -- are you opposed to that as well?). And from the start my position has been that secrecy was anti-competitive.

    5. Re:Anti-Market, Pro-State: Ridiculous! by dada21 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Thank you for agreeing that trade secrets are bad for competition. True, copyright, licencing and certainly patents prevent competition. Which is why the anti-monopoly laws curb their power when they outlive their purpose. But complete deregulation, as you seem to advocate it, is not the solution, it's complete madness. If you take away copyright, you take away any incentive anyone might have to publish. If you take away patents and licencing in general you take away any incentive to innovate. Government is not evil, it's a huge protection and a necessary burden.

      I disagree with you. I've written two books (both becoming free e-books) that I never used copyright to protect my creations. I sold them, and I continue to reap profits from their sale. I maintain about a dozen blogs and websites where I repudiate copyright and allow others to take my words intact and use them as their own. As long as the ideas get out there, my income goes up even if no one knows that I wrote the words. I also use my freely distributed words to reinforce my hourly rate, which goes up each and every year well over inflation's rise.

      The blogosphere and F/OSS movement both contradict the idea that people will only create if their works are protected. The garage band and pub band industry also rejects the claim. MOST artists care less about protecting their art as long as they are making an income. No record label would take another artist's works and distribute it as their own -- the label would jeopardize their future if they attempted to defraud the public. The Internet protects the original author's ego more than any other distribution scheme in the past.

      What gave MS its edge vs. Digital was the deal with PC makers to buy MSDOS for all their PC's, whether they installed it or not. So if a customer wanted DRDOS he had to pay for MSDOS as well.

      So? When I sell my labors, I tell my customers that if they want a discount, they better buy what I recommend. If they don't, my rate doubles. Some customers prefer to go direct, so I charge them a higher rate. Microsoft has EVERY right to contract their stipulations -- PC makers had every right to refuse the contract and sell hardware with opposing operating systems. The consumers decided they wanted Microsoft, not DR-DOS. On top of that, the State's enabling of copyright and patents prevented DR-DOS from legally reverse engineering the MS code to sell a competing product. The State restrained trade, not Microsoft.

      Deregulation is what gave California its power outages and England it's shortage of tap water.

      Lies. Myth. Completely false. Deregulation NEVER happened in California. In both cases, wholesale costs were partially deregulated, but retail costs were not -- and competition was NEVER allowed into the picture. See this article: The Myth of De-Regulation and this article: The Failure of State-Designed Markets In BOTH cases, government is to blame 100%. Why did only California experience these outages when other states are even more free in energy policy? Corrupt politicians and corrupt public policy.

      What you need is not deregulation, it's BALANCED regulation. Protect innovation, production, implementation, commerce, etc. until the players become too rapacious and the disadvantages outweigh the benefits. Which why patents have a limited lifespan, btw.

      No patent really seems to work, though. Look at cell phones -- almost all of them are nearly identical in how they work, but every phone has a dozen patents pending. None of the patents mean anything to the cartelized players in the game -- they only serve to restrict new players from competing. We'd have a cheaper and higher quality world without patents.

      This had nothing to do with the state, it was the deal with the hardware manufacturer(s) (and the fact that the hardware manufacturer had to honour their contract -- are y

  42. In other news... by wackymacs · · Score: 1

    ...Ballmer just threw a chair across Microsoft's boardroom and started jumping around like a monkey in his office...

    1. Re:In other news... by Kamujin · · Score: 0

      ...Mac invents method of obtaining negative market share. This eliminated the long standing 0% barrier which has served to limit the change in market share for the company's most recent non-backwards compatable OS.

  43. Cool by The+MAZZTer · · Score: 0

    Can anyone fine a big company a ridiculous amount for no good reason? I wanna be next! :D

    Seriously, what is "information about it's Operating System" supposed to mean? We've had the APIs for forever... and I personally don't care about the internals (the idea of having to look through some millions of millions of lines of code is enough to staunch any curiosity I might have).

    1. Re:Cool by KokorHekkus · · Score: 1

      It's about the SMB protocols which Microsofts network application-level protocol and it was decided that the documentation that Microsoft offered just wasn't good enough. And the documentation wasn't decided as poor by any EU civil servants sitting in their ivory towers but by an expert that Microsoft THEMSELVES had submitted as a an expert just for that specific task. So step away from the Microsoft kool-aid.

  44. 2nd world countries? by MarkByers · · Score: 4, Informative

    Form a group with your fellow 2nd world countries.

    Have you ever compared the GDP of the EU with that of USA?

    --
    I'll probably be modded down for this...
    1. Re:2nd world countries? by mrxak · · Score: 0

      Without per capita information, those numbers are useless. Do you honestly believe that a country (China) with a GDP of about $6,000 per person is third in the world? EU vs. US. Check it out on the sidebars, you'll see that the USA is absolutely dominating the EU for GDP. A lot of the EU countries are significantly less well-off, face very high unemployment, and with an aging population and low birth rates, will be in serious trouble down the line. My comments were not meant to be a criticism of the EU, simply a congratulatory message for their efforts at fixing their problems.

    2. Re:2nd world countries? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Please remember to deduct from the GDP of all US citizens the payments of interest on the Worlds No. 1 debt.

    3. Re:2nd world countries? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your an idiot. Its an unranked 'entitiy' like 'the world'. Of course the EU is higher than the United States. Its a combined group of 25 countries most of whom are in the top 30.

    4. Re:2nd world countries? by forgotten_my_nick · · Score: 1

      Technically thats all the US is too. Except you call them States.

      Would be interested to see how each state ranks up in GDP vs other countries.

    5. Re:2nd world countries? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The EU has a population of approximately 450 million, while the US is around 300 million. The GDP, on a PPP basis, is approximately the same for both.

      However, there is a wide gap between the top and bottom nations in the EU, particularly since the recent expansion. Looking at GDP per capita, the US is hardly exceptional on the world stage. It's not at the top of the list, and within about 75% you have most of central Europe and Scandinavia, Canada, Australia, and Japan, as well as several much smaller countries.

      Personally, I can live with our modestly lower level of productivity (on that metric, at least - the reliance on PPP in a market which isn't 100% efficient is not a perfect model) in exchange for our much higher quality of life (most of those nations work shorter hours, take more vacation time, live longer, etc.) and not conceding inappropriate levels of power and influence to The Mighty Corporation. YMMV, of course.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    6. Re:2nd world countries? by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
      Its

      Old World - Thats EU to you

      New world - thats you

      and third world.

      If there is such a thing as second world, its the USA (and South America and the Carib bean).

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    7. Re:2nd world countries? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the USA is absolutely dominating the EU for GDP
       
      That's because the US have been inflating their GDP for years. For example, buying computer hardware adds the computer's price to GDP, but it also adds "virtual benefits" for increase of productivity that amount to several times the worth of the hardware. I'm not saying other countries aren't using similar creative calculations to make themselves look good, but the US are outdoing everybody at this sport.
       
      Googling, you will find the occasional economist writing about it. But most economists don't care because they know GDP is a rather inconsequential piece of data that is easily forged and does not have direct consequences on anything. The unwashed masses like to know it, to have a feeling of knowledge of the inexplicably complicated webwork that is international economy, and if they can remain confident in the US for a bit longer and delay the inevitable crash of our current, relatively stable international trade relations, the better. The informed quietly prepare. (Example: Dick Cheney invests in European bond funds)

    8. Re:2nd world countries? by Nixoloco · · Score: 1

      I always thought the 1st, 2nd, 3rd world catgories came about after WW2
      First world: Democratic/Western Bloc
      Second World: Communist/Eastern Bloc
      Third World: Everything else

  45. Re:WGA and the EU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And I'd love to see that backfire in Microsoft's face as EU seizes all of MS' property in EU. Most likely they'd have something in there that's valuable and then release it to the open source community. Frack with us, we'll frack with you.

    Government > Corporation.

    The US isn't powerful enough (outside of nukes) to take on the entire EU and the other countries its potentially ****ing off.

  46. Reality check by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    So many stupid/nonsense answers. Reality is

    1) Yes, the EU can enforce the money. If MS doesn't pay, EU can hit them with sanctions (what do you think, how big is the EU part of MS revenue pool. Right, pretty relevant) and finally seize their physical assets. (Guess what, MS exists outside the US)

    2) MS has no threatening potential against the EU. What should they do: Increase prices? --> antitrust case! Threaten to pull out? --> They would cut their own profits significantly. EU could immediately legalize copies from the US (they wouldn't, but let's say Win/Office is declared important for national security or something...)

    3) The US government will not put pressure on the EU here. Yes, they may protest, yes, they may have some impact, but come on guys. Where not talking about some small banana republic. Also look at the history of the EU anti-trust comission. Remember the GE/Honeywell-merger?

    4) Yes, the fine does matter. 280m is a lot of money also for MS, from end of July on it will be 3m/day=~1b/year=~8% of EBIT (probably increasing over time). Yes, that DOES matter. What will financial markets think of that, what will that do to stock options of MS managers?

    Summary: MS will pay, MS will obey and try to comply (they already started, just too slow...) with the ruling, MS will of course continue to use all means of lobbying (which is their good right).

    Now the more interesting question is, if they have a chance with their appeal before the European Court of Justice, which doesn't look too bad for them...

    1. Re:Reality check by Kamujin · · Score: 0

      I dunno. Maybe they stop "officially" selling versions in the EU. Their customers can just import US versions with whatever legal disclaimer is necessary and be done with it. Real people doing real work don't care about whether media player is bundled or not.

    2. Re:Reality check by olman · · Score: 1

      1) Yes, the EU can enforce the money. If MS doesn't pay, EU can hit them with sanctions (what do you think, how big is the EU part of MS revenue pool. Right, pretty relevant) and finally seize their physical assets. (Guess what, MS exists outside the US)

      Why do you think there are so much "loan" spam? People just don't seem to have a concept of having their balls on the line if they default on their debts.

  47. Activate, schmactivate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People would probably not be able to activate their WinXP anymore (unless someone writes a, then legal, crack/patch for it), so they would probably step back to Win2k

    The corporate versions of XP and Svr 2003 do not contain the activation stuff. There are enough copies of those versions floating around Europe, plus readily available keygen proggies for the installation codes, that it will be a non-issue if the EU should declare Windows to be in the public domain as a punishment to MS.

  48. We'll See by Another+IT+Grunt · · Score: 0

    Microsoft should just pull all of their products and support for any country in the EU, then just wait 6 month to wait for them to come crawling back. In Mr. Burns fashion "Exxxxcellent"

    1. Re:We'll See by thricenightly · · Score: 1

      A lot of people in Europe would like nothing better than for MS to pull out of the continent. We'd have a brief vacuum which dozens of companies would strive to fill. With the monopolist out of a multi-billion Euro market, there would be huge competition and a massive drive in product development in order to try to get a share of the immense rewards on offer.

      Hmmm, competition, product development, advances in the IT industry. Exxxxcellent indeed. But it won't happen. MS might be p!$$ed by this, but they're far too smart to let any competition get such a large foothold.

  49. The Trial of Bill Gates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    One of the judges, acting as prosecutor, had read the charges.
    "You may now offer whatever plea you wish to make in your own defence," he announced. Facing the platform, his voice inflectionless and peculiarly clear, Bill Gates answered:
    "I have no defence."
    "Do you --" The judge stumbled; he had not expected it to be that easy. "Do you throw yourself upon the mercy of this court?"
    "I do not recognise this court's right to try me."
    "What?"
    "I do not recognise this court's right to try me."
    "But, Mr. Gates, this is the legally appointed court to try this particular category of crime."
    "I do not recognise my action as a crime."
    "But you have admitted that you have broken our regulations controlling the sale of your software."
    "I do not recognise your right to control the sale of my software."
    "Is it necessary for me to point out that your recognition was not required?"
    "No. I am fully aware of it and I am acting accordingly."
    "Do you mean that you are refusing to obey the law?" asked the judge.
    "No. I am complying with the law - to the letter. Your law holds that my life, my work and my property may be disposed of without my consent. Very well, you may now dispose of me without my participation in the matter. I will not play the part of defending myself, where no defence is possible, and I will not simulate the illusion of dealing with a tribunal of justice."
    "But, Mr. Gates, the law provides specifically that you are to be given an opportunity to present your side of the case and to defend yourself."
    "A prisoner brought to trial can defend himself only if there is an objective principle of justice recognised by his judges, a principle upholding his rights, which they may not violate and which he can invoke. The law, by which you are trying me, holds that there are no principles, that I have no rights and that you may do with me whatever you please. Very well. Do it." "Mr. Gates, the law which you are denouncing is based on the highest principle - the principle of the public good. Who is the public? What does it hold as its good? There was a time when men believed that 'the good' was a concept to be defined by a code of moral values and that no man had the right to seek his good through the violation of the rights of another. If it is now believed that my fellow men may sacrifice me in any manner they please for the sake of whatever they deem to e their own good, if they believe that they may seize my property simply because they need it - well, so does any burglar. There is only this difference: the burglar does not ask me to sanction his act."
    "Are we to understand," asked the judge, "that you hold your own interests above the interests of the public?"
    "I hold that such a question can never arise except in a society of cannibals."
    "What ... do you mean?"
    "I hold that there is no clash of interests among men who do not demand the unearned and do not practice human sacrifices."
    "Are we to understand that if the public deems it necessary to curtail your profits, you do not recognise its right to do so?"
    "Why, yes, I do. The public may curtail my profits any time it wishes - by refusing to buy my product."
    "We are speaking of ... other methods."
    "Any other method of curtailing profits is the method of looters - and I recognise it as such."
    "Mr. Gates, this is hardly the way to defend yourself."
    "I said that I would not defend myself."
    "But this is unheard of! Do you realise the gravity of the charge against you?"
    "I do not care to consider it."
    "Do you realise the possible consequences of your stand?"
    "Fully."
    "It is the opinion of this court that the facts presented by the prosecution seem to warrant no leniency. The penalty which this court has the power to impose on you is extremely severe."
    "Go ahead."
    "I beg your pardon?"
    "Impose it."
    The three judges looked at one another. Then their spokesman turned back to Gates. "This is unprecedented," he said.
    "It is completely irregular,

    1. Re:The Trial of Bill Gates by ChadAmberg · · Score: 0

      The most insightful comment ever on slashdot, and its by an AC... go figure.

