DOJ To Oversee Windows 7 Development
MrKaos writes "Windows 7 is already being reviewed by U.S. government technical appointees. Under the terms of Microsoft's November 2001 Justice Department settlement, and final court judgment issued about a year later, a government-sanctioned 'Technical Committee' has been formed to oversee Windows development. The TC is responsible for ensuring that Microsoft complies with the terms of the final judgment, investigating complaints about Microsoft abuses and regularly reporting on the company's compliance."
DoD infiltrates DoJ, mandates Win7 is coded in Ada,
for that geeky-kinky Gates-on-Gates[1] action.
After something like twice the development time/budget of Vista, the effort collapses, the government relents, and WinXP, Nervous Pack 3 is approved for release as Win7.
[1]Yeah, yeah, I know that BeelzeBill won't be involved in Win7, but I appeal to Slashdot's preference for cheap japes over reality.
SecDef Gates is unlikely to outlive this administration, as well.
Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
Can we have someone from the Linux coders to check there's no GNU code in Win7?
This.
Will signify the year of the Linux Desktop.
If there was anything that could make windows worse, this administration will find it.
If you can read this, I forgot to post anonymously.
the staredown between the DOJ geeks and the MS geeks as they both fight for superiority. Think there'll be fistfights in the breakroom?
"Power to the people!" Smack.
"This one's for Billy!" Punch.
I have been waiting for a built-in Windows National Threat Advisory widget for so long.
Vista has issues without external help, so I'd hate to see what DOJ intervention is going to do other than make it even worse. I am not a big Microsoft fan, but please let them at least try to develop a decent OS without an external committee. Let them succeed or fail on their own merits. If the DOJ wants to intervene anywhere, at least do it in vetting the results or paying attention to contracts.
Jumpstart the tartan drive.
At first I read that summary:
"...responsible for ensuring that Microsoft compiles with the terms of the final judgment...
Pity... I thought "final judgment" would be an altogether fitting and proper name for any compiler that could successfully compile a Windows OS.
Proudly supporting the Libertarian Party.
Windows 7 would probably have been pretty lame anyway, WITHOUT government-appointed ANYTHING "overseeing" it. I predict doom, and I'm sure I'm not the only one.
As judgements go, this seems toothless or perhaps worse . . . unless you consider the specter of this years ago to have caused Microsoft to make some different decisions.
According to TFA, the DoJ is mainly concerned with:
- Compatability/bundling in four areas, three of which, such as bundling an instant messenger, Microsoft has given up on since '01. Web browser is the area on that list still in play.
- Making sure that bugs in previous versions of Windows don't recur. Congratulations, your tax dollars are providing extra Windows QA.
With this much oversight, any development will slow to a crawl. If anything gets released at all, it will be a rehash of products they already make.
Insert Windows Vista joke here.
One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
"Normally, we'd be concerned about anti-trust violations. But Win7 sucks so hard, never mind. Based on what we've seen with their last OS release, well, Microsoft - go ahead and do whatever it is you wanted to do."
The blind leading/watching the blind?
The ill-informed overseeing the absolutely stupid?
Or
The haven't-got-a-clue trying to look like they know what they're doing while watching the hard pressed to deliver working in an unrealistic timeline.
Just trying to get it figured out what kind of cluster Fsk to call this gem of an idea.
-Goran
Carpe Scrotum - The only way to deal with your competition.
I believe that to some folks, the DoJ is the Department of Jokes.
does this not bother anyone else? Why is our government so powerful that it can involve itself in development of a commercial product by a private company? Do we not realize that by endorsing this, we are inviting government to get involved in more an more areas of out lives. Why not regulating what types of products you can build as a developer? This is insane. I cannot believe that my fellow slashdotters think this is ok. Government has gone too far.
Windows 7 is "scheduled" for maybe something like sometime in 2010, but they're not making any promises. And if you look at the slated "features" It also looks like they're not sure what they have going on there. Updated versions of Paint and WordPad? Is that really what they're going for?
