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Microsoft's 'Men in Black' Kill Florida Open Standards Legislation

A NewsForge article was handed to us talking about pressure Microsoft recently brought to bear on a piece of Florida legislation. A few short paragraphs in Senate bill 1974 added by Rep. Ed Homan discussed the need for open data formats, but Microsoft's men in black responded by pressuring legislators and staff employees about the bill's language. "A legislative staff employee who would lose his job if he were quoted here by name said, 'By the time those lobbyists were done talking, it sounded like ODF (Open Document Format, the free and open format used by OpenOffice.org and other free software) was proprietary and the Microsoft format was the open and free one.' Two other legislative employees (who must also remain anonymous) told Linux.com that the Microsoft lobbyists implied that elected representatives who voted against Microsoft's interests might have a little more trouble raising campaign funds than they would if they helped the IT giant achieve its Florida goals. Note that lobbyists for IBM, Sun Microsystems, and Novell -- the only three companies with a major interest in open source who have registered lobbyists in Florida -- did not weigh in on this matter." Linux.com and Slashdot are both owned by OSTG.

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  1. Re:Your rights end on conviction. by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1, Redundant

    Even the usual "rights" you might ascribe to a public company have no force when you are talking about a convicted monopolist like M$.

    Bzzt. Thanks for playing. One cite, just one cite, of how the "rights ascribed to a corporation" (public company has screw all to do with it) are revoked upon a finding of monopoly. Points off, too, for use of "conviction". Nice appeal to emotion, completely incorrect.