    2. Re:The Trial of Bill Gates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Ayn Rand said it, then it must be insightful...

      ...or possibly a more appropriate term would be 'delusional'.



      Randian objectivism doesn't seem to have caught on in the EU. Can't imagine why not.

    3. Re:The Trial of Bill Gates by rbarreira · · Score: 4, Informative

      At least give credit where it's due! And don't try to pass it as a true court transcript or whatever...

      --

      The AACS key is NOT 0xF606EEFD628B1CA427BEA93A9CA9773F
    4. Re:The Trial of Bill Gates by Phillup · · Score: 3, Funny
      "Are we to understand," asked the judge, "that you hold your own interests above the interests of the public?"
      "I hold that such a question can never arise except in a society of cannibals."
      "Well," said the judge, "that solves our lunch problem. Let's see who we'll be eating for dinner..."

      "NEXT!"
      --

      --Phillip

      Can you say BIRTH TAX
    5. Re:The Trial of Bill Gates by ThePilgrim · · Score: 1

      s/Mr Gates/Mr Husain/g

      --
      Wouldn't it be nice if schools got all the money they wanted and the army had to hold jumble sales for guns
    6. Re:The Trial of Bill Gates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "Why, yes, I do. The public may curtail my profits any time it wishes - by refusing to buy my product."
      Making a profit is not essential, buying a product can be. No one will take away your profit if you don't make any, you are free to go into life support mode at any time.
  50. EU the embodiment of reasonableness by golodh · · Score: 3, Informative
    I must say that I find the EU the embodiment of reasonableness in this case. Not only do I consider the fine fully justified, the EU is evidently taking very special care not to (unduly) hurt Microsoft while still getting their full attention. The EU is clearly after compliance .. not revenues. To a company such as Microsoft, the amount of 280 million Euros is quite affordable (as many others noticed), but it still is a lot of money.

    As I see it, the EU is telling Microsoft:

    "Ok, Microsoft you had your chance to document your API's two years ago as you were told to, but instead you chose to try and mess with us and we just don't believe you when you said you made an honest effort to comply. So here is your fine. If you think you are going to appeal your way out of this ... good luck to you. Now we know that you are working to better your lives, and we want your compliance more than your money, so we won't hurt you as much as we could have. We actually want you to do business in the EU, and for that reason we will go easy on you this time. Only ... if you think you can make a fool of us again, prepare for fines that *are* hurtful."

    There are worse attitudes I suppose.

    1. Re:EU the embodiment of reasonableness by Technomonics · · Score: 0
      The question that is beign raised, by Microsoft, is how do you define "document". To me, the EU is demanding documentation while it does not spell out exactly what it is looking for, other than the total and complete release of all trade secrets of the Microsoft Corporation. Is that fair? Not in my opinion. Microsoft has been making a good faith reply to all of the EU demands, which is not a diminuitive task. And dont think for a minute that this fine, which will ultimately lighten the tax burden of European citizens, will have no effect on us. We will end up paying higher prices for MS software in the future, count on it.

      Microsoft has published significant information regarding APIs and continues to provide resources for integrating third-party software solutions into Windows. I can only imagine that the EU really wants Microsoft to reveal how the OS was written so they can give that information to EU companies to build competitive software. "Poor poor Serge can not compete because he can not write an operating system."

      The EU levels these fines against Microsoft, Microsoft complies and releases a OS with Media Player and other elements unbundled and offers it for sale. What is the prevailing choice of EU consumers? The bundled OS, not the unbundled one. To me, that defines the "will of the people" more than some EU commission.

  51. the MS game plan.... by Churla · · Score: 1

    Let's see... 3m a day in fines...

    check..

    How do we make this back? Oh yeah, let's just raise the prices of products in Europe. They've proven they aren't migrating to anything else , even if it's free, so we know they'll pay up. Sony did some groundbreaking work in this field and it seems true.

    MS doubles prices of software sold in Europe. There would be minor losses of sales numebrs as some people did switch over because of it. But as long as they don't lose HALF their sales they're still making a profit on the move.

    Also that bit about where the fine money goes does seem awful "small town judge pocketing the traffic ticket money".

    --
    I'm a fiscal conservative, it's a pity we don't have a political party anymore
    1. Re:the MS game plan.... by Kadin2048 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Microsoft has a monopoly. Therefore, it's a pretty good assumption that they've done their market research and have already set the price of their products for maximum revenue generation: the point at which the sales you'd lose from increasing the price overwhelm the additional income. (There's probably an economics term for this point, but it's been a while...)

      Any involuntary price increase at this point can't be a good thing for them, because (assuming rational behavior) they've already set their prices for optimum profit. Increasing them further might not make people immediately switch from Windows, but it could change purchasing patterns in other ways: slowing the upgrade cycle, making piracy or theft more attractive, etc.

      True, most people would just bend over and take it, but Microsoft is already giving it to them as hard as they can -- forcing them to be harder isn't good for them. The damage to MS might be insignificant, though.

      --
      "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    2. Re:the MS game plan.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention the EU would notice that and forbid them from doing that probably.

    3. Re:the MS game plan.... by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Microsoft has a monopoly. Therefore, it's a pretty good assumption that they've done their market research and have already set the price of their products for maximum revenue generation: the point at which the sales you'd lose from increasing the price overwhelm the additional income. (There's probably an economics term for this point, but it's been a while...)

      The term is "monopoly profits".

      Any involuntary price increase at this point can't be a good thing for them, because (assuming rational behavior) they've already set their prices for optimum profit. Increasing them further might not make people immediately switch from Windows, but it could change purchasing patterns in other ways: slowing the upgrade cycle, making piracy or theft more attractive, etc.
      Yes, it does, basically, work like this. The point of charging "monopoly" profits is to get the consumers to buy an optimal number of products, X, at a high price, Y. The X sold under a system of monopoly profits is significantly lower than X2 that would have been sold under a free market, but the Y is increased at such a level (compared to the Y2 of a free market) that it doesn't matter.

      The sole limiting factor of monopoly profits is the market's ability to bear these prices. At a certain point, consumers run out of dollars to spend on Operating Systems; that's the max price.

      --
      WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
  52. Re:wth? by Qbertino · · Score: 1

    Wrong.
    MS is getting a major ass chewing for breaking anti-trust laws in the EU. Break the law == deal with the consequences. It's that simple. The EU even was playing nice. Other businesses would've been sued to chunky kibbles by their competitors allready. It's just that MS is so big, it's competitors are to scared and don't have the resources to go against them in a regular civil court trial. Here's where the EU steps in.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
  53. No, they couldn't by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 3, Informative

    The parent isn't insightful, it's simply wrong. Under WIPO treaties, to which pretty much every major economic power in Europe is a signatory, the EU can do no such thing. All the posts about cancelling Microsoft's copyrights are fantasy. Then again, pretty much every other post in this discussion seems to think this is just an ineffective slap on the wrist, without considering the likely consequences.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    1. Re:No, they couldn't by mrchaotica · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Considering that canceling the copyright would require making an exception to the law to begin with, making an exception to the treaty also isn't that huge of a difference.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    2. Re:No, they couldn't by vadim_t · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Perhaps, but let's suppose MS decides to get out of the EU. The EU still could decide to legally dissolve MS in their territory, and to seize all assets and bank accounts.

      Once MS loses all presence in the EU, who is going to be bringing lawsuits for copyright infringement?

    3. Re:No, they couldn't by ThePhilips · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Under WIPO treaties ... EU can do no such thing.

      All the WIPO/WTO (global treaties of that kind) have provisions for emergencies and strategical resources. (*) M$Windows is installed on 95% of computers in Europe => M$Windows is strategical resource. M$ pulls out of Europe => that would be emergency. EU/EC already has all the evidence against M$ - they'd make up case in WTO very quickly.

      But, of course, M$ will not pull out of Europe. 28%(?) of M$ revenue comes from here. Such stunts on M$ behalf might easily bring down the whole company. Even without EC intervention. (*) No independent country would ever put itself into complete dependence on treaty with another country. (The independence clause of respective constitutions is still there I hope.) Also, WIPO (part of UN) is not much relevant here. The international trade case could be only brought up in WTO anyway.

      --
      All hope abandon ye who enter here.
    4. Re:No, they couldn't by Elektroschock · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Of course they can. Competition law is not IPR law. Different legal systems. When in war you cannot ask for compensation of bombine damages. This does not mean that your property isn't protected, it is just that your nation is at war. Same goes for competition law.

      "The company ... says it was only this spring that it fully understood what it was required by the Commission to do, and had duly put a team of 300 people to work to supply the information."

      You know, when you play these silly games you make reasonable people look at you like a fool. Microsofts communication policy and corporate affairs policy is asperger. You can play these games for a while but a hard landing and declining support is what you have to expect.

    5. Re:No, they couldn't by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      All the WIPO/WTO (global treaties of that kind) have provisions for emergencies and strategical resources. (*) M$Windows is installed on 95% of computers in Europe => M$Windows is strategical resource. M$ pulls out of Europe => that would be emergency.

      Well, as you said yourself, it's unrealistic to think that MS would ever voluntarily pull out of a market the size of the EU: they'd sink like osmium moments later.

      However, I'm not convinced about your "emergency" claim. It's not like MS not selling in Europe in the future would suddenly invalidate all the existing licences, and most of the big customers (governments, non-tiny businesses) will have open licence agreements on a per-site or per-organisation basis. So it's not like they'd be required by their own laws to uninstall every copy of Windows and Office overnight, or even like they couldn't install new copies of versions where they've already got open licensing arrangements.

      Of course, they wouldn't necessarily get security patches or be able to buy future versions of Windows/Office/whatever. But by the time they come along, the millions European governments would be putting into deals with competitors, whose private investment income would be going through the roof as well while Microsoft was busy collapsing under the weight of its own arrogance, would be starting to yield big returns.

      In other words, I don't think Microsoft pulling out of the EU would be a disaster for the EU, only for Microsoft. As such, the EU couldn't realistically claim that MS pulling out was an imminent emergency that required immediate and total nullification of the effects of an international treaty. But then again, they wouldn't need to, so why bother?

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    6. Re:No, they couldn't by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 2, Informative

      The parent isn't insightful, it's simply wrong. Under WIPO treaties, to which pretty much every major economic power in Europe is a signatory, the EU can do no such thing.

      Actually, it is you who is completely wrong. Both the EU and the US have under numerous cases confiscated intellectual property rights as well as other assets from convicted criminals. Now the fact that these rights are worth a lot of money and the company is based in the US makes a difference politically, but not legally. In fact, according to the WIPO traty the US would be the one bound to respect the EU's confiscation of those intellectual property rights.

    7. Re:No, they couldn't by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      Actually, it is you who is completely wrong. Both the EU and the US have under numerous cases confiscated intellectual property rights as well as other assets from convicted criminals.

      I'd be interested to see some examples. As many here are often at pains to point out, intellectual property is not the same as physical property. I've never seen anything in either the UK's IP legislation or anything like the EU Copyright Directive that provides for copyright to be transferred "forcibly" just because someone broke the law in some other way, but perhaps I am indeed wrong and I've just missed the critical provisions. What (and where) are they?

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    8. Re:No, they couldn't by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'd be interested to see some examples.

      Try bankruptcies and fraud cases for starters. Intellectual property is seized and transferred from corporate entities all the time. Patents and copyrights have been transferred any number of times and are considered the same as any other asset as far as the criminal courts are concerned.

      I've never seen anything in either the UK's IP legislation or anything like the EU Copyright Directive...

      Those uphold the principles of reciprocity, not the right of the government to act within it. If the EU confiscated the intellectual property the US is the one bound to honor it. I think you're either misconstruing my earlier remark. In any case any given member state may have laws that conflict, but if so I've never seen one. It seems like a huge loophole if I can transfer all my assets to intellectual property (like patents and copyrights) and the government is powerless to seize any of them even if they are purchased with the proceeds of a crime. If this is truly the case, I might have a new business venture in mind. Let me know if you find any countries where this truly is the case.

    9. Re:No, they couldn't by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Competition law is not IPR law. Different legal systems. When in war you cannot ask for compensation of bombine damages.

      Sure you can. Reparations were common in wars. The losers were required to pay the winners back for the damage they caused. And IP law is irrelevant to the case. Don't think of it as "revoking the IP." Think of it as "seizing the asset with equivelent value (the IP) and then releasing it unencumbered." It is the same effect, but the second doesn't require any legal changes. Though, I think they'll have a hard time convincing everyone that the Windows copyrights are worth as little as a few hundred million. I expect that if it were to be sold, it would go for billions more than the fine.

