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Microsoft Threatened With Fines By EU Again

ukhackster writes "The EC is threatening Microsoft with yet more fines. This time, it's over the interoperability protocols that Microsoft has been ordered to open up to its rivals. The EC has examined 1,500 pages of information about the protocols, and concluded that they 'lack significant innovation'. This is pretty damning for both Microsoft and the patent system, as it has been awarded 36 patents covering this technology and has another 37 pending. Could this encourage someone like the EFF to start pushing to get these patents overturned? The EU has a FAQ about this issue, containing additional details on the subject.

32 of 184 comments (clear)

  1. Patents haven't been about innovation for years by spun · · Score: 4, Interesting

    They are about redistribution of wealth, from those that have less to those that have more.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    1. Re:Patents haven't been about innovation for years by bigtomrodney · · Score: 5, Interesting
      This shows a lot of promise for Open Source Developers. When I first read this I feared the protocols might be made available at prohibitive costs to Open Source and hobbiest developers.-

      Microsoft has already documented Vista and Longhorn server-related protocols and priced them. But again the European Commission has managed to surprise me with their forward thinking :-

      What is the situation as regards open source? The Commission has previously stated that it is committed to ensuring that the open source community has access to the non-innovative protocols if the Court of First Instance rules in its favour in case T-201/04 (the action brought by Microsoft against the 2004 Decision). Which we are told "lack significant innovation". I'm not sure whether I'm happy for the OSS developers or to laugh and rehash all of the jokes about Microsoft rehashing everyone else's ideas. Hopefully we do see some of those Patents overturned too.
      --
      I never get used to these constant resurrections
    2. Re:Patents haven't been about innovation for years by bmajik · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Anti-trust legislation hasn't been about protecting individuals or consumers for years. It's been about moving money from one business to other sets of businesses.. the selection of which is based on the political motivations of the government body in question.. which is largely determined by the "other businesses".

      Where you see true monopoly, you almost always see government collusion.

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
  2. There's a similar story written by AP.... by 8127972 · · Score: 4, Funny

    .... That you can read here: http://www.thestar.com/Business/article/187051

    Note this quote from the above story:

    "This is a company which apparently does not like to have to conform with antitrust decisions," said EU Commission spokesman Jonathan Todd.

    Next they'll be saying that the sky is blue and fish swim. Thanks for stating the obvious.

    --
    This is my opinion. To make sure you don't steal it, it's covered by the DMCA.
    1. Re:There's a similar story written by AP.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      >Next they'll be saying that the sky is blue and fish swim. Thanks for stating the obvious.

      Yea, we all know the sky is gray, and fish fly

        (sorry, i live in Seattle, i couldn't resist)

      Please, EU, i beg you, really i do, FUCKING KILL MICROSOFT! Because whatever you do, they will always just swindle by. Some fines? No problem, they can afford to pay them and still ignore you. Your best solution, is to destroy Microsoft in the EU by enforcing a fine they can not afford to pay, 1% of their yearly profits each day they continue to infringe. When they dont pay, simply confiscate their properties and money in the EU, if that dont pay for it, then remove their privilege to copywrite in the EU. If they dont comply, they will loose their entire business in the EU, and everything they own there. If they just so happen to have source codes in the EU, that would be open to the public domain effectively, effectively destroying Microsoft as a whole. There really is no point in play around with a company that has proven both in and outside the EU it wont play by the rules, get very serious very fast, or else risk them continue to ignore you, and possibly give ideas to other companies about ignoring you.

  3. I hope by JustNiz · · Score: 3, Interesting

    this sends a stronger "Get a Clue" message to the US Patents office than they're used to ignoring.

  4. EU once again by jackharrer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think EU doesn't like MS too much nowadays :)
    But honestly, aren't they right? If any monopoly is locking others from access they always do it. Why should MS be different? They're effectively a monopoly in OS.

    --

    "an experienced, industrious, ambitious, and often, quite often, picturesque liar" - Mark Twain
    1. Re:EU once again by KDR_11k · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And frankly, I don't see how this helps them really. The costs will be passed onto their countries, and of course EUers will simply blame big corporations for the higher prices or more limited products.

