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DOJ Nixes Lax Policy, Hardens Antitrust Enforcement

eldavojohn writes "A policy from the Bush era seen as a hurdle to the government prosecuting companies under antitrust laws has been withdrawn by Obama's Department of Justice. From the article: 'The DOJ's Antitrust Division has withdrawn a September report that "raised too many hurdles to government antitrust enforcement and favored extreme caution" toward antitrust enforcement action, the DOJ said. The change in policy could mean that the department looks harder at the actions of technology vendors such as Google, Oracle and IBM, as detractors have raised antitrust concerns about all three in recent months.' You may recall that Google has come under some antitrust scrutiny recently and the pressure may have just gotten a little more intense."

3 of 249 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Neat by Miseph · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Never before have two people worked so hard to be completely wrong while disagreeing on everything.

    Kudos to you both, really. It's funny when people are this stupid.

    --
    Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.
  2. Re:Neat by Runaway1956 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yet another automobile analogy (large cars):

    I can haz a Kenworth with a Caterpillar, Detroit, or a Cummins engine.

    I can haz a Peterbilt with a Caterpillar, Detroit, or a Cummins engine.

    I can haz a Freightliner with a Caterpillar, Detroit, or a Cummins engine.

    I can haz a Mack with a Caterpillar, Detroit, Cummins, OR a Mack engine.

    Stepping down to the smaller, cheaper modes of transportation,

    I can haz a Ford Taurus with a 4 cyl, 6 cyl, or even an 8 cyl engine, automatic or 5 speed, with a variety of rearends. I can even have a GM or Chrysler engine under the hood, if I choose to invest the time and/or money to do so.

    What gives Microsoft the right to say what I may or may not install on their operating system? What gives them the right to say that I CANNOT use their API's, or their file system, or their office suite on Linux, OS2, Solaris, or whatever I CHOOSE?

    MS never had the right to put a string into Windows that checked fro MS-DOS, then refused to install if the DOS was from some other company.

    It's far past time to break the monopoly. AT&T was probably the most benevolent monopoly in American history, and it was broken up. Microsoft's breakup is long overdue.

    --
    "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
  3. Re:Neat by drinkypoo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What entitles you to other people's work on terms of your choosing?

    Microsoft is a public corporation with high revenues and taxes, and a monopoly, and as such exerts an undue influence over the market and in fact the government. As a corporation it should not be permitted to exist at all unless there is a benefit to the public. Microsoft has unlawfully exerted its monopoly status (which it has only been able to gain due to copyright law) to establish undue influence over the market and something must be done to prevent them from continuing to press their unfair advantage.

    Something you really need to keep in mind here is that Microsoft has no natural right to exist. If corporations do not serve the people, then why permit them to exist? Microsoft has arguably done more to hold computing back than any other "entity". Why not get a little something back? You act like Microsoft has had nothing from us all this time, and that is patently false.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"