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Microsoft Responds to EU With Another Question

An anonymous reader writes "Microsoft has responded to the latest round of EU requests by asking how much the EU thinks they should charge for Windows Server Protocols. The EU has stated the Microsoft should charge based on 'innovation, not patentability' and that they have 'examined 160 Microsoft claims to patented technologies' concluding 'only four may only deserve to claim a limited degree of innovation.' The EU is also starting to discuss structural remedies as opposed to the behavioral remedies they are currently enforcing. At what point has/will the EU overstepped its bounds?"

86 of 545 comments (clear)

  1. At what point? by vivaoporto · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Q: At what point has/will the EU overstepped its bounds?
    A: Is it really necessary that every Slashdot summary ends with a very polarizing question?

    1. Re:At what point? by vivaoporto · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Do they really need to ask anything?

    2. Re:At what point? by realkiwi · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think that is for EU citizens to decide.

      At what point should the EU government stop protecting its citizens from a convicted monopolist? Is probably a better question.

      --
      realkiwi
    3. Re:At what point? by Frankie70 · · Score: 3, Funny


      A: Is it really necessary that every Slashdot summary ends with a very polarizing question?


      Nope. That it end with a stupid question is neccessary. The stupid question may
      or may not be polarizing.

    4. Re:At what point? by xENoLocO · · Score: 2, Funny

      Does anybody need to ask anything?

      --
      "The need to build the internet comes from something inside us, something programmed... something we can't resist."
    5. Re:At what point? by Nuffsaid · · Score: 5, Funny

      Would everybody please stop answering questions with other questions?

      --
      Nuffsaid
      ________

      Don't know about his cat, but Schroedinger is definitely dead.
    6. Re:At what point? by mulvane · · Score: 5, Funny

      What would you prefer we respond with?

    7. Re:At what point? by Timesprout · · Score: 4, Funny

      Something rhetorical?

      --
      Do not try to read the dupe, thats impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth
      What truth?
      There is no dupe
    8. Re:At what point? by Wite_Noiz · · Score: 2, Funny

      Is this a private game, or can anyone join in?

    9. Re:At what point? by h2g2bob · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A: When the court of law decided MS had.

      Fixed that for you

    10. Re:At what point? by QuickFox · · Score: 3, Funny

      You mean like a rhetorical question?

      --
      Terrorists can't threaten a country's freedom and democracy. Only lawmakers and voters can do that.
    11. Re:At what point? by nharmon · · Score: 3, Funny

      What is a rhetorical question?

    12. Re:At what point? by iainl · · Score: 3, Funny

      What do you think one is?

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    13. Re:At what point? by karolgajewski · · Score: 3, Funny

      Are we using the EU definition of a rhetorical question or the Slashdot Natalie Portman definition of a rhetorical question?

      --
      - .k. -
    14. Re:At what point? by sconeu · · Score: 2, Funny

      And Clive Anderson (or Drew Carey) buzzes in ending the game.

      One thousand points to Greg Proops!

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    15. Re:At what point? by ickoonite · · Score: 4, Funny

      Would it not be a good idea to keep doing this to see if we can break Slashdot? How many levels deep can we go?

      iqu :P

    16. Re:At what point? by Watson+Ladd · · Score: 2, Funny

      Can we go one more?

      --
      Inventions have long since reached their limit, and I see no hope for further development.-- Frontinus, 1st cent. AD
    17. Re:At what point? by MrCopilot · · Score: 2

      Who do you think you are, asking a question like that?

      --
      OSGGFG - Open Source Gamers Guide to Free Games
  2. Appropriate price? Zero Euros and redistribution by mrchaotica · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The EU's goal is ostensibly to ensure proper competition in the market, right? And let's face it, MS's only real competition is Free Software. Therefore, the only possible fair price for the protocol specs is free, and with free redistribution, so that it's able to be used by Free Software.

    (Note that I'm talking about interoperability specifications (and patent licenses) only... Microsoft should be able to charge whatever it wants for its reference implementation.)

    --

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

  3. Trade Wars by N8F8 · · Score: 2, Informative

    The EU has been very heavy handed recently using any and all trade laws to hurt tech companies. It would be nice to have one or two of them say "screw you" and pull out of the market. A EU without Apple, Hitachi, Toshiba or Microsoft?

    --
    "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
    1. Re:Trade Wars by mrchaotica · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Those tech companies would pull out if and only if the EU's punishment were worse than losing the EU market. For example, what would happen if MS stopped selling Windows in Europe? The entire continent would switch to Free Software almost instantly. I'll bet Microsoft is willing to put up with a Hell of a lot to prevent that from happening! And that's not just because of the lost sales directly, but also because it would prove to US businesses that Free Software is viable on a grand scale.

      --

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

  4. Which bounds? by asninn · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Its bounds? The EU pretty cannot overstep its bounds - if Microsoft wants to do business here, they'll have to play by the rules, just like - and this is important - EVERYONE ELSE. If they're unwilling to do that (and I'm not saying "unable or unwilling" since it's pretty much impossible for them to really be unable), well... nobody's forcing them to do business here. There's no dog-given right to act like an arse, and our politicians haven't been bought out 100% yet (just 99%).

    On a side note, it's really rather funny to see that all the hatred for Microsoft on Slashdot suddenly vanish as soon as it's Microsoft vs. the EU - then suddenly, defending a fellow US-American company suddenly seems to become more important than pointing out how much Microsoft as a convicted monopolist engaged in illegal anti-competitive tactics is hurting innovation/the industry/society.

    --
    butter the donkey
    1. Re:Which bounds? by HoosierPeschke · · Score: 3, Insightful

      On a side note, it's really rather funny to see that all the hatred for Microsoft on Slashdot suddenly vanish as soon as it's Microsoft vs. the EU - then suddenly, defending a fellow US-American company suddenly seems to become more important than pointing out how much Microsoft as a convicted monopolist engaged in illegal anti-competitive tactics is hurting innovation/the industry/society.