    10. Re:No, they couldn't by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      We aren't talking about cancelling the copyrights. We are talking about taking MS's property in lieu of unpaid fines, something which they are perfectly entitled to do.

      What would happen is that they would auction everything off except the cash to raise the money to pay them, so the copyrights would be sold to someone else.

    11. Re:No, they couldn't by binkzz · · Score: 1

      "The losers were required to pay the winners back for the damage they caused."

      No they weren't. The losers were only required to pay some damages to countries they invaded. They never had to pay for damages done to any other country.

      --
      'For we walk by faith, not by sight.' II Corinthians 5:7
    12. Re:No, they couldn't by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      I've never seen anything in either the UK's IP legislation or anything like the EU Copyright Directive...

      Those uphold the principles of reciprocity, not the right of the government to act within it.

      No, those define what copyright is -- the fact that it even exists, how it is acquired and transferred, and so on. The WIPO treaties are what impose reciprocity, and would require one nation to recognise copyrights established in another.

      Generally speaking, when assigning remedies, courts have options related to the breach of the law that occurred. For example, the UK's legislature will indicate that a certain crime may carry a fine not exceeding a certain level on a scale, and it is then for the court in a particular case to determine what fine to impose within those limits. Of course civil and criminal law don't work exactly the same way, but then again we don't have punitive damages in the UK either.

      So, in order for a court to seize something, there must be some provision in law allowing them to do so. In the case of money for a fine, this is well established. The seizure of physical property if money is not directly available is also established. But I haven't encountered anything that indicates that intellectual property is to be treated the same way, as if it were a tangible, physical asset. Neither would it necessarily make sense to treat it so, since as people often note around here, IP is not the same as physical property. Would it make sense for a court to claim the copyright of a GPL'd application because one of the contributors upset it? What does that imply for any licences already granted? What if a defendant decided to assign all their IP to some other body just before the ruling was given? I'm not saying it couldn't be done, but attempting a parallel with forfeiture of physical goods is not likely to work as an analogy here.

      I'm not a lawyer, so I could indeed be completely wrong about this, but a quick web search didn't turn up any example cases either. Have you actually seen any specific cases where this happened? You mentioned bankruptcies and the like, but I've yet to (knowingly) see a bust games company's code either being reused by another company or appearing in the public domain, for example.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    13. Re:No, they couldn't by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Generally speaking, when assigning remedies, courts have options related to the breach of the law that occurred. For example, the UK's legislature will indicate that a certain crime may carry a fine not exceeding a certain level on a scale, and it is then for the court in a particular case to determine what fine to impose within those limits. Of course civil and criminal law don't work exactly the same way, but then again we don't have punitive damages in the UK either.

      Yes, but when dealing with fines the courts are generally empowered to seize other assets to cover the value of fines in the instances where the convicted is unable to pay otherwise, or where the courts cannot collect otherwise. By your argument, I could go into a bank and run out with a million bucks, take it immediately to a brokerage and buy the rights to various patents and copyrights. Then when the police came for me, they could arrest me, but they would be powerless to get the money back or take it from me. When I got out of jail, I'd be rich. The money MS has and has reinvested into building the intellectual property they have was to some degree gained through illegal means, breaking criminal antitrust laws. Now I'm not a legal expert, but I suspect that in either my bank robbery or MS's antitrust violation the courts have the power to seize any asset gained by this illegal process as well as anything needed to cover the fines imposed. If MS "jumps ship" and somehow moves all their other assets out of the EU, the EU can still seize their intellectual property as compensation and the US is obligated to honor that.

      The seizure of physical property if money is not directly available is also established.

      I've seen a lot of laws, but they all make references to "salable assets" or "property." Can you show me ones that exclude intellectual property assets?

      Would it make sense for a court to claim the copyright of a GPL'd application because one of the contributors upset it?

      No. But it also doesn't make sense for the court to seize $1 from everyone in a private club because one member owes a fine. They can, however, seize the rights to the portion of the GPL software that particular person owned, but not revoke the already sold license (since that comes along with the intellectual property).

      What if a defendant decided to assign all their IP to some other body just before the ruling was given?

      The same thing that happens when a defendant gives away all their money just before a ruling is given.

      I'm not saying it couldn't be done, but attempting a parallel with forfeiture of physical goods is not likely to work as an analogy here.

      As far as I know, the same laws apply. It does not matter if it is a house, stocks, a patent, or a copyright. From the court's point of view it makes little difference.

      I'm not a lawyer, so I could indeed be completely wrong about this, but a quick web search didn't turn up any example cases either. Have you actually seen any specific cases where this happened?

      Every corporate bankruptcy case I've ever seen included the sale of intellectual property assets as part of the assets which were used to compensate the creditors. I have been involved in one particular case (in the US not the EU) where a corporation was dissolved and sold off and the courts and the IRS were certainly concerned about the intellectual property of salable value. They ignored incidental copyrights, but I don't think you can consider Windows to be incidental.

    14. Re:No, they couldn't by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      "Reparations were common in wars."

      Irue, but reparations are never individualistic and only the winner party gets it.

      Patents are tools against too much competition for inventors. But competition law is not integrated into patent policy making. In most cases a community of patent officials, lobbied by patent attorney associations, with a partisan agenda, decides how to move forward in patent policy. The system governs itself.

      Competition law and antitrust associations on the contrary combat anti-competitive action and defend freedom of the market. So in order to neutralise the patent movement, get the competition guys in.

  54. Re:WGA and the EU by LarsG · · Score: 3, Insightful

    First, making a company give competitors trade secrets in immoral.

    Sure, it isn't nice. But then again the goal of sanctions isn't to be nice but to remedy the problem. MS was found to be in violation of antitrust law, and forcing MS to document interfaces so that competitors can more efficiently make interoperatible software was seen as the most efficient remedy.

    --
    If J.K.R wrote Windows: Puteulanus fenestra mortalis!
  55. OK, let me pull rank here, literally by CurtMonash · · Score: 2, Informative

    I was once an Institutional Investor-ranked analyst following Microsoft, although that was a long time ago ...

    Market cap does matter. Microsoft can sell stock to get cash -- or rather forgo repurchasing it.

    The income statement matters somewhat. If this were a true foreseeable-future ongoing cost, it would matter a lot more. But it will be over soon, one way or the other.

    The balance sheet it what matters most directly. They can pay the fines out of cash easily, I should think, not that I've actually looked at their balance sheet for quite a while.

    --
    To err is human. To forgive is good system design.
  56. Isn't this... by ManoSinistra · · Score: 0

    Old news??

  57. Oblig by Dashcolon · · Score: 1

    Gates: "Balmer, my wallet's in my right front pocket. Oh, and I'll take that statue of Justice, too."
    Judge: "Sold!"

    --
    Trout's epitaph: Life is no way to treat an animal.
  58. Linux Desktops by HoodCrowd · · Score: 1

    The reason there is no Linux desktops is because there is no commercial software that has been adapted for businesses that everyone else uses. Businsesses need the software they are used to and a switch will cost money, money that needs to be spent on software they will have for a long time. Most businesses have only begun to hear about Linux and most software companies for that matter.

  59. typical /. tsk tsk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course this would get modded up on /.
    Would you be happier to read that they thought it was fair?
    Perhaps you fail to miss that it does not report that the fine 'is' unfair, just reads that MS thinks it is unfair.
    Nothing more nothing less.

  60. Hi Steve. by reality-bytes · · Score: 1

    Nice to see you read /. too

    /me ducks suborbital chair.

    --
    Ripping an new rectum in the fabric of spacetime.
  61. Re:wth? by Decaff · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is just getting stupid.
    M$ is getting F'd in the A because they built an o/s that a business 'chooses' to use. That business wants to get additional software that integrates with their servers as smooth as possible. Business chooses M$ software because it smoother than the competition (and not by much I must add).
    I really don't understand???? Whats the problem here?


    Because of something called a 'monopoly'. Microsoft have overwhelming dominance on the desktop. They are using that dominance to sell servers, which is a separate market. Using monopoly dominance in one market to influence sales in another is illegal.

    Microsoft server software integrates more smoothly than the competition with their desktop systems because their desktop systems require specific protocols for this integration which Microsoft are keeping secret. Other systems have managed to replicate this only by reverse-engineering what is seen to go across networks.

    Microsoft could easily have provided good integration with desktop systems using standard or existing protocols (they have proved in the past that they can produce quality implementations of such things).

    None of this would matter if Microsoft were not effectively a monopoly presence on the desktop (that does not mean total dominance - it means enough presence to seriously influence other markets).

    Clear now?

  62. When you say sting, do you mean like a pin prick? by babbling · · Score: 1

    Apparently it won't sting quite enough, though. May I remind you that this charade has been going on for over two years already?

  63. Re:WGA and the EU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Immoral? You're nuts. Pitchforking babies is immoral. Forcing a convicted monopolist to obey the law of the countries it operates in is a matter of policy. If MS don't like it they can sod off (and then get sued to bits by their share holders - so they can't sod off, they will and must eventually obey the law).

    It's quite simple. If you're a convicted monopolist the normal rules don't apply to you any more. Using 'trade secrets' to extend your monopoly into other areas until you control everything is in complete opposition to free market and competition principles. It would be immoral NOT to force MS to comply.

  64. Jolly good show! by Toreo+asesino · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The funny thing is, the US has unoffically admitted that the EU stance is actually quite a good one - http://news.zdnet.co.uk/business/legal/0,3...39278 431,00.htm

    This procedure will benefit everyone; more-opennes == more competition == greater choice for consumers.

    --
    throw new NoSignatureException();
    1. Re:Jolly good show! by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 1

      That link doesn't work....

      --
      WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
    2. Re:Jolly good show! by Toreo+asesino · · Score: 1
      --
      throw new NoSignatureException();
  65. Ok how about this... by McNihil · · Score: 0

    This is good for Microsoft... the higer the fine the more inclined they will be to abuse their powers even further. They will think that they have the "right" to when they have "bought" the courts this way... the only legal way to buy a court (its not ethical but who cares.) If EU were really serious about dealing with Microsoft they would give them the following ultimatum: "Pay or we ban the use of your products and any breach of any settlements will default in a ban" Money really means nothing to big corporations like Microsoft that are so far above their "critical mass" of making money. Their Win9x products should be outlawed.

  66. hmmm... by aquabat · · Score: 1

    I bet they could keep filing appeals until the documentation they are supposed to provide is obsolete, and then just say "OK, here you go. Enjoy."

    --
    A republic cannot succeed till it contains a certain body of men imbued with the principles of justice and honour.
  67. Linux Desktop is there... by TheIndifferentiate · · Score: 1

    The bar for when Linux is ready for the desktop is constantly on the rise. About all the people who keep raising that bar have left to complain about is compatability/interoperability with Windows software and file formats. Linux is in a state that it could very quickly assume Windows' desktop position if there was a sea change in industry preference. I don't think we will see a change of that magnitude, but I think its adoption rate keeps it very much on Microsoft's radar.

    1. Re:Linux Desktop is there... by CurtMonash · · Score: 1

      Fair enough, but I generally try to use my computers to run software.

      Or as doorstops, but when I use them for that purpose they gather too much dust.

      --
      To err is human. To forgive is good system design.
    2. Re:Linux Desktop is there... by TheIndifferentiate · · Score: 1

      Your tone suggests you try to use your computers to run Windows software. That's better left to Windows than to Linux. As I mentioned though, if industry were to get behind Linux in the form of Linux software, Linux has enough capability to assume the role of de facto desktop operating system that Windows currently occupies.

      BTW, your website is very interesting.

  68. The Fines Won't Work by Carcass666 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What will work is redirecting the money wasted on legal action in a bonafide attempt to ascertain the feasibility of switching servers and workstations to Linux. They won't be able to do it everywhere, but they could concentrate on the following:

    • Migrating from Exchange to the newly announced Notes on Linux
    • Setting up file storage shares on Linux/Samba instead of Windows Server/Windows Storage Edition
    • Migrating targeted groups of users from Microsoft Office to Open Office ("power" users may be harder to switch, but the guy using Word as a memo authoring package will be able to)
    • Migrating ASP/ASP.NET applications to Java Server Pages (or maybe PHP)

    Investors won't freak out because of a arbitrary fine that Microsoft won't end up paying (they'll settle on a lower amount or give away licenses or something). Investors will freak if an entire continent starts a concerted effort to shut down a significant part of Microsoft's revenue stream.

    1. Re:The Fines Won't Work by Cheeze · · Score: 1

      Linux is NOT the answer to everything. There are other operating systems that are better at certain things.

      The playgound is crowded with operating systems. The point of the fines is microsoft is not letting anyone play with the ball. It has nothing to do with letting linux into the game. Microsoft not only holds the ball, it also gets to set the rules to the game.

      --
      Why read the article when I can just make up a snap judgement?
    2. Re:The Fines Won't Work by Carcass666 · · Score: 1

      Linux, BSD, OS X, take your pick. The "point" of the fines is that the EU wants to force Microsoft to open up source code and protocols because of their supposed monopoly. You can attempt to fine or regulate to modify behavior, or you can let the market do your work for you, by leveraging alternatives.