Instead of "Windows 7" the real code name is "Maybe we can come up with something you will want to buy, unlike Vista...?" However, unfortunately, they really have no idea how to accomplish that.
Oh, and just to be a snob... by comparison, OS X 10.5 looks like it will be adding real features and actually be released in about one year from now.
(I know, -3 Troll/Flamebait... But it was too fun not to post.)
they check for illegal cooperation between a OS powerhouse (Microsoft) and a music/movies powerhouse (RIAA/MPAA)
I truly doubt that this will stop another repeat of the many viruses that plagued Windows in the past from happening.
It might, speaking tentatively, stop, or perhaps better yet, slow, the spread of giant botnets.
Even if everything was to be square and safe, viruses rendered immune from spreading via the net, you'd still have some other crazy way of viruses spreading, like throw hardware or, oh, I don't know... iPods?
It's called RTUTILS.DLL.
If your physical network layer goes down (from, oh'say "attack"), you are given a warning which then redirects the traffic to the next one.
You should be more concerned about the gray areas of code that are only winked upon as would any obfuscated design might not disallow. That's why Microsoft employees have always been looked at funny, because they are not allowed to directly "fix" problems reported by their RETAIL customers; they probably have a hackchain to maintain for their DOJ and DOD patrons so as to not break anything they promisted them in software.
Next-up, how the V Tube and HAARP have caused many to be mis-diagnosed with ADD and ADHD when all that was needed is a Faraday-caged House.
The more I read about government oversight of operating systems, the more FOSS software I install... "America who isn't paranoid must be crazy" -- Robert Anton Wilson
The DOJ will likely want to ensure that there's a backdoor into the system that's not going to be caught by AV and firewalls that will allow them to snoop into anyone's computer at will. If you don't think they want this, you've apparently had your head in the sand.
Seriously, I haven't seen anyone deeply concerned over the possibility this means for backdoors forced in by the government. Do you really trust the government to NOT do this when it is available to them? Thank god for linux...
I remember reading (long enough ago that I don't remember the source or exact words) something by Gates saying that he feared the worst case for Microsoft would be to end up like their partner IBM: big and slow, with lawyers wedged into every orifice impeding every move. Fast forward twenty/thirty years and now they're in pretty much the same situation. I don't envy them.
News for Geeks in Austin, TX
They still aren't in compliance with documentation from the original order. There are lots of functions for example that iexplore/explorer call which are not found in a search of MSDN, and really google fails for a lot of them - except returning one page complaining about the lack of documentation.
The explorer shell could be seen as part of the OS, but a web browser has no business calling undocumented functions. Too bad they tried to bundle the two. And it's also too bad that there is a lot of duplicated code among explorer.exe, browseui.dll, shlwapi.dll, and some others - I can't imagine trying to make a patch for this stuff. Instead of just making a documented API, they copy the code into all sorts of different places. And slightly differently I might add - so patching is not just a copy and paste job - it definitely has to be merged.
the staredown between the DOJ geeks and the MS geeks as they both fight for superiority. Think there'll be fistfights in the breakroom?
Nope, because the DOJ geeks will have badges, guns, pepper spray and tasers.
"We don't pay attention to users." -Gates
I only wish big business and big government had to actually pay us for our wasted time and efforts. Personally, I can't even count how many hours I've completely wasted reinstalling a supposedly reliable enterprise ready operating system. How many hours have you lost?
Perhaps you haven't been following the Microsoft/DoJ saga. Microsoft has gained its dominance on the desktop by spiking its competitors software via the API. The gummint is just trying to be the police that makes sure that the API is fully open and available to developers just as it would be for Microsoft's internal developers.
Where have you been?
Best regards.
If you want a back door for spying coded right, code it yourself!
This looks to be a very interesting situation. MS being watched closely while Apple and F/OSS is not.