      Not all of us, I'm glad someone isn't putting up with MS's crap.
      --
      Mr. Universe: "They can't stop the signal, Mal. They can never stop the signal."
    2. Re:Which bounds? by Angst+Badger · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, speaking as an American, I'm glad the EU is spanking Microsoft, since our government is so completely bought and paid for by corporate interests that there is no longer any meaningful regulation of anticompetitive behavior here. In any event, I don't view Microsoft as an American company in any meaningful sense. If a foreign power had damaged US productivity and parasitically drained off as much capital from US businesses as Microsoft has, it would be construed as an act of war. Microsoft helps America only in the sense that it helps itself to lots of American money it could not access if American regulators still gave a shit about competition.

      As far as I'm concerned, the EU hasn't gone far enough. But to be fair, and to avoid attributing to EU regulators a moral high ground they don't in fact possess, I have my doubts that the EU would have gone as far as it has if Microsoft was a European company. On the other hand, it's questionable whether, say, French agricultural subsidies affect nearly as many people as Windows.

      --
      Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
    3. Re:Which bounds? by ak3ldama · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well put. I hope that the EU goes farther. I also hope they set an example for how to deal with such a powerful, and at times morally bankrupt, company as Microsoft. Challenging the validity and usefulness of their patents is a step in the right direction.

      --
      "but money is the God of Algiers & Mahomet their prophet." - Rich. O'Bryen June 8th 1786
    4. Re:Which bounds? by sane? · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Quite right.

      My only wish is that they didn't keep on giving Microsoft chances and simply hammered them for their existing crimes. Break them up into OS and apps and have done with it; we all know that's what's needed. The EU can, and has the power and moral right to do so. Forget all this "its a US company", it an international company that has played a monopoly hand in the EU. If the US can get away with hijacking legal EU businessmen, the EU can get away with imposing breakup on a company even outside its borders. From a practical standpoint, if the choice was "break in two or all your copyrights are cancelled" what do you think would happen? What do you think China would do?

      The funny thing is this is Microsoft bringing it on their own heads. If they had made this data freely available years ago there would BE no case. Its purely because they decided to play cute that they are here. Bluffing on a weak hand is never a smart move.

    5. Re:Which bounds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      EU regulators have gone a *lot* further against some European companies. Siemens, ThyssenKrupp, KONE and Schindler have got huge fines for anti-competitive practices recently, way more than Microsofts 497 million fine, which they only got after refusing the settlement where they got away for free if they would just stop breaking the law.

    6. Re:Which bounds? by locofungus · · Score: 3, Informative

      But let's call a spade a spade, and recognize that both the US gov't and the EU have a "homer" agenda that pushes them to punish 'foreigners' far more than they scrutinize themselves.

      Where did you get this idea from?

      Record EU fine for lift 'cartel'

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/6383913.stm

      Tim.

      --
      God said, "div D = rho, div B = 0, curl E = -@B/@t, curl H = J + @D/@t," and there was light.
  5. Well beyond their boundaries by gravesb · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The EU has already pushed too far. I personally refuse to use MS products, so I'm not a MS fan, but the EU has gone too far in interfering with the market. Yes, the US has gone too far in "promoting" innovation through patents, but the EU has swung too far the other way. Besides, if you won't allow software patents (which I am against), then you should allow software to be a trade secret. If you are concerned about the monopoly, how about all governments use an open standard for all government business? Then, companies that want to do business with the government will switch, and things will cascade down. Governments have enough power as market actors, as opposed to market regulators, to affect things without being so heavy handed.

    --
    http://bgcommonsense.blogspot.com
  6. Where does... by s31523 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Where does a 500 pound gorilla sit? Anywhere she wants, except in the 600 pound gorilla's seat.

    I don't know who is the 600 pound gorilla in this case, but it sure is interesting to see a case where M$ doesn't just walk all over someone and is actually being bullied back....

  7. Re:Too late... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    That is a ridiculous statement. Microsoft is the one over stepping the bounds. A company is an artificial construct that is licensed to do business by a government. Hence the business has a duty to follow the legal rules.

  8. I wish they were this aggressive on medicine by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The EU has stated the Microsoft should charge based on 'innovation, not patentability'... The EU is also starting to discuss structural remedies as opposed to the behavioral remedies they are currently enforcing.


    Imagine if the EU dumped its focus on trivial crap like software patents and applied the same reasoning to medicine patents.
  9. Re:Too late... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So you agree with the statement that the government should be able to tell companies what to charge for their products?

  10. Re:Wrong by rolfwind · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So the electric company should just charge you whatever they feel like whenever they feel like it? Because, hey, if you don't like it you can always move.

  11. Re:Government interference by wonkavader · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, unless it has a monopoly, at which point it's subject to intense regulation.

  12. It's about rent by hey! · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Namely, renting access to your own data.

    In other words, how much should customers have to pay to get at their own data, which happens to reside on Microsoft products?

    Lets take MS's argument seriously for a moment, to see where that leads us.

    Suppose there is software A, which holds the data, and software B, which accesses the data. How much does MS charge for that A-B interface? There are two possible answers to this. First, they charge 0. Then everybody should pay zero. The second possible answer is that the cost of the A-B interface is part of the cost of A,B, or both.

    In that case, they are illegally bundling it, forcing users to buy access to the other product when they buy A or B, but not allow customers to use it to access competitive software. They should unbundle the interface and show that all three components are priced competitively and independently.

    Whatever the piece of innovation that MS feels it should be compensated for, customers should be able to buy it without having to buy other MS products.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  13. Re:Too late... by KokorHekkus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The EU has already overstepped their bounds. No government should be allowed to tell a company what it is they can charge for a product nor whether their individual products are "innovative" or just "patentable"
    If the government hadn't granted the companies certain rights (protection of copyrights, patents and trade secrets) the companies would have almost nothing to protect. It's highly absurd to say that a government should have no say whatsoever when it comes to limiting the very rights they themselves have bestowed. You can't both have a cake an eat it.
  14. It certainly hasn't overstepped its bounds yet by simm1701 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What point could it?

