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Microsoft's Hottest New Profit Center: Android

jbrodkin writes "One of Microsoft's hottest new profit centers is a smartphone platform you've definitely heard of: Android. Google's Linux-based mobile operating system is a favorite target for Microsoft's patent attorneys, who are suing numerous Android vendors and just today announced that another manufacturer has agreed to write checks to Microsoft every time it ships an Android device. Vendors paying off Microsoft for the right to use Android now include HTC, Velocity Micro, General Dynamics, Onkyo Corp. and Wistron. Microsoft likely makes more money from Android than its own Windows phone platform, and its latest patent agreement announced Tuesday indicates Microsoft is also going after Google's Linux-based Chromebooks."

276 comments

  1. When Is A Company.... by mlauzon · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    When is a company that produces ANDROID-based phones going to stand up to MS and tell them enough is enough, ANDROID is Linux-based, and Linux is not Windows.

    1. Re:When Is A Company.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Linux is operating system and Android is software system what use it
      NT is operating system and Windows is software system what use it

      NT and Linux has nothing to do with themselfs
      Windows and Android by default neither but it depens has Android distributor added some features what MS has patented like Exchange API's.

    2. Re:When Is A Company.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When is Google going to back up the platform?

    3. Re:When Is A Company.... by dclozier · · Score: 4, Interesting
    4. Re:When Is A Company.... by Anon-Admin · · Score: 1

      But the second and third letters in the names are the same. Linux -- Windows Therefor Linux must have stolen the intellectual property of windows to get those two letters.

    5. Re:When Is A Company.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      YOU are an IDIOT. winDOWs and LinUX has NOthing to dO WITh AnYTHIng in this stoRY.

      See, I can capitalize random things in a sentence too!

    6. Re:When Is A Company.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably around the same time the patent system gets fixed.

    7. Re:When Is A Company.... by Amouth · · Score: 1

      but they are using them for e-mail and contact management and calendaring and tasks - all the things that windows PDA's did.

      if i remember right - MS the patents on almost all of the Office/Work/Organizer on Mobile device with sync.

      It doesn't mater what OS or what language you write that in/on if you are copying someones ideas you are copying them and if they have a patent for it then you are supposed to licence it.

      --
      '...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
    8. Re:When Is A Company.... by matazar · · Score: 1

      I'm surprised they haven't already honestly.
      I'm also surprised that none of the big manufacturers did.

      Patent wars are getting ridiculous.

    9. Re:When Is A Company.... by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      MS is suing the smaller fish first to set a precedent and build some kind of case for going after the big phone makers. You notice they aren't in any crushing hurry to take on the hundreds of google or Apple lawyers.

    10. Re:When Is A Company.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WTF?

    11. Re:When Is A Company.... by gregrah · · Score: 1

      I'm assuming the patents referenced are not OS-specific, so whether Android is Linux-based or Windows-based isn't going to make a bit of difference in court.

      As long as the law is on their side and it is in their best interest to do so, Microsoft will continue to sue Android handset makers.

    12. Re:When Is A Company.... by cavreader · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying MS is right for pursuing revenue in this manner but you need to look at a couple of things. #1 Are the patents that other companies are cutting licensing checks for valid or is it just cheaper to pay the license fee then litigate? If the patents are valid and would most likely hold up in a court challenge why should MS be criticized for taking advantage of it? I see no other company or individual out there that wouldn't do the same thing. #2 Android is built on and for a Linux based platform but patents are more geared towards the actual functionality produced not the platform or programming language was used to implement the patented idea.

    13. Re:When Is A Company.... by the+linux+geek · · Score: 2

      I have no idea what that meant, but I like it.

    14. Re:When Is A Company.... by Bert64 · · Score: 2

      I would, if they were sold outside the US.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    15. Re:When Is A Company.... by u-235-sentinel · · Score: 1

      When is a company that produces ANDROID-based phones going to stand up to MS and tell them enough is enough, ANDROID is Linux-based, and Linux is not Windows.

      Has Micro$oft ever come out and EXPLAINED what their 235 patents that Linux violates were?

      I'm curious if this is where the rational comes from. Not that I agree ( I don't ) but I'd love to see their explanation for this. And if they owe anyone a refund!

      --
      Has Comcast disconnected your Internet account? Same here. You can read about it at http://comcastissue.blogspot.com
    16. Re:When Is A Company.... by nonicknameavailable · · Score: 1

      Motorola said no to Microsoft and got sued by Microsoft

      --
      Mendacem Memorem Esse Oportet
    17. Re:When Is A Company.... by gstoddart · · Score: 3, Insightful

      When is a company that produces ANDROID-based phones going to stand up to MS and tell them enough is enough, ANDROID is Linux-based, and Linux is not Windows.

      Sadly, if your Android based device is using stuff that is covered in patents Microsoft owns ... the platform is irrelevant.

      The problem has nothing to do with Linux, and everything to do with how utterly broken software patents are. There's so many of them that a 'skilled practitioner' (ie pretty much any programmer) could develop as being a fairly logical application of other things. In many cases, it's stuff that those of us who took CS in school were actually taught in class, or is stuff that other people had developed years before.

      Being Linux doesn't give you a free pass from the suck that is over-broad patents.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    18. Re:When Is A Company.... by westlake · · Score: 1

      MS is suing the smaller fish first to set a precedent and build some kind of case for going after the big phone makers

      There aren't many bigger fish in the corporate waters than General Dynamics. The fifth largest defense contractor in the world. Guns, tanks and submarines. The first NSA certified smartphone. The smartphone used by Obama.

    19. Re:When Is A Company.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed, that's worth a WTFF !?
      Windows: apparently it's the operating system that isn't an operating system when it's a "software system".

    20. Re:When Is A Company.... by ImaLamer · · Score: 1

      So I can stop looking for the hidden message?

      YOUIDIOTDOWUXNOOWITAYHIRY means nothing to me... but I am a network guy, not a coder.

    21. Re:When Is A Company.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      That means that Android is not just Linux. A distro of Linux could be free and clear of any MS patents but another distro (or Android for that matter) could violate a MS patent. Just being able to use the Linux kernel in your product doesn't mean that MS may not have a real claim to some of the other technology that is paired up with it.

    22. Re:When Is A Company.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When is a company that produces ANDROID-based phones going to stop ripping off other peoples idea?

    23. Re:When Is A Company.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Samsung is the 800 lbs gorilla in the Android room. Samsung has already sold over 3 million Galaxy S IIs. If the Microsoft tax is $1 a unit Samsung already has tens of millions worth of royalty costs to fight against. That mess would be in the courts for years and the odds are good that some fraction of the patents will be found worthless, so it will never happen.

      There you are; IP laws (a.k.a regulation) creating inherent bias for giant corporations that can protect themselves.

    24. Re:When Is A Company.... by MBGMorden · · Score: 2

      Might is try I is probably not understand comment yours.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    25. Re:When Is A Company.... by kale77in · · Score: 1

      There must be some kind of case for legal harassment here. If a small company can point to a larger companies doing the same thing written down in the case against them, yet not being sued, then the plaintiff should be asked to show why they have not protected their shareholder's interests and IP -- their ostensible motivation -- by litigating the largest offenders first? Surely the plaintiff would be delighted to catch the biggest, richest fish with their ostensibly valid case? To my mind the only reason to act otherwise would be legal gamesmanship at the literal expense of the smaller defendants.

    26. Re:When Is A Company.... by Surt · · Score: 1

      There's no precedent in operation here, that's not the kind of court case this is. Plus, settlements out of court hold up surprisingly poorly as precedents.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    27. Re:When Is A Company.... by Soft+Cosmic+Rusk · · Score: 1

      That's because you missed a T!

    28. Re:When Is A Company.... by lordandmaker · · Score: 1

      If the patents are valid and would most likely hold up in a court challenge why should MS be criticized for taking advantage of it?

      Well, for a start, 'legal' doesn't equate to 'right' - something being legal to do doesn't render it beyond criticism.

      But it's also quite widely accepted that the patent system is broken - even if you decide that software patents are in themselves permissible, the length of protection the 'inventor' gets from it compared to the pace of innovation in the industry is completely contrary to the original intent of the patent - if anything, the complaint is that this might well hold up in court more than that anybody in particular is doing it.

    29. Re:When Is A Company.... by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      I love my rooted Nook Color, and my son loves my old B&W one.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    30. Re:When Is A Company.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference is that B&N isn't a player in the tech game. This is their only product in the arena, ever(as far as I can tell). Unlike Motorola, Apple, Samsung, etc, there are no clusters of patents both own that they could sue each other over to set what are essentially profit neutral royalty agreements(MS sues Motorola over X, Motorola sues MS over Y, both agree to pay $x in royalties to each other and call it done) which seem to be par for the course for the industry. B&N has nothing to lose in fighting this(except legal fees) and they have no patent portfolio of their own to equalize the playing field with, so they're really the only ones that can are willing to fight like this. And, honestly, good for them. I hope they win. Software patents are the worst patents.

    31. Re:When Is A Company.... by DJRumpy · · Score: 1

      The headlines are a bit misleading. Microsoft is offering "Patent protection" (ahem..racketeering) from it's patent portfolio for a $5 fee per device sold. In short, they are not profiting from Android itself, but rather a vague threat that the folks who sell Android 'may' be violating various patents held by Microsoft. In this case, some of these companies probably feel it would cost less @$5.00 than it would to go to court and potentially come out on the losing end. I suppose it is possible that MS present compelling evidence to force these folks into these agreements but I have to wonder.

      This is an excellent example of a broken system when someone doesn't even have a good idea if they are legally free and clear or actually violating another's patents.

    32. Re:When Is A Company.... by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      This Linux statement doesn't make any sense. MS is keeping the patents in question secret, so for all we know, they may just have patented the color of the screen, or some other such nonsense.

    33. Re:When Is A Company.... by cababunga · · Score: 1

      He often tells me: "Dad, you know, I remember my old days when all Nooks were B&W". :D

    34. Re:When Is A Company.... by node+3 · · Score: 1

      How can you keep the patents a secret? If you ask for licenses, don't you generally have to list what the license is for? And even more so when you bring forth a lawsuit?

    35. Re:When Is A Company.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All android manufacturer could pool together and crush MS and even maybe Nokia.

    36. Re:When Is A Company.... by cavreader · · Score: 1

      I agree that the patent process is badly broken. I also agree that legal doesn't mean fair or reasonable or even makes common sense. However my original post was about this particular MS action. The gist of the parent post was questioning how MS was making money and his argument was based on the statement. "ANDROID is Linux-based, and Linux is not Windows". My take on why this one statement is invalid is because a lot of software patents are not platform specific.

    37. Re:When Is A Company.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft alone probably has as much, if not more, money than all Android phone manufacturers combined. In other words, it's not going to happen.

    38. Re:When Is A Company.... by mauriceh · · Score: 1

      When they charge money for the OS?
      Seriously, why should they?
      They are succeeding. Android is leading, Apple is #2, Nokia and Symbian are irrelevant, RIM and blackberry are toast.
      So M$ makes a few bucks from a protection racket. Who cares?
      Eventually it will bite M$ in the ass..