      I think you missed something there. If raising the price would bring in more money, why haven't they done it already? Corporations are out to make money, they'll always go for the price that brings in the most money. Since software has almost zero per-unit cost and these fines won't affect that price either the margin per copy doesn't get smaller. It hits their total profit but their per-unit profit is still the same. As such the price for optimum returns doesn't change and a price increase would actually decrease their profits (higher price means less sales, at the optimum price the profit per unit multiplied with the sales is maximal therefore any change would no longer be optimal). Passing costs on only works if the cost is per-unit and decreases the margin enough that the price increase makes up for the lost sales.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
  5. Don't conflate interface with implementation by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 5, Informative

    That's Microsoft's problem, confusing the interface specification with the source code implementing the interface. The EU is commenting on the interface, not the implementation. When they say the interface specification contains no protectable innovation, that doesn't mean that Microsoft's particular implementation of that specification doesn't contain any innovation but simply that that innovation isn't going to be present in the mere API spec.

  6. Patents and Trade Secrets by gravesb · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Patents in the EU and the US are different, so the EU's ruling probably won't have much effect in the US courts. Also, being forced to reveal any non-patented trade secrets, as defined by US code, could have a bad precedential effect on US law. I wouldn't be surprised to see DOJ get involved in this one in some manner. Trade secrets don't have to be unique enough to be patented, but they are still protected by criminal penalties. If the EU can force American companies to give them up, that pretty much invalidates the entire statute. And I'm not arguing on the moral grounds of the Trade Secret statute, just that it exists, and the US government has an interest in maintaining it as such.

    --
    http://bgcommonsense.blogspot.com
  7. Shocking ... by gstoddart · · Score: 4, Insightful

    <sarcasm>What, you mean Microsoft didn't invent all of their networking technology from scratch?</sarcasm>

    I mean, really ... MS has been acting like they invented all networking technologies ever, and they are entitled to protection for their 'innovations'.

    The reality of it is, I bet all of their protocols are ones which were "embraced and extended" over time. Hopefully, they'll be forced to play a little nicer with others.

    Taking stuff someone else did, obfuscating it, calling it proprietary, and then patenting it is just in bad form. I'm glad to see someone finally taking them to task over this. I'm even more glad that, after they were ordered to cough up the information, the information they gave demonstrated that they hadn't 'innovated' anything.

    Cheers

    --
    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  8. Microsoft vs. the Law by arevos · · Score: 4, Insightful
    From the BBC article:

    In the 50 years of European antitrust policy, it's the first time we've been confronted with a company that has failed to comply with an antitrust decision," a Commission spokesman said. When dealing with anti-trust suits, Microsoft's tactic seems to just ignore the verdict in the hope it'll go away. The strange thing is, it actually appears to work...
  9. Re:This is about pricing by Richard+Steiner · · Score: 4, Informative

    How does the ec know what is innovative or not?

    Well, according to the actual article released by the EC, the documentation Microsoft provided was reviewed by the Monitoring Trustee (Professor Neil Barrett, a tech expert chosen from a list of people provided by Microsoft) as well as TAEUS, the EC's technical advisors.

    See the FAQ for more information.

    --
    Mainframe/UNIX Bit Twiddler and long time Windows/Linux Hobbyist.
    The Theorem Theorem: If If, Then Then.
  10. bullshit. by dunkelfalke · · Score: 3, Informative
    --
    Conservatism: The fear that somewhere, somehow, someone you think is your inferior is being treated as your equal.
  11. Hello? Mcfly? by JonnyCalcutta · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Sorry, couldn't resist ;)

    Perhaps they might just take all their assets held in countries signed up to the EU? Microsoft don't operate soley from their secret headquarters in the Rockies - hording their gold in giant underground bunkers to which only Bill and Steve have the keys. They have offices, staff, equipment, bank accounts around the world. If they don't pay the fines they cannot operate in one of the two largest combined economies in the world, not to mention losing all the assets they have there, all the legal protections for their IP in that region, never being able to send any employees to the region or to regions with extredition treaties, etc, etc.

    Or did you think Bill poped over with a big sack of money every time MS did a transaction in the EU?

  12. Re:Or... by KDR_11k · · Score: 3, Interesting

    They are being fined because they demand too much money for those interface specifications they were supposed to release when there's nothing innovative about them. Means the court thinks MS is just increasing prices to prevent competitors from being able to afford the specs.

    --
    Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
  13. Re:Or... by gstoddart · · Score: 5, Informative

    This is the EU desperately looking for some reason, any reason, to levy a hefty fine, not so much for the revenue, but to show how "tough" they are. This is a joke. Fining someone because you don't think their patents are innovative? The EU is really scraping the bottom of the barrel on this one.