    Well if it bankrupted the company then yes that would be too far certainly. If it made it so the company when complying with the law (ie not being fined) could not actualy make a profit after costs, that would be too far.

    Many prices are restricted by goverments - I suspect even in the US though I don't know for certain. Things like the cost per unit of electricity, water, gas, telecoms, public transport when run by private companies. These are to ensure that companies that have effective monopolies cannot abuse the position.

    Same with mircosoft. I agree they should be able to charge what they want for their software. But where they have a protocol or an API that completely separate instance of software talk to (eg from a different computer on the network of from a piece of software that is not part of the OS, or not part of the same software suite) then those interfaces, protocols and APIs should be documented and the information provided for free.

    Yes they can protect their code and their implementations, but the fact you have a microsoft server should not force you to have a microsoft desktop in order to use it - other desktop made by others should be able to communicate on the same level. And vice versa, it should be perfectly possible, from complete and freely available documentation to implement a server that will behave from a clients point of view in the same way a microsoft server would. This is simply fair competition.

    Microsoft would then have to get by on the merits of it software, rather than on vendor lock in.

    --
    $_="Slashdotter";$syn="OTT";s;..;;;sub _{print shift||$_};s!ash!Perl !;s=$syn=ack=i;tr+LLEd+BLAH+;_"Just Another ";_
  15. Re:Too late... by ILikeRed · · Score: 5, Informative
    Innovative and patentable APIs?!? Oh, you mean like Microsoft's version of Kerberos - great patent application there.

    From the US DOJ finding that Microsoft purposefully breaks Kerberos interoperability.

    ----[quoting]----

    For example, Kerberos is an industry standard for encryption, in which certain fields are reserved for optional use. Microsoft, however, has used one of those fields to produce its own proprietary version of the standard. In itself, this is unobjectionable.

    Microsoft, however, has gone one step further: it has manipulated its operating systems and middleware so that they will use and accept only the Microsoft version of the Kerberos standard.(16) This is diametrically contrary to the purpose for which standards, even with optional fields, are developed. Optional fields are included in standards to enable firms to add information to a message. Ordinarily, if an optional field is used in creating standard messages, those messages can still be sent and received among all products that comply with the standard. In such cases, the information included in the optional field may simply be ignored. Optional fields are never, however, intended to enable a firm -- i.e., Microsoft -- to subvert the standard and preclude its widespread usage.(17)

    16. The CCIA explains that "[w]hile the Kerberos Version 5 Microsoft uses for their security services is a standard, the way they have implemented Kerberos is not a standard and renders it nearly inoperable with any other implementation." CCIA White Paper, supra, at 24.

    17. Not content with Microsoft's corruption of the Kerberos standard, Microsoft has filed for a patent on its proprietary version. Consequently, not only will Microsoft products fail to interoperate with non-Microsoft products (because of the modification), but Microsoft will not allow anyone else to use its version unless they purchase a license from Microsoft.

    --
    I have come to a conclusion that one useless man is a shame, two is a law firm, and three or more is a congress -J Adams
  16. Re:Appropriate price? Zero Euros and redistributio by stevedcc · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, the US convicted Microsoft of being a monopolist, then did nothing about it. There's clearly a problem (I don't think we need to argue about that on Slashdot.) So, is it just the idea that the great all powerful US isn't doing it that some people find annoying? Or would you rather some other "superpower" like China, India or Russia ends up having to do it (in 15 or 20 years time).

    Reality needs to be faced. Your government can't deal with the wayward MS business, the EU wants to deal with your problem for you. Isn't that nice of them?

    --
    todo - The developer's equivalent of confession: "Forgive me Father, for I have sinned..."
  17. Re:Too late... by niiler · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I see that companies are sovereign powers now, and that they are able to do whatever whenever because it is their god-given right to earn money for the share-holders, yada-yada-yada. Give me a break. If MS doesn't like Europe's laws, they can go and try to sell their products elsewhere. Nothing guarantees them the right to make a profit.

  18. At what point would the EU overstep its bounds? by delirium+of+disorder · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Microsoft has hurt the global economy to the tune of billions of dollars in lost productivity because of security vulnerabilities, unstable software, and proprietary formats. All the while better alternatives have existed but legal and marketing efforts by Microsoft have kept them out of the public's hands. Bill Gates has used his ill gotten wealth to push patented drugs on Africa which has probably lead to massive death since generic drugs could be mass produced much more easily. The Gates foundation has also funded The Discovery Institute, the main group preaching intelligent design lies. If the EU were to imprison all present and past members of the board of directors and executives of MS and seized all of Microsoft's wealth, they would not be going overboard. They would help millions of people and control a known industrial menace. Perhaps a nuclear attack on Redmond would be going to far, but I'm not sure.

    --
    ------ Take away the right to say fuck and you take away the right to say fuck the government.
  19. Re:Too late... by ricree · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Hence the business has a duty to follow the legal rules.
    No one here is arguing that. We're arguing that these rules (if they actually give the EU the power it is claiming) seem to have some serious issues. Just because something is a law does not automatically make it right.
  20. Oh for goodness sake by samael · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The EU should just tell MS how much they can charge and get on with it. Why the pointless back and forth?

    The hell with it - MS should have to open them for free. In fact, I'd be in favour of mandating that _all_ protocols should be open. You don't need to open your implementation, but other people should be able to use your protocols.

    1. Re:Oh for goodness sake by R2.0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "The EU should just tell MS how much they can charge and get on with it".

      But they won't. By it's very nature, a bureaucracy tends to NOT make "final" decisions - they would then find themselves unemployed.

      Tha EU's response will be "It is not our place to dictate commercial terms in licensing fees. Our role is to judge whether those terms are fair AFTER the fact". This way, the bureaucrats in charge are ensured of continued employment for a few month waiting for MS to erspond, then another few "evaluating", and then probably another finding that the MS terms are unfair. Latehr, rinse repeat.

