Danish FreeBSD Dev. Sues Lenovo Over "Microsoft Tax"
Handbrewer writes "The FreeBSD developer Poul-Henning Kamp (phk) has sued Lenovo in Denmark (Google translation, original here) over their refusal to refund the Windows Vista Business license, even though he declined the EULA during installation. Lenovo argues that they sell the computer as a full product, and that they cannot refund it partially, such as the power supply or the OS even if people intend to use a different one. This seems to be contrary to previous rulings in the EU where Acer and HP has been forced to refund the 'Microsoft tax.'"
Nah.
Much better to push a microsoft tax onto the company via lawsuits.
Then they will feel the pain and make refunds a standard policy.
Lots and lots of lawsuits even better.
She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
find enough people and make it a class action...
Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
While i applaud companies that refund the microsoft tax, i do sort of see where lenovo is coming from. If i buy a car, i can't yank out the back seats and require a refund from the car dealer. It is true i could sell those seats for a profit on ebay, the original dealer would not be required to refund me the cost of the seats. In fact, it could be assumed that you pay $2000 for the laptop hardware and they throw in windows for free.
/sarcasm
Should you be able to sue for not being able to arbitrarily get a refund on a part of a computer? What if you want to run thin clients that never touch the hard drive? Should you be able to refund the hard drive? Just because what you're trying to get rid of has no legal resale value doesn't mean you should be able to refund it, especially if Lenovo never included an itemized list.
You know what? I'm gonna sue the next laptop company i buy from because they won't refund the cost of the touch pad, I hate those things! More than most linux people hate microsoft, i'm talking like a seething, infuriating hatred.
What if you wrote software that included printer capabilities or SQL database access, would you refund someone who didn't want printer capabilities or SQL database access? Too bad lenovo isn't doing what sane people would do and try to work with the customer to come to something that works, but, if you don't like the back seats, either buy the whole care and remove em yourself, or don't buy the car.
Reason people! While microsoft's monopoly is bad, you shouldn't be sueing for a refund, sue for variety! And NO I didn't RTFA, so for all i know, the terms of the settlement may be "Sell blank slate laptops".
you can buy a car without a radio, or without air conditioning, but this is not a car so it is not the perfect analogy, PC makers should give customers what they want and if that includes selling desktops & laptops without windows or without any OS whatsoever on it then that is what they should do, microsoft does not own the OEMs (or do they?)...
Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
Du er sikkert ikke dansk men en Amerikaner!
Why is it that you think class action lawsuits are something found all over the world? Why is it you think that the world follow the US judicial system? Are you really so totally uninformed about the world outside your own country?
Btw, the US do not have a justice system, it only has a punishment system.
If you mod me down, I *will* introduce you to my sister!
Or even better to make them offer Windows as a totally separate product, not automatically part of every computer purchase.
Let's not lose sight of who is to blame, though. (I take that back: let's lose sight after all, because it's more complicated than most people suspect.) Microsoft sells a product to Lenovo. Lenovo resells it. Microsoft puts wording on a paper or the screen, saying that if you don't want their stuff, Lenovo will give you your money back. WTF? How can Microsoft speak for Lenovo? Pretty damn arrogant. Did Lenovo agree to that?
Actually, that's a very serious question: Does Lenovo become bound to the EULA? Are they re-selling Windows or re-licensing it?
The Blizzard case's judge asserted that "title transfers" don't ever happen with software. Nothing is ever sold. Ergo, if you walk into a retail store and pay cash for a Blizzard game just like you would for a loaf of bread, you're not actually buying it. That means the retailer never bought it either. Ergo, the retailer must have licensed it as well (though they never even opened the package so never even implicitly agreed to the EULA -- ah, the mystical magic of EULAs, the only kind of contract of its kind!).
The Blizzard judge would say that Lenovo signed a contract in blood with both Microsoft and the computer purchaser, and therefore Lenovo agreed to every term Microsoft put in the license: Lenovo must pay the refund that Microsoft offered. Any layman would say Lenovo is just a reseller and has no obligation to Microsoft to pay refunds on their behalf; the EULA is between Microsoft and whoever reads it -- but that layman also wants his money back and damn well knows Microsoft ain't gonna pay it.
As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
Not really.
The EULA he declined specifically states: By using the software, you accept these terms. If you do not accept them, do not use the software. Instead, return it to the retailer for a refund or credit.
If the car came with an EULA saying that I could return the radio for a refund, I certainly would expect to be able to get a refund for the radio.
I wouldn't be surprised if lenovo paid something low as in $5 per license of windows when everything was said and done, and then recouped the cost of the license with bloatware. This guy would be miffed to get a $5 check and microsoft would be miffed to have their B2B cost revealed to be a tiny tiny fraction of what they gut consumers for.
Is it sad that I am more likely to recognize you and your posts by your sig than your name or UID?
And the author of the EULA isn't obligated to offer a refund in the EULA. Lenovo isn't obligated to bundle that refund offer with their computer. But Microsoft and Lenovo did that. Somebody (whether you think it's Lenovo or Microsoft) TOLD the user, in writing, they can have their money back if they don't want Microsoft's crap.
They weren't obligated to sell him a computer the way he wants it, but then they said, "Ok, you can have it the way you want it, and here's our offer written in legalese." So, dude, are you really sure they're still not obligated to sell him a computer the way he wants it? He has a piece of paper that says they are, and he didn't write the words on that paper.
As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
Btw, the US do not have a justice system, it only has a punishment system.