    I would disagree.
    • The EU found Microsoft guilty of using their near-monopoly in an anti-competitive way. ie, they lost an antitrust suit.
    • In order to correct Microsoft's practices, the EU said MS had to provide information on protocols to allow people to interoperate with MS products.
    • MS produced 1500 pages and a pricing scheme to get access to the information. MS also agreed, in principal, that the cost to get it should correspond to the amount of 'innovativeness' in the stuff they're charging to see.
    • Upon review, the EU has concluded that the stuff MS is trying to charge so much for access doesn't really represent much in the way of innovation. Nada. They've taken what other people were doing, and fiddled with it so it wasn't interoperable.

    Now, the EU is saying that, according to the terms MS agreed to about how to value the stuff based on the amount of innovativeness in it, MS hasn't really done anything innovative. And, furthermore, how dare they try to charge so much damned money for something which, really, isn't all that different from the stuff that already existed. They're being caught in their embrace, extend, then break model of 'competition'.

    This is not the EU 'scraping the bottom of the barrel', this is about trying to enforce a previous judgement against MS -- one which they continually try to evade both the letter and spirit of: that of allowing for more interoperability between MS products and anyone else.

    They might take the step of invalidating the patents held by Microsoft. Which would say "hey, wait a minute, those magic proprietary protocols you have and claim people need to spend big bucks on are just open protocols you have intentionally made incompatible, and are trying to prevent people from implementing to preserve your monopoly-like status".

    This is all about MS continuing to defy court rulings which say they're not allowed to enforce a software monoculture -- especially when all they did is minorly change existing protocols (or, take an existing idea and do it slightly different) and then patent them in order to make sure nobody else can communicate with their stuff. You know, continuing to do the exact same offence they were found guilty of doing in the first place -- and the enforcement which they've been trying to re-interpret to their own benefit for quite some time.

    Microsoft is doing their usual obfuscate and delay tactics. The EU is starting to say "enough, do what we told you that you had to do".

    Cheers
    --
    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  14. The actual qoute was... by an.echte.trilingue · · Score: 5, Informative
    Actually, according to the BBC, the actual quote was:

    In the 50 years of European antitrust policy, it's the first time we've been confronted with a company that has failed to comply with an antitrust decision.

    I find that statement rather significant. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/6408391.stm

    --
    weirdest thing I ever saw: scientology advertising on slashdot.
  15. Re:slightly queasy by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 3, Informative

    Look at the comparable technology and if its not priced below it then perhaps they are being unreasonable.

    Except that this doesn't involve technology. The EU is making a statement about the specifications, not the implementation. The specification for the TCP protocol isn't a TCP protocol stack, it's only MS that wants to call it one.

  16. They don't conflate interface with implementation! by hxnwix · · Score: 3, Informative

    They don't conflate interface with implementation; you do!

    RTFA:

    "The Commission's current view is that there is no significant innovation in these protocols."

    The EC is saying that THE PROTOCOLS THEMSELVES should not be patentable. I suspect that they are rebutting Microsoft's argument that the PROTOCOLS THEMSELVES constitute innovation and therefore must not be divulged.

  17. Re:Please explain by KokorHekkus · · Score: 3, Informative

    Supply complete and accurate information: This is very vague and how would they even test whether the documentation is complete and accurate
    They let Microsoft define who was capable to judge this issue by letting them deliver a shortlist of people that Microsoft themselves found acceptable. The EC then picked one of them.
  18. Re:slightly queasy by gstoddart · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Theres a couple of things that make me queasy about all this. Its dirt easy to say that something is not innovative after you see it.

    Except, some of us might remember Microsoft co-opting things in plain sight.

    Microsoft has been demonstrated in the past things like taking Kerberos, releasing a morphed version, and then try to claim it's a trade secret. Thereby, the extensions they made to an open standard are suddenly proprietary. Think also, of submarine patents, where you sit around with a bunch of people, decide how it should be done, and then secretly make a permutation of it, file for a patent, and then block everyone else from using it.

    This is about MS providing the protocols to allow interoperability -- I suspect we're in the middle of getting better evidence that those 'proprietary' protocols which can't interoprate with other things are nothing more than other protocols they borrowed and intentionally broke compatibility with. They're going to be substantively similar to precursor technologies.

    If you're going to claim that you have trade secrets that you would be damaged if other people see, and those trade secrets turn out to be versions of things which were developed by other people, the damage you're getting is to your credibility. Because, once people figure out that the only reason it's different (and secret) is to lock everyone into your product.

    Co-opting other people's technology and then claiming it's a proprietary trade secret is basically crap. Refusing to provide the details under the continued guise that your 'innovative technology' is even more crap.

    This at least is a quantifiable statement. Look at the comparable technology and if its not priced below it then perhaps they are being unreasonable.