      I say from my experience with US regulatory agencies, but I can't imagine their counterparts in the EU are any better.

      --
      "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
  21. Re:Too late... by ricree · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Sure, but I don't agree that a totally free market is the ultimate end goal that we should judge things by. Honestly, I'm not really sure what criteria would be best used as a measure, but I do believe that free markets are merely a generally good way to get there, not the end goal itself. As far as patents are concerned, I disagree that they are a bad thing. Besides the standard argument of protecting innovation, they also serve the important role of exposing most innovations to public record. Sure, the companies get a temporary monopoly, but once that time has expired we are left with all records of the innovations as a matter of public record. To my mind, that is a lot better than having to deal with a bunch of companies that hoard their trade secrets so that they never see the light of day.

  22. Re:Publish or Perish by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It is only by the mandated rules of the government, speaking with the voice of all the people, that Microsoft has any rights to charge people for this at all.

    It is only by the mandated rules of the government(s) that their money has any value period.

    The EU cannot overstep their mandate where Microsoft is concerned.

    --
    -1 Uncomfortable Truth
  23. Re:Too late... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The EU has already overstepped their bounds. No government should be allowed to tell a company what it is they can charge for a product nor whether their individual products are "innovative" or just "patentable".

    You do know this is part of a settlement for criminal activity right? You might as well argue that just because a cat food manufacturer put poison in their cat food, the government should not be allowed to mandate that they enact stricter testing measures as part of their punishment for breaking the law in the first place.

    Forget the fact that the entire process is a blatant example of socialism...

    Do you even know what socialism is?

    ...it's just purely one-sided...

    It's strange how the punishment phase of a convicted criminal is often one-sided isn't it? I mean how come car thieves have to go to jail and aren't really given anything positive, like a new motorcycle?

    ...no matter what Microsoft does at this point the EU will just continue to abuse this implied authority that they've been granted until they can drive Microsoft off their shores or make all of the products free in EU.

    The EU commission has very limited authority, but it does include stopping MS from breaking the same laws they stop everyone else from breaking. Once MS stops breaking the law, their complaints might have merit.

  24. Re:Too late... by Alien+Being · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "The EU has already overstepped their bounds."

    Indeed. By granting copyright and patent protection to MS, they have interfered with natural selection. Your argument is invalid because without government, there would be no such thing as patents.

    MS has abused its privileges. The people have a right to revoke them.

  25. MS are playing it wrong by Bert+the+Turtle · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It may well be the case that Microsoft are being forced to under-charge for these protocols - but the fact is they have been found guilty of anti-competitive behaviour by the EU. Now, rather than pay the fine and be apologetic, even after trying to lie and bully their way to not being found guilty, they continue to try and lie and bully. Remember the "ooh, well, maybe we'll just pull out of the EU" threat they tried? So they lie, cheat, and bully, and suddenly expect the EU to sit down and give them a fair hearing now? Sorry, but the individuals involved in the case have been prejudiced against microsoft because of microsoft's previous dishonest behaviour. So is the price fair on the protocols? It doesn't matter. The EU is going to make Microsoft pay for abusing its position, an pay DEARLY for trying to avoid the initial fines and trying to bully their way to success. The EU isn't the US - we aren't just going to vote in the Republicans to make it all go away.

  26. Overstepping Bounds by Myddrin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As others have pointed out, the cost of doing business in the EU is being regulated by the EU. That's life and if the fines/interference/etc is too onerous, Microsoft is free to abandon that market and concentrate on the US, Africa, Asia/Pacific Rim.

    Personally, I'd love to see such a move coming from Redmond. It would accelerate adoption of non-Microsoft solutions in Europe. The resulting ripple effects would have some nice benefits for those of us developing stateside. :)

    --
    Myddrin
    1. Re:Overstepping Bounds by pizzach · · Score: 2, Informative

      That is probably exactly the reason why Microsoft doesn't pull out of Europe. Their biggest fear would come true: Linux would become mainstream. Ack!

      --
      Once you start despising the jerks, you become one.
  27. Re:Perhaps a better question... by ricree · · Score: 2, Funny

    Whatever point you pick, I'll bet Microsoft has overstepped it!
    Hmm... I say that Microsoft has crossed the line when they spontaneously decide to give me a billion dollars.
    /checks bank account
    darn, looks like they haven't crossed that line yet

    Maybe if I check again.....
  28. Re:Too late... by cheese_lord · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Really. Abolish patents...

    By doing that you would basically eliminate free market, or at least damage it, because there would be no incentive to innovate. As soon as you designed some great product, say Slicedbread v2.1, some yahoo comes along and decides to copy most of your work and name it Slicedcheese v1.0. Because of this you would make less profit and are less motivated to work on your next project... Slicedmeat.

    Come to think of it you just reinforced the quote from the parent.

  29. I'm fucking tired of United Statians by miscz · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't know how many times I saw this discussion. Every time US citizens see this as a direct attack on their country. Every time there are links posted to examples that european companies are fined in the same way and that they comply to the terms of EU. Every time there are posters that think it's an attack on a free market. There's no such thing as free market in any country and I don't know if anybody knows any benefits of monopolies in any kind of market.

  30. Bounds? What Bounds? by MightyMartian · · Score: 3, Interesting

    At what point has/will the EU overstepped its bounds?
    It's an awfully good question, but I doubt there's one good answer. On one level, the EU, like any government, pretty much makes the rules, with only a constitution (or in the EU's case, the treaties that amount to a constitution) as a limiting factor. I have no idea whether the EU can legally force structural changes on Microsoft, though I suspect that it does have that kind of power.