      --
      Maurice W. Hilarius Voice: (778) 347-9907
    39. Re:When Is A Company.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See the B&N revelations; Microsoft walks in and says you are violating our patents and we will rape you in court: if you want a chance of getting off easy, sign this NDA first.

    40. Re:When Is A Company.... by jonwil · · Score: 1

      Motorola is doing exactly that. They are refusing to pay up to Microsoft nor are they supporting Windows Phone 7.

    41. Re:When Is A Company.... by macs4all · · Score: 1

      but they are using them for e-mail and contact management and calendaring and tasks - all the things that windows PDA's did.

      if i remember right - MS the patents on almost all of the Office/Work/Organizer on Mobile device with sync.

      It doesn't mater what OS or what language you write that in/on if you are copying someones ideas you are copying them and if they have a patent for it then you are supposed to licence it.

      Didn't the Newton MessagePad pre-date them all?

    42. Re:When Is A Company.... by wikileaks · · Score: 1

      Annnnnd no one cares because Motorola phones are complete shit. I bought my first Android from Motorola and it blows donkey. Next time it's HTC.

    43. Re:When Is A Company.... by satuon · · Score: 1

      Are interfaces even patentable?

    44. Re:When Is A Company.... by frenchbedroom · · Score: 1

      And also an L.

    45. Re:When Is A Company.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about the OHA members?

      After all, the organisation was put together to promote and support the platform.
      Why not protect it too?

      I'm sure NTT Docomo, Acer, Alcatel, Garmin, Kyocera, LG, Motorola, NEC, Qualcomm, Synaptics and others can find the odd patent down the back of the couch.

    46. Re:When Is A Company.... by mcvos · · Score: 1

      Google has plenty of cash.

    47. Re:When Is A Company.... by Old+Sparky · · Score: 1

      And WHO is the Micro$crot stooge that modded this off-topic?

    48. Re:When Is A Company.... by Methuseus · · Score: 1

      If it wasn't patented, it doesn't count. At least that's how I understand it.

      --
      Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity, though I'm not yet sure about the universe. - A Einstein
    49. Re:When Is A Company.... by andydread · · Score: 1

      This one is If you want to help then recommend the Nook over any other ereader. Amazon caved and payed MS.

    50. Re:When Is A Company.... by andydread · · Score: 1

      Motorola is also fighting back.

    51. Re:When Is A Company.... by Mitchell314 · · Score: 1

      Once I get a patent on making shitty interfaces, I am *so* suing the socks of /. :P

      --
      I read TFA and all I got was this lousy cookie
    52. Re:When Is A Company.... by Mitchell314 · · Score: 1

      Methinks you forgot delimiters. Those spaces are capitalized. :P

      --
      I read TFA and all I got was this lousy cookie
  2. Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la SCO? by basiles · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So Microsoft is becoming even more a lawyer company, and a bit less a technical one. If this is true, I won't bet one Microsoft share's raising again.... Did they hire SCO attorneys or laywers? :-)

  3. Good, maybe they'll get rid of Windows Phone by elrous0 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Only together can MS and Google overthrow Apple and rule the galaxy as father and son.

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    1. Re:Good, maybe they'll get rid of Windows Phone by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      Damn, that was pretty good.

    2. Re:Good, maybe they'll get rid of Windows Phone by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Fucking brilliant!!!

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    3. Re:Good, maybe they'll get rid of Windows Phone by inglorion_on_the_net · · Score: 1

      Or, rather, like Master and Apprentice.

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    4. Re:Good, maybe they'll get rid of Windows Phone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      makes a nice change from laser shark and bitcoin jokes.

    5. Re:Good, maybe they'll get rid of Windows Phone by hexagonc · · Score: 1

      +1 Awesome -- wish I had mod points.

    6. Re:Good, maybe they'll get rid of Windows Phone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only together can MS and Google overthrow Apple and rule the galaxy as father and son.

      Three sons of an unknown father. Wait until the next 'Casual Friday' and I'll prove it with jean tests.

    7. Re:Good, maybe they'll get rid of Windows Phone by tyrione · · Score: 1

      Microsoft can't stand Google. Move along.

    8. Re:Good, maybe they'll get rid of Windows Phone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only together can MS and Google overthrow Apple and rule the galaxy as father and son.

      But who is the master and who is the student?

    9. Re:Good, maybe they'll get rid of Windows Phone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft can't stand Google. Move along.

      I bet you're popular at parties

    10. Re:Good, maybe they'll get rid of Windows Phone by Methuseus · · Score: 1

      I need to remember that "jean test" line. Yes I steal most of my jokes from others, but I share them with people who don't read /. so it doesn't count.

      --
      Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity, though I'm not yet sure about the universe. - A Einstein
    11. Re:Good, maybe they'll get rid of Windows Phone by Gherald · · Score: 1

      Brilliant. Damn. It's been 4 years since I signed in to comment here, but I had to give you props for that.

  4. Looks like Microsoft is going under... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't suing everyone the trend companies go through when they are on the decline? SCO remember them?

    1. Re:Looks like Microsoft is going under... by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      SCO was suing people bigger than them. That's a recipe for hard times. If you're suing a company with deeper pockets than you then you need to actually have a real case. If you're suing smaller companies you can use a lame ass case and bluff them out because they can't afford the ante. It sucks to know your opponent has a pair of 5's but you can't match the pot.

  5. It won't last by MM-tng · · Score: 1

    You can't build from this. Just build up the dislike. New products don't stand a chance. Now give me my N9 you damn Elop. I will write a check to Microsoft myself.

  6. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by x6060 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I hear if you say Darl McBrides name 3 times in a mirror he will appear and speak to you about his litigation techniques. A few days later you'll receive a cease and desist followed by a lawsuit about trade secrets from Microsoft.

  7. Software patents are evil by Max+Romantschuk · · Score: 1

    'nuff said. :(

    --
    .: Max Romantschuk :: http://max.romantschuk.fi/
    1. Re:Software patents are evil by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      The dickheads who voted this into legislation are evil. Sold out whores will do anything for a dollar.

    2. Re:Software patents are evil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The dickheads who let dickheads voting this into legislation are evil.

  8. My fear.... by DJ+Particle · · Score: 1

    My fear is they will use the agreements as a wedge to claim ALL of Linux as infringing. Luckily I think Torvalds and Shuttleworth have the resources to fight MS.

    1. Re:My fear.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, I don't think toreballs does.

    2. Re:My fear.... by andydread · · Score: 1

      repeat after me Linus Torvalds could not care any less. He does not care. I don't see him screaming on top of the rooftops about how bad this is. He does not care. Just as long as he can write code he's fine. Even if nobody uses Linux it in the future because Microsoft and other have made it too expensive he'll continue to write code and accept merges. Other than that he does not give a damn.

  9. What IP? by mugurel · · Score: 1

    So what intellectual property is this about? I couldn't find it in TFA.

    1. Re:What IP? by liquidweaver · · Score: 1

      So what intellectual property is this about? I couldn't find it in TFA.

      What is "Intellectual Property", anyways? I'm pretty sure that was term that was made up by those who hold lots of patents and copyrights - which are two things that are radically different. It's funny how capitalism relies on an open market, yet every business wants to monopolize ideas.

      --
      mov ah, 4ch
      int 21h
    2. Re:What IP? by md65536 · · Score: 1

      What is "Intellectual Property", anyways? I'm pretty sure that was term that was made up

      Uhm, you're kinda treading on my opinion security right now, and it's starting to infringe on my emotional ownership rights.

  10. The legal and patent system are broken. by impaledsunset · · Score: 1

    You know that your legal and patent system are broken when a company is making more money from a competitor product in the making of which they had no part than from their own product. If you can't make a good product of your own, simply take some of the money your competitor makes for the profit that you're entitled to!

    1. Re:The legal and patent system are broken. by NoNonAlphaCharsHere · · Score: 1

      This is why I won't have anything to do with Mono. Or Wine, for that matter.

    2. Re:The legal and patent system are broken. by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

      You know that your legal and patent system are broken when a company is making more money from a competitor product in the making of which they had no part than from their own product.

      Except that no one actually knows that they are making more money that way. And no, some link where a guy basically makes up figures is not an actual reliable source of information. Secondly, their mobile division is a drop in the bucket compared to the revenues from their OS, Office suite and tools divisions.

    3. Re:The legal and patent system are broken. by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      150 million from HTC so far, 30 million we know of in Win 7 phone sales. Who cares if they make more from Office, they are making more from android than Win Phone 7.

      They are keeping their old markets and their new innovation seems to be making protection money.

    4. Re:The legal and patent system are broken. by Surt · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Isn't that the whole point of having a patent system at all? So that your competitors can't just steal your ideas and undersell you to drive you out of business?

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    5. Re:The legal and patent system are broken. by impaledsunset · · Score: 1

      The article does base some of its figures on hearsay, but that doesn't change the fact that the legal and patent system allow such ridiculous scenario to occur and favour it, it doesn't change the fact that Microsoft are trying hard to make it happen, and it doesn't change the fact that the figures in the conclusion are not in the least surprising to anyone here, and sound so plausible that doubts are next to non-existent.

      But in the end, it doesn't matter if Microsoft are making "more" from Android or not, they are profiting from someone else's work, and not only profiting, they are directly picking their money. For those who love misleading metaphors, this is closer to armed robbery than copyright infringement is to theft.

    6. Re:The legal and patent system are broken. by Stormthirst · · Score: 1

      Yes, it is functioning as designed. It's a flawed design, but it is by design. This is why software patents are a really dumb idea.

    7. Re:The legal and patent system are broken. by msclrhd · · Score: 1

      It's racketeering plain and simple. See the Barns & Nobel case details.

      Microsoft (well, their lawyers) is going up to a company and:

      MS: Hey, I see you are using Android. Do you know you are infringing in our patents. You wouldn't want to get sued, would you?
      COMPANY: What patents?
      MS: We won't tell you unless you sign a non-disclosure agreement that will prevent you from revealing publicly available information.
      COMPANY: What if we say no?
      MS: We sue you to the ground.

      COMPANY signs patent agreement.

    8. Re:The legal and patent system are broken. by mcvos · · Score: 1

      This is not a matter of underselling. This is about competitors producing a superior product. It's about stifling competition and innovation.

  11. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by Threni · · Score: 1

    They've always been lawyers. Apple are marketing people. And Google are developers.

    Microsoft got lucky way back when and have been ruling ever since because of the fact. The internet will be their downfall; they still don't understand it, and Apple and Google are going to take them to the cleaners. This sort of crap is all they can muster.

  12. Re:MS-Brain Tumor v1.01 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    You heard it here first, folks; Dr. Bob the chiropractic quack practices "aggressive manipulation" on 9 year old boys.

  13. Citation needed by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Microsoft likely makes more money from Android than its own Windows phone platform,

    This statement just cries out for at least a small amount of supporting evidence. The article doesn't appear to make this claim - so did jbrodkin simply pull this out of his nether regions, as I suspect?