Should MS' new OS come up with a feature that is the only OS supporting a feature that is part of a newly regulated banking industry security system, how would that play out in court?
If the OS does not come up with anything new, and only adds performance hits, bloatware, and other usability problems, will the consumer throw off MS for other options? If that happens, can MS blame the government?
Somehow, I don't see this working out too well. Even if people just 'think' the government is putting in a super secret back door to spy with, MS' revenue stream will dry up fast. Foreign governments, banks, and businesses will not want that kind of spying going on in their data centers.
Knowing politicians and governments the way we do (when wearing tinfoil hats) if we know this much about how Windows7 is going to be developed, what do we NOT know?
I just don't see this as being good for the industry as a whole. A bad precedent, or so it looks.
Support NYCountryLawyer RIAA vs People
This makes me think:
:-)
When will regular users notice that they are being denied of access with certain software or hardware? I know very well what the consequences of DRM are at the moment, but it seems that regular users don't know, care or notice the badness of DRM.
The sooner people start noticing they are being held back, the more they might want to use open alternatives.
Dependency hell? =>
These news have been out since June 19th!
Is Slashdot getting laggy or is it just me?
What does government oversight of Windows 7 have to do with making viruses harder to spread?
Perhaps you tuned in late. Or, perhaps you just were not paying attention. Maybe you shouldn't be commenting about things that you have no clue about.
Microsoft came to dominance by sabotaging the API so that its competitors did not have a good API to use, and its internal divisions for Excel and Word had a secret API that worked well. This is monopolistic behavior.
Part of the judgement agreed to by Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly is that Microsoft will open its API to all.
Best regards.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
If Microsoft had been split into separate competing companies back when they lost the original DoJ lawsuit then:
(1) Microsoft would collectively be bigger and more profitable than they are now.
(2) Microsoft would be largely free of this kind of oversight.
Why did they fight so hard to remain a regulated monopoly instead?
Dear Mr. Mukasey:
Linux kernel in Windows 7 please.
Thanks.
Tired of FB/Google censorship? Visit UNCENSORED!
"DOJ To Oversee Windows 7 Development" At last! Microsoft seeks help! Hope they can improve things in Redmond. The operating systems have not been so great from that place. However, I am really surprised that DOJ would have that expertise. It doesn't sound like that kind of institution. (BTW, what is the emoticon for deadpan?)
The DOJ has as much to do with Vista being a piece of crap than anything else. Why is it that no one sees that this ruling was never about helping the consumer and all about bitter, petty businesses acting like babies becuase their crappy software was rejected (even when it was forced down peoples throats, "free", in bundles -- you know just like they claimed MS did illegally to get market share)
This entire case needs to be heard again. But not for about 5 years - when all those nice XP machines are gone and everyone is left with Vista and 7 - only then will people fully realize the damage this ruling has done. And who knows maybe 2013 will finaly be the year of the linux desktop so we can end this whole "no consumer choice" bs- I doubt it though. Linux has years of cleanup work to do to make it so the average person can use it. And still, after years of talking about it, you still need to consolidate into desktop, server, geek - you cant have 25 diferent flavors - no one wants this except the idealist geeks that dont understand the business and consumer aspects (this is what Bill meant by "we were better at making a business" of this stuff)
How destryoing the Windows platform and leaving everyone with a bunch of semi-releated software that almost works with other software even though its made by the samee company and with no reason for such incompatibilities to exist (other than the fact that it is mandated by the coutrts) is a good thing I will never understand.
I suggest for those that dont like the Windows PLATFORM to make their own PLATFORM - and no, you dont have anything like this now - you are a decade away from a real platform that could compete with the one offered by Microsoft (and by this I mean the one they first offered in Windows 2000).
The DOJ ruling is creation by destruction- and it, like everything else the goverment mandates for the collective good, has only caused bigger problems than it solved. Show me how this rulling has done anything other than hurt MS
(and I can already hear the rumbling of the socialists out there... "it didnt go far enough"..."they should be foreced to give away thier sorce code"..."think of the children"..."they should be taxed more")
Oh, good.
