Software Libre: DoHS Switches, Commerce Slights 279
An anonymous reader writes "Some excellent Pigdog investigative journalism: Apparently, The state department is trying to block international support of OSS and Free (Libre) Software. See also this InfoWorld article." Contrast that with this NewsForge report of a switch from Windows 2000 to Linux+Oracle at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. They picked a good week for it.
They will fail (Score:4, Insightful)
Free software will win on the same basis. Sure, the US is open compared to most of the countries in the world, but it's not as open as open source.
Re:They will fail (Score:4, Funny)
Hey look, a Starbucks opened up down the street.
just a quick note (Score:2, Insightful)
The United States (as originally designed) != capitalism.
Captilism is a new, post-industrial idea. The thinking is that things are run by the few who have scrambled to the top and can negotiate with each other for power and influence (see Rockefeller on this, who actually disdained the idea of a free market). I therefore don't subscribe to the idea that a government must be either Captilist or Communist. Call me a throwback, but I am kind of partial to the word free.
Re:just a quick note (Score:2)
Re:just a quick note (Score:5, Informative)
Capitalism: economic system, first described in detail by Karl Marx in Das Kapital in which capital goods, i. e. the means of production such as factories or tractors are owned by those who controll them, i. e. factory owners. This is not a post industrial idea, but actually one born in the heart of the idusrial revolution.
Communism: econimic system, first proposed by Karl Marx and Freidreich Engles in which the means of production are held in common, i. e., private ownership of capital goods has been abolished. It is fairly complex, but baisically means that you can own your toothbrush, television and house; but you can not own a factory, a mine, an oil well, or even a farm.
As you can see, neither is a political system. You can have democratic communist countries (in theory, at least), and you can have very oppresive Capitalist ones (Nazi Germany and Facist Italy.)
So where do we live? Well, most of our means of production are owned by large corporations. Those corporations are not owned by the people who controll them---the shareholders---but by executive officers appointed by large mutual and pention fund managers, and persons with usually less than 5% ownership of the company. Which means, there is not capitalism. It also means that persons who controll corporations are accountable niether to workers, nor to their customers, nor to the general pubic, but to people who can not see beyond the ticker at the NYSE.
So, the 5000 point bonus question: Is this the system which will result in a free society, or will sprout forth types like Ashcroft and his gang of freedom loving incarcirators?
Re:just a quick note (Score:3, Interesting)
I prefer the terms individualism and collectivism instead, most eloquently explained in F. A. Hayek's Road to Serfdom [amazon.com]. The basic gist of the book is that socialism inevitably leads to totalitarianism, demonstrated in the Soviet Union and Third Reich Germany.
Individualism (aka capitalism) allows each person to make their own decisions how they will spend their time, money, and resources. People may own property and benefit from its use. This encourages them to work hard and be productive.
Collectivism (aka socialism, fascism, or communism) controls prices, trade, and consumption, based on the group's goals and values. Unfortunately, for any sufficiently large group, it's impossible to define these to each member's satisfaction. Whoever makes decisions must ultimately impose on the group what they perceive as its goals and values.
Here's a good quote from playwright and current Czech President, Vaclav Havel: And another on the benefits of ownership from Clinton's Secretary of the Treasury and current Harvard President, Lawrence Summers:
Re:just a quick note (Score:2)
Re:just a quick note (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:just a quick note (Score:2)
And how is that different from capatalism? I realize you're over simplifying communism, but how is the statement 'Capatalism is not free since it assumes that an individual must sacrifice his freedom for the good of society' false? Capatalism requires us all to give up freedoms in the form of agreeing to be ruled by a government so that certain rules (that restrict freedom) can be enforced so that capatalism can work.
Eh?
Re:just a quick note (Score:2)
I'm trying, but I can't think of any freedom that must be abridged if I live in a capitalist economy.
In civilized countries, there is a judicial system that enforces contracts. Is this the freedom you refer to? But this has nothing to do with capitalism, it is a function of government, under any economic system.
Re:They will fail (Score:2, Funny)
Basil Exposition: Austin, the Cold War is over!
Austin Powers: Finally those capitalist pigs will pay for their crimes, eh? Eh comrades? Eh?
Basil Exposition: Austin... we won.