    --
    #DeleteChrome
    1. Re:Citation needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      This was something that was pointed out some time ago. Yes he probably should have added a link for reference.

      http://www.asymco.com/2011/05/27/microsoft-has-received-five-times-more-income-from-android-than-from-windows-phone/

    2. Re:Citation needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is a quote from the linked article!

      Microsoft reportedly receives $5 every time HTC sells an Android phone, leading some observers to conclude that Microsoft makes more money from Android than its own Windows Phone 7 platform.

    3. Re:Citation needed by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 1

      This was something that was pointed out some time ago. Yes he probably should have added a link for reference.

      http://www.asymco.com/2011/05/27/microsoft-has-received-five-times-more-income-from-android-than-from-windows-phone/

      Thank you. It's certainly not an unbelievable claim, given that Windows Phone 7 hasn't rocketed to the top of the sales charts.

      Hopefully Motorola won't capitulate.

      --
      #DeleteChrome
    4. Re:Citation needed by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

      Which is a pretty shitty link since it's just figures that some guy basically makes up.

    5. Re:Citation needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      jbrodkin is the writer of the article.

    6. Re:Citation needed by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 1

      Note that "leading some observers to conclude" is not even close to "Microsoft likely makes ...".

      --
      #DeleteChrome
    7. Re:Citation needed by TreeInMyCube · · Score: 1

      The info is tenuous, at best. JBrodkin's piece alleges that MS gets $5 USD for each Android device sold by the licensees. He does a back-of-the-envelope calculation that LicRevenue = $5 * ProjectedAndroidUnits / Year and Phone7Revenue = SomeProfit * ProjectedWinPh7Units / Year ... and concluded that LicRevenue > Phone7Revenue. Lots of wiggle room in the sales projections per year, given the volatility month-to-month and the guessed impact of iPhone5 on future sales. Will people hold off getting a new smartphone for a month or two, if they think iPhone5 is coming? Or that iPhone5 introduction would get them a better deal on an iPhone4?

    8. Re:Citation needed by ImaLamer · · Score: 1

      You didn't read the article....

      Microsoft reportedly receives $5 every time HTC sells an Android phone, leading some observers to conclude that Microsoft makes more money from Android than its own Windows Phone 7 platform.

    9. Re:Citation needed by ImaLamer · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Also, the submitter is the article writer... dipshit.

    10. Re:Citation needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I fail to see the difference between jbrodkin and "some observers"

    11. Re:Citation needed by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

      Yes and by "reportedly receives" he means that he's just made up that figure out of whole cloth since he has no actual figures to go by.

    12. Re:Citation needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since you replied to yourself, did you really mean to call yourself a dipshit? I guess you would really be the best to make that diagnosis ...

    13. Re:Citation needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft reportedly receives $5 every time HTC sells an Android phone, leading some observers to conclude that Microsoft makes more money from Android than its own Windows Phone 7 platform.

      That's from the article. Did you read it? lol Or are you an M$ troll surfing /. to "correct" these errors? HTC alone shipped 25 million phones last year. Google had a 33% market share at the end of 2010... compared to M$'s 3.1%.

      Math, my friend, math!

    14. Re:Citation needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft likely makes more money from Android than its own Windows phone platform,
                  This statement just cries out for at least a small amount of supporting evidence.

      No, it doesn't. What cries out for at least a small amount of supporting evidence is the claim that MS has against android. Notice that none of the shakedowns have gone to court.

    15. Re:Citation needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      exfreeeking zactlly.. This is a very 'tech hate ms' rant. Hey they are the 700lb gorilla (they have lost some weight) in the room. But it ignores the real giant in the room of smartphones, the big Q. They make an not insubstantial amount of each phone sale these days (i can not say how much but it is a lot more than you would think). What MS is getting is chicken feed comparatively. Also most of these sorts of deals turn into cross license deals. Meaning, dont sue each other out of existence.

      Also MS has been in the 'smart phone' business for a long while (nearly 15 years). That they have patents on these sorts of things is not surprising.

    16. Re:Citation needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you can, do. If you can't, teach. If you can't teach, administrate. Except in microsofts case, #2 "teach" is replaced with "litigate". When patent laws get rubbed out, half a second later, microsofts stock share price flies like a brick.

  14. Purchased IP? by billsf · · Score: 2

    How can any company expect to profit from 'purchased patents'. I don't think it'd fly in the more civilised world. If this is the case: NO Mercy. Even if Google won with pi*10^9 dollars, what good would it really be in the end? Let the innovators and not the trolls make out technology.

    BillSF

    1. Re:Purchased IP? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Let the innovators and not the trolls make out technology.

      Yes, but that would be Google fucked then. They'd have a pretty good search engine and nothing else.

      I'd be happy for people to tell me what I'm forgetting but the search algorithm and the business model (luring people in with 'free' services and selling them to advertisers) seems to be about it as far as Google's successful innovations are concerned.

    2. Re:Purchased IP? by tsotha · · Score: 1

      Let the innovators and not the trolls make out technology.

      How is it you think most innovators get paid off for the things they invent? There's nothing wrong with buying and selling rights to patents. Not everyone who gets even legitimate patents has the know-how and resources to bring his idea to market. The problem isn't that patents are bought and sold, the problem is the USPTO is awarding overly broad patents to for things that probably ought not be patentable to start with.

  15. Back to their roots by xednieht · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They never really were a tech company, IMO. Their innovations: EULA and software licensing. Most of their products were bought, copied stolen.

    --

    Hope is the currency of fools
    1. Re:Back to their roots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Surely you jest, as they are the largest spenders of R&D in the world.

    2. Re:Back to their roots by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

      You are measuring input, not output. Besides, MS is also known for shifty accounting practices.

    3. Re:Back to their roots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh? Tell us a tech company that you think IS innovative and I'll show you a company that has bought, copied and stolen.

    4. Re:Back to their roots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please. Bill Gates dropped out of Harvard to develop an OS. Then through hard work, good timing, and shrewd business sense he made himself the richest man in the world. And then you come along and write some trite comment on Slashdot like you know everything. Let's see you do better, then you can talk.

    5. Re:Back to their roots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, we all know of all the fine examples of groupware that Microsoft blatantly stole from to make Exchange, and how its really not difficult at all to find a drop in replacement for Exchange.

      Wasnt Exchange built in-house? Wasnt NT built in-house? What about NTFS? ActiveDirectory (based on LDAP, but still an MS invention)?

      These are all their core bread and butter; how are you going to claim that "most of their products were bought, copied, stolen" when their biggest and most important brands were done in-house?

      Its the periphery that they buy-- ntbackup, iexplore, Microsoft AntiSpyware (before Security Essentials / defender), etc.

    6. Re:Back to their roots by PmanAce · · Score: 1

      The Kinect for example is pretty techy...

      --
      Tired of my customary (Score:1)
    7. Re:Back to their roots by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 1, Interesting

      They never really were a tech company, IMO. Their innovations: EULA and software licensing. Most of their products were bought, copied stolen.

      Just like Google...

    8. Re:Back to their roots by CapuchinSeven · · Score: 1

      They bought it, it already existed.

    9. Re:Back to their roots by X3J11 · · Score: 1

      Please. Bill Gates dropped out of Harvard to develop an OS. Then through hard work, good timing, and shrewd business sense he made himself the richest man in the world. And then you come along and write some trite comment on Slashdot like you know everything. Let's see you do better, then you can talk.

      Bill Gates developed a BASIC interpreter and dropped out of Harvard. Then, with a relatively insignificant amount of money, dumb luck, and shrewd business sense, purchased someone else's operating system and made himself the richest man in the world. And you come along and write some erroneous comment on Slashdot like you know everything.

      Microsoft has done very little when it comes to innovation. Their history is filled with their inability to remain at the leading edge of software, and rather than developing the technologies to remain in the lead they simply bought out or sued their competition into oblivion. They also had a habit of taking other people's work and corrupting it to further bind people to their operating systems.

      Very few Microsoft products that exist today cannot be traced back to some other company's efforts somewhere in their history.

    10. Re:Back to their roots by X3J11 · · Score: 1

      These are all their core bread and butter; how are you going to claim that "most of their products were bought, copied, stolen" when their biggest and most important brands were done in-house?

      Its the periphery that they buy-- ntbackup, iexplore, Microsoft AntiSpyware (before Security Essentials / defender), etc.

      You need to dig through the history books a bit more, there's a considerable amount of now-irrelevant software from the days of DOS and the early origins of Windows NT, going all the way back to MS-DOS 1.0 itself - the product that provided the foundation of their empire.

    11. Re:Back to their roots by advocate_one · · Score: 1

      Bill Gates developed a BASIC interpreter and dropped out of Harvard.

      He didn't just drop out of Harvard... he jumped before he was kicked out... that BASIC interpreter was developed on stolen computer time and not only that, they'd been dumpster diving and used code they'd found in the bin...

      "That phase of Allen's life involved taking the bus - sports coat, tie, leather briefcase and all - down to the offices of local computer gurus. âoeI would boost Bill into dumpsters and we'd get these coffee-stained texts" of computer code from behind the offices, grinned Allen."

      PS... difficult to find real evidence on why he really left Harvard...

      --
      Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
  16. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by Sprouticus · · Score: 1, Informative

    As much as the anti-MS crowd on slashdot would like this to be true, just saying this does not make it the case. Even if MS got $10 for EVERY Android device, and the 500k untils/month I found on wikipedia is close to accurate, that is 6 million units per year, or $60 million a year. And even if you say that other patent troll-esque licensing agreements multiply that by 10x again to $600 million a year

    Microsoft made almost 17 billion last quarter.

    Microsoft is a lot of things, but they are not SCO. They are not classic patent trolls with no product. They are basically just like Apple, IBM and Oracle and Google and every other big company. They use their patents to maintain their market share and stifle competition. Bad, but not SCO bad.

  17. Re:MS-Brain Tumor v1.01 by RoFLKOPTr · · Score: 1

    You heard it here first, folks; Dr. Bob the chiropractic quack practices "aggressive manipulation" on 9 year old boys.

    Oh man, stop it, you're getting me all hot and bothered.

  18. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by vux984 · · Score: 1

    Apple are marketing people./em

    Apple is lawyers as much as marketing.

  19. Microsoft is evil again... by kallisti5 · · Score: 0

    ... well that didn't take long. Weren't they open source friendly like two months ago?

    1. Re:Microsoft is evil again... by md65536 · · Score: 1

      They're friendly like a date-rapist.

  20. Quizz! by flibuste · · Score: 0
    I remember a company who was in difficulties by not being able to sell enough products. It went into litigation mode trying to sue the hell out of everyone or everything that moves, hoping to generate revenues from those patent enforcements. This company no longer exists because that mode ended up not being sustainable as a good business.
    • Q1: Name said company
    • Q2: Name a company that is adopting the same "I'm losing it" tactics
  21. Re:MS-Brain Tumor v1.01 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    What about those of us getting "nerve issues" from your quack "medicine" and constant trolling of /.? Will you aggressively manipulate us, too? ...will you at least take me out to dinner first?

  22. Cheaper to pay the protection money than litigate by sl4shd0rk · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Microsoft has enough money to spend on court battles that many companies would rather pay the protection money than say "f#ck you". Sad, but that's the way it is. This is why monopolies are not such a good thing.