I like when the government gets involved in software development.
We get quality products like the California DMV upgrade and the latest IRS sofware upgrades...
The Kai's Semi-Updated Website Thingy
Anyone who remembers that era knows that Microsoft's competitors got into marketplace trouble by sucking even worse than Microsoft. Netscape gave Microsoft the browser market because Communicator was a steaming pile of dog shit compared to IE4 and IE5. Java didn't take off because Sun didn't focus anywhere near enough effort early on into getting a fast interpreter (JIT should have been in version 1.0) and Sun didn't help things by treating Swing like a curiosity for the first few years of its existence. Need I go on?
With Windows Vista, the DOJ should have laid off. It was a total debacle for Microsoft and signaled that they are in decline. If there is anyone who merits a look for anti-competitive, restrictive behavior it's Apple. I say this as someone who still happens to enjoy a nearly 100% Apple ecosystem in his house (iPod, MacBook Pro, AppleTV...)
So we're going to get some DoJ PHB looking over the coder's shoulders, saying "Hrm, y'know, I really liked that paper clip thing. I turned him into a doggie and kept him jumping around all day long. He ever wrote all my memos for me. I-- I mean the DoJ-- really mandates that he be put back."
UTF-8: There and Back Again
MS is gonna put a positive spin on it with some kind of fancy "DoJ-approved" sticker to go with your new laptop.
If you quote this signature there'll be 72 copies of Windows ME waiting for you in Heaven.
If there was ever any doubt that the NSA has the ability to monitor all our communications, this should squash the last hangers-on... I, for one, welcome our new NSA overlords.
Many /. users seem to be confused about what Microsoft was found guilty of. Again, it is not illegal to be a monopoly; it is illegal to use the leverage of being a monopoly to stay a monopoly.
Microsoft used tactics to very much hurt other businesses - and as such are being 'rehabilitated'. This might actually be a good thing for Microsoft, as the company will know where they stand when building a product and shipping a product. If two years after Win7 ships a company cries foul play, Microsoft can point back to this committee.
In general, I do agree that the government should stay out of the way of business.
I'd dump MS like a hot potato if Linux was able to run the programs that are built around it. I've tried to install wine several times without success. Not everyone is a geek, many people like myself, need a more user friendly application before we can use it.
Who watches the watchers?
And does anyone really trust the DOJ any more?
Why can't they just overlook it instead?
Invenio via vel creo
When the US government, or more specifically, the executive office has the power to tell US businesses to facilitate spying on US citizens or even citizens abroad, there are several implications that I cannot get beyond.
#1 Employees of companies that are complicit with US Government ESPIONAGE demands are quite likely to be tried, convicted and even executed as spies.
#2 Spying of this sort cannot be expected to be limited to phone calls. Internet and ALL other technologies can be expected to have complied. This would include Microsoft and possibly even Apple.
It's one [wrong] thing when we have government agencies doing their cloak-n-dagger thing under direction of the executive. But it's another when our consumer products and services are made to do the will of our big brother executive.
I dislike Windows as much or more than the next guy. But it's so deeply wired into the world that when Windows sucks, it kind of sucks to work with computers in corporate environments.
MS has a ton of inertia, and they dominate the market. But they're not making good tech. They're not even very competent any more. It's over, they've jumped the shark (or nuked the fridge, if you prefer).
Everyone understands that if you have a choice, it's better to run something else. And everyone is pushing against the things that take that choice away. Eventually, the ropes will be loosened.
In the meantime, lets not hobble MS in ways that will make computers suck more than they have to. Let's let the limiting factor be their own competence. It's a big enough limit as it is.
Macbooks and eepcs are the writing on the wall for them. It's over, it's just going to take 10 years for it to play out, because of the lock in and their momentum.
I can just see it now for all us non-US users...