      I agree Linux is not the answer as much as Samba, Open Office, JSP or Notes are. The point should not be to "hurt" or even "punish" Microsoft, the point should be making sure that the continent's systems remain interoperable and not subject to the whims of a single entity. The best way to do that is to leverage open systems when appropriate, not to throw money at lawyers/barristers/politicians.

      Microsoft does not "set the rules to the game". There are choices. It's a bunch of crap to say that "we use Windows because we have to". There are a number of alternatives to most of Microsoft's components and applications. If the EU likes Microsoft software, fine. They should use it. But they should not be in the business of regulating behavior. If they want Microsoft to "open up" the best way to do it is to affect their revenue stream. If you try do this by regulation and fines, Microsoft can make the arguement that "the only way we lose is to get fined to death, but our products are still preferred," and this will ultimately placate shareholders, because there are not too many companies driven out of business because of regulation (cigarette and drug companies are doing just fine, thank you very much; and Enron was fraud, not fines).

      If the EU starts implementing alternatives, Microsoft will then see their bad behavior leading to a loss of marketshare, and that will concern investors much than intermitable legal action. Microsoft is starting to dig into their large stash of cash for R&D, so market cap will become more important as their liquid assets utilized. Drop in sales, not fines, will get investors to pressure Microsoft to play nicely.

    3. Re:The Fines Won't Work by Toreo+asesino · · Score: 1

      Why switch? For the point of it?

      I'm not for mass-migrations away from Microsoft, just for Microsoft to share it's toys with the rest of the IT industry.

      Microsoft technologies do come with some advantages y'know, as do open-source equivalents. It's just open-source stuff tends to be more open - and that's the issue at stake here.

      --
      throw new NoSignatureException();
  69. More mismanagement at MSFT by amightywind · · Score: 2, Interesting
    MSFT has a market cap of 230-something billion. Substantial? Not really.

    The EU has telegraphed this fine for a year. It could have easily been avoided. Gates and Ballmer may have a large cash hoard. I doubt if their stockholders appreciate them lighting it on fire.

    --
    an ill wind that blows no good
  70. Precedent by SleeknStealthy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I am as big of a Linux finatic as the next slashdotter, but I am having a hard time understanding the basis for the magnitude of this fine. I am a firm believer that Microsoft has its monopoly because Microsoft Office has consistently been the most robust office package on the market. I have to run VMWare at home just because I can't use another office product.

    However, the information that the EU demands seems to be nothing more than an extortion attempt. Samba has worked flawlessly with Microsoft's SMB implementation for years, and I can add linux to a windows domain, authenticate agains a Microsoft ADS and plugin to Microsft Exchange server with Evolution. So what is the real issue, all of these functions have been created without taking anything from Microsoft, but rather from innovation from the Linux community.

    I am not going to debate whether or not Microsoft has used its market share for good or ill, but I don't see how it much affects any other operating system. Corporations have always commanded the popular OS and companies choose the OS on what platform will make the employees the most efficient. Microsoft Office is still unreplaceable and it is the main anchor to the Windows platform. Office 2007 is one of the best software products I have used to date, so I don't see that going away. It will be the slow detereriation of the desktop that erodes the grip of Windows, not litigation from governments over non-existent issues

    At least this is my take. If I had a car that controlled 90% of the market, would it be fair to make me compete without seats or a stereo? Who even cares, linux and apple technologies and innovations are maturing and besting such commodity apps. such as media players, web browsers, picture managers, etc.

    --
    Math
    1. Re:Precedent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you do something illegal, then get told "repent with two years, or pay $1 per day until you repent" would you be shoched if in two years time you get a bill for $720? No?

      MS did something illegal.
      They were asked to fix it, and give quite some time to do so. If they had fixed it they would not be being find.

      WTF is up with some people? MS did bad, yeah the office software, and WindowXP is actually good software. Yeah MS is getting fined alot. But it was give LOTS OF TIME to fix its problems. Its answer, ignore and hope it goes away.

    2. Re:Precedent by MrNemesis · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Samba has worked flawlessly with Microsoft's SMB implementation for years, and I can add linux to a windows domain, authenticate agains a Microsoft ADS and plugin to Microsft Exchange server with Evolution.

      Really? I was under the impression that the public documentation for SMB was a) hugely out of date and b) wrong in many cases. Much of the hard work of projects like Samba has been done by painstaking packet sniffing and reverse engineering. Even now, Samba still can't act as an AD domain controller (unless you count the highly experimental samba 4). Why is this? Are the samba team lazy and stupid? Or maybe perhaps it's because figuring out what Windows 2003/CIFS is doing is damned hard...? We use Samba for a file server at work with AD, and it works great, but it has a *very* long way to go before I'd say it was compatible.

      Same goes for Exchange - the protocols are poorly documented and obfuscated to hell and back, and pretty much the only way to get things to talk to it reliably is to use MS API's. Either that or you have to pony up dosh to have a peek at the protocol under a breathe-a-word-of-this-and-we-kill-you NDA. Why does Evolution even need a plugin? Why can't it talk to Exchange directly? I've been itching to dump Exchange at work but I just can't find a competing product that does what Exchange does without horrific things like Outlook plugins.

      It's these secret formats and protocols that mean we can't apt-get install courier-exchange samba-ad_dc, and it's because of this hostility to developers of non-MS platforms that half of this case came about in the first place.

      Disclaimer: I'm a Linux guy through and through, but I actually think MS can write some damned fine software when they want to. I just feel the company as a whole is evil.

      --
      Moderation Total: -1 Troll, +3 Goat
    3. Re:Precedent by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      I am as big of a Linux finatic as the next slashdotter, but I am having a hard time understanding the basis for the magnitude of this fine.

      Then you have a hard time understanding the magnitude of Microsoft. It's about 1% of their cash reserves. It's like a $1000 fine for someone with $100,000 in their checking account (or $10 if you have $1000). They made more profit in that time than the fine is for while violating the court ruling. How can the fine be too much if the company is still making money by ignoring the court. Microsoft will complain about the fine, but I'm sure that the bean-counters have already set aside cash for the ruling and won't bat an eye.

      At least this is my take. If I had a car that controlled 90% of the market, would it be fair to make me compete without seats or a stereo?

      And what if the 90% car maker didn't publish any shop manuals? If you wanted to replace your stereo, you are reliant on someone else telling you what the yellow wire is for. Sure, others have spent the time and money to find things like that, but it's easy to just buy the car-maker's radios too. You know they'll work together.

    4. Re:Precedent by theLOUDroom · · Score: 1

      I'm a firm believer that Microsoft has its monopoly because Microsoft Office has consistently been the most robust office package on the market.

      You can be a firm beleiver that pigs can fly, but MS had their monopoloy before Office even existed.

      --
      Life is too short to proofread.
  71. We save their asses from the NAZIs and this is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We save their asses from the NAZIs and this is the thanks we get ?

    1. Re:We save their asses from the NAZIs and this is by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 1

      I know, isn't it great???

      We save them from Nazis, they save us from Microsoft!

      --
      WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
  72. Larger implecations by porkThreeWays · · Score: 1

    I don't think the market would fall apart completely, but I think the implecations would be bigger than that. Just think about all the people who've never administered anything but windows. Many of them have no clues about generic concepts as simple as DNS. They just understand how to work the tools MS provides for DNS. Home users are an easy switch because they don't do very much and generally have a 1:1 equivalent to another OS. However, there are dozens if not hundreds of tasks an admin has to do. How would those admins survive without any real knowledge of LDAP? HTTP? DNS? FTP? NFS? CIFS? SMTP? God forbid they have to get information from a man page or use a command line tool... Many would just drown.

    --
    If an officer ever threatens to taze you, say you have a pacemaker.
    1. Re:Larger implecations by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Ohhh... it would be dot.com all over again!

      Companies would hire new sysadmins in huge numbers, you'd be sent on training again. The only difference would be that, instead of "I know that TCP/IP is not the Chinese CIA" you'd have to say "I can grep a man and gawk at wget" to get an overpaid job. :)

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    2. Re:Larger implecations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Just think about all the people who've never administered anything but windows. Many of them have no clues about generic concepts as simple as DNS. They just understand how to work the tools MS provides for DNS. Home users are an easy switch because they don't do very much and generally have a 1:1 equivalent to another OS. However, there are dozens if not hundreds of tasks an admin has to do. How would those admins survive without any real knowledge of LDAP? HTTP? DNS? FTP? NFS? CIFS? SMTP?


      Firstly, I don't think Microsoft is going anywhere.

      Secondly, I agree. It would simply be the second iteration of the dot.com bomb. You know, that little period during 2002-2003 where people who could plug a keyboard in were "field engineers", Front Page idiots were "Web Developers", and the act of simply opening up an MMC instance and adding a user to the domain qualified you as a "Network Administrator".

      I'm the admin in a small shop (we support ~500 folks), and I could do away with Microsoft easily except for one damned thing: GPOs. If you could push a GPO somehow through Samba/OpenLDAP/whatever and inflict it like MS does upon clients, there'd be no 2003 in my shop.

      Let's see what Novell does in the next few years with Linux and Netware. If they come up with a universal client that allows similiar functionality without the bloat and supports more than just MacOS and Windows clients, I'm there.
    3. Re:Larger implecations by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      So you're telling me that the IT trolls that are faithful strictly to Microsoft technology would be up shit's crick?

      Whoopdie do.

      With all the Linux/BSD buzz, any admin that hasn't actually done at least some basic research into one POSIX-based system or another's administration is woefully remiss in his or her duties.

      If you're not adaptable enough to replace your entire infrastructure within a year, given enough money, and operate it properly (part of that year being devoted to reading manuals), you've got no business being in IT.

      --
      110100 1101000 1101000 1100110 0 1101111 1101000 1100011 1
    4. Re:Larger implecations by jabelson · · Score: 0

      Oh sure, because only a genuis can handle this kind of work...

  73. I think the EU should... by Technomonics · · Score: 0, Troll

    ....Blow It Out Their Ass! Microsoft is the one company everybody loves to hate, yet I doubt that competitive companies in Europe were denied anywhere near that amount of income. Why is it that companies in the US find themselves able to write programs that interact with Windows while European counterparts sit and whine about things. This is a ludicrous amount of money, and I want an exact accounting from the EU as to how these funds would be used. Sounds like they want Microsof to fund the EU....

  74. World Wide issue by raitchison · · Score: 1

    you're comparing the fine for a single region to their world wide profits.

    Well that actually makes sense. If they comply with the EU court's demands and share their technology with competition (primarily OSS projects such as SAMBA) it could affect their worldwide market.

  75. In the end, who REALLY pays ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You do. If you aren't a lameo using some beatnik operating system that is. MS should say, Fuck you, man! We don't need your stinkin' users.

    1. Re:In the end, who REALLY pays ? by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 1

      Ah, but myself, and my company, are those beatniks.

      Much like Novell, IBM, Apple, Sun, Oracle.......

      Forgive me for running with such a hippie crowd.

      --
      WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
  76. /emote YEAH! by Tom · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    (n/t)

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  77. Let me add one thing by lbbros · · Score: 1

    That Microsoft actually proposed some licensing for the protocols, only:

    a. They weren't compatible with all licenses (guess what? the GPL was one of them)
    b. Small businesses complained that they had to pay a big amount of cash for a lot of material, most of which they didn't even need.

    As usual, groklaw had a good coverage of the matter.

    --
    A CC-licensed illustrated horror novel
  78. In other news by guruevi · · Score: 1

    The EU has just spent money on software licenses. To upgrade their Phantom consoles to Vista and Office 2007 including Duke Nukem Forever, the EU has just spent 300m Euro. 280m Euro was spent on Vista and Office licenses. A support contract for 2.5m euro / day was also included.

    --
    Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
  79. Re:WGA and the EU by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 1

    First, making a company give competitors trade secrets in immoral.

    You're insane.

    IP (Intellectual Property) is not a god given right. IP is government assigned monopoly to promote the arts and sciences. IP is a government subsidy!

    Furthermore, corporations exist at the behist of a government. Corporate charters, or the right to do business, and hold assets, are not god given, either; you get the from your local powers-that-be.

    We don't live in a corporate state. We live in populous states, where corporations are allowed to exist in order to forward the aims of the people. When the aims of the people conflict with the aims of corporations, and it involves Government Subsidy, not god-given rights, than the aims of the people should (and will, in a proper democracy) prevail.

    Wake up, and pull your head out of your ass.

    --
    WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
  80. FAQ from the EU Commission [Slashdotted] by AnonymousDot · · Score: 5, Informative
    Source: http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?refe rence=MEMO/06/277&format=HTML&aged=0&language=EN&g uiLanguage=en

    Competition: Commission Decision of 12 July 2006 to impose penalty payments on Microsoft - frequently asked questions

    What is Microsoft required to do?
    The European Commission's Decision of March 2004 required that Microsoft take various steps to put an end to its illegal and anti-competitive conduct (see IP/04/382 and MEMO/04/70). These included obligations to:

    1. supply complete and accurate interface information which would allow non-Microsoft work group servers to achieve full interoperability with Windows PCs and servers; and
    2. make that information available on reasonable terms.

    On 10 November 2005, the Commission warned Microsoft, pursuant to Article 24(1) of Regulation 1/2003, that should Microsoft not comply with these obligations by 15 December 2005, it would face a daily penalty payment of up to 2 million (see IP/05/1695). Article 24 of Regulation 1/2003 entitles the Commission to impose such penalty payments not exceeding 5% of average daily turnover in the preceding business year per calendar day to compel companies to put an end to infringements of EC Treaty anti-trust rules, where an infringement has been established by a previous Commission anti-trust decision.