Austin Powers: Oh, smashing, groovy, yay capitalism!
Re:They will fail (OT) (Score:2, Insightful)
They remain popular because they sell the SAME product line everywhere they are. Kinda like McDonald's.
Re:They will fail (OT) (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:They will fail (Score:5, Funny)
They do sell a good product. Breath freshner for people who eat shit.
RE:THEY WILL FAIL (Score:3, Funny)
STARBUCKS!!!!!
WordNet defines capitalization 4 ways. Number is "writing in capital letters".
We're number 1!
Of course, defiitions 2-4, pretty much revolve around corporate business crap.
Re:They will fail (Score:5, Interesting)
Starbucks employed the most agressive expansion strategy in the history of retail.
They themselves are responsible for the term 'clusterbombing' neighbourhoods
It was only people's desire to think they had control over their little universe that led them to think Starbucks multiplied in size a zillion times over the span of 5 years because they innately discovered a better coffee than all existing coffee shops.
What a joke. Anybody that takes an interest in corperate strategy either revears Starbucks as a hero, for successfully expanding faster than any retail gig in known history, for pioneering a few new coperate-expantion strategies like clusterbombing, for gutlessly buying out the leases of local favorite coffee shops (despite protests by local populations and local celebrities and dignataries)
I wont even touch on what they did to international coffee prices. Now, 0.5% of their coffee beans are bought, in their words, "at a fair price." This was to silence those who rallied valiently to save the livings of coffee farmers the world over.
Re:They will fail (Score:3, Funny)
Your precious free market at work!
(goddammit, I'm gonna get my karma slammed on this thread! first I embarassingly misconfabulate the plot of the underpants gnomes episode, now this!)
Re:They will fail (Score:2)
Hey, if the RIAA and MPAA don't deserve to get their stupid business models enshrined into law, why should the coffee growers or anyone else for that matter?
OPEC figured out how to run a cartel, so should the coffee people if they want a guaranteed high price for growing too much coffee. Blaming Starbucks isn't the right tactic.
Re:They will fail (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, a product can sell when people desire it, but that is not the same thing as the product being any good, or anyone needing that product. Don't belive me? Well you may be shocked to hear that ghasp cigarettes sell quite well, though they are neither a good product nor particularly usefull.
Furthermore, you go to any local coffehouse outside of the Midwest U.S., and see if what they think of your Starbucks coffee. Sure, if all you know is Folgers, it may seem like nectar, but compared to the worst coffee house in say Italy, France, Greece, Turkey, Germany, Spain et c. et c., Starbucks seems much like so much sewage.
I know, I know it is comfortable to hold on to those free market myths of yours. And you know what, if you actually found a free market, it might not be all complete bull. But find that free market, friend, but meanwhile try to get informed.
Re:They will fail (Score:2)
you know how time isnt constant?
Well, no market is transparent. No consumer is aware of all their choices. And no Econ 101 course is going to teach you anything about how the economy really works.
The way people like you talk, executives have no jobs
Any fucking econ dude that did post grad work will tell you that Econ 101 is to give you the very basic rules. When you start to factor in various innovations in influencing markets and consumer behaviour (gee, what the fuck is advertising if consumers magically buy the right product as per your theory)
But dont believe me. Check the other replies to your post.
Re:They will fail (Score:3, Interesting)
No, it is the selling of a consistent product at all stores, day in day [out], that doesn't disgust a wide audience that sells.
McDonalds does not make good hamburgers, but that doesn't seem to have hurt them at all. Why? Because I can walk into any McDonalds anywhere in the world and point at the picture of the Big Mac behind the cashier and get exactly the same crappy hamburger with exactly the same special sauce. I know exactly what I'm going to get, and people are willing to pay for that, generally regardless of actual quality.
What needs to happen is you anti-free market and anti-capitalism wanna be do-gooders need to do is go back to econ 101 and learn that a product sells when people desire it or need it, people know about it and can buy it.
I hope you'll take your blinders off when you decide to grow up. In the modern market economy peoples buying decisions rarely have anything to do with either need or quality of the product. The idealistic supply/demand model only works in commodity markets.