"Please look at the webcam, place your finger on the scanner and make sure your computer has a network connection."
or worse:
I'm sorry but your username has been placed on the 'no-compute' list. Please try again after the current US administration has expired.
Yes considering how astute government bureaucracies are I'm sure they'll really make a lot of difference
Government: We're having some issues with this 'notepad' program. You can't include it, it's anti-competitive.
Microsoft: Are you crazy?! Nobody uses that for actual word processing!
Government: That may be so, but including a word program with your operating system is unfair to the people who make MSOffice
Microsoft: Oh.. Okay... Well, what if we struck some sort of deal with the 'MSOffice' people as a gesture of good will? Maybe bundle their software with our OS?
Government: Why that sounds like a wonderful idea. I'm sure the MSOffice people would really appreciate such a brotherly gesture.
I have nothing compelling to say
Well, that about seals it. Within five years "microsoft" will be a term used to describe a particular kind of mistake, not the name of a giant once-profitable software company.
Didn't I say this was going to happen back in 1993?
Yup, Anonymous Coward said those same words, back in '93... He was right then, too.
This article makes it sound like the 'National Operating Systems Commission' that MS joked about during the antitrust trials in 2000. In fact, it is just a technical body overseeing the development under DoJ. With the current administration, the DoJ has been toothless in this matter, but when the administration changes next January, the situation MAY chance.
"Netscape gave Microsoft the browser market because Communicator was a steaming pile of dog shit compared to IE4 and IE5"
.. Clone their client technology early and often (full embrace strategy)"
.. explicit sabotaging of any protocol extensions we make"
.. while infesting all other computing devices with it's programming language"
.. But Sun don't get invited to the party .. :)
.. er partners. Is there a differece .. :)
"I think we should have to do even more cloning of Netscape
"In worst case scenario, Netscape will
"Java didn't take off because Sun didn't focus anywhere near enough effort early on into getting a fast interpreter"
"it becomes clear to me that the Java OS will try to conquer the embedded marketplace
"We also talked about slowing down and coordinating modifications to the Java language - I proposed a "Java Language Council" made up of key tools vendors - MS, Borland, Symantec"
"With Windows Vista, the DOJ should have laid off. It was a total debacle for Microsoft and signaled that they are in decline"
The DOJ never did squat to reign in Microsoft. Vista isn't a problem for Microsoft as they have decided their key strategy is getting control of the Internet, through litigation threats and re-innovating the protocols. Billy boy is always ten steps ahead his partners
"If there is anyone who merits a look for anti-competitive, restrictive behavior it's Apple"
How many times has Apple been in court as often as Microsoft and for doing the same things.
davecb5620@gmail.com
"It doesn't really matter what APIs exist or don't exist - so long as a business can achieve a better bottom line by using Microsoft"
It does indeed matter that Gates sabataged the APIs so as to get a competitivew advantage against the independent software developers. It only doesn't matter if you posess all the ethics of a sewer rat. It's a moot point whether business save money by using MS software. On average one fifth of their revenue.
"A business does not have an obligation to support competitors. In fact, you want to beat your competitors and win in the marketplace"
As is patently obvious the Windows monoculture isn't a market place. The OS functions so as to funnel off revenue from the rest of the economy. In effect any business that uses Windows is a client subsidiary of the MIcrosoft organization. It not as if they wan't to do business with MS, they have no choice.
davecb5620@gmail.com
If the government gets involved with Windows development, there will be so much Spyware and Backdoors, that privacy on a Windows machine would be impossible
We are Dead Stars looking back Up at the Sky
I'm sure the gov would love to oversee Win7 development -- they want to make sure the necessary back doors are included with no bugs this time.
"If the government gets involved with Windows development"
What do you mean if, I figure the current backdoor is a little better hidden. It would be interesting running Wireshark on a Windows network and seeing where it's sending packets. At least before they make it illegal.
davecb5620@gmail.com
Just two weeks after Microsoft attends a Bilderburg meeting.