    Assuming the EU has the power, the next question is should it? Well, I personally think it's going to be the only way to bring Microsoft into line. It has a long history of nodding yes to the courts and the authorities, and then just finding some new way of doing what it wants. The EU certainly has had limited success getting Microsoft to even adhere to the demands it has made already, and certainly cannot be ignorant of Microsoft's behavior in elsewhere in the world. Since Microsoft won't co-operate in any meaningful way, likely won't stop the behavior that has lead to the present impasse, what other option is there than to remake it into something that will obey European rules?
    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  31. Utilities by warrax_666 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's a pretty standard argument: Utility A sells cheap service in area A. Everybody moves to area A. Utility hikes price of service by 10000%. Is everybody now supposed to move, or what?

    In the analogy: software = service, area A = Microsoft Windows, and moving = changing platforms. For some people changing platforms is even more expensive than moving physical locations, and for others it's actually impossible (if they need Windows-only software to operate). Sure you could argue that they shouldn't have gotten so tied to the platform in the first place, but saying that doesn't actually help anything.

    --
    HAND.
    1. Re:Utilities by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 2, Informative

      I get the analogy but I'm saying its flawed. Firstly where have MS hiked the same product price by 10000%

      The problem with the analogy is not in comparing MS to the electric company as both are monopolies and the same rules do apply similarly. The problem is with the nature of the abuse. MS is not being punished for raising prices on their monopolized product. They are being punished for tying their monopolized product to another product in a different market and then charging others to remove that tie.

      At the end of the day if you want to insulate yourself from a 3rd party vendor price changes don't go with a 3rd party vendor and develop it all yourself, or go with something from OpenSource. These are other options.

      And you can bypass the electric company with solar panels or a generator, but it is not cost effective or most people at this time.

      Allow me to try to extend the analogy presented to fit with what MS has done. Imagine if the electric company decided to get into the television business and somehow changed the nature of the electricity coming into your house to be a proprietary pattern. This pattern would cause normal televisions to not function, but televisions from the electric company would still work because they could predict the spikes or whatever. Now assume the law caught up with them and told them they had to publish the specs as to when these spikes would occur so other television manufacturers could compete again (after the electric company went from a few percent of the market to more like 50%). So the electric company after years of going through the courts and being fined for not complying says they will publish the pattern, but they want to charge money for it, since it took them a lot of time to come up with. At this point they're haggling over how much they are going to charge other TV makers to get around the problems they intentionally created in order to break the law in the first place.

      Now there are obvious practical issues with the analogy above, but it at least presents the spirit of what is happening in the MS antitrust case here. They're haggling over charging for the details of the interface between MS's monopoly(desktop OS) and another product(server OS), not MS's monopoly product itself.

  32. Re:Too late... by NMerriam · · Score: 5, Insightful

    eah, in fact my right to exist is granted by the government...Stalin would be so proud of you.


    If you're a company (ie, an artificial entity that exists only based on law and not any natural basis), then yes, you do exist solely by the legal grace of the real people in the jurisdictions where you conduct business.

    Considering Stalin was a communist, and large international megacorporations are generally somewhat capitalist, I think you may have to repeat 7th grade.
    --
    Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
  33. Re:Wrong by Malc · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That's the prevailing attitude in the US. It's not the prevailing attitude of EU citizens (but I'm sure a large number of Europeans would side with American stance). Microsoft is free to choose not to do business in the EU if it doesn't like this.

    In this situation Americans seem to be telling the Europeans how to run their markets and economies. Turn it around: as American, how do you feel about Europeans telling you how to run your justice system (e.g. death penalty and gun control?) and health care systems? Both sides think their approach is correct and that the other butt out and mind their own business.

  34. Re:Too late... by diegocgteleline.es · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The government shouldn't tell companies what to charge for their products, but they should ensure that companies can compete freely and make money.

  35. Re:Appropriate price? Zero Euros and redistributio by diegocgteleline.es · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In fact, it's funny that Microsoft tries to promote their own document format because they say that interoperatibility is important and that they support open protocols blah blah blah, and then they don't release the specs for the protocols they're using in windows server, because those protocols is what make windows server succesful (because 95% of clients are windows and only windows server can serve them)

  36. Re:Publish or Perish by Yvanhoe · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The EU cannot overstep their mandate where Microsoft is concerned.

    Well considering that software patents are forbidden in EU, I don't see why EU should take the number of patents MS owns as a metric for innovation.

    That sounds benign, but I think a lot of people fail to see the reach of this claim : an expert EU commission just stated that the number of software patents is completly uncorrelated to the amount of innovation a company carries. If investors and shareholders finally manage to understand this, the patent system could fall.

    --
    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  37. Re:Too late... by Yvanhoe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The "issue" of this law would be that the EU commission doesn't accept the number of patents as a metrics for innovation ? Considering that software patents are not recognize in EU I only see a coherent decision and a good law.
    There are also laws in some EU countries about interoperability that aim at forbidding a company to abuse a dominant position to prevent third-party interoperability. Call it socialist if you will, but I only see this as a way to guarantee a free competition in a free market (an objective which is harldy socialist)

    --
    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  38. Re:Something I don't get about the whole MS-EU thi by vidarh · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Because turning away from a market of about 500 million made up of citizens of many of the wealthiest countries on the planet isn't economically viable and would lead to massive shareholder lawsuits?

    Not to mention that if Microsoft turned away from this market, business partners and subsidiaries of European countries would suddenly have a strong incentive to consider alternatives too.

  39. Re:Something I don't get about the whole MS-EU thi by KokorHekkus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You need to get out of, lets say, the "playground mentality" and look at the realites of such an action. The basic and very obvious reason is: money.

    They can't just drop the EU market because it's the same size that the US one. It's a publicly traded company and investors would very much like to know if was a fiscally sound decision (i.e. did they lose more than staying would have cost). If they don't get the answers they want the stock tanks and I doubt shareholder lawsuits would be far behind. And add to that the worldwide worries wether you can trust Microsoft with your IT infrastructure. Buyers would ask themselves: will they try the same tactics in our market? what will they demand of us to keep on selling their products? can we afford that?

  40. what's really at stake .. by rs232 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The commision ruled in 2004 that Microsoft broke European competition laws and directed them to release complete interoperability documentation on the protocols, MS pretended to not understand what the Commision was on about and released some source code. The Commision also said that MS acted to stifle innovation by tying Media Player to Windows.