Nobody buys Kraft cheese or Wonderbread because they're superior products. They buy them because that's the bland, tasteless, lowest common denominator product from a brand name they recognize.
It might come as a big shock, but any Starbucks, anywhere in the world, is better than 95% of the non-chain Coffee Houses.
I don't know where you've been buying your coffee, but I think it's clear to most of the people reading this thread that you need to get out more.
Starbucks makes stuff that isn't bad, but I can get equivalent or better, with faster more personal service, at the same price, at any of my local non-chain coffee houses.
Re:They will fail (Score:3, Insightful)
Been to plenty with good coffee, good atmosphere and a few with decent sweets. But ABSOLUTELY NONE OF THEM have anything approaching good service. They all have the same orange-haired, pierced-nose alterna-whatever trendanistas "working" there. They're rude, slow and usually can't make change or do anything other than take breaks well.
It's no better at Starbucks or Caribou or any other chain -- its like you can't make coffee unless you're over 45 with "Flo" embroidered on your dress or under 30 with more safety pins in your lip than I have in my whole house and hair the shade of a warning sign.
Besides, buying coffee at the store is dumb to begin with. The markup is like 2000% or something. A pound of decent beans is $6 and makes enough coffee to keep me wired for a week. A single cup at any coffee place is like $3.
Re:They will fail (Score:2)
Coporations typically start small, it's the greed required to get them big that is the problem. Companies like JetBlue seem to have figured out a better way to all of this - superior product on a large scale. Rather than high quality in a single location or low-quality on a large scale, they did both, and they're reaping the rewards of thought in business.
reasons for company success (Score:4, Interesting)
1. good/unique product
2. consistent product
3. well adverstized product.
4. addictive product
5. monopoly on product
Starbucks is 2,3,4
Coke/Pepsi is 2,3,4
McD's is 2,3
Microsoft is 3,5
Re:reasons for company success (Score:2)
McD's makes some shit, but it's easily consummable.
Re:They will fail (Score:3, Funny)
Are you joking? Those watery, burnt espressos made on stale coffee by some pimply untrained teenager on minimum wage?
The mathematician Paul Erdos once said "A mathematician is a machine for turning coffee into theorems." He is later reported to have said that American coffee is "for the lemmas."
Most of the crap Starbuck's sells is more milkshake than coffee. And besides, I think that last line is his sig.
Re:They will fail (Score:2)
I've also tasted the coffee of many local enterprises... most of it is mud. If I want bad coffee I'll stay at home and make it myself.
Re:They will fail (Score:2)
So Mr. Tweek ends up working for the man. Like everyone.
Re:They will fail (Score:5, Insightful)
While the behavior of those corporations seeking to protect their monopoly/oligopoly is unlikely to lead to wasted resources on the same scale, tremendous inefficiencies can be caused by, and I would argue, have laready been caused by, the strategic actions taken by the producers of proprietary software. It's not just the final outcome that matters.
Re:They will fail (Score:2)
Say what? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not sure how you are tying that to selection of software. Effectively the US outspent the USSR and broke them. At the present rate of growth in China, which is in some ways open, some ways closed, it will be interesting to see how the US stacks up in the years to come. Seems to me the biggest economy wags the tail.
It is ironic the government embracing pricey closed systems, particularly how they are doing it. NSA and Homeland Security employ open source, apparently because they have full access to code and updates. Less critical applications get the junk. I've had to exchange data with various government departments before and typically they're a bit disorganised, so throwing buggy software at them seems like a way to compound their problems. Great for the next round of budget cuts, "Department X is inefficient and unresponsive to the needs of the people and will be eliminated/restructured/etc.", as sacrificial lamb to show leadership, etc.
"Their giving us Microsoft Office and and Exchange Server."
"Yeah, looks like it's time to polish up the old resume."
Re:Say what? (Score:2, Insightful)
And exactly where do you think the US got the money to do that?
Re:They will fail (Score:3, Insightful)
The US presently has an astounding public debt (hey, have a look at what Shrub is doing wrt spending/debt -- hint: it aint gettin' better). This debt is used to compensate for any contraction of the free market, essentially, when times are 'bad' the debt balloons as the Plutocrats see to it that the 'free market succeeds' "see, once again, the market saves" - building debt and calling it success is a little silly.