The Justice Department is so fucked up. Does anyone really think that mandating portions of code will really solve antitrust issues? Sure, like the rest of Windows products, via convenient features, the code steers you toward eventual lock-in. But that wasn't really the issue-- after all, Apple, Sun, IBM, and most software development houses in the 90's all used this same strategy. The issue was that Microsoft was threatening their own customers, OEMs and integrators, if they did not play by Microsoft's rules. THAT was the problem.
Now what we will have is an operating system that was created in some fictitious anti-trust-free-zone, burdened by additional government "oversight" whose cost will be passed along to both taxpayers and Microsoft's customers, because Microsoft still plays like a bully, and the original issues brought up in the antitrust trial were NOT RESOLVED. When Microsoft is forced to play by the same rules as everyone else, that's when customers will finally be able to objectively decide whether they want to go the convenient, locked-in route or the some other way.
"please let them at least try to develop a decent OS"
Microsoft was never concerned with making a decent OS, what they were always about was shuffling the APIs and file formats so as to sabatage their partners/competitors. They still haven't even tackled the virus/spam/phishing epidemic. See that's isn't a priority.
davecb5620@gmail.com
Windows 7 is coming bundled with Duke Nukem Forever!
Seriously, MS had better get started developing Windows 8 on the side. With normal business oversight and *government* oversight, what could possibly go wrong?
Doesn't slashdot have a "whatcouldgowrong" tag?
Korea
Want Big Business out of government? Take away the incentive and start by getting government out of big business!
True, and it was the Clinton era justice department that went after Microsoft. The trial just lasted well into the Bush admini1stration. But do not confuse the Republican In Name Only's (RINO's, Aka Senator John McCain (Rino) Az, Senator Norm Coleman (Rino) MN, Senator Olympia Snowe (Rino) ME and many many others including President G.W. Bush), with conservatives or conservatism.
Does this mean we might all go to jail when we get that dialog that the program we are running has performed an illegal operation and will be shut down? Is a fatal error the death penalty?
By shielding them from lawsuits (corporate charter). By paying them tax breaks, giving them visas, tax codes that they can exploit.
Hell, the copyright MS owe its existence to is given to them by government.
So if you want government out of their hair, prepare to lose these too.
Ensure cooperation between a OS powerhouse (Microsoft) and a music/movies powerhouse (RIAA/MPAA)
Given the international distribution of their product, what steps would Microsoft need to take to avoid this? I mean, what if they break Windows 7 into Windows 7 US and Windows 7 Global? Would the government have any argument for jurisdiction over the non-US product? A step further, what if Microsoft simply announced that Windows 7 was being exclusively created for the international community?
With Windows running 80% of the offices around the world, this is less about anti-Trust and more about getting access.
This administration couldn't even monitor 15 hijackers; you're saying that these idiots can some how monitor 200million pc's?
Actually, I'd say that these days, preemptive strikes are _typically_ American.
Sorry... I just get really annoyed when it is stated that something is un-American, and by that it is meant that it is "bad". America and Americans are just as prone to vices and ill will as every other nation on earth. Furthermore, this usage is also a slur against every person who is not American. To people from other nations it sounds ignorant and boorish. It puts your nation in a bad light.
I'm sure to be attacked by people who will point out the arrogant French, the ineffectual/wimpy Canadians, etc. etc.
If the answer is war, you are asking the wrong question
The problem with Katrina wasn't Katrina itself, it was the idiots who built levees that allowed a city to exist below the natural water level in a zone where hurricanes happen from time to time.
The problem with MS-Windows is the legislation that allows copyrights for binary executable files. Check the US Constitution: "To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries". Which part of "Writings" they didn't understand? Where is it mentioned the exclusive Right to codes compiled from Writings?
If the US Constitution were fully respected, programmers should have to publish their source code in order to get copyright protection.
It was shown to the courts, and they ruled it true, that Microsoft had a hidden API that they used for their internal divisions, and a less functional API that they published.