This statement alone should be marked +5 insightful (and that's coming from US citizen).
No, He would have been a troll if he just called people names. You know, like you just did.
Are you really so uninformed as to believe the majority of the people in this world have a deep understandings of the workings of their own legal systems let alone all the particulars of the legal systems of all the other countries of the world?
Or did it just seem like a convenient time to bash the ignorant Americans and get modded up for it?
When buying a new car you can in fact let the dealer know that you do not want the stock tires and wheels. You can then work a deal with the dealer to pay less for the car. Or. You can sell the stock tires and wheels as you paid for them and now own them. The same is not true for a software license.If the car dealership sells you the car. Offers no way to not pay for certain parts and then makes it illegal to sell any of the parts you bought and no longer want then you would be correct. Another horrible /. car analogy.
Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
I think it's pretty clear that Windows' licenses require a refund that is separate from the computer.
Really? The last time I was on jury duty, nobody cared about the guy's guilt or innocence. They just wanted to reach a consensus so they could go home and watch NASCAR.
"Are you really so totally uninformed about the world outside your own country? "
Because understanding every nuance of the court systems of other countries is obviously the indicator of how informed someone is. Keep the dickish outrage to yourself.
Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
If you don't want Microsoft Windows then do not buy a computer that comes with Microsoft Windows pre-installed, it is as simple as that.
If you don't want to provide Microsoft refunds, do not sell a computer that contains a EULA saying you will provide refunds if the EULA is unacceptable.
Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
That is true, and I did not say anything contrary to that. What I am objecting to is the notion that somehow you have a right to FORCE a manufacturer to make a product by suing him. If you don't want the product as offered, don't buy it. If you want to make a point, buy it and return it saying 'I don't agree with the EULA, so you lost a sale'. Suing someone for not offering a product you want to buy is just asinine.
I understand your point, but you often don't have a choice when you're buying a laptop.
For example, when I bought my laptop, I chose some specs, and then looked at various manufacturers to find the cheapest price. No manufacturer sold a model with those specs without Windows preinstalled.
Dell was cheapest by a few hundred dollars, so I called them up to see if they'd sell me the model I wanted without an OS. Of course, I got some CSR in India who couldn't understand why in the world I'd want a computer with no operating system, no matter how simply I tried to explain it (even saying just "I already have one" didn't work).
I ended up just getting XP Home and living with it.
But you would have me "go buy from someone else", despite the fact that nobody else was selling a comparable laptop without an OS for that price?
It's not about "growing up", it's about being annoyed that in order to get the hardware I wanted, I had to get software I didn't want, and I didn't really have a choice.
I'm talking about laptops, here. I build my own desktops, and I obviously don't pay for Windows for those if I don't need to.
This raises a couple of issues with the law that I have often wondered about.
Under UK law, and I imagine most EU country's law, a contract has to confer some benefit to both parties. The contract can't just be "give me money", you have to give something (like a service or goods) in return. If you decline the EULA, you could argue that either the computer is now useless to you and so you receive no benefit from it (it doesn't do anything without an OS). Of course you could install Linux but the agreement was for a working computer so even if contract law does not apply, unless Lenovo installed it for you it would be possible to argue that it is not "fit for purpose" under sales law.
Another related issue is the requirement for all contracts to be negotiable. I don't know about Denmark specifically, but I imagine most EU countries have something similar to the contract law here in the UK which requires that both parties must have an opportunity to edit a contract before agreeing to it. One party can just refuse to agree to any changes the other one makes, but there does at least have to be that possibility of making counter-offers. Since you often cannot edit the EULA (sometimes it's just a text file you can edit before installing) it might be possible to argue that it is unenforceable as a contract.
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
I would argue that that is not true. In principle all citizens are your peers. In reality, that's not true. Tell the poor, black guy that gets convicted by an all white, middle-class jury when he was innocent, that he was convicted by his peers.
No double jeopardy? Well technically you are right, but tell that to OJ. Whether or not you think he was guilty, he still got "punished" in a civil trial after winning the criminal one. The guy doesn't get convicted for murdering your relative? No problem, just file a wrongful death suit in civil court where the burden of proof is less.
No, the EULA states to you must ask the manufacturer what the return or credit policy is. Lenovo says the policy is return the laptop. That fulfills the EULA, and makes the guy whole (he is not out anything). If Lenovo said the policy was 'too bad, you bought it, no refunds' then the guy would have a claim. What the guy wants to do is unilaterally redefine the terms of the sale, from hardware+OS to hardware only, and Lenovo is under no obligation to honor a one-sided deal like that.
Sadly I can vouch for that. My mom was selected for jury duty a couple of years back in an Arson case. She ended up hanging the jury 11 to 1 and causing a mistrial. Why? Because the other 11 said "the defendant is Italian and haven't you ever seen Goodfellas? He is probably in the mob and must have done it"
It didn't matter that there wasn't any actual...oh what is the word? oh yeah, EVIDENCE, or that the guy had to file bankruptcy because he didn't have enough insurance to actually cover his losses, or that even the fire investigator admitted on the stand he couldn't say for sure WHAT had actually caused the fire, they had seen Italians on TV are mobsters and therefor he did it.
Sadly when hearing this I was reminded of that old saying that 'juries are 12 people too stupid to get out of jury duty". If mom hadn't been civic minded and actually went that guy would be doing 3 to 5 for being Italian and having a jury who had seen Goodfellas. Sad but true.
ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.