What *WILL* happen is that this debt, will collapse onto the US. Both the private (your household) and public (state/federal) debt.
USofAmerica a very unsustainable economic system -- (i wont even mention the problem with American Consumerism and its effects on the Environment in the discussion (unsustainable/deadly/ridiculous consumerism had to be CREATED in order for the US economy to 'explode' to 'compete' with USSR. The planet has its limits, not everyone is going to be able to consume like USofAmericans, eventually, saner policy will prevail to combat real problems (global warming, mass extinction due to habitat loss, etc)
Basically, time will tell... Americans never fail to amaze me when they look so narrowly at Reality and declare the US Model of "Society" the best thing ever.. in reality, it has had some circumstantial support, things that will not always exist in order to 'prop it up'.... and when that happens, when your pride has to be swallowed as you realize your precious 'system' has some serious faults, I hope for all-our-sake you arrogant warmongers dont start WWIII in a mass-hysteria jingoist crusade. (think hitler && germany)
Re:They will fail (Score:5, Insightful)
I hear this a lot from Americans. (Don't get your nationalist knickers in a wad; by accident of birth, I'm one of you, too.) The problem is that it is only a half-truth. If by "most of the countries in the world" you mean to include Brunei, Madagascar, and the Sudan, well, sure. But compared to the rest of the industrial democracies, it's not that clear-cut.
"Freedom" isn't a monolithic measurement, except to nationalist politicians. There are quite a few things I can do in various western European countries that I can't do in the United States. The converse is also true. For example, what Americans refer to as First and Fourth Amendment rights are considerably more open in some countries, while the American Second Amendment is pretty unusual for countries not ruled by hereditary warlords.
For my tastes, Germany is a much freer place. Someone who likes to own guns or is a Scientologist would probably feel differently. While it would certainly be nice if there were a most free or most open society, the truth is that you must ask "free and open in which ways?"
Re:They will fail (Score:2)
Everyone has their shortcomings...
Re:They will fail (Score:2, Interesting)
of you who have, and do not post "America is freedom", you
know that in most of the other countries you live
the everyday life of chaos -- a far cry from the
the police-patroled neighbourhoods of United States.
If not saying the USA is a totalitarian state, far from it,
but to think that the USA is the bastion of freedom is
a concept only acceptable to those who have
never traveled outside their country and think
they capable to compare and form opinions (mostly.
based on what they are told by CNN).
I have lived in many countries, and in each
country the local inhabitance they all tend to
think that their country is the most free, the most
moral, the most civilized, and they can recite lots of
evidence to prove to each other that this must be so. Enough!
Re:They will fail (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, it's the open-source companies that are having to change or die. The closed-source companies are humming along the same as ever.
We can argue all we want about whether open-source software is morally superior to closed-source software or whatever else, but the bottom line is that the companies that base their business model on closed-source software are surviving, while the companies that base their business model on open-source software are dying.
Re:They will fail (Score:2)
Re:biggest crock (Score:3, Insightful)
Get ready to repeat yourself when the story is re-posted tomorrow :-)
Actually, the State Departments' actions in trying to discourage open source are the biggest crock of shit I've seen today, especially in contrast to the DoHS switching to open source.
Irony (Score:5, Funny)
You have attempted to reach a site to which access has been blocked
Smurfcontrol (Re:Irony) (Score:2)
Are you using SurfControl?
I should rephrase that, is Surf Control using you?
In Soviet Russia, internet filter uses you!
MS ad placement (Score:2)
"Managing desktop security can be challenging.
Fortunately you've got help"
Xix.
Re:MS ad placement (Score:2)
That is Microsoft's idea of help.
Microsoft, for the agile business.
(to dodge the worms;)
Author must have drank too many beers. (Score:4, Insightful)
This is considered good investigative journalism?! All the government did was allow MORE flexibility to allow BOTH open and closed source with a preference IN WRITING to open source. What the hell is wrong with that?
Re:Author must have drank too many beers. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Author must have drank too many beers. (Score:3, Interesting)
You'll note that the change is regarded as a "compromise". Which means that the State Department probably wasn't shooting for a clause "encouraging" free software, but rather something less.