    Why has the Commission levied a penalty payment for non-compliance on only the failure to provide interoperability information, and not the terms on which that information is provided (i.e. the first and not the second of the two points from the 10th November 2005 Article 24(1) Decision)?
    As regards the provision of information on reasonable terms, Microsoft has announced that it will review the pricing of its protocols once revised technical documentation has been submitted. Furthermore, a final assessment on the degree of innovation, if any, that is contained in the interoperability information, and hence the reasonableness of the royalties that Microsoft charges, can only be made once the technical documentation embodying that interoperability information is complete and accurate.

    Why has the Commission decided that the fine levied should be 1.5 million per day?
    Of the two elements of non-compliance identified in the Article 24(1) Decision, complete and accurate interoperability information is a prerequisite for interoperable work group server operating systems to be developed. Microsoft's non-compliance in this regard has eliminated the effectiveness of the remedy. Consequently, the Commission has taken the view that failure to comply in this respect should at this stage constitute a larger part of the daily penalty payment identified in the Article 24(1) Decision of 10 November 2005.

    Why has the Commission taken today's Decision given that Microsoft is in the process of preparing revised technical documentation?
    Microsoft's obligation was to comply with the March 2004 decision's requirement to make available the relevant technical documentation as of June 2004. As of 20th June 2006, Microsoft had not done that, and the Commission decided that it was appropriate to levy a fine on Microsoft for its non-compliance so far.
    More than two years after the 2004 Decision, the Commission has therefore been obliged to resort to formal measures to ensure compliance. If any revised documentation that Microsoft submits proved to be complete and accurate, then Microsoft would not be subject to further daily penalty payments from the date on which complete and accurate technical documentation was provided. This would be the best outcome. However, if Microsoft continued t

    1. Re:FAQ from the EU Commission [Slashdotted] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The penalty payment is paid into the EU Budget. It does not increase the Budget, but reduces the contribution from Member States. The fines therefore reduce the overall tax burden on individuals.


      That's fantastic! Individuals and other taxpayers have paid monopoly rents to Microsoft; this is a decent way of returning that wealth to the people who should never have had to part with it in the first place.
  81. EU should use late fees to fund Windows Clone. by ldheinz · · Score: 1

    If the late fees were earmarked to fund an open source Windows clone, Microsoft would have a good reason to pay quickly. 5 million euros a day would fund the entire project in about an hour. Just think the scare that would put into Chairman Bill. That'd get Microsoft's attention.

  82. Untrue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The EU could confiscate Microsoft assets in Europe. Buildings, money in banks, everything, really.

  83. Open Solutions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's why it's important to switch government related IT system to open source solutions, preferably GPL as soon as possible. Some cities and institutions including the french police already took this leap without larger problems. This is the only way to free themselves from dictatorship of international mega-corporations like Microsoft.

    Also the tax payers should be able to clearly see processes of their government, which is only possible by using open solutions.

  84. property confiscation by zogger · · Score: 1

    What do the EU nations have that might be akin to eminent domain seizures in the US? Here, unfortnately IMO, the supremes have ruled that property can be taken (by government) even for simple economic gain of third parties, such as transferring your land for a new golf course because it might bump up the local proerty taxes, etc. Seems like copyrights could fall under that, because they have made provisions for patent takings in the past. Perhaps they could just take the source themselves and open it, I believe the source code has already been provided to various governments...

    note: I am not a huge MS fan, far from it, but I think they are treading on thin ice here and could lose out significantly if they keep waffling.

    1. Re:property confiscation by jelle · · Score: 1

      "What do the EU nations have that might be akin to eminent domain seizures in the US? Here, u"

      EU governments (like all/most) are still big MS customers... They can simply halt payments...

      If bad comes to worse, I bet they can divert many payments to MS from big companies, banks, etc, too...

      No need to screw around with 'taking copyrights' nonsense, etc.

      --
      --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
  85. $200 by spykemail · · Score: 1

    It's not about the size of the fine, it's about the publicity. Microsoft has a virtual monopoly on the operating system market. I don't want to get into an argument about Europe's economic models, but even if you're a capitalist monopolies are bad news. It's proven historical fact that modern monopolies tend to lead to higher prices and lower quality products and services. The whole basis of modern capitalism is competition - competition promotes innovation and leads to higher quality products at lower prices. Most modern companies exist for one reason - to make money. Once a company obtains a monopoly they still want to make more money - and the best ways to do that are:

    1) Artificially raise prices.
    2) Artificially lower costs (often leading to lower quality).
    3) Maintain their monopoly by preventing any possibility of competition.
    4) Leverage their monopoly to gain control of other markets, especially ones related to their monopoly.

    Microsoft has done all four of these things, but the last one is what they're getting fined for right now. Prices are pretty standard so they don't have much room for #1 and they can't exactly buy Apple or Linux so they've been concentrating on #4 with a natural bit of #2 that's more of a side effect of not having much competition than a conscious decision. For those of you who don't know, Microsoft was found guilty of breaking the law in the US as well. The difference is that Microsoft used its influence to prevent any actual punishment.

    Microsoft will pay this fine and the fine itself will not hurt them. What is (and will continue) hurting them is the negative publicity. When headlines read "Microsoft fined $XXX million for breaking the law" it makes investors nervous and hurts their rep with the general public. I can only assume that Microsoft has some sort of plan in place to prevent this from spiraling out of control. Either they are going to continue to ride the line and pay some fines (cost of doing business) or they have a card up their sleeve to make sure this doesn't escalate. Given their business model and practices I find it extremely unlikely they are going to become a good corporate citizen and stop trying to rule the virtual world.

    I can only pray that one day the United States Department of Justic will come to its sense and break Microsoft into very little peices. The OS situation is bad enough without Microsoft trying to gain control of every single aspect of computer software. It is absolutely killing innovation and lowering the overall quality of computer software by an absurd amount.

  86. Commencing delcaration of war against Europe in... by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 1

    3...
    2...
    1...

    --
    You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
  87. FSFE commenting the decision by hkl387 · · Score: 2, Informative

    The Free Software Foundation Europe, who has been supporting the European Commission from the start, has launched a press release on the EC's decision.

  88. if ms had any sense by jt418-93 · · Score: 1

    they would pull an apple and say, ok, we'll take our windows and go. im sure the eu would crap a fat one if that were to happen.

    and i would laugh my ass off. can you imagine the chaos?

    --
    -.no
  89. Re:WGA and the EU by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

    First, making a company give competitors trade secrets in immoral.

    Obviously you haven't been following the case. The remedies that the EU wanted had nothing to do with trade secrets. The two major remedies.

    1. Supply documentation so that competitors can better interoperate with Windows. Like documenting all Windows AD protocols so that Apples and Linux (Samba) boxes can better network with Windows AD servers.
    2. Unbundle Windows Media Player.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  90. First time this phrase would ever be used: by JoeLinux · · Score: 1

    "Your honor, I wish to do my time in a British prison"

  91. Call the receptionist... by seven+of+five · · Score: 1

    OK, will somebody please find the receptionist, have her pay this pizza guy or whoever he is from the petty cash drawer so we can all get back to work??

  92. 280m? by slcdb · · Score: 1

    280 meters? That's one hell of a big euro.

    --
    Despite what EULAs say, most software is sold, not licensed.
  93. EU could make ODF mandatory for government use by Been+on+TV · · Score: 1

    If Microsoft don't pay up and comply with the ruling, in addition to confiscating assets and all the normal legal stuff in each of the EU member states, the EU Commission could make it mandatory to use ODF for all document processing and storage in Government within the Union.

    That'd basically pull the feet out under MS Office.

    --
    The future is in beta
  94. Ballmer's reply by Nybble's+Byte · · Score: 0

    Gates, hand me my chair.

  95. MOD PARENT +5 Insightful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously. Wait til Microsoft tells these Eurotrash companies adios. Then, they'll be forced to use Linux and all it's quirky bugs and lack of support. They'll come kicking and screaming back to Microsoft. It's time for the Microsft parent to spank these little brats and teach them a lesson or two on just how good they really have it. If I were Ballmer, I'd jack their licensing fees up three or four fold the first time OpenOffice crashes or they get tired of applying linux security patches or library updates daily. Good luck Eurotrash...

  96. Actually the can not by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    If they do so, then the EU software companies that are there would have to develop for another platform. That would almost certainly become Linux. At that point, companies such SAP would be pushing Linux on the world including America. Then even American software competitors would have no choice but to be on the same platform. MS loses their monopoly and at that time, they would fall faster than netscape did in 2000 or IBM back in 1990-1991.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    1. Re:Actually the can not by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      And remember that OpenOffice is mostly developed in Germany, Mandriva is a French company, SuSE is based in Germany, the KDE Foundation is German and no doubt there are many other examples.

  97. Re:When you say sting, do you mean like a pin pric by chthon · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think the real sting is that, probably, in whole Europe, on the news (radio, TV), you could hear Neelie Kroes say that "Nobody is above the law" in regard to the way Microsoft behaved.

  98. Wouldn't be the first time Bill got "hit" in EU... by The_REAL_DZA · · Score: 2, Funny

    There was this little incident in Europe's "capital", Brussels, about eight years ago...I still get the giggles when I think about it.

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    This space intentionally left (almost) blank.
  99. In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was fined ten bucks for jaywalking. Only the $10.00 bucks hurt my wallet a lot more than MS's $357,000,000.00 hurt theirs.

  100. Re:When you say sting, do you mean like a pin pric by zippthorne · · Score: 1

    Indeed. but does the EU actually have lawmaking authority? I'm a bit confused over whether it's an economic agreement or some kind of strange franco-germanic empire.

    --
    Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  101. Um. You're on crack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The development of GSM had nothing in common with your attractive, but wild fantasy.

    ... massive investment of capital by the EU

    Unlikely. The EC doesn't have the money or the political backing to do its own Windows. The only EU intervention in the development of GSM was making vague noises that interoperability would be a good thing, then stepping back.

    GSM investment involved private money, and investment from state-owned telcos, where they still existed at the time. It did not involve public or federal money.

    GSM didn't involve declaring war against large US corporations or confiscation of IP.

    Oh, you're quoting Wikipedia. Please find a credible source.

    ... As you may or may not know, ISPs in Europe are closed related to the government.

    I'm not even sure you know what you mean by that.

    Care to try again in coherent English?

    ... Simple

    Indeed.

  102. You don't imagine very well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There would be no chaos. Oh no, all MS products are now free, such chaos!

  103. indeed! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Personally, I can live with our modestly lower level of productivity (on that metric, at least - the reliance on PPP in a market which isn't 100% efficient is not a perfect model) in exchange for our much higher quality of life [...]"

    Hear, hear.

    Of course, this argument will reach deaf ears to those following the typical USA (or anglo-saxon) ultra-capitalistic view on the world.

  104. That offhand... by gravyface · · Score: 1

    is slowly curling into a glowing fist, powered by an evil far greater than...

    --
    body massage!
  105. Four words: by AJWM · · Score: 1

    Tragedy of the commons.

    --
    -- Alastair
    1. Re:Four words: by spun · · Score: 1

      That's the best you can do? Chrissake, man, that is nothing more than an early example of owning-class FUD. That situation never took place, because people can collectively look after their interests and punish freeloaders. Try the tragedy of private ownership: when ownership is unlimited, there is no incentive to maintain resources rather than exploiting them, because you can simply take your cash and move on to a new exploitation when the old one dries up.

      Four words: Think before you write.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    2. Re:Four words: by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      Tragedy of the Commons occurs when the population is given shared ownership but not shared authority. It's both a failing of communism (the bad apples rise to positions of power, thus spoiling the bunch) and capitalism (the bad apples rise to positions of mass ownership and influence, thus causing those in power to spoil the bunch).

      In the event that a population is given both shared ownership and authority, bunch spoilage is mediated via the population; ie: as you said, the population can look after its collective interests and punish freeloaders. A good example of this in action is Wikipedia.

      However, there is still a need for a basic administration; not a full-fledged government, per se, but a kind of system of social guidelines that are enforced by the population (including incentives for charity). Also, a fixed, stable currency is needed to allow for resource trading - even if its a one-bill paper money with a price that's fixed to the cost of counterfitting (though I prefer a silver standard in my idealist utopian anarcho-capitalist regime - it's cheap enough to still be useful as coins, and stable enough to use as savings.)

      Additionally, this, like both capitalism and communism, can be damaged rather deeply via the scourge of imperfect information (ie: one party in a given transaction knows more than the other, and uses this in an effort to exploit the situation - or more expressly put, lying by word and lying by omission).

      --
      110100 1101000 1101000 1100110 0 1101111 1101000 1100011 1
    3. Re:Four words: by spun · · Score: 1

      Well put. If the original poster had taken the time to think things through like you have, I would not have been so flippant. Your understanding of the tragedy of the commons indicates the nuanced view of someone who has thought deeply about the subject. I prefer the anarcho-syndicalist approach to the anarcho-capitalist one, but in an ideal world we would both have our pick of which system to adhere to, a free market of governance, if you will.

      What we both agree on, I believe, is that any system where authority is divorced from responsibility is doomed to fail. That, and coercion is bad. Basics of anarchism, really, no matter what flavor you adhere to.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    4. Re:Four words: by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      Precisely.