    No, it's bullshit actually. If, in the example of Kerberos, the protocol was part of a publically available RFC (ie. free), then charging outrageous money for something you didn't really innovate but are pretending you did is hardly selling your stuff at "30% below market value". It's a cash grab at best -- fraud and extortion might also be said of this practice.

    The people making this judgement are people selected from a list MS said it could live with of people who understand technology.

    Don't let MS fool you -- this is about basic networking protocols which MS has intentionally made incompatible with everyone else for the purpose of making it break. This has nothing to do with innovating anything.

    Cheers
    --
    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  19. Re:slightly queasy by profplump · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You could argue that this is modified since MS is a monopoly but what if I become a monopoly thats been convicted of unfair trade practices. But what if I got a monopoly through fair dealing - the competition just wasn't good enough?

    If you obtained a monoploy and dealt fairly you presumably wouldn't lose a trial about your unfair trade practices. But Microsoft did, in fact, lose such a trial. This is the penalty phase of that trial, not a ruling that being applied to someone dealt fairly and happened to be best.

  20. Re:slightly queasy by dshk · · Score: 3, Interesting

    moreover, it really doesn't matter how did you become a monopoly. If you are then you have to play very nicely, like a non-monopoly. Otherwise the government must restore the competitive environment or control the monopoly, e.g. define its prices. Here EU wants to create the possibility of some competition, not to help other competitors (although that is a necessary side-effect).

  21. Re:Or... by WindBourne · · Score: 3, Informative
    Nobody is forced to use any Microsoft product.

    False. MS is having gov. do their bidding for them. In particular, upper reaches of gov. tell sub groups that they will run windows. The upper group have a cash or reward incentive to do it. In America, it is called lobbying or simply doing business as usual. In other countries, it is called bribery and is illegal.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  22. Re:Or... by TENTH+SHOW+JAM · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Mistake 1. The EU functions as a soverign body. They could happily levy a fee on any software "not invented here" This would show their "toughness"

    Mistake 2. This is not a joke. This is justice being applied firmly to the behind of a company that is guilt of abusing it's monopoly advantage.

    Mistake 3. This is not about how innovative their patents are. This is how innovative their protocols are. A patent can be taken out on a implementation of a protocol, but not the protocol itself. What the EU is saying is that the protocols are nothing special because they tend to follow the KISS principal.

    Mistake 4. The EU represents a large percentage of MS customers. If the EU are trying to protect it's people from being abused under a monopoly, then the EU is doing it's job. If this is at the cost of MS shareholders, what matter is that to the EU? It isn't even a European company.

    Must try harder.

    --
    A sig is placed here
    To display how futile
    English Haiku is
  23. Re:Protectionism. by KokorHekkus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm just asking for trouble..
    Of course you are since you are arguing a point which has no obvious foundation in reality. Being "convinced" doesn't make for a good basis for a factual argument. You need to at least point to something suspicious for the rest of your post to have any relevance when it comes to this particular case.

    There is no bias in reality against foreign companies when it comes to EC anti-trust cases. In fact, the biggest anti-trust fine was given to a German company in connection with an lift and escalator cartel. And second this investigation wasn't initiated by the EC... it was a complaint from SUN Microsystems that triggered the whole thing. Which is, as I'm sure you know, very much an US company.
  24. Yay for eu while U.S. senate sucks up to big buck by unity100 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Dont even dare think of flaming me - remember the recent crap from u.s. senate we had to put up with about net neutrality, drm, patents, any shit that is beneficial to big buck, but detrimental to ALL people.

    What eu did is something good. U.S. senate should learn to follow in its tracks.

    you americans started to demean europe TOO much lately.

    dont forget that, the ideas that sparked the united states revolution, the concepts of humanity, equality, republicanism and the like spread from europe especially with the 18th century writers like Rousseau, Voltaire, Diderot. If there werent these guys in the earlier parts of 18th century, many american founding fathers wouldnt field the same ideas with same strength in years coming up to 1774.

    give some god damn deserved crecedence to europe dammit - some part of that soul which made 1789 still lives on in there - support them !

  25. Re:Thank you mods, may I have another? by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Disclaimer: I make ~ $50,000 a year.

    The president of my company makes ~ $150,000 a year.

    We live or die by our patents. We're primarily a soil remediation/washing company; we developed a technology completely different from anything else on the market. We do what other companies cannot do, and we do it cheaper than disposal/incineration.

    If we didn't have a patent on our core equipment, we would not be in business. Why? Because several of our contractors have already tried to steal our design, and got bitch-slapped in court doing so.