But put it this way: do you think that if the Thai government had announced support for Microsoft software, the US government would be pushing for a change? Why shouldn't a foreign government support or buy whatever damned software best suits their needs, and how do US diplomats qualify to make that determination better than market forces?
Unless, of course, our priority is something other than allowing them to make the best decisions for their organization.
Re:Author must have drank too many beers. (Score:2)
Yes, I do think that our government would reject a recommendation supporting Microsoft software. The U.S. government uses many operating systems, and I think that an official stance to support software by any provider would not be deemed appropriate.
Let me reiterate; I do not believe it is the place of our governments to a priori declare "support" for one source of software over another beside.
Re:Author must have drank too many beers. (Score:5, Insightful)
Read the article. The US government is (fortunately) not in a position to "allow", or prohibit, anything in this context. The final wording adopted was a compromise between the US government, which wanted to block anything positive about open source, and all the other governments, which wanted to support it. The final wording reflects the fact that the US government was outnumbered and did not get its way. The point of the article is that the US representatives tried to block support for open source.
Re:Author must have drank too many beers. (Score:4, Informative)
Irritatingly, there's an advert partially covering the second paragraph. I guess that's what I get for running beta software (Phoenix).
Re:Author must have drank too many beers. (Score:3, Informative)
I'd be furious (Score:2, Insightful)
This thread's obligitary conspiricy theory (Score:4, Insightful)
More seriously, what right does the government have to clamp down on open software that they have no involvement in creating or maintaining. Open source software is (disputably) more secure and reliable, and considering another department has just switched to it... something fishy is going on.
Re:This thread's obligitary conspiricy theory (Score:2)
OK, it's paranoid... but sometimes you can be paranoid _and_ they're out to get you. It sorta explains the DOJ slap on the wrist, doesn't it?
Re:Paranoid? (Score:3, Informative)
So according to the Official Slashdot Opionion Guide that's 2 points putting them in the "Good Guy" category.
The Fed doesn't care about capitalists... (Score:2)
There are two things that the US likes about Microsoft running the computers of foriegn governments:
1) What they can have in their operating system is regulated by US export law
2) Foreign governments don't get to see the source code
Whether the US government plans to take advantage of this though merely exploiting security holes in Windows software or whether the US government has managed to specifically place back-doors for their use in Microsoft software is left as an excercise for the reader.
Re:The Fed doesn't care about capitalists... (Score:2)
Would you like to reconsider that statement [com.com]?
No... (Score:2)
fundamental question (Score:5, Insightful)
Contrast with bigtime software companies. Lots of money. When it comes down to it, the government is going to support and push against OSS and Free Software on the basis that it does nothing for the US's economy if foreign countries attempt to liberate themselves from the MS Licensing death spiral.
The government will continue to issue statements along these lines, and people who want to use free and OSS software will, and those who don't, won't.
Re:fundamental question (Score:5, Insightful)
Sadly, you're probably right. But don't you think it would be at least worth trying to get the US government to behave like a democracy? Write to Reps and Senators, that sort of thing? While we still can, without risking anything?
A lot of other countries have slid even further from democracy than the US has (like Malaysia, once a democracy, now well on the way to becoming a police state). For the US to continue sliding down the same slope, all it takes is for most people to sit back and say "What does it really matter?".
Re:fundamental question (Score:2)
Malaysia, once a democracy
Wrong. Malaysia is a monarchy from the very beginning.
Re:fundamental question (like taxes) (Score:2)
Yeah, think of all the income tax the government would miss out on if Microsoft went under. Oh, wait....
Re:fundamental question (Score:4, Insightful)
I tought the goverment represented people interests! Of course in most cases taking care of the economy helps the people but NOT in all cases.
Free/open software is good for the quality of life of people, and believe it or not it is probably GOOD for the economy. Because it is free it becomes a ressource which can be used by companies to make money. In the end it's the country that uses that resource most effecintly that will get richer.
Look at the case where a country can use it and one cannot. The companies of the country with all the free software will be able to benefit from it, increase their effeciency, and have a big advantage compared to the country whitout it.
This does not apply only to companies but also to individuals, because the software is free, not only the companies can afford it but also the individuals. The individuals will get all the benefits of the free software and be able to perform better in their life/jobs which will benefit the society in general. But this may also explain a little why the big corporations opposes it them getting competition not only from other companies but from anybody and everybody.