Please. Do your own research.
Best regards.
Microsoft could have settled back in 2000, before they were ever a convicted monopolist by agreeing to split the company into two or three parts. I think it was a combination of arrogance and blindness by Gates and the senior leadership.
They knew they could "beat" the DOJ, and this is the result. Completely flat stock price for 7+ years. Senior management distractions. Inability to compete in Internet properties, hamstrung eating their own dogfood.
In my opinion Microsoft + Microsoft Applications + Microsoft Services could have been much bigger and more profitable than it currently is as one entity, since the divisions would have been free to take their independent projects where their customers were best served, rather than what the Microsoft bundling dictated. They probably wouldn't have wasted billions on the Xbox foray either. Vista wouldn't be such a complete mess and wouldn't have taken so long to deliver.
It is in fact, you, who are un-American.
What determines what is American? Is it what our founding fathers believed in? Is it what our federal government believes in? Mass media? How about what our very divided American public believe in?
The first and last are both quite plausible definitions, but I challenge anyone to pin down what the last actually *is*.
Well, Windows Vista is insecure, unstable and slow. The Government uses Windows internally, and needs it to be secure, stable and fast (in that order). Apparently, all Microsoft wants it to is force you to upgrade your hardware, which would make a lot of government machines obsolete in about 5 years. Maybe there's an agenda behind keeping an eye on Windows 7 development, who knows.
"If you want a vision of the future, Winston, imagine a boot stamping on a human face forever." - George Orwell, 1984
Founding fathers did not intend to be interpreted the way they are interpreted now. Heck, they did not even intend "all men are create equal" to apply to blacks and women.
Engineering is the art of compromise.
The 'Technical Committee' will consist of the following field experts:
Simon Cowell
Paula Abdul
Randy Jackson
This is going to absolutely...destroy Microsoft...who in the world will trust ANY software released by a private company that was SUPERVISED by the government...given the times we live in today?
HAHAHAHA they got what they deserved...as far as I'm concerned. If shitty business ethics and sell-out-man-ship won't rot you from the core...uncle sam looking over your shoulder while you work...definitely will.
Good riddance, to bad rubbish.
Although "corps" and "core" are pronounced the same, they are different words!
If you knew a child molester who was convicted time after time, wouldn't you want their release to be monitored? Microsoft breaks laws all the time, but we should be saying monitoring them is scary?
GIVE ME A BREAK!
If you repeatedly commit a crime you deserve to be monitored (and chemically if not actually neutered). Just 2 more cents.
soylentnews.org Go there to enjoy the people!
They are going to call version 7, Everest Edition... Why you might ask??? Because it is going to be the biggest mountain of bloat ware the world has ever seen.
-1 disagree is not a modifier for a reason. -1 troll, flamebait, redundant, overrated are NOT acceptable substitutes.
The original settlement defined an expiration date of 5 years post-decision, extendable by an additional 2 years under certain conditions. Subsequent negotiations between DoJ and Microsoft have extended the settlement for those 2 years, and a few parts until at most 2012.
Link
So to summarize: it is like parole. Like parole the "person" being monitored (company in this case) was recently convicted of a crime. And like parole the monitoring has a defined expiration date.
Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
As a democrat, you should be happy when criminals go unpunished with support from Jew-funded organization such as the American Criminal Liberties Union.
Oh yeah, M$ is controlled by Jew named steve ballmer. Get over it. Jew is all over the place.
I, for one, welcome our new zionist jew overlords
Trolling Slashdot is dreadfully easy [slashdot.org]
All in all it appears to me that the government sees this as one monopoly that it should be controlling, influencing and owning. Design and deployment decisions that affect the products installation into government departments are a small and "not-unreasonable" next step and now that Bill Gates has stepped aside, who is charismatic enough at Microsoft to reason against such a scenario.
A very slippery slop indeed.
My ism, it's full of beliefs.