      'course, I'm no anarcho-capitalist. I'm pragmatic about things; ie: capitalism has its rewards vis a vis QoL growth in capitalist vs. socialist nations: when taken as percent QoL growth per-year (based on wealth per capita increase, adjusted to the value of gold and for inflation), center 50% used as the sample, and geometric mean of the sample taken (as 1.xx, rather than xx%; let's be properly accurate here), capitalist still wins out over socialism. This may be because capitalism just works better, or it may be that communist nations are plagued by coincidentally bad apples.

      However, I don't really belive in the concept of posession. If someone else needs something more than you do, give it to them; if you need something more than someone else, ask them to give it to you.

      I like to think of my flavor of anarchist as similar to that of Bernardo De La Paz in "The Moon is a Harsh Mistress"; i.e. I do as I please, take responsibility for what I do, and if a law is too inconvenient to abide by, I simply don't abide by it. An aspect of taking responsibility means that if I get caught, I rather have to fight the specific law in question, tooth and nail. (Lots of other aspects; there's a sort of zen necessary to get the whole concept. Sort of an 'Apply it with proper thought, common sense, and a feel for what's right'.)

      Yeah. All three are needed; common sense is often nonsensical, thought is often mislead, and what's 'right' is subjective, and therefore not always what's socially beneficial. Getting the three working together is a process of discovery.

      For one thing, you do not own you. You have been paid for by your parents, the work of countless others, and the money of whatever regime you live under. Just as you hold a stake in those around you, everyone else holds a stake in you. As such, you have a duty to be a socially responsible person (ie: 'good', as religions put it).

      Meanwhile, you have to realise that nobody's perfect - not even you. So it's attempting to live ideally in an imperfect society, while accepting that your own behavior must, by definition, be flawed.

      Also, 'socially responsible' changes with the times. Like being 'good', it's subjective to the situation. On the other hand, unlike the religious 'good', it's not subjective to arbitrary rules. Instead, it's formulaically derived from that which can be shown to be socially beneficial.

      Mind you, 'socially beneficial' is also not always in the public interest - though, they are very often approximately the same.

      Wow. I do go on. Feel free to ask me to shut the fuck up ^_^

      --
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  106. The reason for the reducing of the fine by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1

    The reason the fine is less than what had been threatened in the press is because in late March 2006, Microsoft met with the EU Trustee Neil Barrett, who "clarified the requirements for the documents". Barrett also provided Microsoft with "aggressive series of deadlines" for providing the documentation in accordance with the clarified requirements.

    Since that time, Microsoft has been working overtime to provide the documentation, including rehiring retirees that are more familiar with the issues, pulling people off of other projects such as Vista, staying up till 3AM, etc. And Microsoft has met all milestones in the "series of deadlines" laid down by Barrett. The seventh and final deadline is July 18, which Microsoft expects to meet.

    So, since March, Micrsosoft has been acting in good faith, the EU knows this, so there's no need for the harsher fines that had been predicted. And don't hold your breath hoping for larger fines down the road. Why? Because even if the new documentation is still lacking in some manner, the EU knows that Microsoft provided the new documentation in good faith, and they'll just work with Microsoft to address any further deficiencies.

    See Microsoft Scrambles to Meet EU Demands, for details on the above.

    --
    -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
  107. Thought the headline read: by boomgopher · · Score: 1

    Microsoft Hit With 280mm Cannon

    --
    Your hybrid is not saving the environment. Its purpose is to make you feel good about buying something.
  108. "Oh, have I got your attention now?"" by brre · · Score: 1
  109. hold the world hostage for a million dollars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    austin powers

  110. Re:wth? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have MS headquartered in some EU country. Would the EU be so quick to want to force an EU company to hand over all of it's software to competitors?

    No, hell no the EU would be defending the company stating that it has a better product and the consumers decided that.

    This boils down to the EU hates it that other countries are better at things then they are. Remember the global wine wars? all the EU countries lost. The best wine comes from the US and Australia. Their own judges decided that. The EU wine people decided that. That totally pissed off the EU. This is a chance to hurt a foreign company. Nothing more.

    Is it impossible for Linux and apple to use window Servers? Depending on which server application the answer is yes or no.

    Exchange, one needs an exchange client first. If someone makes a Linux exchange client, then Linux can use exchange.

    File server, I see people around campus using macs and Linux boxen and store their files on Linux, apple, and windows servers. So Id say either someone did some serious hacking and created a custom way to write to the Windows file server from other Oss, or the EU is just lazy and doesnt want to read what is available or wants to be handed the product. Again being lazy.

    And for other application, your dealing with a specific application. Granted MS may have made product ABC, but do they have to make a client for product ABC for every desktop OS?
      If MS made a client for Linux, OS X, FreeBSD, would everyone still be complaining?

  111. Err ... unclear??? by golodh · · Score: 1
    In essence Technomonics takes the view that the EU's requirements were so unclear that Microsoft couldn't reasonably be expected to comply.

    Demand for trade-secrets to be compromised?

    To me, the EU is demanding documentation while it does not spell out exactly what it is looking for, other than the total and complete release of all trade secrets of the Microsoft Corporation.

    I respectfully disagree. The EU made it clear that they do not *want* any source-code. They want an API specification: (here I quote from the EU decision of 2004).

    To the extent that any of this interface information might be protected by intellectual property in the European Economic Area(6), Microsoft would be entitled to reasonable remuneration. The disclosure order concerns the interface documentation only, and not the Windows source code, as this is not necessary to achieve the development of interoperable products.

    (see http://news.com.com/EUs+statement+on+end+of+Micros oft+investigation/2100-1014_3-5178465.html?tag=nl) So: no source code. Furthermore I really don't understand how publishing an API specification would disclose trade secrets.

    Unclarity?

    And besides, what part of (here I quote from the EU decision of 2004):

    As regards interoperability, Microsoft is required, within 120 days, to disclose complete and accurate interface documentation which would allow non-Microsoft work group servers to achieve full interoperability with Windows PCs and servers.

    (see http://news.com.com/EUs+statement+on+end+of+Micros oft+investigation/2100-1014_3-5178465.html?tag=nl) is hard to understand and what part is unclear? I just don't see it.

    A good-faith attempt?

    Microsoft has been making a good faith reply to all of the EU demands, which is not a diminuitive task.

    Again I have to disagree. Prof. Neil Barrett (proposed as a monitoring trustee by Microsoft itself) characterised the documentation as: "entirely inadequate" (see http://www.regdeveloper.co.uk/2006/03/11/eu_ms_res ponse/). I absolutely cannot believe that Microsoft, with all its software engineers, would be incapable of documenting their own communication protocol if they put their mind to it. Or alternatively recognising that they couldn't do it in short order and saying as much.

    Microsoft has published significant information regarding APIs and continues to provide resources for integrating third-party software solutions into Windows.

    Err ... significant? In what respect? Again I point to the statement by Barrett that the documentation was "entirely inadequate". But it gets better. The commission also quotes from an independent analysis of Microsoft's protocol documentation conducted by Taeus (see http://www.taeus.com/ for general information on this company).

    Taeus compared Microsoft's submissions to a car manufacturer selling a car without wheels, handbrake, or steering wheel, and only fitting each begrudgingly after the customer complains. [...] Taeus concluded that what documentation Microsoft had provided was "devoted to obsolete functionality", "self-contradictory" and was written "primarily to maximize volume (page count) while minimizing useful information.".

    I feel that the above two statements destroy the theory that that Microsoft made a good-faith attempt at documentation. And as to the meaning of the EU's request being uncle

    1. Re:Err ... unclear??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would say that the effort has been a good faith effort. Guys have been working nearly 24x7 to get our protocols (not APIs) documented now that we have an idea what format the EU wants. We're taking a major hit on the Vista release date because of the EU.

    2. Re:Err ... unclear??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The contention concerns the interpretation of the terms "complete and accurate interface documentation".

      Microsoft documented every single API that was used by any component not part of the windows kernel that had previously not been documented (there has been a site called msdn.com that documents Microsoft APIs for quite a while). I believe it's fair to say that 'having documented every API that is used by a component outside of the kernel' is a reasonable definition of complete.

      Neil Barrett's conclusion that the Microsoft documentation is inaccurate contains such choice complaints as 'the documentation doesn't enable *me* to write a file server' (asking for introduction to the concept of what a file server is etc.pp., material that is beyond the scope of API documentation) and that the terms 'Handle' and 'void *' where nowhere specified. Anyone who knows anything about programming knows exactly that these are opaque types common in C and C++. It's pretty clear that Neil Barrett was not vetted for his actual understanding of programming concepts and common practices. There has been some rather outspoken criticism of the Neil Barrett expert opinion by people like Manfred Broy (Germany's #1 prof for Software engineering).

      One of the problems with the way this has been handled by the EU is that up until the end of 2005, nobody pointed out that the documentation that Microsoft had made available was considered inadequate. Then in the end of 2005, bang, the hammer drops and the EU demands massive amounts of money for the period during which Microsoft was under the impression that they were supplying exactly what was asked for. There's even a trail of emails that documents MS asking for feedback and the EU responding 'everything's fine'. If that isn't a money grab, I don't know what it is.

      Then MS & the EU set up a timeline and specification of what the EU is looking for in the documentation, and a week before MS is due to deliver on that specification, with all previous milestones passed, the EU fines them. Fair?

      See http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/legal/02-23-06R esponsetoECSO.mspx for the Microsoft side of this argument.

  112. I've said it before and I'll say it again by edraven · · Score: 1

    Corporations aren't people. You can't expect them to react like people, so you can't punish them the way you punish people. If you want to modify the behavior of a corporation, you have to endanger its market share. Two ways I can think of to do this would be to place limits on the amount of advertising they can do and to tax _other_ companies for continuing to do business with them.

  113. they never reduced the fine .. by rs232 · · Score: 2, Informative

    .. or watch out MS.Astroturfers on board ..

    "The reason the fine is less than what had been threatened in the press"

    Can you provide any citation from the commision to a reduction in fine for good behavour. There is a December reference to a $2m per day from the Commision. Which if my arithmetic is correct, is one million less then the current fine.

    "Microsoft met with the EU Trustee Neil Barrett, who "clarified the requirements for the documents"."

    Microsoft were compelled to 'meet' Barrett as they failed to comply with its ruling. What he actually said was the documents were "totally unfit for its intended purpose".

    You put that as if MS was the concerned party somehow trying to play honest broker to the nasty Commision. In fact MS were compelled to 'meet' Neil Barrett after they first tried to have him removed. You see the Commision is a legally conviened body in judgement of Microsofts' misconduct. It's not as if the guilty party gets to 'meet' the Judge and 'clarify' things for him.

    "Barrett also provided Microsoft with "aggressive series of deadlines" for providing the documentation in accordance with the clarified requirements."

    So its the Commision who's at fault for not clarifying requirments. Instead of what is really happening, MS wilfully ignoring the instruction to open the protocols to third party developers.

    "Since that time, Microsoft has been working overtime to provide the documentation,"

    If they are complient why are they being fined $357m and a further $3m euros per day?

    "Microsoft has met all milestones in the "series of deadlines" laid down by Barret"

    If they are complient why are they being fined $357m and a further $3m euros per day?

    "the EU knows that Microsoft provided the new documentation in good faith, and they'll just work with Microsoft to address any further deficiencies."

    If Microsoft provided the new documentation in good faith why are they being fined $3 million per day.

    Why does the Commision need to 'work with Microsoft'? Did Leona Helmsley get to 'work' with the Judge when she was caught cheeting on taxes?

    In real life, are you a PR hack for Microsoft?

    Is slashdot becoming totally overrun with MS.Astroturfers?

    --
    davecb5620@gmail.com
  114. Re:When you say sting, do you mean like a pin pric by ThePilgrim · · Score: 1

    The EU can make law, but only in thos areas surrendered by the individual states to the EU.

    Europien compertition is one such area

    --
    Wouldn't it be nice if schools got all the money they wanted and the army had to hold jumble sales for guns
  115. Interpreting the daily fine. by jbn-o · · Score: 1

    Gervase Markham's article for the Times Online would seem to disagree with you on that last point—a previous ruling meant a £1.5/day fine. Markham argued that Microsoft should just pay the fine as that fine was not so big:

    "Still, Microsoft may consider this a good deal. One foundation of their success is their operating system monopoly, reinforced by the interactions and dependencies between the client and server versions which tie the two together. In 2003, they made £14 million a day from Windows client operating system licences alone. In the context of preserving that revenue, a fine of one-tenth of that figure suddenly doesn't seem so large.

    Somehow a fine double that of the old fine still doesn't seem terribly significant in their daily take. And according to the BBC, Microsoft will appeal so perhaps this will ultimately result in a fine more to Microsoft's liking.