All in all, it solves the problem of monopoly being created from the big corporations because the small individual cannot compete even if he has the knoledge to make a better product or service.
It forces the large corporation to be efficient and creative to be able to be competitive, not make money off of just "being big"
And in the end it makes the country more efficient and helps the economy.
Maybe I'm wrong but, you have to have a hiden adgenda to not support free software.
From zer InfoWorld article (Score:5, Insightful)
Remember, kids; there's more to life than the money big companies make.
And no, I'm not against Microsoft et al making money, but doing it at the expense of impoverished people in the world isn't what I'd call right.
-Mark
Anti-OSS posters... (Score:5, Funny)
"If you code with Linux you code with Saddam!"
Re:Anti-OSS posters... (Score:5, Funny)
Every day you use linux, God kills a kitten.
Re:Anti-OSS posters... (Score:4, Funny)
Open Source makes baby Jesus cry.
Re:Anti-OSS posters... (Score:2)
No no no! (Score:2)
No, the punch line is:
"...then the terrorists have won!"
thought so... (Score:5, Funny)
Free Software is AMERICAN software.
I knew that Torvalds guy was from Pittsburgh.
Re:thought so... (Score:2, Funny)
Nope, he's from a place called "Finland", which is located either in the former Soviet Union, or possibly the Middle East, or China. And we all know that nothing good comes from these places.
Re:thought so... (Score:3, Funny)
I knew that Torvalds guy was from Pittsburgh.
Does that mean he's a Penguins [pittsburghpenguins.com] fan? Poor guy.
homeland security switch (Score:2, Interesting)
now is this true?
i know zero about windows administration, but i always thought it was that unix admins were more security conscious, better trained, or better paid, but that windows itself inherited alot of really cool security features from VMS, which in theory could make the box even more lock downable.
-- p
btw, the most productive follow-ups would be objective assesments from those who have administered both unixen and windows.
Re:homeland security switch (Score:2, Insightful)
I dunno - considering that the only utility you need to customize *nix security is vi, where with Windows you need countless wizards and administrative tools and multiple registry settings for the same items.... well it confuses me (not that that's hard to do)
How good is the included firewall? (Score:3, Interesting)
How can you be sure the new development enivronment you just installed did not just open port 1434?
Can you run services like IIS in their own "jail"?
I don't know, I can't afford the Server versions of these OSes. That's why I'm asking?
Re:ask a hard one, why don't you (Score:2)
Convicted monopolists need our support (Score:4, Insightful)
Well !!!!!!! (Score:3, Insightful)
US likes money and things that make more money (Score:2, Funny)
Re:US likes money and things that make more money (Score:2)
Important change in wording (Score:3, Funny)
The use of free software is supported : you can get $$$ if you use the stuff.
The use of free software is encouraged : you can get kudos if you use it.
That being said, I think the author of the original article smoked a bit too much of all the shit he could get on that beach.
Setec Astronomy (Score:3, Insightful)
Okay, someone has to be a legalese nerd... (Score:3, Insightful)
"Encourage" could be syntacially stronger than "support" if "encourge" was used in this community to mean financial support in addition to moral support.
I strongly doubt this is true, but someone reading has to have seen enough of these things to actually know what the between the lines meaning is.
Motivating my curiousity was a discussion I had today about some GPL'ed code, and what exactly could be done with it. I realized that past a certain point, all I was comfortable saying was: "Well, to my understanding... blah, but you really outta talk to a lawyer before assuming anything" Words mean different things to different audiences.
fucked up my mental equilibrium (Score:2, Funny)
If an article starts with this sentence in the very first paragraph, I am not sure how many people are going to take it seriously
Re:fucked up my mental equilibrium (Score:4, Interesting)
This is the face of new journalism: everyone is a journalist. The most important effect of the internet is also one of the most subtle. You and I are communicating, in a rather disjointed way; moreover, we are communicating in public. This elevates our words beyond mere conversation.
