Iowa Antitrust Case Costs Microsoft $255M 96
The judge in charge has approved the payout for the case, which was settled seven months ago. Iowa citizens will get up to $179 million in refunds and the attorneys will get $75 million, $8 million of which covers expenses. There's another $1 million in there for legal aid. Individual consumers pocket very little: they can file for $16 for each copy of Windows or MS-DOS purchased over a 12-year period, and $29 for Office. Such a payout would serve as a deterrent only if all 50 states had sued and won similar amounts. Alone it's a slap on the wrist.
What's that sound? (Score:2, Funny)
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So they nicked MS for what, half a day's pay? The shareholders won't notice the mebbe 5 cents off their divident check.
Most people don't brag about their ignorance. (Score:2)
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Pah, don't throw me your small change, Bill!
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Companies especially companies like M$ do not and never will set prices based upon generosity.
So every cost, every civil suit, every legal punishment, we can stick M$ with, hurts their prof
Alone it's a slap on the wrist. (Score:4, Informative)
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I got $239 CASH from the Minnesota settlement.
-Rick
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Minnesota Settlement
by Rick Richardson (87058) on Wednesday February 14, @05:45PM (#18017518)
02/13/2006 FUNDS RECEIVED *type: *DEPOSIT $251.00
$251.00 is serious money from Microsoft Corp, NOT "Average consumers will probably end up with a few bucks or a coupon".
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And a payout like that would encourage other states to follow with their own lawsuits. "Remember that $251 check you got from Microsoft? I was the guy who went after the big bad company. Vote for me!"
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And Microsoft don't even feel it. Any idea how much Windows/Office pulls in?
A Slap on the Wrist? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:A Slap on the Wrist? (Score:5, Insightful)
When it's imposed upon an entity that makes 13 billion dollars every three months and records that against offshore subsidiaries that pay no tax?
Just a thought.
Microsoft won't pay the entire amount. (Score:2, Offtopic)
Slashdot readers are millionaires who read Slashdot while sitting on the decks of their yachts or flying in their personal jets.
The point people are making is that the fine is far too small to encourage Microsoft to stop being adversarial toward its customers. Anyhow, I'm guessing that Bill Gates would rather be poor than be good towards customers. Sometimes the adversarial behavior se
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actually no receipts or proof of purchase needed for claims under a certain amount. Although I bought many of these eligible products in Iowa, but no longer live their... Also since it no longer comes out of MS's pockets (number of submitted claims doesn't affect their payout), I won't bother. So you are correct (and most people don't know that a receipt is not required.)
some zeros needed here,,,, (Score:2)
if they wanted to hurt MS then they should of added a zero to that sum.
or should it to be 2 zeros?
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have you actually tried to buy a new PC without MS software on it? I have. It has been more or less impossible for many years, it is only comparatively recently that OEMs have begun to offer free alternatives. I am MS free at home. I do not buy MS of my own free will yet I find it crammed down my throat with every PC purchase. Of my own free will indeed.....hah!
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Or you could not buy a computer at all?
Are produce farmers forcing us to buy their products or are we choosing not to starve?
I don't particularly like Microsoft's way of doing business but they're not a monopoly and they aren't forcing anyone to do anything.
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It's an interesting frame of mind. I'm always intrigued when people take the attitude that everything would be perfect, if only they could make everybody else do as they want. Such an unrealistic state of mind, and it typically results in some
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As someone who has worked in the tech industry since the late 1980s, I have seen Microsoft go from one of the great enablers of the computer age to one of the anchor stones. It was never a particularly nice company, but there was a time when a lot of us cheered that Microsoft was telling IBM to sod off, and was encou
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The bottom line here (if I'm interpreting your phrase "MS Tax" correctly) is that you're blaming MS for something that another company does.
No, not quite. Another company does it because MS in their wisdom allows them "discounts" if the OEM only supplies MS operating systems and refuses the supply bare PCs in the name of preventing piracy. I use the term "discounts" because when nearly every OEM int he planet uses them they cease to become a discount and become a normal oppressive business tactic.
The fact remains that if the OEMs felt free to sell bare PCs then they would do so. I can only think of one OEM in the UK that actually sells a ba
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and here's the math... (Score:5, Funny)
Cost of 7.5 million x $10 dollar rebate vouchers for a team of attorneys: $75 million
Look on the senior partner's face when 25 trailer trucks full of printed rebate vouchers enters the parking lot: priceless.
There are some jokes money can't buy. For everything else, there's Slashdot.
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$75 million! (Score:5, Interesting)
I call bullshit, why are they getting this when their expenses are significantly lower and it isn't part of the money given out to everybody who bought Windows?
I'd be seriously pissed if I found out lawyers were skimming massive amounts from public settlements on behalf of my state or county. Where's it going eh?
Envy? (Score:2)
I'm not a fan of lawyers in general, but it's not as if Billy G would have ponied up the dosh without them, is it? There'd have been no settlement to start with and the people would have got nothing.
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Re:$75 million! (Score:4, Interesting)
I know that it's popular on Slashdot to vent against lawyers who do class action suits, but come on. You said it yourself: the law firm incurred $8 million in expenses to see this thing through. Yes, they ended up earning $75 million (because they won), but how much would they have gotten if they lost? Nothing; in fact, should they have lost, the judge could've ordered them to pay Microsoft's fees (which are likely even higher). Eight million is quite a large amount of money to gamble, especially considering that the lawyer in this case has her own law firm [roxanneconlin.com], and probably paid those expenses out-of-pocket. All told, the market's decided that a 30% contingency is fair for such a high risk, and I'm inclined to agree.