    Not that I totally disagree with you. I believe patents should cover a very narrow range of mechanical/technical innovation. Definitely not software concepts, and most likely not biotechnology, either. But can a small company like ours utilize the patent system to our advantage? Most definitely; if we didn't have a patented technology, we'd be out of business, because someone would literally steal our equipment (this HAS happened to us), reverse engineer it (this HAS happened to us), and we'd have no legal recourse, except possibly against the original theft, which would be difficult to prove.

    Does the patent system need major reform? Yes. Do I think that the USPTO's standard of obviousness is ridiculous? Yes.

    Do I think a patent system, in principle, is a good idea? Yes.

    --
    WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
  26. Re:Thank you mods, may I have another? by dwandy · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Some semi-random quotes:

    We live or die by our patents.
    If we didn't have a patent on our core equipment, we would not be in business.
    We're primarily a soil remediation/washing company;
    Ok; so your basic assertion is that your business would go bankrupt w/o patent protection. imho? then it should.

    That might sound harsh, but it's a reality. ...and here's why:
    The *only* reason (based on what you've written) that you would go bankrupt in the face of competition is if you're not efficient and your competition is.
    In other words, you believe you can only obtain profitable business by being the only player.
    But wait! You're a _service_ business. You charge to provide the service of dealing with polluted soil. Even if your competitor 'stole' your technology they would still have operating costs, just like you do. Liberating your technology doesn't mean they can do it and you can't. That's the nice bit about ideas and such: we can all have them w/o taking anything away from anyone else.

    because someone would literally steal our equipment
    ...'course this has nothing to do with patents...

    Do I think a patent system, in principle, is a good idea? Yes.
    While it sounds good on paper I fear that any such system quickly deteriorates into the system we have today. There is no sustainable way to run such a patent system. And a patent system costs money. So if we can't get a return, why expend the effort?

    As usual, I invite any-sayers to read this before applying flamage to my comments. And actually read it, dammmit.

    --
    If you think imaginary property and real property are the same, when does your house become public domain?
  27. There IS no significant innovation by bastianmz · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you look at what is covered by Microsoft's Published Protocols made available by entering into Royalty Free licensing agreement, you will find yourself able to "to implement the Protocol(s) for which the applicable box(es) are checked on Exhibit A, and to use the corresponding Technical Documentation (as defined below) for that purpose." What are some of these Royalty Free protocols?

    • Daytime (RFC 867)
    • Chargen (RFC 864)
    • AppleTalk
    • DIFFSERV (RFC 2474)
    • Discard (RFC 863>
    • DNS (All appropriate RFCs)
    • DHCP
    • FTP
    • TCP/IP
    • ...

    The list just keeps going on. I know this is royalty free but for the life of me I cannot figure out why I would need to sign a licensing agreement with Microsoft to implement any of these. A patent agreement maybe with Apple for AppleTalk or relevant parties to implement Bluetooth for example (not saying that I agree with software or protocol patents but this is the IP environment that we currently work in). Signing an agreement with Microsoft to be allowed to read documentation and implement someone elses protocol, WTF? No significant innovation. I would be interested to know if anyone has entered into this Royalty Free agreement.

    Protocols not included in this list are subject to other licensing and royalty agreements. An implementation of a General Server without restricted protocols has a royalty rate of 5% for a software product and 2.5% for an embedded product with a minimum royalty of $40 per server or $0.40 per user. Per server licensing would put the minimum product price at $800.

    Included in this is permission to implement propriety Microsoft protocols (.NET Remoting TcpChannel Protocol, FrontPage Server Extensions Remote Protocol, Microsoft Media Server Protocols, Windows Group Policy Protocols, etc) which may include significant innovation as well as others that are existing protocols that have been extended. These include:

    • H.323 Protocol Extensions (Additional codec)
    • Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol with IPsec Extensions
    • Windows Media Services HTTP 1.0 Streaming Protocol
    • Windows Media Services HTTP 1.1 Streaming Protocol
    • World Wide Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV) Protocol Extensions
    • Internet Protocol Security Protocols Extensions
    • NT LAN Manager Authentication Protocol (Kerberos extension)
    • Network Time Protocol Extensions

    None of these appear to be licensed separately, they are only available as part of task based licensing bundle. The protocols in the list above also don't have any significant innovation, they are just minor extensions or combinations of, existing protocols. I agree with the EU, these should not be patentable (nor should any protocol) and that the royalty is excessive.

  28. Re:Yay for eu while U.S. senate sucks up to big bu by flyingfsck · · Score: 3, Funny

    What? Something of value happened outside the US borders? That is absurd.

    --
    Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!