    --
    Join the Slashcott! Feb 10 thru Feb 17!
  23. truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    fucking cocksuckers

  24. Re:MS-Brain Tumor v1.01 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    You know, last I heard, hundreds of Facebook friends was almost the exact same thing as a medical license. In fact, once I get a few more friends I intent to remove my own appendix.

  25. Hmm, not Samsung then? by phonewebcam · · Score: 1

    Seems strange - the revenue from the handful of WP7 Samsung phones sold will amount to a rounding error compared to that from their Android sales.

    The new m$ mobile business policy: if you can't beat 'em, extort 'em.

    1. Re:Hmm, not Samsung then? by Tridus · · Score: 1

      Welcome to the US patent system: designed for patent trolls and lawyers by bought corrupt politicians.

      --
      -- "So they told me that using the download page to download something was not something they anticipated." - Bill Gates
    2. Re:Hmm, not Samsung then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And now Samsung as well http://www.electronista.com/articles/11/07/06/ms.faces.resistance.on.samsung.android.payments/

  26. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by h4rr4r · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Android is not the only ecosystem they shake down for protection money.

  27. Using HTC Estimates and WP7 Numbers, $150M $30M by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Informative

    Microsoft likely makes more money from Android than its own Windows phone platform,

    This statement just cries out for at least a small amount of supporting evidence. The article doesn't appear to make this claim - so did jbrodkin simply pull this out of his nether regions, as I suspect?

    It's been the subject of recent speculation given the numbers that HTC pays them $5 for each phone and has sold 30 million sets totaling $150 million. And then compare to what WP7 makes MS:

    Microsoft has admitted selling 2 million WP7 licenses, and assuming a price of $15 per license, that's $30 million in revenue.

    Okay so that could be incorrect but we're just seeing more and more Android licenses resulting in payment to Microsoft. And I don't think WP7 is keeping up with that.

    Is this conclusive? Not at all. The above numbers could be false. Is it probable? Well, that's for you to decide.

    --
    My work here is dung.
  28. If I worked for Microsoft by gilgongo · · Score: 0

    I'd be pretty depressed. I mean, have they done *anything* they can be proud of in the last 20 years? XBox maybe.

    --
    "And the meaning of words; when they cease to function; when will it start worrying you?"
    1. Re:If I worked for Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Visual Studio (best IDE ever done), .NET just to name a few

    2. Re:If I worked for Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clearly you have a different definition of "proud" than the rest of us......

    3. Re:If I worked for Microsoft by dna_(c)(tm)(r) · · Score: 0

      .NET is a shameless copy of Java - They innovated changing the capitalization of the first letter in words, though. And make it cross-out-other-platforms.

      VS is indeed the best after Eclipse, vi and Emacs (although the I never can remember in which order the last two should be mentioned, sorry)

    4. Re:If I worked for Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > .NET is a shameless copy of Java

      with a few nasty annoyances imposed upon Java for political reasons washed away. Microsoft, unlike Gosling, recognized that certain object types (like Strings) *are* inherently special and deserving of convenient treatment. I still curse the name of Gosling every time I'm forced to do some abomination like

      if ((something != null) && something.equals(whatever)) // ...

    5. Re:If I worked for Microsoft by sgt+scrub · · Score: 0

      The XBox is a shameless copy of your home built gamer PC.

      --
      Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
    6. Re:If I worked for Microsoft by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

      In addition to dna_(c)(tm)(r)'s comment, Visual Studio originated as a shameless copy of Borland's IDE.

      --
      Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
    7. Re:If I worked for Microsoft by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

      You need to give Code::Blocks another try. It is more portable IMHO than Eclipse. Needless to say VS (aka VpoS) isn't portable at all.

      --
      Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
    8. Re:If I worked for Microsoft by Xest · · Score: 1

      VS or no VS I find it incredible that anyone could claim Eclipse is better than anything. Have you really used it extensively and compared it to other IDEs? Eclipse is bottom of the pile trash- slow, prone to crashing, broken plugin system, lacking major features, not particularly great for usability, stupid workspace system.

      JDeveloper and NetBeans are far better than Eclipse at least, let alone Visual Studio.

      I agree .NET was a shameless copy of Java, but it's really not anymore. A combination of things through the years like anonymous methods, operator overloading, improved delegates, generics, LINQ, lambda expressions, and dynamic objects, have put C# way ahead of Java (and most other languages) nowadays. They had a slow start, but the C# team are definitely leaders in programming language evolution now, rather than mere imitators. as they were at the start This is really why C# usage is still rapidly accelerating whilst a number of indicators suggest Java is probably now in decline.

      Despite all this none of it's really new, just new in that it's all implemented together in a decent way, I do agree that the general gist of the argument in this thread that Microsoft haven't historically innovated much is true- Visual Studio really borrows more from Borland's older IDEs than anything. I don't think much truly can be called original in computing now though, you can always find something in history that looks similar but was simply implemented before it's time and so never caught on, or was never marketed right, or used with quite the right combination of other technologies and so on.

  29. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    actually, Google are advertising people.

  30. And that is where it ends too . by unity100 · · Score: 1

    suing htc is one thing, suing google is another thing.

    1. Re:And that is where it ends too . by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      We just need a 100% tax on LAWYERS then all the money drained into these cases will pay off the national debt... Between Apple, Gooogle, microsoft... There are $150 BILLION or so the government could use. It's not like those companies are using it in the economy...

    2. Re:And that is where it ends too . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would love to see this in action; the amount of money that would be put into that courtroom would make any sane person curl up in the fetal position and cry.

    3. Re:And that is where it ends too . by Bitmanhome · · Score: 1

      And suing Apple is a third thing. Suing Samsung would be .. what are we up to? .. four things. I'm pretty sure Microsoft can handle four things at once. Probably even more.

      --
      Not that this wasn't entirely predictable.
    4. Re:And that is where it ends too . by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

      Sorry mabhatter. They are already slated for additional tax cuts this year.

      --
      Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
    5. Re:And that is where it ends too . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do not understand why Google does not team up with Software Freedom Law Center and sue Microsoft over the so called infringing Linux patents. I mean if you look at the one we know about http://www.scribd.com/doc/51246791/Microsoft-vs-Barnes-Noble they are crap. They can be can be null by Prior Art or are so vague they would not stand up in court.

  31. Re:MS-Brain Tumor v1.01 by JSBiff · · Score: 1

    To what extent could some of those "aches and pains" be caused by something other than Electromagnetic Fields? E.g. talking on the phone with someone who is making you angry or stressed (e.g. afraid your boss is unhappy and you'll get fired; or your girlfriend/wife is chewing you a new one; etc)?

    Stress can certainly add 'aches and pains' to people, and I would not at all be surprised if the increase in people carrying cellphones has resulted in more stress due to the increased frequency which you might engage in such communications, because you can easily be reached 24 hours/day.

  32. Ideas are supposedly worth a dime a dozen by Normal+Dan · · Score: 1

    Looks like that's changing.

    --
    A unique way to learn a language: http://languageloom.com
    1. Re:Ideas are supposedly worth a dime a dozen by kikito · · Score: 1

      Nothing has changed. For the average bear, ideas are still farts in the wind.

      This just demonstrates that justice isn't the same for all of us. If you can afford a bunch of attorneys and a long procedure, you can buy your own rules.

    2. Re:Ideas are supposedly worth a dime a dozen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ideas worth a dime a dozen? lol.
      I agree: "supposedly"! :)

      Do you know what I tell certain manager- or engineer-types who always say that?
      "Okay then. Go on, and have just one good one.".
      They fail. ;)

      It's always those who can't have ideas that make this dumb statement. Those who engineer the new and improved oil lamp or manage the project of creating the eleventh installment of some sports game.
      And if they have ideas, they think their dumb pseudo-ideas are the best thing since sliced bread.

      No wonder they think ideas are worth nothing. Theirs really aren't better.
      Which can be seen when you look at what is patented.
      They truly think that's worth something! ;) Unbelievable!

      Or look at just about all GUI "desktop environments" out there. The only ones who dare to go a tiny bit off the path, are OS X and Compiz. And it's not really much except for digital bling-bling.

      I don't think anyone can, with a straight face, say that the invention of the wheel, car, computer, or Internet and the discovery of relativity theory, quantum mechanics, neural networks, etc weren't worth a shitload of shitloads of money.

      Boy am I happy that I'm making my own graphical shell right now. Which doesn't resemble the shitty windowing, mousing and monolithic application "frameworks" at all, and is a awesome thing, for everyone. (If somebody disagrees, that's just, because he can't imagine something better than that which he knows and exists. Which is pretty sad, isn't it? ;)

  33. We:"Put up or shut up." MS:"No. You'll see why." by Cajun+Hell · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Back when Microsoft started making waves about their patents, one of the things often shouted here on /. was "put up or shut up, tell us exactly which patents are being infringed." Nobody ever says what they are (though I think a FAT32 patent on legacy-formatted SD cards might have been mentioned).

    What's funny is that the silence didn't mean Microsoft was doomed to lose. AFAIK all the settlements are under NDAs (is this incorrect?). That means that nobody can even prevent the threats by making sure they don't infringe.

    I think licensing NDAs should be illegal. Not only do they passively encourage other acts of infringement, but they obscure the cost of patents that society is bearing. Of course, to patent trolls, these two reasons against license NDAs, are reasons for them...

    BTW, I don't think making such NDAs illegal would be an infringement of anyone's privacy rights or overreaching government involvement. We're talking about patents, so the premise is that the government is already involved in the transaction, by means of threatening the use of force (courts) against one of the participants. If you want privacy, use a trade secret instead. (It's not that laissez faire is necessarily wrong, but under laissez faire you can't have patents anyway, so the very discussion starts with the idea that laissez faire is off the table.)

    --
    "Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
  34. Patents by g0es · · Score: 1

    Anyone have any links on exactly what these patents are? I find the patent system incredibly frustrating. It would be one thing if these patents weren't so vague and open to interpretation, but with the way they currently are how the hell can you even create something that doesn't infringe on someone's patent? I guess I would fee differently if I had patents to profit from.

    1. Re:patents by ThosLives · · Score: 1

      and patents encourage innovation how?

      Apparently the method is to force innovation so you don't infringe, rather than merely "encourage" innovation.

      Of course, the problem with many patents (as has been demonstrated by a horse beaten so badly it is now perhaps just a few molecules which once represented a horse) is that they are granted when they are so broad as to cover the desired effect rather than an implementation of the desired effect. This makes it impossible to innovate in many areas.

      The fix to the patent system would simply be "Patents must be on novel, useful, unobvious machines or methods to achieve an effect, rather than a description of an effect."

      A similarly powerful revision, though I don't really have a good strong wording for it, is something like "Patents shall not be granted to arbitrary designs such as particular encoding mechanisms (for instance, use of the number 1 to represent 'red' versus the number 2 to represent 'red'." To rule out silly things like particular data recording formats being patented.

      --
      "There are a dozen opinions on a matter until you know the truth. Then there is only one." - CS Lewis (paraprhase)
  35. Wasn't TomTom one of them too? by JSBiff · · Score: 1

    Aren't some of TomTom's newer GPS units Android powered?