Since 99% of everything is crap (used to be 90% before the internet), most of our public conversation will amount to nothing but an archive on
So, this "report" is still important (in a minor sort of way), even without the sterling stamp of unbiased reporting. Hell, it's nothing more than a blog entry. It serves at least on major purpose: it helps us realize we are not alone, that there are others who feel and think some of the things we feel and think. This alone is worth the time cost of reading it. The fact it is entertaining helps.
Anyway, I'd rather see blatant bias than the subtle bias most respected news sources employ -- the small censorships, the subjective language disguised as objective, the stern seriousness with which they present the most trivial garbage, the dumbing-down of gut-shot-serious current events.
Just my $.02, sure, and biased to boot. But intelligent bias is a hell of a lot better than idiotic objectivity.
Trade Balance vs local Costs (Score:5, Insightful)
Internally the US government is mandated to support national development and minimize costs. This is best done through an open source solution system and the development and support of many independent local service companies. See the Peru OSS document.
Thus we have the two faces of government:
1) attempting to get other nations to buy overpriced, over hyped expensive american products
2) attempting internally to minimize costs and local development
Should one be suprised that other governments are also attempting 2. No. But the best thing to do is to pressure them to do 1 and send those $ to the US.
Re:Trade Balance vs local Costs (Score:3, Insightful)
This issue is foreign relations. The war mongering is already antagonizing most of the world against the USA, with the UK and Australia possibly being the last official allies - thus anything to antagonize the people in other countries further may cost the US very dearly in the future. Hegemonialism and imperialism are attitudes that do not stand in high regard any more.
Re:Trade Balance vs local Costs (Score:4, Insightful)
The US State Department has a mandate to support exports of American products.
Isn't Red Hat an American product? Or is it the US State Department's policy to favour some US suppliers over others?
Re:Trade Balance vs local Costs (Score:2)
One of the first things you learn in any elementary economics course, or by simply scratching your butt and thinking for a minute, is that Ponzi schemes are all eventually destined to collapse. This applies to Microsoft and the US stock market just as it does to any other enterprise that thinks it can continue to outpace real growth by simply sucking in more customers. And it applies to your view of international trade as well.
The real economy is a network, not a pyramid. Whether you are a supply sider who believes supply creates it's own demand, or whether you believe the economy is driven from the bottom by consumers, there is nothing in either of these prevailing theories to suggest that maintaining artificially high monopoly pricing for a product capable of being commoditized is good for the economy as a whole.
Nor is there evidence to suggest that other countries losses are our gains. The goal is not to suck the money from point 'A' to point 'B'. Capital is not some kind of incompressible fluid that should be hoarded like gold. That kind of economy died long ago. The goal is to lift everybody up, simultaneously. Yes, really for goodness truly.
Nearly everything in this country is too high priced. The only thing that should be high priced in this country is the man that works. Wages must not come down, they must not even stay on their present level; they must go up. And even that is not sufficient of itself -- we must see to it that the increased wages are not taken away from the people by increased prices that do not represent increased values.
-Henry Ford, New York Times, November 22, 1929
Re:Trade Balance vs local Costs (Score:2)
Support means $$$ (Score:2)
In other words, this is probably a big uproar over nothing. The only reason to track it is to prevent certain commercial vendors from spinning the same term-of-art to it's own benefit.
friggin old news! (Score:3, Insightful)
As far as I can tell, our government(to all you other Americans) is favoring proprietary software vendors(ie. Microsoft) over OSS/free vendors, including RedHat, IBM, HP, etc. OSS has become integral to a number of U.S. based companies, BIG companies like IBM and HP. OSS/free software is also used internally at companies like WalMart, Burlington Coat Factory, and our oh-so-fucking-precious movie studios.
What incentive does our government have to favor certain U.S. based companies over others? You have one guess...
It is not that bad (Score:2)
Doesn't surprise me at all (Score:4, Interesting)
Eluding tariffs [washingtontimes.com]
We can see the same thing elsewhere, with copyright, the DMCA, softwood tarrifs(designed to increase logging profits in the US which is faced with Canadian competition) and the like.
The essence of mercantilism is to reward your cronies with government favors (corporate welfare, monopolies, tax breaks) while harming their competitors, and anyone else who happens to get in their way.