    1. Re:Interpreting the daily fine. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is not the fines. The problem is that Microsoft, contrary to popular belief, actually did comply. They DID remove Media Player from the OS and let vendors choose which version of the OS they wanted. They DID release a shit-ton of documentation about their current CIFS protocol and unlike most companies, they are not capable of predicting the future as to what enhancements their proprietary protocol will contain in Vista, an OS that has yet to be released. The problem here is that they did comply and they're still being fined. Their response may very well have been slow but thats what typically happens when a judicial entity waves its hands and says "stop what you're doing" without outlining specifically what changes they want to make. This appears to me to be a no win situation for Microsoft. They only thing that they really can do is fight until the EU outlines the changes they expect Microsoft to take. Also note, that the EU Commission is announcing their decision 2 weeks before the compliance deadline. Microsoft still has 2 weeks to comply, but the EU has already made their decision? Does that sound like a fair fight to anyone? If Microsoft hasn't complied, then how come the EU isn't listing specific details of their non-compliance? The only statement EU made is that they didn't lower the price for the version of the OS that does not contain Media Player, which is an app you can download for free online, and then they use this to justify their conjecture that Microsoft didn't release a version of the OS that does not contain Media Player. The fact of the matter is that the EU Commission buloxed their demands by making them too vague and Microsoft management has a responsibility to its shareholders to take advantage of business opportunities appropriately. If Microsoft were to discount the version of windows without Media Player, which might I remind you, is an application that is *free*, they would likely face a class action lawsuit from shareholders for not taking advantage of a business opportunity by not obtaining the market value of their software. It is by definition a no-win situation for Microsoft.

      The honest to God fact about all this Media Player stuff is that the competition sucks. Real Networks rode the wave of mediocrity and crappy streaming, along with a company called "Viva" and nobody liked their ad-driven bloaty software. Quicktime is still alive only because of Apple users, but everyone should also remember that there are plenty of open Video and Audio standards for streaming that work perfectly fine. If Media Player sucked worse than any of these other players, I can guarantee you that it would have faded into oblivion a long time ago and instead of the EU targeting Media Player, they would target WordPad or Remote Desktop or their Spyware Removal tool. The fact of the matter is that the EU quite simply is looking for foreign dollars to suck into their flailing economies. They don't want to pay market value for windows. They also don't want to pay a premium for Apple's hardware. So what do they do? They kick off an anti-trust investigation.

      The EU has alternatives. Microsoft isn't a monopoly. You can get a Mac, or a Linux machine or a Windows machine. All three of those OSes are absolutely competition with Microsoft. The problem is that the end-user prefers Windows because the over-all cost of the system is cheaper than that of a Mac and is easier to use than a Linux machine which would be even cheaper. There is no doubt that Microsoft played dirty during the browser wars in various ways. Telling a vendor that you'll black-ball them as a customer unless they do X-Y-Z is an anti-trust violation. Shipping Media Player with an OS that the vendors WANT bundled on their machines is not a violation. Microsoft making a better Media Player is not a violation. Microsoft putting some random media company out of business because Microsoft has a BETTER product is not an anti-trust violation.

      This whole thing is stupid. The argument against Microso

  116. [wipes a tear] by berenixium · · Score: 1

    Joyful sob.
    This is the happiest day of my life. Sigh.
    It's even sunny outside...

  117. Free Windows is a Bad Idea by wordsofwisedumb · · Score: 1
    While making Windows free may solve one problem, it still promotes Microsoft products, in a sense extending the monopoly they have. This does the exact opposite of what the ruling is trying to fix.

    It would be like introducing an invasive beetle to an ecosystem to eat an invasive vine you let loose ten years earlier. In the end you still have a problem with an invasive species.

    1. Re:Free Windows is a Bad Idea by schon · · Score: 1

      This does the exact opposite of what the ruling is trying to fix.

      I wouldn't say it does the exact opposite, but you're right about it not reducing MS's monopoly.

      My argument wasn't that it's something they would do, but something they could do.

    2. Re:Free Windows is a Bad Idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the beauty of the solution, when the winter hits, the gorillas will freeze and die and all will be well again!

  118. Re:Wouldn't be the first time Bill got "hit" in EU by ozbird · · Score: 1

    There was this little incident in Europe's "capital", Brussels, about eight years ago...I still get the giggles when I think about it.

    "Belgium, man! BELGIUM!"

  119. Re:WGA and the EU by rbairos · · Score: 1

    IP (Intellectual Property) is not a god given right. IP is government assigned monopoly to promote the arts and sciences. IP is a government subsidy!

    How generous of the government to allow an individual the right to the products of his/her own mind.

    We don't live in a corporate state. We live in populous states, where corporations are allowed to exist in order to forward the aims of the people. When the aims of the people conflict with the aims of corporations, and it involves Government Subsidy, not god-given rights, than the aims of the people should (and will, in a proper democracy) prevail. Wake up, and pull your head out of your ass.

    What socialist tripe. If a corporation wants to sell a product to another individual the government has no moral authority to intervene. It is irrelevant whether or not any other group (even a majority) would benefit from a government-imposed looting of that product. Microsoft exists for the benefit of Bill Gates and his share holders, whatever benefit the people derive from it is secondary. Pull your head out of your own ass and stop demanding the world revolve around your own un-earned needs.

  120. Biggest concern by macdaddy · · Score: 1

    My biggest concern is that Uncle Sam will step in. Junior still has enough time in office to seriously piss of the EU. We're not all that mighty and powerful. Even Conan needed friends.

  121. Re:wth? by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

    Have MS headquartered in some EU country. Would the EU be so quick to want to force an EU company to hand over all of it's software to competitors?

    First, the EU has convicted and punished dozens of EU headquartered companies for monopoly abuse. Second, "hand over all it's software"?!? They are ordering them to document the interaction between the server and the desktop. There is no software required, just documents that explain how they interact so others are not illegally disadvantaged.

    This boils down to the EU hates it that other countries are better at things then they are.

    Oh, I see. You're an idiot.

    Is it impossible for Linux and apple to use window Servers?

    Who cares? The question was can Windows desktops use Linux and Apple servers as easily as Windows servers?

    Exchange, one needs an exchange client first.

    No, they need to be able to run an exchange server on a non-windows box. That is why the EU ordered them to document the exchange protocol.

    And for other application, your dealing with a specific application. Granted MS may have made product ABC, but do they have to make a client for product ABC for every desktop OS?

    You have the entire ruling completely backwards. MS doesn't have to create any clients at all. They have to document the protocols well enough so that Linux and Apple and Sun, etc. servers can compete on even ground when serving Windows desktops. This isn't about stopping MS from having a monopoly on desktop OSs. It is about stopping them from using that monopoly to gain another monopoly on Server OSs.

    The unregulated monopoly business model goes like this. Take a monopoly (desktop OS). Tie it to a new market (servers OS, web browsers, media players, etc.). You quickly drive everyone else out of business and you have two monopolies. Rinse. Lather. Repeat. Soon you just have a small number of competing monopolies, innovation is pointless, and consumers are screwed. That is why I don't know of a single country where what MS has done is not illegal.

  122. Re:When you say sting, do you mean like a pin pric by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

    Apparently it won't sting quite enough, though.

    Remember though, as in the US, the guilty punishment was very little compared to the payout for all the civil suits which became slam dunks. Expect MS to settle a lot more lawsuits in Europe to server and media player companies.

  123. Microsoft still can appeal by edxwelch · · Score: 1

    Actually, if you read the artical you will see that they have the opertunity to appeal.
    I have a feeling that they will be able to weasel their way out of this one.

  124. Re: GDP? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i don't know about the EU's gdp, but the usa's gdp is smoke and mirrors.

    look up hedonic pricing and chain weighted dollars.

    in 1996, greenspan decided gdp wasn't accounting for gdp growth. rather than figuring out why or challenging his assumptions (that gdp was growing and the #2 didn't reflect this growth - based on no evidence, btw), he changed how the numbers were crunched... like any good enron executive.

    here's how the scam worked:

    1998, 200 MHz computer sells for $1,000.
    1999, 400 MHZ computer sells for $1,000.

    because the processor was twice as fast in the 1999 model, greenspan arbitrarily counted $2,000 toward gdp instead o fthe $1,000 actually spent.

    i argue that if the speed of the processor *actually* created more dollars, it would show up down the road. it didn't, so greenspan did what any reputable accountant would do - he faked the numbers.

    "new economy" -> stock market bubble -> housing bubble -> it has to end badly, it always has.

  125. Re:WGA and the EU by spun · · Score: 1

    You don't have the right to profit from the products of your mind. Without government protection, the first person you sold it to could sell it himself. Only the threat of government sanctioned violence keeps people from reproducing any intellectual property whatsoever.

    Corporation is an abstract concept created by government. Your free market idealism applies to sole proprietorships only. Once you have more than one owner, you need a power structure and laws to keep things sane. Without corporate charter, you do not have limited liability and any shareholder can be sued for the entire amount of damages or debt a company has. So telling government to stay the hell out of corporate business is nonsensical. Without government, corporations as we know them wouldn't exist. We, the people, created them through the democtratic process and we can impose any kind of limitations we want.

    We live in a cooperative society, and just as we have the right to say "we will imprison you for killing someone" we can also say what are legal and illegal ways of making money. You sound like a petulant child who wants all of the rights and privileges of living in a cooperative society with none of resonsiblities, and like petulant children everyhwere you project your own failings onto those who point them out to you. Socialists aren't the ones profiting off the work of others, capitalists are, and they demand the right to keep on profiting. A wage slave is a slave nonetheless, and capitalism is founded on the work of the wage slave.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  126. Re:WGA and the EU by rbairos · · Score: 1

    You don't have the right to profit from the products of your mind. Without government protection, the first person you sold it to could sell it himself. Only the threat of government sanctioned violence keeps people from reproducing any intellectual property whatsoever.

    There's a difference between a right to something, and protection from those who take it from you.
    And yes, you dont have a right to *profit* from it, but you do have a right to keep it.

    Corporation is an abstract concept created by government. Your free market idealism applies to sole proprietorships only. Once you have more than one owner, you need a power structure and laws to keep things sane. Without corporate charter, you do not have limited liability and any shareholder can be sued for the entire amount of damages or debt a company has. So telling government to stay the hell out of corporate business is nonsensical.
    Without government, corporations as we know them wouldn't exist. We, the people, created them through the democtratic process and we can impose any kind of limitations we want.


    A corporation is only a collection of interested individuals. It is not a government granted privelege or abstract concept. The governments only valid role is to protect the individuals of the corporation and those they deal with in such areas as limited liability, intellectual and capital protection, disputing trade agreements, etc, etc.

    The artificial domains of Anti-Trust and/or Anti-competition is what this thread is focusing on.

    We live in a cooperative society, and just as we have the right to say "we will imprison you for killing someone" we can also say what are legal and illegal ways of making money.

    There is a fundamental difference between murdering someone and trading goods between two voluntary entities. These are not arbitrary democratically chosen laws, subject to the whim of the current government. They stand on their own reasoning. If people had the right to impose any law than this entire conversation would be moot wouldnt it?

    You sound like a petulant child who wants all of the rights and privileges of living in a cooperative society with none of resonsiblities, and like petulant children everyhwere you project your own failings onto those who point them out to you.

    The only responsiblities are met by delivering the product that was paid for, and paying the wages of those who agreed to make that product.
    Point out my failings and who exactly Im projecting them on, or please refrain from attacks ad hominen.

    Socialists aren't the ones profiting off the work of others, capitalists are, and they demand
    the right to keep on profiting.


    You do not have a right to make a profit. Anyone who claims so does not know the first thing
    about capitalism.

    A wage slave is a slave nonetheless, and capitalism is founded on the work of the wage slave.
    Thanks for tip.

  127. Re:wth? by Decaff · · Score: 1

    No, hell no the EU would be defending the company stating that it has a better product and the consumers decided that.

    That is not the point. The consumers may have decided that Windows on the desktop is better, but the issue is that Microsoft are using this position to make their Servers more effective because of their dominance of the desktop. In other words, other companies aren't being allowed to give the consumers full choice of servers.

    Is it impossible for Linux and apple to use window Servers? Depending on which server application the answer is yes or no.

    Wrong. It is not impossible, but they can't use them as effectively, as they don't know the protocols to use them as effectively.

    File server, I see people around campus using macs and Linux boxen and store their files on Linux, apple, and windows servers. So Id say either someone did some serious hacking and created a custom way to write to the Windows file server from other Oss, or the EU is just lazy and doesnt want to read what is available or wants to be handed the product. Again being lazy.

    Yes, someone did do some serious hacking, and as a result Linux machines can use Windows servers, and Linux servers can provide services to Windows desktops - but not nearly as effectively as if they used the full correct protocols.

    Exchange, one needs an exchange client first. If someone makes a Linux exchange client, then Linux can use exchange.

    No, because to use exchange effectively, you need to know the full protocols.

    Clear now?

  128. Formats as fig-leaves? by golodh · · Score: 1

    I would say that the effort has been a good faith effort. Guys have been working nearly 24x7 to get our protocols (not APIs) documented now that we have an idea what format the EU wants.

    Well ... I'm happy to see what might actually be a response with inside knowledge. However ... first of all I'm afraid that, given its public record in the area of "honesty" and "fair dealing", Microsoft is facing rather serious credibility challenge here.

    Could it really be that bad?

    So ... are we to understand that Microsoft really had no documentation of its main client-server interaction protocol (whether API or protocol description) that it could use to produce documentation for the EU? Do you really expect us to believe that?