    The real question is whether a single company should get a lock in on PROTOCOLS, never mind what they should charge for them. Is this an example of the polluted protocols MS talked about in that Valloppillil email.

    "By extending these protocols and developing new protocols, we can DENY OSS projects ENTRY into the MARKET."

    'At what point has/will the EU overstepped its bounds'

    At what point will MS realise it isn't dealing with the DOJ?

    --
    davecb5620@gmail.com
  41. Re:Wrong by walt-sjc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not "should intervene", it must intervene as its duty to the citizens that elected the government. It's unfortunate that the US government has failed its basic mission of protecting its people from abuse, and has now turned into the abuser.

  42. You've gotta be shitting me by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 2, Informative

    This is the European Union, not the United Republicrat States of Corpo-fascism wonderland of America.

    We have a Human Rights declaration, and plutocratico-aristocratic capitalistic sons of bitches aren't listed on it as a protected species.

  43. Do you even know what socialism is? by Savage-Rabbit · · Score: 5, Informative

    Forget the fact that the entire process is a blatant example of socialism... Do you even know what socialism is? What Socialism is depends on where in the world you are. For most of the world it is a spectrum of political denominations that advocate a social-economic system where property and the distribution of wealth is controlled by the community or the state. These can range from the moderate Social democrats, who simply advocate borrowing certain aspects of this model and integrating them into modern democratic systems, to the more radical Communists, Bolsheviks, Stalinists, etc... who advocate the complete abolishment of private property and total state control of all aspects of the economy. In the USA, however, the meaning of the word 'Socialist' is somewhat different due to the almost complete absence of a political left wing (as the rest of the world defines it) in US politics. Here 'Socialist' seems to be a pejorative applied without any regard to it's true meaning to anybody whose political affiliations lie to the left of the extreme right wing of politics including both genuine Socialists as well as people with more moderate right wing affiliations.
    --
    Only to idiots, are orders laws.
    -- Henning von Tresckow
  44. Overstep their bounds? by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 2, Informative

    At what point has/will the EU overstepped its bounds?

    The EU is a government. They will have overstepped their bounds when their constituents say they've overstepped their bounds. Note that Microsoft is not one of those constituents, nor are any Americans or American companies. This is a concept Microsoft and it's supporters seem to be having a problem getting their heads around.

  45. Re:Too late... by xappax · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...and are less motivated to work on your next project

    So let me get this straight: In order to preserve the "free market", the government has to introduce special incentives to motivate people to produce useful stuff?

    Maybe I missed something in economics class, but I thought the whole point of a "free market" was that the market itself created the incentives, and that government distortion of those incentives leads to inefficiency...

    Of course, personally I think that intervention and tampering with markets can often be a good thing (by legitimate, functioning democratic institutions, not corrupt governments), I just had to point out that your own reasoning is contradictory: Patents are a distortion of a "free market", so abolishing them can't possibly jeopardize the freedom of said market.

  46. Re:Too late... by polar+red · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Just because a group is elected does not mean that we can't turn a critical eye towards what they are doing. Couldn't agree more, but if the people doesn't agree, they can always vote them out, which you can't with a monopoly.
    --
    Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
  47. Oh that economic wasteland that is the EU... by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 5, Informative

    GDP growth rates higher than the US, positive balance of payments, higher life expectancy and literacy, lower infant mortality, lower crime rate, TEN TIMES less people in prison, much higher savings rate, lower personal debt, ...

    Oh yeah, you're right, unemployment is higher. Great. You know what? It doesn't mean shit.

    4th quarter 2004, unemployment rate men aged 25-54: 7.4% in France, 4.6% in the US.

    You're right, it (look)s bad.

    At the same quarter, the employment rate, that is, the number of people working vs. the total number of people in that sex/age group was 86.7% in France as opposed to 86.3%. That's right, more people working in France than in the US. (Source: OECD Employment Outlook 2005 (pdf))

    There's a few reasons for this discrepancy, one being that we don't put 1.5% of our active population in jail, most of whom are poor blacks, likely candidates for the "unemployment" row.

  48. Don't let the door hit your butt on the way out by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 2, Funny

    A EU without Microsoft is a wet dream.

    Please let it happen.

  49. Re:Too late... by DarenN · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You, sir, are an idiot. Yes, an idiot. Let me explain what actually happened without your paranoiac comments about Stalinist Europeans. Despite the fact that most of the EU were allied with you for over half a century. Prick.

    We have a large company who over the years have gained a monopoly. Congratulations! There is a problem, The US government and the EU have rules, some of which annoyingly prevent this monopoly crushing all-comers by abusing their monopolistic powers.
    The US government convicts them, attempts to remedy this, faces legal challenges, and meekly cries off, having done all but nothing to fix the problem.
    The EU takes a slightly different tack, and says "You broke the rules. You can't keep breaking the rules. One of the rules you're breaking the one about muscleing your competition using your monopoly so you're to 1. Stop forcing Internet Explorer, and your own solutions on everyone, let them make their own minds up and 2. Give others the information to interoperate correctly. You can charge for 2, if the patents that cover it are innovatve you can charge more. The innovative restriction applies because in europe you're not allowed to patent any and every kind of software no matter how obvious*."

    So they're saying "fix your behaviour, or we'll get annoyed and do drastic things".

    MS wibble off muttering and after acting outraged for a while, decide on a different tack, which is, to delay. The EU's response was, "Delay all you want. Incidentally, if you manage to delat too much, there's a time-based fine after April 3rd if you're delaying". Again, a behavioural solution.
    As the request of MS, they extended the deadline to today, and MS's response is "How much should we charge?"
    This is a delaying tactic again, and I think MS are going to get a nasty shock if they keep it up. Y'see, the EU WILL apply fines of 4,000,000 per DAY if MS keep it up, and even with reported cash reserves of $30 billion that'll sting. Espcially as it'll be retroactive to last August 1st.