    Microsoft sued TomTom over patents a few years back (I don't think at the time that TomTom was using Android, specifically, but they were using Linux in their devices). TomTom ended up settling with Microsoft, so I would expect that same settlement would cover any use of Android or any other flavor of Linux.

    1. Re:Wasn't TomTom one of them too? by g0es · · Score: 1

      From what I remember Tom Tom was Linux based and Microsoft went after them because of the file system they implemented for map storage which i believe was FAT based.

    2. Re:Wasn't TomTom one of them too? by KingMotley · · Score: 2

      Mostly correct, not just FAT based, but it used the same technique for storing long file names in a FAT file system that Microsoft patented. If TomTom would have stuck with 8.3 filenames they would have been ok.

    3. Re:Wasn't TomTom one of them too? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It wasn't about using Linux, it was about the FAT filesystem. Any Linux kernel compiled without FAT support would be clear of that particular issue; I'm not sure whether a kernel with FAT support (e.g. for user-plugged SD cards) but with no FAT filesystems from the factory would infringe or not.

      Since I'm sure that settlement was secret (like all of them *sigh*), we can only guess what was or wasn't covered. If they're licensing different patents now, that settlement might not cover it entirely.

      (Captcha: "bastards" -- how apropos)

  36. Re:MS-Brain Tumor v1.01 by grub · · Score: 1

    lol, man I wish I had mod points... :)

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  37. Re:Using HTC Estimates and WP7 Numbers, $150M $30M by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

    Free market at its finest !

    --
    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  38. Like Linus Said: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "If Microsoft ever does applications for Linux, it means I've won."

  39. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yet they are still rolling out major updates to Windows Phone 7 and Windows with Windows 8. Add on their competitive cloud offerings (including Office) and you should get the point.

    I doubt you, or most others will though.

  40. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

    Yes, but they are very nice Lawyers.

    --
    Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
  41. reminds me a lot of IBM and SUN by Lead+Butthead · · Score: 1

    I was told this is a true story (though I probably remember some of it wrong) -

    IBM's Nazgul came calling at SUN one day and demands licensing fee for several patents. After some internal reviews of the patents in question, SUN concluded that there are no merit to IBM's claims. IBM's Nazgul were completely unfazed; "Do you seriously believe that of the hundred thousands of patents in our portfolio, you are NOT in violation of ANY?" Needless to say, SUN ink the licensing agreement.

    Considering the amount of patents M$ is sitting on, most probably paid just to avoid any expensive and prolonged litigation. Merit has absolutely nothing to do with it.

    --
    ELOI, ELOI, LAMA SABACHTHANI!?
    1. Re:reminds me a lot of IBM and SUN by Svartalf · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, it's probably apocryphal. I honestly and SERIOUSLY doubt that IBM, let alone Cravath, would be party to extortion of any kind- and the story describes that very practice in question, which is a felony in most jurisdictions for good reasons.

      You can call it "leverage", but in the end, it's still just extortion.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    2. Re:reminds me a lot of IBM and SUN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I think Oracle took this attitude towards Google with the Java patents.

      Now those patents are undergoing scrutiny by the USPTO, and being mostly invalidated.

      And once they are invalidated, they are invalidated for everyone, forever.

      That's not such a bad thing.

    3. Re:reminds me a lot of IBM and SUN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's the story: http://www.forbes.com/asap/2002/0624/044.html

    4. Re:reminds me a lot of IBM and SUN by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      You don't work at IBM, do you? IBM's shady business practices have only begun with having subsidiaries work with Nazi govt... FFS! All of the soviet mainframes were IBM design based by the 1980-ies!!!

    5. Re:reminds me a lot of IBM and SUN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, according to James Gosling, that is a true story. Here is an interview with him, and the IBM shakedown is in the 3rd paragraph from the top. http://www.zdnet.com/blog/open-source/gosling-javas-creator-joins-google/8578

      He notes that it nearly put Sun out of business, and to prevent that from happening in the future, Sun patented "everything".

  42. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What do you mean "becoming". They just don't feel the need to use proxies for it anymore, since the antitrust watch was lifted.

    BTW: How is their behavior not racketeering?
    It's *exactly* like racketeering. Including "Oh, what a nice business you have here. It would be a shame if something happened to it.", the equivalent do demolishing some piece of furniture, etc. Down to them being convicted criminals. (I'm sure everyone has seen the list of convictions Microsoft got all over the world over the decades.)

  43. Re:Cheaper to pay the protection money than litiga by dargaud · · Score: 1

    It's never a good idea to pay the Danelaw...

    --
    Non-Linux Penguins ?
  44. considering where Billy came from by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Considering where Billy G came from (family of lawyers,) this is a surprise?

  45. Re:Cheaper to pay the protection money than litiga by KingMotley · · Score: 1

    You don't have to be a monopoly to have enough money to have a good legal team. Your statement "This is why monopolies are not such a good thing" is false. It's unrelated.

    Of course if you meant to say, this is why companies who make money are not such a good thing that would be related, but I think most people would agree that companies that make money are generally a good thing.

  46. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Android is not the only ecosystem they shake down for protection money.

    ... which is why he said "... even if you say that other patent troll-esque licensing agreements multiply that by 10x again to $600 million a year." Your argument is already taken into account in his math.

  47. Dr. Bob! Hi! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Charles LaTan, F.D. here! Good to see ya still posting and fighting the good fight against this non-sense and superstition called "science" that bases their opinions on "evidence" and "data"!

    Anyway, back on topic .... You are so correct and I'm seeing the same issues in my practice. These poor kids come in and I have run the Tachyon particle and field analyzer on them and usually, just one special Tachyon Quartz crystal fixes them but there are some case that are really bad - yes, the ones that need the dead chicken and Voodoo dance by the naked priestess. One poor kid we referred to one of your colleges got his adjustment and the crystal and STILL had issues.

    His stupid parents took him to an orthopedist and well, they got REAL lucky. A couple of sessions with the physical therapist and some Aleve fixed him up - but no matter, that's just the outlier and they have NO proof what so ever that their treatment worked. Fortunately, the parents are coming back for the Tachyon treatment and understand that the crystals and voodoo is what really did it. Some people just respond to the placebo effect from people with those "MD"s at the end of their name.

    Oh well. People are just stupid.

  48. Re:We:"Put up or shut up." MS:"No. You'll see why. by mabhatter654 · · Score: 2

    Interesting. If these companies are licensing patents, isn't it law that those be disclosed on the "credits" screen or something??? I thought if an item sold had a patent on it it legally MUST have the number on it to be valid. As these companies are essentially paying for a license, there should be a page crediting these Microsoft patents.

  49. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by rolfwind · · Score: 1

    I think Atari stayed afloat for years like this, way before SCO, and moderately successful at it too.

  50. SCO was really Microsoft all along by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft was funding the entire thing.

    1. Re:SCO was really Microsoft all along by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The revelation!!!!!

  51. Some of the infinging patents: by echostorm · · Score: 2

    here are a few of the patents Microsoft claims against Android:

      People also expect to be able to access command windows without interfering with the application's main window, and to be able to tab through various screens to find the information they need. Microsoft's patents enable the opening of a new, tabbed control window. (U.S. Patent No. 5,889,522)
      Surfing the web quickly is a key device feature. One of the patents in this case enables devices to show the content of a page even while the background is still rendering, allowing users to interact with the page more quickly. (U.S. Patent No. 5,778,372)
      Users also want to know the status of their downloads. A Microsoft patent provides information about download status on top of the content display. (U.S. Patent No. 6,339,780)
      The ability to select text is critical to working with documents. One of our patents enables users to select text, see what is selected via highlighting, and expand the selection in either direction as desired. (U.S. Patent No. 6,891,551)
      Users also want to annotate e-books and other documents. A Microsoft patent allows people to insert and review annotations without changing the underlying document, and to select annotations and be brought to the related portion of the document. (U.S. Patent No. 6,957,233)

    1. Re:Some of the infinging patents: by echostorm · · Score: 2

      others include:
            5,579,517: Common name space for long and short filenames
              5,758,352: Common name space for long and short filenames
              6,621,746: Monitoring entropic conditions of a flash memory device as an indicator for invoking erasure operations
              6,826,762: Radio interface layer in a cell phone with a set of APIs having a hardware-independent proxy layer and a hardware- specific driver layer
              6,909,910: Method and system for managing changes to a contact database
              7,644,376: Flexible architecture for notifying applications of state changes
              5,664,133: Context sensitive menu system/menu behavior
              6,578,054: Method and system for supporting off-line mode of operation and synchronization using resource state information
              6,370,566: Generating meeting requests and group scheduling from a mobile device

    2. Re:Some of the infinging patents: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Crap, I was infringing on some of those patents while reading your post. Microsoft is going to cash in on that text highlighting habit of mine. And those download progress bars I had open.

    3. Re:Some of the infinging patents: by edxwelch · · Score: 2

      but that stuff is in every OS. Why aren't MS sueing Apple, Nokia and Research In Motion too?

    4. Re:Some of the infinging patents: by phonewebcam · · Score: 1

      Every one of those has prior art - the text selection one most likely before m$ even existed.

    5. Re:Some of the infinging patents: by pedestrian+crossing · · Score: 1

      The ones listed in the B&N response:

      5,778,372: Remote retrieval and display management of electronic document with incorporated images

      A browser remotely retrieves electronic documents from a remote computer network for viewing by a user. For enhancing responsiveness, the browser initially displays an electronic document without a background image so that the electronic document is initially displayed more quickly. The browser also prioritizes downloading of embedded images of the document by their incorporation in the currently visible portion of the electronic document. Further, the browser dynamically creates additional connections for retrieving resources incorporated into the electronic document from the remote computer network.

      6,339,780: Loading status in a hypermedia browser having a limited available display area

      Described herein is a portable computer having a limited display area. An Internet or other hypermedia browser executes on the portable computer to load and display content in a content viewing area. During times when the browser is loading content, the browser displays a temporary, animated graphic element over the content viewing area. The graphic element is removed after the content is loaded, allowing unobstructed viewing of the loaded content.

      5,889,522: System provided child window controls

      New varieties of child window controls are provided as system resources that application programs may exploit. The preferred embodiment of the present invention provides a dynamic link library (DLL) for implementing the new child window controls as part of an operating system. The new child window controls include a header bar control for providing header bars in application programs. The new controls also include a hot key control that allows a user to view and edit hot key combinations. The new controls further include a tab control for establishing tabs that differentiate amongst pages in user interfaces provided by application programs. An image list data type is defined and functions are provided for manipulating the image list data type. Image lists include multiple like-sized images that are stored efficiently in a single bitmap.

      6,891,551: Selection handles in editing electronic documents

      A computer system and method for highlighting and selecting elements of electronic documents is disclosed. In one embodiment, a selection area identifies an initial selection of data, and one or more selection handles appear on the selection area to allow dynamic resizing of the selection area to select a larger or smaller portion of data or number of items.

      6,957,233: Method and apparatus for capturing and rendering annotations for non-modifiable electronic content

      A s

      --
      A house divided against itself cannot stand.
  52. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

    No, no - they're lawyers in white* suits.