It shouldn't surprise anyone that Microsoft has secured its position as a beneficiary of "honest graft" [myschoolonline.com]
I mean, I hope no one thinks it was in the interests of justice that they got a slap on the wrist in the anti-trust case.
This is only half the story... (Score:3, Funny)
What's the US gov doing there? (Score:2)
encourage vs. support (Score:2)
Conspiracy Theory or just standard Trade? (Score:2, Interesting)
1. The U.S. government has been taking huge political contributions from Microsoft and has had to sit down and listen to their lobbyists give these speeches about how Free Software=Communism and by supporting Free Software you're supporting communism. Thus, they are taking some kind of moral stand because as you know the primary mission of our country is to promote democracy and capitalism throughout the world. I'm saying this all half tongue-in-cheek, but it could be possible that they actually bought into some of the OSS=Communism rhetoric.
2. The more likely probability is that software sold by Microsoft and other closed-source US software companies is billions of dollars in exports from our country. By promoting commercial products that are closed-source in nature our economy gets a boost from all of the international commerce and money coming in from other developing nations. Although this sounds like a shitty way to run a country, this is the way the world works. We have to convince/prod/force other countries to buy our poorly manufactured Microsoft software because it helps our economy...
Oh well. Guess we should all just drop out of the international financial system all together and go back to bartering for goods... Once you work out all of the delivery and manufacturing headaches bartering is actually a very good economic system.
Pointless. Completely Fucking Pointless (Score:2)
Two things.
1) We already have an "Office of Homeland Security" Its called the CIA/NSA, and has been around, honing their skills for close to 100 years. Shut up, take your tinfoil hat off, and let them do their job. Do yourself a favor..Take your tinfoil hat off and go back to what you were doing. Panic solves nothing.
2) The problem this country faces is largely a self-imposed one. 9/11 was a freak accident, and freak accidents *will* *happen*. Terrible things happen all the time, and they scare all of us. Accidents happen, and theres nothing we can do to avoid them. If you believe otherwise, you're not living in the real world.
Its not a minimzatiion of a tragedy to point out that the WTC site doesn't even amount to so much as a pin-prick on a map of the United States...Its a fact. But yet, we're reacting like it was the entire fucking eastern seaboard that got nailed.. Hell, even if you had an 8.5x11" glossy of just the state of New York, you still couldn't find the WTC. Its not a minimization of a tragedy to point out that the majority of the damage inflicted on this country is psychological, not physical...YES, thousands of people died, and yes, what they did to us is sickening...but no amount of press conferences, phone calls, UN inspectors, meetings, speeches, comittees, foreign diplomats, town hall meetings or other such horseshit is gonna repair that. The only thing that repair's a country's confidence and sense of national identity is war. As unfortunate as that may seem to you, thats how it is. You're more than welcome to point out something besides war that accomplishes the same. If you can come up with something else, let us know. Mankind has been trying to figure out an alternative for about 45,000 years now. Nobody likes war, just the same as nobody likes a tornado in their neighborhood or a tidal wave on their shores, both of which are just as natural and just as necessary.
It's a hard concept to be comfortable with -- the concept that war is a necessary, unavoidable and critically important part of human nature. Its hard to think about, and unpleasant to consider. But consider this: War is what keeps us in balance as a species, and staves off mass extinction. It does so at the price of contained, localized, and periodic killing. It's a regulating force of nature like any other, a cycle of destruction and renewal that has to take place in order for the big picture to sustain itself.
Avoiding war is just as pointless as engadging in war on a continual basis. Like everything in nature, too little war is unhealthy. Too much, and its just as bad.
I'll leave the decision as to whether or not we go to war to the people who have studied all their lives to know how to make the best decision. They dont tell me how to do my job, so, i'm not going to tell them how to do theirs. The government is made up of Joes like you and me anyway.. Not superintelligent uncaring zombies spawned from test tubes.
Cheers,
Countries Support Their Primary Export Industries (Score:3, Insightful)
Countries Support Their Primary Export Industries. Film at 11. The US isn't being any more persnickety than say... oh... France when it comes to the name "Champagne". I'm sure the Europeans who don't want to cave to MS feel the same way I do that we (the US) haven't caved to the French and allowed them to dictate how we use words. Cheers.
With Mozilla, it was unreadable (Score:2)