    For the next section, we've to be a bit more specific and informative.
    The specs in question are technical information to competing groups allowing them to design better Windows-compatible server software, specifically work group servers. The ruling was some time back, the final appeal which MS lost was in December 2004. Yes, that's right, 2 and a half years ago.
    They missed numerous deadlines to submit the information, finally coughing it up in July 2006.

    The real problem here is that MS don't want to release those specs, and if they do, they want it to be extremely unattractive to actually license them. So much so that they're demanding up to 5.95% of a licensee's server revenues as royalties, which is completely unreasonable considering that the market rate for such specifications (according to IBM, Oracle, Sun as well the commission's expert, Prof. Neil Barrett, who was suggested by Microsoft.) is between 0% and 1%.

    Mant of MS's other API's are available (for 0%, incidentally) at msdn.microsoft.com, so they've set a standard themselves. The ones that aren't are areas where they're using monopoly power to leverage a market, for instance, MSN Messenger had to be reverse-engineered (and that would probably be illegal in the states now!).

    All the EU has been/is doing is trying to improve competition, for everyone, using behavioural remedies to attempt to correct a monopoly dominated market (as the DoJ tried, and failed, to do). All MS has been doing is delaying the inevitable to squeeze another few Euro's out of the market.
    And if they keep it up, the behavioural remedy will become structural and Microsoft will not be allowed to trade in Europe as it currently stands. Which is fine by me, although it'd be a royal PITA for a while.

    So do you understand what's happening now? And why you're ridiculous attitude makes you look ridiculous and an embarassment to your country ("Down with the commies" is very 50's. I suppose you still think pot is a commie drug?) ?

    Also, as

    --
    Rational thought is the only true freedom
  50. Re:Publish or Perish by 644bd346996 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If MS decided to skip town (continent, actually) just because the court room hearings were getting rough, it would be quite sensible for the EU to freeze all their assets and issue warrants for the arrest of the executives. Once you start thinking of Microsoft as organized crime, it gets a lot easier to decide what to do with them.

  51. Re:Contempt of court by someone300 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why is it that the overall consensus on Slashdot is that the US government aren't doing enough to regulate Microsoft or help stop the monopoly, but as soon as the EU government try to get Microsoft to publish their specifications for interoperability, there's a huge outcry?

    I think that, Slashdot being US based, seems to randomly hate the EU and their decisions. Quite honestly, it doesn't matter what Microsoft want here, and the EU probably don't care what economic damage their going to do to a US based company. Bear in mind that for Microsoft to release all their protocol specifications, it'd probably cost an extremely small amount of money compared to the amount they wasted* on Vista.

    Considering Microsoft is a convicted monopolist and to interoperate with over 90% of the market, you need access to Microsoft's specifications, I hardly think it's unreasonable to demand MS provide access (even free access) to the specifications. I don't think Microsoft has a reason to demand that they maintain an illegal monopoly by not releasing their specifications that would merely allow others to interoperate. If anyone's dragging their feet here, it's Microsoft. I doubt a multi billion dollar company couldn't have just spent maybe a few weeks writing specifications and then released them on their devnet site. Hell, they could have bought a specifications firm to do it for them... It really isn't as difficult as they're making it out to be. The fact that their original specifications were deemed to be too low quality speaks volumes. I wonder how many of their file formats are internally undocumented other than the library itself.

    And hey, if MS hates it, they can pull out of the EU. The EU could nullify the Windows copyright in the EU and we could all legally pirate Windows :) .. Okay, unlikely.. I sort of hope not, really.

    * I don't mean all of Vista was a waste, but there was probably a considerable amount of money wasted on things like WinFS that have been all but dropped now

  52. Re:I don't get it by Coryoth · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's about lock-in. Once you've bought in, back when it may have seemed like a decent idea, you're trapped because the cost of changing is greater than you cna afford. Someone else posted a reasonable analogy: Imagine a electricity company that offers cheap service to a particular area. Lots of people move into that area. Later the service charges are ratchetted up to the point where the customers are getting fleeced. In theory they don't have to keep buying electricity from that company -- there are other electricity providers in some more sparesely populated areas outside of town. The problem is that the cost of moving is more than the homeowner can raise, so in practice they can't change, and the provider can charge them as much as they can bear. The existence of competition doesn't make a difference if you can't afford to make the change.

    The analogy is loose, of course, so pushing it too far is pointless, but the basic idea is there: people who bought into the MS platform early on when it seemed as good a choice as any are now locked into that platform. The costs involved in trying to migrate to the competition -- in converting all your software, retraining all your staff, migrating all your data, etc. -- is more than they can manage. The EU is essentially trying to offer a migration path. In our rough analogy it would be a little like requiring the monopolistic electricity provider to allow competing provider access to the area so they can compete on more even terms.

  53. Re:I don't get it by KokorHekkus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Maybe it's because I don't pretend to know what I'm talking about, or maybe I am just stupid...why does ANYONE care what Microsoft charges for ANYTHING?
    Well, I would not say stupid but perhaps ignorant of the facts in this case. First you must realise that in this case it's not about the price of any ordinary Microsoft product... those Microsoft can price pretty much any way they want. No, this is about Microsoft being found guilty of anti-competetive conduct according to EU rules. As a remedy they have been forced to reveal certain server interface specifications and the EU agreed to let them license them for a reasonable amount. Now of course it lies in Microsofts interest to hike up those license charges as much as possibly so that they can at least partly nullify losing the competetive edge those protocols gave them. EU is seeing what they doing and saying that we will not allow you to water down the obligations we laid down for you.

    Why do people care what they charge? Just like any other company, if you don't like the price....DON'T FUCKING BUY IT.
    Conversly: if you don't like the legal system which you must operate under to do business in a certain area... then don't do business there. Of course that would cost them a bit too dearly...
  54. What it's all about by Cpt.+Fwiffo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As is known, MS was fined by the EU for abusing their monopoly, namely, bundling MS media player (and other apps) with windows.
    For not complying, they were fined again. And again. And...
    One of the requirements was opening up the specs so that third-parties could use the same API as MS media player uses, thus actually having competition on that part.