    *the color of clothing has no bearing on their litigation motivations.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  53. Crowdsource prior-art! by KreAture · · Score: 1

    Why can't we have a website dedicated to invalidating patents?
    Crowdsourcing prior-art info preferably public so, as to invalidate the patent without moving domain over to a new patent.
    It can't be that hard. Ofcource, if the patent is not yet granted it is easier as then you just send the info along to the examiners who in turn can force the filer to prove it isn't prior art. Once it's granted however we need a way to prove it is prior art as the onus is on us. (google the word, I hate it too...)

    1. Re:Crowdsource prior-art! by swillden · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't make any difference in this case, since no one knows what the patents are.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  54. Re:MS-Brain Tumor v1.01 by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    I don't think anyone cares about your Facebook achievements here, but your list of /. freaks - which is a more telling statistic hereabouts - is not exactly short.

    Actually, no, scratch that. It is surprisingly short, considering your clumsy but persistent attempts to spam completely unrelated topics with promotion of your quackery.

  55. Americans... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can't you see how wrong all this big-buck bullying is? Write to your congressmen or senators! Change the law!

  56. patents by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and patents encourage innovation how?

  57. dragonlinux by decora · · Score: 1

    and some other old school linuxes used to have a way to implement long filenames on top of FAT filesystems.

    i wonder if they should have sued microsoft for violating their patent

  58. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Did they hire SCO attorneys or laywers?"

    What do you mean did the hire... They've always been on the payroll!!!

  59. Doh.... by mswhippingboy · · Score: 1

    Microsoft likely makes more money from Android than its own Windows phone platform.

    Well hell, that tells us a lot doesn't it. They make more money from furniture repair or BillG pinup posters than from their Windows phone platform.

    --
    Sometimes the light at the end of the tunnel is the headlight of an oncoming train.
  60. Re:We:"Put up or shut up." MS:"No. You'll see why. by jdgeorge · · Score: 1

    Interesting. If these companies are licensing patents, isn't it law that those be disclosed on the "credits" screen or something??? I thought if an item sold had a patent on it it legally MUST have the number on it to be valid. As these companies are essentially paying for a license, there should be a page crediting these Microsoft patents.

    Best of my understanding: Nope. It's not like trademarks, where you have to actively defend the mark in order to retain the rights to the mark.

    As the patent holder, you can let everyone in the world use your invention for free with zero acknowledgement of your genius, or you can go around demanding payment with a pinky at the corner of your mouth. Your mileage will vary based on real-world conditions and the geothermal activity of your volcano hideout.

  61. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

    Did they hire SCO attorneys or laywers?

    No, these lawyers are competent and got money out of their marks.

    --
    Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  62. Re:Using HTC Estimates and WP7 Numbers, $150M $30M by onefriedrice · · Score: 1

    Free market at its finest !

    Except that there is no example of a free market in this story. The whole patent system (government granting exclusive rights to an idea) is yet another governmental mechanism that encourages the development of monopolies and is definitely not a free market principle. Another case where we would be better served by the government just getting out of the way. Software patents are especially ridiculous considering software is just an expression of mathematics.

    --
    This author takes full ownership and responsibility for the unpopular opinions outlined above.
  63. Re:Cheaper to pay the protection money than litiga by LordLucless · · Score: 1

    Danegeld

    --
    Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
  64. Re:MS-Brain Tumor v1.01 by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

    So he's a republican?

    As for TFA this is just damned smart business and if it were Apple or Google doing this the fanbois would be lining up to defend it. How much has MSFT spent on buying up patents this decade? How much have they spent on the patents they've filed? all this does is allow them to get a ROI and I would point out unlike certain OTHER companies...cough cough Apple cough...MSFT has been pretty damned good about giving RAND access to just about everything they've ever done. Don't forget that before they sued they offered TomTom the SAME RAND they offered every flash OEM and got the finger in return.

    So don't get pissy that the "free as in beer" standing on a corner with a tin cup business model keeps you from paying RAND licenses, it isn't the job of MSFT or any other corp to prop up your failed business model, which I would argue the deaths or dying spasms of companies like Sun, Novell, and Mandriva shows this is the case. Oh and Proptip: Linux DOES infringe on MSFT patents, because it would be mathematically impossible for it NOT to with the sheer number of patents MSFT has, just as AMD infriges on Intel and vice versa. What are you gonna do, come up with a totally convoluted and ass backwards way for 2+2=4 to keep from infringing? Better start ripping all those video codecs out while you are at it, because with over 2000 patents MPEG-LA pretty much owns video compression/decompression.

    In the end it isn't MSFT's fault you don't have the money to buy patents like everyone else, it isn't MSFT's fault you want to give your product away for free. The MSFT patents are filed in black and white for all to see at the patent office, feel free to try to rewrite your entire OS to avoid them. Good luck with that BTW.

    Oh and a final bit of food for thought...you are worried about the old dog when it is the young wolves you need to worry about. As in TFA you can do a RAND license agreement and send MSFT on its way, while whom you can't pull that off with is the shitload of patent trolls buying patents like they are going out of style that will want everything including the office furniture, since the only money they make is by bleeding companies. Between that and TiVo showing the corps of the world how to turn Linux into a proprietary OS by simply adding code signing or eFuses? You got bigger things to worry about than MSFT setting up RAND licensing deals with headset makers.

    --
    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  65. Re:We:"Put up or shut up." MS:"No. You'll see why. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He's talking about the licensing agreement (for how much and under what terms) of the patent, not the fact that they are licensing it.

  66. The Manager Song, by Steve Ballmer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All of their products were bought, copied, stolen.

    There, fixed that for you.

    Oh wait, there was MS Bob and Clippy. Those were results of Bill's rose-colored glasses when looking at ideas of his wife*. Can't blame a guy for that. ;) (You can blame his wife* for it though. ;)

    * And I don't mean the Ballmer Butch.
    ...
    *imagines "I'm a Lumberjack", sung by Ballmer:*

    I'm a manager and I'm okay
    I sleep all night and I yell all day

    He's a manager and he's okay
    He sleeps all night and he yells all day

    I cut down jobs, you eat my shorts
    I go crash the new PC
    On Wednesdays I throw wood chairs
    And have deep-fried lard for tea

    He cuts down jobs, you eat his shorts
    He goes crash the new PC
    On Wednesdays he throws wood chairs
    And has deep-fried lard for tea

    I'm a manager and I'm okay
    He's a manager and he's okay
    I sleep all night and I yell all day
    He sleeps all night and he yells all day

    I cut down jobs, I flip and jump
    I like to run MS Bob
    I put on women's clothing
    And like to be on top

    He cuts down jobs, he flips and jumps
    He likes to run MS Bob
    He puts on women's clothing
    And loves to be on top...??

    I'm a manager and I'm okay
    He's a manager and he's okay
    I sleep all night and I yell all day
    He sleeps all night and he yells all day

    I cut down jobs, I wear high heels
    Suspenders and a bra
    I wish I'd been Bill's girlie
    Instead of Melinda

    He cuts down jobs, he wears high heels
    Suspenders and a bra...?!
    . .

    Heeeeee...'s a developer and he's okay
    He sleeps all night and he yells all day...

    He's a developer and he's okay
    He sleeps all night and he yells all day...

    1. Re:The Manager Song, by Steve Ballmer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh damn. Some errata:
      1. s/And like to be on top/And love to be on top/
      2. s/developer/manager/ (In the last two paragraphs.)

  67. Re:MS-Brain Tumor v1.01 by s73v3r · · Score: 1

    >As for TFA this is just damned smart business and if it were Apple or Google doing this the fanbois would be lining up to defend it.

    Yes, but there would also be loads of people claiming they're the new evil for doing it, and that they're "Worse than Microsoft ever was."

    As for your whole rant about FOSS and RAND licenses, while I may not disagree that it's not Microsoft's fault these projects can't afford RAND license fees, I will say it is largely Microsoft's fault that they have to in the first place. Most of those things shouldn't have been patentable in the first place.

  68. Re:We:"Put up or shut up." MS:"No." by Cajun+Hell · · Score: 1

    Just the fact that they are licensing it (specifically: what patent) would be a great improvement. Other terms of the agreement are less important. Knowing those other terms would be nice too (for purposes of measuring the cost of the patent system) but even knowing that Red Hat or Novell or HTC licensed Patent X from Microsoft for use in some particular product, would help people to know that Patent X is the threat.

    That would be enough for the rest of the world to come together and either fight Patent X or work around infringing it. Look at the situation right now: we are being divided and conquered by the secret settlements. There is currently no defense against this attack (except lots of money). Opening up the settlements could help with that.

    --
    "Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
  69. Re:MS-Brain Tumor v1.01 by node+3 · · Score: 1

    As for TFA this is just damned smart business and if it were Apple or Google doing this the fanbois would be lining up to defend it.

    Looks like the same is true for MS doing it.

  70. Re:We:"Put up or shut up." MS:"No. You'll see why. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    B&N refused to sign the NDA and released some info on how weak the patents in question are:
    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/04/27/barnes_and_noble_response_to_microsoft_suit/

  71. Re:We:"Put up or shut up." MS:"No. You'll see why. by mdmkolbe · · Score: 1

    While I like the idea, I'm not sure how to get the implementation to work. The problem is I don't have to "license" the patent to you, I just have to wave my rights to or contractually promise not to sue you for infringing on my patent. I don't have to put you "under NDA", the contract just has to stipulate that the "license" becomes void if you reveal the contents of the contract.

    Now, if we made void all contracts that contain in NDA on their contents, then I could see it working. But short of that, it seems like it would be pretty hard to define what constitutes "NDA licensing" contracts without leaving big loopholes.

  72. Are they creating jobs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Right now, when we really need forwarding thinking, innovating companies to create jobs, all we're getting is a bunch of navel gazers leeching of each other. This isn't just true of Microsoft of course.

  73. mod parent up by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    wish i had points

  74. GOOG vs. MSFT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A lot of people will say they only do this until Google sticks it's nose in because Google is somehow the big happy protect-all corporation. But that won't happen, because Google is not on par with Microsoft. Microsoft's money is three times that of Google's. Microsoft has patents out the yang. That means if they wanted to play the fun family board game of Litigation, Microsoft could spend three times as much to help their case, and bring up a shit ton of patents to make business feel like hell. And from the sounds of it, Microsoft's patents do actually apply to the situation, so why would Google declare all out war? If I was Google, I would try to work with the beast, rather than face off against it.

  75. Re:MS-Brain Tumor v1.01 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So he's a republican?

    No, he's a Democrat.

    See how pointless and stupid that is?

  76. Re:Using HTC Estimates and WP7 Numbers, $150M $30M by 0123456 · · Score: 1

    Free market at its finest !

    There's nothing 'free market' about patents.

  77. Glenn, is that you? by gosand · · Score: 1

    Is this conclusive? Not at all. The above numbers could be false. Is it probable? Well, that's for you to decide.