    Well ... sadly enough we might, because we remember the efforts by Jim Allchin to put Microsoft's Windows development on a more systematic footing (see: http://asay.blogspot.com/2005/09/news-microsoft-ad mits-its-development.html). So if that holds for Windows development as a whole, then might it not hold as well for something like a communication protocol? *shrugs* Ok ... I give up. It might be that Microsoft as a company really hadn't got a clue what it's most important client-server communication protocol looks like. So ... yes. If you had to dig through mountains of Windows source code to figure out all instances where client-server interaction can occur (because you don't have a clue really) it could take a lot of time. But even if that were so, why didn't Microsoft warn the EU that it wouln't be able to finish withing the alotted time? Perhaps that is why it got the extra year to complete its documentation. But even so why keep mum and come up with hollow-sounding excuses about "formats" at the latest possible time? Could it be that whoever was in charge of this project didn't know how to manage it?

    Unfortunately the choice seems to be between

    (a) downright incompetence (the project manager in charge of producing the documentation couldn't count and couldn't read a calender)

    (b) the problem was too big (we ain't got no docs anywhere boss, honest, only source), or

    (c) stonewalling.

    Forgive me for being just the tiniest bit sceptical of Microsoft's good intentions and good faith (with Microsoft's long history of outright chicanery in mind whenever things didn't suit them).

    So ... the EU caused Microsoft to miss its delivery target for Windows?

    And please ... if your company had to actually interrupt its work on Vista to introduce disciplined software engineering, do you really expect me to lend credence to claims that delays in Vista delivery aren't 100% self-inflicted? And all those vanishing features ... caused by the EU's interference as well, yes? I'm sorry, but if you're saying that Microsoft really didn't have its act together when it comes to software engineering, it's very hard for me to lend credence to any claims that the EU's requirements has cause Vista to be delayed by even a single day.

    Formats as fig-leaves?

    And secondly ... sorry if I sound a bit grumpy, but this "now that we have an idea what format the EU wants" sounds like a poor cop-out. What do you care what format the EU wants? They specified an effect, not a procedure. They didn't specify a format in order not to impose undue constraints on you. If other developers can use your specs to produce something that will be intereoperable, the EU is satisfied. And sorry but if you knew your business, you ought to know what a workable specification looks like. So pushing the EU for a precise definition seems either:

    - fishing for an excuse to produce unworkable documentation ("we

  129. If I were Microsoft... by Dretep · · Score: 0

    I'd pack up my things and leave Europe. Then wait for them to come crying back.

  130. Gates announces... by walnutmon · · Score: 1

    Warren Buffet came up around 500 million dollars short on his record setting monetary donation, he will, however, forgive him.

    --
    You take it, I don't want it...
  131. ...and Australia... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    ...has more FOSS developers per capita than any other country in this world.

    My hypothesis is that Oz would be the ideal place to first make the upgrade. My business plans are all focussed around this idea. (-:

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:...and Australia... by lazybeam · · Score: 1

      I had a business plan to support Linux, but it got rejected for the NEIS allowance as "not viable". I made it more general, and applied at a better NEIS provider, and got accepted. I do support one Linux server out of my hundred-odd customers...

      Contact me if you want: http://cortina.com.au/us/

      --
      --
      no sig for you. come back one year.
  132. An exercise in logic by fromthevoid · · Score: 1

    (1) The proposition.

    A company (Microsoft) has a monopoly if competitors do not exist.
    A competitor exists { Apple,<insert Linux distro>, Unix, SCO ; ) , BSD }.
    Therefore monopoly doesn’t exit.

    Brought to you by modus tollens*

    Note: According to cognitive psychologists, although nearly 100% of college students have a solid, intuitive understanding of modus ponens, < 60% can apply modus tollens correctly.***

    Corollary: In modern industrialized countries the majority is with those citizens that have not been college educated constitutes approximately 65% of the workforce.

    I have a thought experiment.
    Suppose nearly a third of educated people are able to apply modus tollens.
    In addition grant the uneducated classes this same value (however unlikely).

    The outcome in (1) is thus: the majority of voters will evaluate it incorrectly, or are easily misled into thinking that they are correct. It follows that the governments that are elected by the people, unfettered by special interest groups, will not be able to evaluate (1) as well. In conclusion repressive policy will be generated ‘for equality’ at the expense of freedoms. This process will by induction flow from one level of economy to another, all the way to specific personal freedoms by the regulation of the economy of personality. Everyone is equal, competition is staged (Remember competition is a necessity for innovation, but equality must be at all times maintained), everything is protected from the citizen, even themselves.

    Closing remarks:
    It becomes evident that the adage that ‘democracy is the tyranny of the majority’ has some semblance of reality. Restated in more specific rhetoric, the previous maxim should read: ‘democracy is the tyranny of the incompetent by the deceitful.’ The only redeeming quality democracy has is that domestic revolutions are usually ended in a bloodless coup.

    ps.
    If the collective body of the EU can compete with Boeing via the creation of Airbus; why isn’t a composite to Microsoft formed? It’s not like alternate OS generation is impossible, Linus did it

    *** (Cognitive Psychology and Its Implications, 3rd ed. By John R. Anderson,
    New York: Freeman, 1990; pp 292-297)

  133. Prrof that M$ ripped off code in Win 95!!! by RecycledElectrons · · Score: 1

    M$ ripped off code, and included it in Win 95. That's the only plausible reason that they would refuse to release the source. In today's litigous society, a few hundred cases of stealing code would lead to lawsuits that would bankrupt M$.

    Andy Out!

  134. analogy for monopoly by happycorp · · Score: 1
    Someone posted an analogy of a company that produced 95% of the cars on the road.

    I think an easier analogy (even if less exact) is if one company owned 95% of the roads in your country.

    Then, they could extend this monopoly to start to specify what brand of cars were allowed to drive on those roads. If they made a car, they could allow only that car to drive.

    They could do the same with trucks. Then with the stuff that the trucks carry.

    If left unchecked, someone with this kind of monopoly power soon owns EVERYTHING. You can see how.

  135. "Give us the tools and we'll finish the job" by mjwx · · Score: 0

    - Winston Churchill

    --
    Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  136. Ouch by golodh · · Score: 1
    Ok, Reasonable points, and potentially very damaging, but I was aware of some of them and have discussed them previously on slashdot (see e.g. http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=184261&cid=152 17097).

    Microsoft's side: a camera's view

    I did try to read the reports, but the main themes in them seemed to be:

    (1) it's industry standard to have incomplete documentation for something as complicated as that, so Microsoft complied by providing incomplete docs (Broy)

    (2) such docs are aimed at specialists anyway, so only people with lots of background knowledge about Windows architecture, and Windows networking will be able to read and use them (Broy)

    (3) Barnett asked for silly things and made mistakes (Broy)

    (4) Barnett based his opinion on the documentation delivered by October 2005, and there was an update (Broy)

    (5) Barnett used the documentation to try and figure out how to do two things: (a) add a user, and (b) propagate a password change (Finkelstein)

    Damaging criticism for certain, but of course these reports were written to highlight Microsoft's point of view.

    With all respect, but when you read e.g. SCO's pleading without being aware of their context you'd think that they had a point ... and a case. Then when you read Groklaw's comments and IBM's pleadings, you see how wrong you were. Reports like this are like camera's: they show you exactly what they show you, but you have no idea what they skirt. Microsoft does seem to have legitimate gripes, and I tried to find the original trustee report to see for myself, but I couldn't. So could you please tell me where I can find the trustee report so that I can verify the criticism?

    But for me the bottom line is that Microsoft choose to describe their protocols in words. Text. Nowadays there are better ways of doing that.

    FSFE's take on the matter

    The FSFE gives a pertinent suggestio. See this link for FSFE's take on the matter: http://mailman.fsfeurope.org/pipermail/press-relea se/2006q2/000137.html

    They state that Andrew Tridgell (of Samba) estimated that Microsoft's protocols can be described in about 30,000 lines of IDL (Interface Definition Language), of which Samba has deciphered about 13,000 lines.

    If what they claim is true (and I admit I can't judge that), then Microsoft could have delivered the entire interface specification in just 30,000 lines of formal description, and simply and deliberately choose the most inefficient method of documentation possible. In that sense directing a major effort at producing text-only documentation could just as well be seen as a major effort to pass the compliance test without actually producing any useful documentation. In other words the "written primarily to maximize volume (page count) while minimizing useful information." accusation by Taeus comes to mind.

    Summing up

    I'm sorry, but again given Microsoft's track record where it concerns honesty and fair dealing, and its ongoing insistence on providing "solutions" that exclude Opens Source competitors, it's hard not to lend credence to the claims by the FSFE and Taeus. Notwithstanding the reports from admittedly reputable experts provided at Microsoft's behest, which uniformly tend to take the position that protocol documentation can only mean giving dedicated experts a few clues about where to look, I remain deeply sceptical.

    The Commission ordered Microsoft to produce "documentation" that's sufficient to allow others to produce intereoperable software, not how. If Microsoft chose to provide terribly voluminous and inefficient documentation, an obfuscation exercise in its own right, then I cannot see why this would excuse Microsoft from providing error-free and self-standing documentation (even though th

    1. Re:Ouch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the problematic bit with the argument you make is that it makes assumptions (they're evil) about the intention of Microsoft and use those assumptions to reinforce the original argument (they are evil. so their intention in producing industry standard documentation was to obfuscate and be useless. Therefore they are evil).

      Pause for a moment and consider:

      Boss: I need you to document our network infrastructure by next week. This is very important, you have to do this well otherwise you're fired.
      You: Ok.

      You go ahead and pull 7 all nighters to document your network infrastructure in the way you've done this for the last 10 years.
      In the process, you send daily updates to your Boss, and your Boss goes 'ok, looks fine'.

      Next Monday:
      Boss: The documentation you delivered is not what I wanted. What where you thinking? I have to fire you.
      You: What??? What is it you want?
      Boss: Sorry, that information is covered by confidentiality agreements with our clients. I'll have to fire you.

      Lots of back and forth, and you boss finally agrees to arrange a meeting with the client. You guys meet and come up with a 5-day plan to add what the client actually wanted. You embark on several all nighters again, every day checking with the boss and the client to make sure they are ok with what you've got so far, and every day they say 'Yes, that's it'.

      On Friday morning, you get an email from your boss.

      Boss: Your willful attempt to derail our relationship with the client by delivering the wrong information leaves me no other option but to fire you. You are fired.

      Wouldn't you wonder why he didn't at least wait until end of day Friday? Wouldn't you wonder if *his* intention had been all along to fire you and that you were set up?

      On a related note: Am I the only one worrying about the economics of having one partner in a transaction getting paid daily until the other partner meets his obligations? There is no incitive for the EU to be specific or clear in their demands and every reason to drag knuckles as long as possible.

    2. Re:Ouch by golodh · · Score: 1
      First off ... I admit that in the situation you sketch the boss you portray acts unreasonably. If the EU acted like that, then Microsoft would have a legitimate cause for complaint.

      Having said that, I am trying to understand whether the horror-scenario you sketch is the one that actually happened, and to be frank I am totally skeptical. I cannot think of any motive for the EU to deliberately allow Microsoft to produce documentation that is useless. Ordinary everyday incompetence on part of the EU, yes (the EU are a Government organisation after all ...) but not sabotage. And ... forgive me if I repeat myself from previous posts, but Microsoft was charged with producing a specific result, and not with sticking to a format or a process. Can it not be blamed for trying to take advantage of the EU's (apparent) incompetence in assessing the technical documentation as an excuse not to have to deliver?

      Since the correspondence between Microsoft and the EU will likely not be public, I am looking for different ways to get a handle on whether their claim is true. If you can give me any (verifiable) information I would be happy to study it.

      I think the problematic bit with the argument you make is that it makes assumptions (they're evil) about the intention of Microsoft and use those assumptions to reinforce the original argument (they are evil. so their intention in producing industry standard documentation was to obfuscate and be useless. Therefore they are evil).

      Circular reasoning on my part to decide "Microsoft is Evil"? If I did commit circular reasoning, then I retract that part of what I said. I do admit that my previous post seems a bit disorganised. Sorry about that, I'll do better. However I didn't mean to commit circular reasoning, and frankly I don''t think I did. My argument has two parts: first arguing that Microsoft is inherently untrustworthy, second combining that with the motive they have to err ... present the facts as other than they really are.

      I mean that I believe that, given Microsoft's conduct in court cases over the past 10 years, we have excellent cause to be distrustful of Microsoft's good intentions. Why? I base that on:

      - the material presented at this http://www.kmfms.com/whatsbad.html#deception site. a)the doctored video(s) that Microsoft presented, purportedly showing the "crash" of MS Windows after Explorer was removed. I think that any ordinary person who pulled a stunt like that would have faced prosecution for perjury. For some reason Microsoft didn't suffer any comparable penalty b)Microsoft going back on the promise to support JAVA when it needed people to believe that Microsoft would in fact support Java c)Bill Gates' claim that Windows doesn't have bugs in an interview with FOCUS. If Allchin was aware of the problems with Windows message queues, then Gates would have been to. He simply told untruths. d)Microsoft's misleading claims regarding the security of it's passport service.

      - Microsoft's use of astroturfing (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astroturfing). "In 2001, the Los Angeles Times accused Microsoft of astroturfing when hundreds of similar letters were sent to newspapers voicing disagreement with the United States Department of Justice and its antitrust suit against Microsoft. The letters, prepared by Americans for Technology Leadership, had in some cases been mailed from deceased citizens or nonexistent addresses. [3] " According to this article, Microsoft actually sent letters of support with the address of (among others) of deceased citizins, which clearly proves that the letters were in fact written by Microsoft and posted under other names.

      - Microft's deceit (again) by astroturfing (see http://www.newsfactor.com/perl/st