    However, MS argued that this spec contained innovations, and should not be opened up freely, as there were costs involved.
    The EU found this reasonable.
    MS opened up the specs, and set a price based on those innovations.

    Upon investigation by an independent party at the request of the EU, the independant party found nearly nothing innovative.
    As the amount of innovation was tied to the cost, it meant that microsoft was way overcharging its specs.
    This of course is not part of the deal: the cost of the specs should be reasonable, so that third parties could actually use the spec, and compete.

    This is where the EU is upset about. The fact that Vista is way overpriced is not the issue here. The issue is MS abusing the wording of the ruling and the subsequent settlement of the antitrust case they had against them.

    See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Union_Micros oft_antitrust_case

  55. Re:Too late... by lordSaurontheGreat · · Score: 2, Insightful
    As someone who takes history very seriously, I feel constrained to answer your misconception.


    Stalin was a Stalinist, which is not anything like Communism. Stalin used communist ideals as the springboard for his new form of government. Stalin's system of rule is different from dictatorship only in that a dictator is still morally bound to do that which is best of his people. Stalin was bound by nothing.


    I would ask that you stop disgracing a perfectly good form of government by associating it with Stalin's horribly corrupted form of that government. Communism is a very noble concept, and deserves the respect due to such a well-developed solution to the unsolvable problem: "which form of government is best?"

    --
    Consider yourself spoken to.
  56. Re:Publish or Perish by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Well considering that software patents are forbidden in EU This is not entirely true. Software patents are not uniformly forbidden in the EU. It is up to member countries to decide on their validity. In the UK, we now have a clear government statement on the issue, indicating that they are not, and will not be, valid. In other countries, this may vary.
    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  57. Re:Contempt of court by init100 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why is it that the overall consensus on Slashdot is that the US government aren't doing enough to regulate Microsoft or help stop the monopoly, but as soon as the EU government try to get Microsoft to publish their specifications for interoperability, there's a huge outcry?

    You didn't consider the possibility that different people are attracted to different headlines? If you try to assign a set of opinions to "the Slashdot crowd", you are certain to get some conflicts, simply because this crowd consists of a whole range of people, many with very different opinions.

  58. Re:Publish or Perish by init100 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Software patents are not uniformly forbidden in the EU. It is up to member countries to decide on their validity.

    Exactly. Since the CII (Computer-Implemented Inventions) directive (a.k.a. software patent directive) was voted down, there has been no harmonization between the countries. The EPC (European Patent Convention) forbids patents on software "as such", but in certain countries they are allowed if combined with a computer (just like in the US, IIRC). In Sweden, where I live, it appears that software patents are valid. Patent och Registreringsverket (the equivalent of the USPTO) states:

    Vilka datorprogram kan patenteras?
    När det gäller datorprogram får man inte patent på programmet i sig utan på kopplingen till den tekniska lösningen, alltså den funktion, metod eller process som blir resultatet av programmets körning i datorn.

    Man kan även få patent på program som styr fysiska processer eller som behandlar fysiska signaler, eller program som styr kommunikation. Datorprogram som styr operativsystem kan patenteras.

    Which roughly translates into:

    Which computer programs can be patented?
    Computer programs cannot themselves be patented, rather the patent covers the connection to the technical solution, that is the function, method or process that results from executing the program in the computer.

    You can also patent programs that controls physical processes or (programs) that processes physical signals, or programs that controls communication. Computer programs that control operating systems can be patented.

  59. Re:I remember what it was like before by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Sure, there were other companies that did it earlier and some even better, but Windows brought a gui to the masses.

    I don't even know what point you're trying to make. MS did not invent something, but did popularize it many years ago so we should let them break the law now?

    And I certainly hope that this is not your first language if you really are above average intelligence. First, anyone that wants to announce their increased intelligence to the world probably has some issues, so maybe you're not so much familiar with "modesty".

    Actually this is my first language and I am fluent enough in it to take note of, but not call attention to your numerous grammatical errors. This is, after all, a rather informal forum for writing. As for your statement about, "announce their increased intelligence" I'm not sure exactly what you're trying to convey. I mentioned that people on Slashdot tend to be above average in intelligence, not that my intelligence is increased by... well, whatever it is you think I was saying.

    Second, what the hell is decidedness supposed to mean in your post?

    That is a typo that was meant to read "decides."

    If you plan to label someone as a moron you should first do a spell check.

    A spell check should not catch "decidedness" since it is a proper, if little used word.

    I still insist that bundling is not a big deal.

    Bundling is not a big deal. Bundling with a monopolized product is a big deal. The fact that you still can't seem to understand the significance that those are different things, speaks to your ignorance. If you bothered to read anything about antitrust law you would note that only the latter is illegal. That might be your first clue to try to figure out why it is illegal.

    How many people do you know that actually use the build in CD burning functionality in XP? None? Because it sucks. What about Media player? Probably a lot more because it's not a bad product.

    Actually, those are both the most popular applications in their respective categories, used more than any other. Just because you don't seem to know a lot of people who use them, does not make them less popular.

    I'm not saying it's great, but it is usable without much fuss.

    So imagine you're in business as say, a baker. Now suppose you make really good baked goods at an affordable price and are doing well, but then the electric company starts bundling baked goods with people's electrical service. They raise the cost of electricity a bit, but there still aren't any other good options, so now everyone already has baked goods and don't need yours. Now the baked goods from the electric company aren't great, but they are eatable without much fuss. So you go out of business and consumers end up eating inferior baked goods that cost them more money, even if they can't tell exactly how much.

    You honestly don't see a problem with that? What about when they start adding more and more products to said bundle and driving more and more people out of business? Still no problem? What about when all innovation or advancement in those markets slows to a crawl since there are no competitors left for people to move to? Why invest when it doesn't get you any more money? You really can't comprehend how monopolistic bundling can be a bad thing for the economy and people in general?