    This sounds like something Glenn Beck would say and doesn't really help your case all that much.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  78. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    500k per month? Try more like 500k per day...
    http://www.csmonitor.com/Innovation/Horizons/2011/0628/Android-activations-now-total-500-000-a-day-Google

  79. hey, if you cant create.... by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    ...sue you way to profit ( and/or get laws passed that guarantee you income ). Sad really that we have come to this point in our society.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:hey, if you cant create.... by andydread · · Score: 1

      We have come to this point because we bitch on slashdot while they bitch to congress and the senate. Get it? How about you join us and write a letter to your congressman and senator about this? Explain to them that Microsoft is again abusing their monopoly in the marketplace by running an extortion campaign to drive up the price of competing products to push them out of the marketplace. Point to the statements from Barnes and Noble

  80. Actually no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It would cost less to have just written a driver for ext2 to load the flash card.
    The code was already out there for Windows.

    Google failed to plan ahead.

  81. The TI Model by ISoldat53 · · Score: 1

    Texas Instruments has made a fortune suing over patents.

    1. Re:The TI Model by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

      TI actually creates their stuff. They have engineers that design and build real things. Microsoft's patents are mostly from consuming other small companies. Worse, those companies are usually consumed after being pushed out of the market by Microsoft dirty tricks.

      --
      Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
  82. Suing for....? by mchawi · · Score: 1

    The cost and list of phones looks very similar to the phone sets that support Microsoft's Exchange Active Sync push technology. Is the lawsuit definitely something to do with Linux or could it just be licensing fees for synchronizing email?

  83. Disappointing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Though I've done plenty of passionate Microsoft-hating, up until recently I tended to be on their side whenever lawyers were involved. Microsoft is as much a victim of the broken IP system as anyone else, as an occasional multi-hundreds-of-million-dollar East Texas patent lawsuit sometimes shows. (Though at least against non-trolls they're able to defend themselves with cross-licensing, unlike the other 99% of the software industry. Ok, so "as much a victim" was an exaggeration, but they still deserved some sympathy.)

    The "Halloween Memos" showed an uglier side, but a lot of people said that wasn't going to be their real strategy and for many years it didn't appear they were doing it.

    The effect of patents and copyright in combatting Linux remains to be investigated.

    Apparently the investigation has been concluded and they have truly crossed the line.

    If buying the Nortel patents is your company's biggest recent news, rather than a product announcement, I'm not sure you're still a tech company. And the biggest news before that is that you paid someone literally a billion dollars to use your product.

    This is a new low. People admitting in public that they worked for Microsoft, used to sometimes get 'em dirty looks, but at least they could glare back and say with at least a little pride, that they were doing something. There are worse things than working for a half-geek company. But I'm not sure you even have that anymore.

    You know what my Science Fiction revenge against Microsoft would be? It would involve a time machine. And no, I wouldn't go back and kill them. No, I would do something far nastier. I would go back in time and kidnap them. I would take Microsoft employees from 20 years ago or earlier, but particularly concentrating on the Apple "look and feel" lawsuit era. I would bring them to the present day to get a look at their future selves. And then I would send them back to their time, but each of them armed with a gun and one bullet.

  84. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by sqldr · · Score: 1

    None of the above happened, but I'll be sending you a bill for the mirror.

    --
    I wrote my first program at the age of six, and I still can't work out how this website works.
  85. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And they also get a shakedown form other companies too. Patents are a never endign escaltion of shakedowns and lawyers

  86. $60M here, $60M there by retroworks · · Score: 1

    I thought that's how you become a $17b company?

    --
    Gently reply
  87. Re:Using HTC Estimates and WP7 Numbers, $150M $30M by straponego · · Score: 1

    The interesting thing about this is it sets a value on not using Windows. To many, many millions of people, it's worth $5 + markup to not have to use WP7. So the market has determined that WP7's value is -$5.00. I'm sure it's worth more than ten times that negative amount, but MS can't rush the shakedown too much or they'll either kill their hosts or ramp up the immune systems of their hosts (i.e., companies which aren't just parasites, because they actually produce value).

  88. Re:Using HTC Estimates and WP7 Numbers, $150M $30M by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Free market at its finest !

    Bumper sticker wisdom at its finest.

  89. Re:We:"Put up or shut up." MS:"No. You'll see why. by poppycock · · Score: 1

    Setting aside the question about patens for a moment, your argument would apply to any contract. I mean, it is in the end a court that enforces a contract. Surely you don't intend for the terms of all contracts to be public, do you?

  90. Just as I was starting to feel sorry for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They show their true colours once again.

  91. Re:Using HTC Estimates and WP7 Numbers, $150M $30M by elashish14 · · Score: 1

    $5 for the patents.
    $15 for the whole operating system.

    So by those numbers, one would infer that 33% of the value of MS's OS is held in patents.

    I hope that those numbers are seriously wrong. Then again, getting $5/phone for doing nothing is pretty outrageous

    --
    I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
  92. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by cavreader · · Score: 1

    MS has always been lawyers because I can't remember a time in the past 20 years when someone wasn't suing them over something. Apple are hardware specialist. Proprietary hardware has been the company policy since inception. They suffered when cheaper commodity became the norm. They were so bad off for a while that MS had to invest in Apple to make sure the company survived. Google is comprised of advertisers and marketers that just happen to use good tech to satisfy their main money making operations.

  93. Re:We:"Put up or shut up." MS:"No. You'll see why. by Rich0 · · Score: 2

    Simple solution - just make a change to how contract law works. A contract is legally binding when two parties communicate their agreement to be bound to the terms to a court, which then publishes the contract.

    If you keep the terms of an agreement secret, then a court will not uphold that agreement. That means that if you secretly pay MS a lot of money not to sue you, they can sue you anyway. Hence, nobody will secretly pay a lot of money to MS not to sue them.

    While we're at it, in the special case of transfers of real-estate the court keeps an index of property owners, updated based on those published contracts. No need for title insurance now, either.

  94. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    [citation needed]

  95. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by andydread · · Score: 1

    Google uses patents to stifle competition....[Citation Needed]

  96. Re:MS-Brain Tumor v1.01 by quetzalblue · · Score: 1

    > Linux DOES infringe on MSFT patents, because it would be mathematically impossible for it NOT to with the sheer number of patents MSFT has,

    Darl McBride, is that you ? You still going on about that Linux patent issue ? I'd have thought that when IBM was in court defending itself against SCO this particular issue has been put to rest. Boy, that was big big news here a few years back and now we get MSFT shills flogging this dead horse ? I believe if there are patents out there that are being infringed (and when boneheads try to patent individual letters in an alphabet .. kinda like "i", I'm sure there are infringements), the lawyers involved will be active - or not. Depends how big the target.

    Lets wait and see if MSFT will go after GOOG. This should be good entertainment Break out the popcorn !

  97. MIcrosoft Linux Tax by andydread · · Score: 1

    Microsoft will eventually extract a tax from any successful Linux device/computer sold with Linux installed. This is their goal. Eventually if you purchase a device with Linux installed you will be paying the Microsoft Tax. There will be no way to avoid it. Bitching on slashdot won't help. The greater Linux community is powerless. Linux developers don't seem to care at least they don't seem very vocal about it. They will continue developing software for Microsoft to claim as their own. Everyone has their collective heads buried in the sand. Barnes and Noble are the only ones standing up to this campaign by Microsoft. I wish B&N well. I will no longer recommend Microsoft products to anyone for any reason what so ever.

  98. Re:MS-Brain Tumor v1.01 by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    I'd advise starting with someone else's appendix first; if you have a few hundred facebook friends you're bound to know someone with appendicitis; and in this country there is a good chance they don't have insurance. Then if you get it wrong, you can learn from that before you remove your own.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  99. Re:Using HTC Estimates and WP7 Numbers, $150M $30M by BlackSmithNZ · · Score: 1

    I think this analysis is actually a good thing.

    First up, I think the numbers probably aren’t that far off. Right now MS probably lose quite a lot of money per WP7 phone given the investment they have had to put in to get adoption going (giving away large numbers to staff, developers, advertising and something like $1b to Nokia alone) on top of development costs and infrastructure.
    Even if they have sold 5m phones retail with a gross profit of $15 per unit (and I think they are not selling all that fast), they are probably still losing on every unit sold.

    Compared with that, the income from Android sales, while modest in terms of total income, is almost pure profit; a few lawyers filing legal threats and signing up contracts, and then pure profit on development and patent costs that (in the case of FAT patents) was spent last century.

    If you were a shareholder, would you invest in Steve Ballers business model which is to spend billions trying to reach a point where they might sell say 10m licenses at $15, but competing not only with a free product bankrolled by not only Google but an army of companies like HTC, Samsung and Motorola, but also with a company even larger and more profitable than MS (Apple) which is selling a market leading OS that is far ahead in terms of terms of infrastructure, user base and mature products and design.

    Or invest in an alternative business model in which little or nothing is spent or risked, and instead they might sell 100m licenses at $5 each. No competition other than open source developers trying to work around patents? No infrastructure at all, and MS are freed to develop tile like (Win8 looking?) interfaces on-top of Android as with the HTC sense layer, along with partnerships like the Bing in China deal. In fact MS are free to take Android entirely and use it as a mobile platform for .NET etc; its only pride that stops them.

    In the end, if even some of the bean counters at MS are thinking about option B, MS has to consider working with platforms that are stronger than them.

    They have done this when they ended up supporting iOS by shipping apps for iOS. I always thought that having tools like Visual Studio or Office on all platforms would be a good thing? I know that technically, almost impossible to happen (and MS culture would have to change) but Office 2012 running on Ubuntu or an iPad/Android tablet would be something I would love to see.

    I always though MS trying to subvert standards and control the platform was a bad thing; if they make more money off open source, standard platforms that trying to push their own propriety solutions which they control entirely, then we all benefit. If their patents get in the way, developers will route around it (as with GIF, being replaced with PNG) and MS know that.

  100. MS refunds? by Ostracus · · Score: 2

    If in the future the patents are found groundless, will all those who paid get their money back?

    --
    Shai Schticks:"You don't make peace with friends, you make peace with enemies"
    1. Re:MS refunds? by Eskarel · · Score: 1

      No one.

      Those are the breaks. You make a settlement because you aren't sure of the outcome and the risks of trying to find out aren't worth it. It's a lot like poker, you don't get to find out if you really would have won unless you put your money on the line to find out.

    2. Re:MS refunds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No because laws (and law changes) are not retroactive (generally speaking)

    3. Re:MS refunds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most likely, no.

      The companies would have to sue and since MS has enough money to lawyer up through doomsday the action would be cost prohibitive.

  101. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by QuantumRiff · · Score: 1

    I believe 500k units a month might be in the US only.

    keep in mind, it was revealed a few years ago that MS was only making $13 per computer of Windows XP that major OEM's were selling. and this stuff, they don't even have to support..

    --

    What are we going to do tonight Brain?
  102. Re:We:"Put up or shut up." MS:"No. You'll see why. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All you need is a law stating that for a patent license to be valid, the license contract has to be published, and that an unpublished license contract is unenforceable. No licensee would be satisfied by a secret license contract if such a contract offered no protection in court. In order to avoid disputes about publication venue you could make the USPTO keep a register of patent licenses, but that is not strictly necessary. Naturally you would also need a transition period of several years before the new system could be fully functional.