Moreover, I'd like to know how you'd "fix" the system as it stands. Obviously, you cannot ban class actions or limit the damages, because in many ways they're the only recourse that a bunch of people screwed by a corporation have, without the government (the largest class of them all) stepping in. You cannot place any limits on class action lawyers' pricing structures, either, because that'll have the effect of decreasing the number of class actions we have. No lawyer is going to take such an expensive case on a 10% contingency.
The only way that I can see is to have the government step in more often when a company has screwed people. Unfortunately, the DoJ hasn't really been prosecuting misbehaving corporations since early 2001: I wonder why?
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I know you're aware of the problem - that an injured class gets proportionally less of an award than the lawyers. But seriously - do you think class action suits would dry up if lawyers were capped at 10% (or even less)?
How can the problem be fixed? (Score:1)
Here's one suggestion: Let the jury make two deliberations. First, for the award for the plaintiff; second, for the plaintiff's lawyers. That way, if the plaintiff's lawyer wants an uneducated jury - as many of them do in order to extract a jackpot lottery award - (s)he might be less likely to receive such a sympathetic deliberation that lavishly enriches him.
Yes, many of them take a risk with millions of expenses - but why? To secure jus
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Hmm... I would have thought a tech-savvy crowd would understand the relationship of expenses to total cost. When you write a new software application, your expenses are things like compiler licenses, printer paper, etc.... The true cost of development is in paying your software developers. The same is true of attorneys. In this case, the $8m does not include any portion of any attorney's pay. It does include court costs, stenographers (for depositions), photocopying, etc..., which are a tiny portion o
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That's really not that bad when you figure that's gotta cover EVERYTHING.
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If your staff aren't an expense, what are they? Liabilities?;) ... I would have assumed that the 8 million expense covered everyone's time, but as Twitter said getting a 10x ROI on this kind of thing probably isn't that terrible.
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You would be amazed at how piddly little things can add up on a big case like this -- the discovery costs are probably the largest part of the $8M.
We should do lunch (Score:2)
Thank god (Score:2, Funny)
14,572x16=233,152
4.)Profit!!
missing tag: greed (Score:1)
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1.) This has nothing to do with formats
2.) This case was brought against MS in 2000.
3.) It is now 2007.
Try some perspective. I hear it goes well with your morning coffee.
50 states (Score:2)
a deterrent only if all 50 states had sued and won
Or just maybe, if M$ lost a FEDERAL antitrust case? Nah, THAT could never happen...
Now on eBay: (Score:1)
Someone make a poster... (Score:2)
always win more.
How many of the residents do you suppose will actually cash in?
Are you required to be put on a spam list to collect? Probably.
For the $16 dollars you get, what is being gotten from you?
Could have windows been sold for $16 dollars less to begin with?
Microsoft is not a bottomless pit of money. With all the lawsuits
and judgements against them It'd be interesting to see where there
books really are. At least to know how much more
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They may not be bottomless, but they might as well be. These itty-bitty rulings are little more than petty cash. I have little doubt that when such cases rear their ugly heads, the Redmondonian accountants put aside large chunks of cash to pay for them.
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Are you required to be put on a spam list to collect? Probably.
For the $16 dollars you get, what is being gotten from you?
Could have windows been sold for $16 dollars less to begin with?"
If the California case is any indication, very few will bother to "cash in". But the reason is that the common fold don't give a damn about this case!! In the past few years, I've received class-action settlement notices for Dell (some laptop issue) and Apple
Legal Fees (Score:2)
Assume that the average legal fee at the firm is about USD 500 per hour. 67m buys 134k hours which equates to roughly 15.29 consecutive years of labour for one person that works 24 hou
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Educate the customers, no point in punishing msft (Score:2)
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when MS is on 90-95% of the world's desktops and OSX 4% and MS Office dominates on both platforms, then - in a coldly preactical sense - MS compatabil
Re:Educate the customers, no point in punishing ms (Score:1)
Lawyer fees (Score:4, Interesting)
Thats all? (Score:2)
Iowa Citizens! (Score:1)
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and they call me a fanboi.. -- mac fanbois are more sophisticated?
B.
The court is out of line (Score:1)
*yawn* (Score:2, Interesting)
So much for the right to a speedy trial.
So much for relevance.
Errr... (Score:2)
Further, it's in Microsoft's interests to stall these as long as possible, because that'll cost the plaintiff a lot of money in litigation expenses and deter people from suing them.
That said, at least this one is better than the previous ones. Other lawyers were settling for a few millions for themselves and coupons for everyone else, with the rest going to buy Microsoft software for the
Let me get this straight (Score:2)
Lawyers get 75 million? MS-DOS refunds??? (Score:2)
The results of the settlement are bullshit too.
"Individual consumers pocket very little: they can file for $16 for each copy of Windows or MS-DOS purchased over a 12-year period, and $29 for Office."
Why should anyone get a partial refund for MS-DOS? Is there ANY evidence that
Good News (Score:2)
What happens to unclaimed refunds? (Score:2)