It could be my gross lack of understanding just what "compliance" means with respect to the DOJ requirements, but I fail to see how this is even a feasible undertaking.
There are a number of large programs and projects that are subject to third-party V&V. But, from my understanding, this isn't anything like a Verification and Validation.
There must be scores of millions of lines of code in Windows proper, from the kernel to the UI. A simple Technical Committee from the DOJ is supposed to pore over the source looking for violatins? That's what TFA seems to imply. Of whom is this technical committee comprised of? Hopefully a highly capable third party. I find it difficult to believe - not impossible - that the DOJ just happens to have the manpower and skillsets in-house to handle such an undertaking.
So, if it's not a complete code analysis, then it must be something less. That implies something more superficial. Are they supposed to simply validate specs to features - a black box test if you will? Or is this going to be a superficial, less-than-effective CTL + F for defaults as TFA seems to imply.
I've worked on a lot of software projects, big and small. I've worked on everything from C to ASP.Net and everything in between from small applications to large enterprise scale systems. I can say anecdotally that the most difficult part is reading and understanding an existing application. Some TC from the DOJ is just going to whisk in with a team of ninja geeks fresh out of Carnegie Mellon and Stanford and Viola' the code is analyzed? Just like that?
I'm just not buying it. The efficacy of this endeavor is completely suspect. It's either a complete waste of my tax dollars, or it's a complete waste of my tax dollars disguised as "to protect and serve."
If you do what you always did, you get what you always got.
This might not be all that bad.
All you'll need to do to get acceptable performance out of it, is remove RedTape.dll and reboot.
What a depressingly stupid machine.
Instead of just making a documented API, they copy the code into all sorts of different places. And slightly differently I might add
Welcome to software development? Any large project that has many programmers working on it will show the exact same characteristics.Not that I would ever really rely on Windows for security in the first place, but with direct government oversight, you have to assume that aside from the glaringly obvious security holes, there will be various other back doors to allow government searching of your PC.
This is, of course, all in the name of National Security, and if you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear.
The government's contribution to linux: selinux.
The government's contribution to windows: bureaucracy.
Hmm... Now I'm all for proprietary and and open source software cohabiting. Some things are better done as proprietary, others as OSS. But does this not seem like all the more reason to use something, in the very least, non-windows?
Skiffy is Spiffy, but Ort is tort.
Adjust the chart for inflation, and zoom out a couple decades and see what it tells you.
GWB is a poor example for Republican fiscal policy. He neither believes in, nor abides by it.
Grok law has a nice write up about how M$ continues to fail its five year compliance duties.
Looking at the source rather than going by your obviously biased Journal, Microsoft is striving to meet the goals of the demands. Unfortunately, some of the documentation has gone AWOL. As a result they are having to make their best guess. Microsoft is now documenting their code so they can be more compliant with the EU and the DOJ. BTW, Internet Explorer is more standards compliant and it is no longer tied into the rest of the operating system.The market remains a stagnant monopoly where significantly better products struggle to gain traction.
A stagnant monopoly? I could have sworn PC manufacturers are including Ubuntu as an option and Firefox was gaining market share.A better punishment would be for government to quit purchasing things from Microsoft and fine them the costs of transition.
Judging by your posts, the only way you would be satisfied is if Microsoft and every other software company went out of business.Just weeks after Bill Gates attends a Bilderburg meeting. Coincidence? I think not.
And M$ going out of business is a problem, how fat fucktard? It might be only to you fat fucktards as you fat fucktards are the ones who seem to support fucktarded OSes the most, just take a look at that fat chair-throwing fucktard Ballmer.
Remember fat fucktard, anytime you post I will remind everyone how much of a fat fucktard you really are. Eventually someone in their right mind will mod your whole fucking account into fucking oblivion which is what fat fucktard like you should do by slitting your fucking wrists. Once all you fat fucktard do so, then there will not be a shortage of food ever again.
If you flame me or ignore my post, then you will prove just how fucking right I am fat fucktard.