  103. Re:MS-Brain Tumor v1.01 by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

    It is called math, something i thought would be understood on /. but I guess I was wrong. you see MSFT has literally 10s of 1000s of patents, feel free to look them up. They also buy patents by the hundreds EVERY SINGLE YEAR so the number of patents owned or co-owned by MSFT is probably gaining by about a dozen a day. and very very many of those patents are in...surprise!...OS design. Wow, who would have thunk it?

    So you have this OS called Linux, an OS made by large groups spread all over the planet, including many that don't have rules about clean room reverse engineering nor do they give a crap about patents (See ReactOS for an example of the trouble this can lead to) but lets say for the sake of argument that not a single person that has EVER worked on Linux has seen a single line of Windows code (which considering even I got to see the WinNT code when the Win2K leak happened is kinda doubtful) and that everything they've ever done was based on a home grown idea.

    Again we are talking about TENS of THOUSANDS of patents here that cover everything from system calls to file systems, from memory management to booting. Now are you gonna HONESTLY tell me that there isn't a single line that in any way, shape, or form, infringes on those huge mounds of patents, really? you know there is a reason why Google doesn't indemnify on Android or WebM, yes? it is because MPEG-LA has enough patents that one would be hard pressed to develop anything that did squat with video that didn't infringe, and I would argue that with MSFT R&D cranking out the patents the same WILL be true of Linux and OS design.

    Look in a way we are on the same side here, i think patents and copyrights in their current form need to DIAF as they give the big corps too much power and stifle innovation. But until one gets the system itself changed one can't just go "Well I don't like the system so fuck it and fuck you" which is why so many corps like Intel and AMD and Nvidia do cross licensing, because they know that a patent war would equal MAD. But Linux as a whole doesn't have the money or the patents to play that game against an Apple or MSFT. Sure you have Google and IBM coming to your rescue, but for how long? Already both IBM and Google won't allow GPL V3 since they can't TiVo it, so how long before one or both just forks and creates their own proprietary version with eFuses?

    The simple fact MSFT isn't the big scary that it was under gates, now they just offer RAND and walk away, easy enough to get rid of them like in TFA. What is gonna slowly bleed Linux to death is the trolls and the death of a thousand cuts. With so many Linux corps going tits up that is a lot of patents ending up on the market and it doesn't take too many lawsuits in East Texas to drain the life out of smaller companies. No until the system is fixed the ONLY protection is big ass patent warchests which sadly Linux is severely lacking in compared to the competition. I foresee a future where you have "Google Linux" and "IBM Linux" and everyone else is shut out by patents.

    Do I think that's great, or cheer if it helps MSFT? Hell no, and in fact there is nothing I'd like more for them to get taken down a couple more notches so the sweaty monkey can be shown the door and someone from the Office team can get in there and bring them back to a business OS company that also makes consumer OSes, not the "ZOMG we need to be Apple!" bullshit we have now. But if you want in this business you gotta play the game and right now everyone else is holding bats and you have a Nerf ball. Not really a fair fight friend.

    --
    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  104. Re:MS-Brain Tumor v1.01 by ashkante · · Score: 1

    ... What are you gonna do, come up with a totally convoluted and ass backwards way for 2+2=4 to keep from infringing? ...

    Have fun paying the licence when MSFT figures out how to patent things such as "breathing" and "walking". /sarcasm

  105. Re:We:"Put up or shut up." MS:"No. You'll see why. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah! Go BN!

  106. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by top_down · · Score: 1

    500k a month are 2009 numbers, it is now >5m a month: http://www.betanews.com/joewilcox/article/Gartner-Android-smartphone-sales-surged-8888-in-2010/1297309933

    You are right that they are not SCO of course. However lawyers getting more important in a company is always a bad sign as they are not about creating wealth but about getting a bigger part of the pie.

    --
    Anyone who generalizes about slashdotters is a typical slashdotter.
  107. Re:MS-Brain Tumor v1.01 by shentino · · Score: 1

    I thought SCO was about copyrights, not patents.

  108. This is disgusting. by md65536 · · Score: 1

    I say we stop supporting Microsoft and start bashing them in our comments.
    That should get them to smarten up.

    What a disgusting despicable company.

    1. Re:This is disgusting. by andydread · · Score: 1

      What would be more effective would be if you write a letter to your conressman and senator and encourage everyone you know to do the same. That is more effective that bitching on slashdot. People on slashdot cannot do a damed thing about it unless they themselves have written a letter to their congressman and senator. I have written 2 letters one to my congressman one to my senator. Maybe you can do the same and get everyone you know to do the same and maybe we can get some traction here.

  109. Groklaw has part of the answer by md65536 · · Score: 1

    http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20110427052238659

    "Microsoft has a scheme, Barnes & Noble asserts, to dominate Android and make it undesirable to device manufacturers and customers by demanding "exorbitant license fees and absurd licensing restrictions" -- a license fee that it says is more than Microsoft charges for its entire operating system for mobile devices, Windows 7."

  110. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by Caetel · · Score: 1

    The latest reports claim 500,000 units per day , which is up from 300,000/day at the end of last year and 160,000/day from a year ago. If Microsoft could get $10 per phone at those numbers, that's almost $2 billion a year in effectively pure profit, or around 10% of their yearly profit. And in all likelihood Android's numbers are only going to continue growing.

  111. Re:Using HTC Estimates and WP7 Numbers, $150M $30M by md65536 · · Score: 1

    What sets the value of not financially supporting Microsoft and their monopolistic machine, which (as you've shown) artificially inflates the cost of not using Windows?
    Who do I pay the money to, to extract this value?
    And, how much of what I would pay would go directly to Microsoft?

  112. Time to buy a Samsung by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not getting another HTC if they've knuckled under.

    1. Re:Time to buy a Samsung by andydread · · Score: 1

      Samsung already pays Microsoft a licesne fee.. What you can do though is join us and write your congressman and sentaor a letter explaing this. That will help much more that sticking our heads in the sand.

  113. New mafia. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now the law protects mafia, they are partners, because mafia pays taxes.

  114. Let me say "Barnes & Noble" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most of the settlements are made under non disclosure agreements so we will never know what was agreed or why. However not all companies are run by such pathetic nonces. In a well known case discussed here on Slashdot not that long ago Barnes and Noble refused to sign an NDA and instead submitted their account of Microsoft's intimidation tactics to the court as part of the evidence. It makes very interesting reading.

  115. Re:Cheaper to pay the protection money than litiga by brunes69 · · Score: 1

    Er, HTC is not some fly by night operation. They have a 35 billion dollar market cap.

    They can afford their own litigation if their own legal thought the patents had no merit.

  116. Re:MS-Brain Tumor v1.01 by mcvos · · Score: 1

    As for TFA this is just damned smart business and if it were Apple or Google doing this the fanbois would be lining up to defend it.

    If Google was suing people over something as stupid as software patents, and if they were charging money for products that they didn't make, then they wouldn't have so many fanboys. Part of the reason why Google is so popular is that they're one of the few giants that admit that software patents are a stupid and harmful idea.

    How much has MSFT spent on buying up patents this decade? How much have they spent on the patents they've filed? all this does is allow them to get a ROI

    Just the fact that MS has wasted money on stupid and harmful ideas means they're entitled to a ROI?

    What you're saying is that MS is basically a patent troll now. They buy patents on technology that they didn't invent, charge money for products that they didn't make, and sue the companies who do make popular products that MS can't compete with. It's a retarded business model.

    Oh and Proptip: Linux DOES infringe on MSFT patents, because it would be mathematically impossible for it NOT to with the sheer number of patents MSFT has,

    That just proves how stupid and unproductive patents are. If you can't innovate without accidentally infringing on numerous patents that you couldn't possibly know about, if you have to pay a patent tax to the industry giants in order to be allowed onto the market in the first place, in order to be allowed to innovate, then patents are very obviously detrimental to competition and detrimental to innovation. They need to be abolished.

    In the end it isn't MSFT's fault you don't have the money to buy patents like everyone else, it isn't MSFT's fault you want to give your product away for free.

    You're right. It's the law's fault for allowing such a travesty to exist in the first place. But it is Microsoft's fault that they are abusing that system and trying to sue the companies that produce superior products into paying a buggy whip tax. Sure, there may be worse companies out there, but MS is definitely not on the side of Good here.

  117. So sad, even by microsoft standards... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft claims Motorola infringes on 21 patents, including 19 with Android, according to Mueller.

    Microsoft's contentious relationship with Linux-based products goes back many years, of course, to CEO Steve Ballmer calling Linux a cancer in 2001 and a 2007 claim that Linux and other open source software violates 235 Microsoft patents.

    Gee that almost sounds like 90% of Ballmers claimed property just vanished overnight when it became time to defend these claims in a real court with a real opponent who can afford real lawyers.

    I guess that must mean that between 2007 and now the kernel must have gone on a trough a diet, and then google stripped out the last of the 90% owned by microsoft when it made android.

    Good for MS, I guess that just goes to show that while many might try that when it comes to doing UNIX only microsoft has always been the real innovator.

    Good thing microsoft has not caught on to how anytime internet giant microsoft launches a product like a search engine software giant google launches the same product at massive investments and with zero chance of being profitable like googles famous service "bing"

  118. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by Old+Sparky · · Score: 1

    Microsoft hasn't been a tech company for a lonnnngggg time.

  119. Suggestion by Gonoff · · Score: 1

    When I install Ubuntu and I want certain things that they have defined as non-free, I have to download them separately. Google should do this.

    For example, if it is the FAT32 drivers that are the source of FUD, Google should not include them with Android any more. Manufacturers are then not "stealing" any imaginary property and the necessary code should be available on Google Marketplace. MS can then take on Google instead of collecting protection money from handset manufactuers.

    --
    I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
  120. The Goog by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google can spend time and resources long -term to develop Patent alternatives to MS. Eventually MS will be cut out and hopefully we will see Google start to knock MS off their high horse.

    1. Re:The Goog by andydread · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately that will not work. MS will still claim the patents are violated by Linux and unless you take them to court with millions of dollars there is no way to prove differently. And google wont be doing that. This looks like the beginning of the end for Open Source Sofware and Linux in particular. It was good while it lasted though. I guess its time to start paying Microsoft again or get out of tech altogether. They own tech now. And since the Linux people and the Linux foundation is DOING NOTHING about this then Linux is dead.

  121. Deliver without OS by cooldfish · · Score: 0

    They should deliver their devices only with a bootloader so that the buyer can decide which Operating system they want to use. They could sponsor a community that provides actualized software images for the Phones.

  122. Re:We:"Put up or shut up." MS:"No. You'll see why. by aug24 · · Score: 1

    It might well be the FAT32 patent (actually VFAT). It was upheld in 2004 or so for usage on memory cards, and a lot of Android phones have card slots, unlike iPhones, which would explain why this is not an Apple shakedown too.

    --
    You're only jealous cos the little penguins are talking to me.
  123. Re:Microsoft becoming a lawyer company à la S by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

    Sorry, their INCOME was 17 billion. This $600mil would be 100% profit. That $600 mil per year would be 2.5% and those 2.5% do count...