Iowa Court May Order Microsoft Refunds 319
dowobeha writes: "The Des Moines Register is reporting that thousands of Windows 98 users in Iowa could get $40 refunds from Microsoft. The Iowa Supreme Court has found the big boys from Redmond guilty of price fixing in violation of a 1976 Iowa law. According to the report, this is the first antitrust ruling in any state that favors 'indirect purchasers' (regular consumers who got Windows preinstalled on their newly purchased computer) rather than "direct purchasers" (manufacturers who license Windows to distribute on new machines)."
Is it too late to move to Iowa? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Is it too late to move to Iowa? (Score:1)
Maybe one of the Dakotas. Or Arkansas. Maybe Oklahoma.
You know, it sucks to live anyway. I'm moving to Canada.
Re:Is it too late to move to Iowa? (Score:2, Interesting)
That'swhy I moved first to WA State, and now on the Southern Coast of Cali...
One place I visited that I would never want to live is WHYoming :)
Re:Is it too late to move to Iowa? (Score:2, Interesting)
I agree, I too am from Eastern Iowa and I recall that the jobs market is mostly service/ag/telemarketing.
yay
Now am I eligible if I bought my pc in Iowa and then moved?
Re:Is it too late to move to Iowa? (Score:2)
Now if only we could persuade the entire population of China to relocate...
Of course... (Score:3, Funny)
Laugh
Re:Of course... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Of course... (Score:4, Funny)
We're not technologically backward like the sterotype says... now if you'll excuse me I have to milk bessy and bail some hay...
Re:Of course... (Score:2)
Prick (Score:4, Informative)
Iowa has ALWAYS been in the top 3 for education.
Iowa had the FIRST state-wide fiber optic network.
Iowa had the FIRST digital computer in the world.
So go ahead and make fun of us. We know how good we are.
Iowa rules (Score:2)
Dude from Grinnell [grinnell.edu] invented the integrated circuit.
Go Pioneers [grinnell.edu]!
Re:Of course... (Score:2, Informative)
1) yes, the digital computer. [ameslab.gov]
2) Iowa produces Corn. Corn = Ethanol. Ethanol = lessened dependance on oil. This makes oil prices drop, and it lessens our dependance on foreign oil. Not to mention that it burns cleaner and more efficent than regular oil.
3) You want something that we've done? How about the first six-sided 'cave' virtual reality system in the united states? [iastate.edu]
Re:Of course... (Score:2)
Re:Of course... (Score:2)
Consumers, not states, brought the case (Score:5, Interesting)
It would be interesting to see how this would work in other states, but it would be difficult seeing as the case was based on state, not federal, law.
Re:Consumers, not states, brought the case (Score:4, Insightful)
But there's a good lesson here, don't sit back and take it - it's easy to sit around and think academically "oh my, they certainly can't take away this! It's guaranteed in the bill of rights!" but who actually gets out there and tries to stop it?
A small step? (Score:1)
Perhaps other states will follow suit, or is this false hope?
Re:A small step? (Score:2)
Only other states that have a similar competition law would be able to do this. Consumers in idaho were able to sue only because of the 1976 Competition Law.
However, if more strong antitrust sanctions against Microsoft are not gained at the federal level, I wouldn't be surprised if dissenting states decide to create special laws to handle such cases in the future.
easy (Score:2)
The states (including their component munincipalities) can make anything not explicity ruled legal by the federal gov't illegal. The problem, of course, is that any law has to pass judicial review by the relevant court (probably the highest court in the state) or it'll get tossed.
New York, for example, could outlaw wearing white after labor day. But once they charge someone with the crime, they have to deal with the inevitable appeal to a higher court that will, almost certainly, toss out the conviction and the law.
(and let's not even get into the setup of executive pardons...)
Re:The Legality of a Monopoly (Score:2)
A monopoly is not, in and of itself, illegal. Gaining a monopoly is not, in and of itself, illegal.
Yeah, that was my point. But I guess saying anything that could possibly be misinterpreted as pro-Microsoft on Slashdot is risking getting labelled "Flamebait". I'm surprised your post wasn't modded down as well, Anti-Bob.
Re:A small step? (Score:2)
All you have to do to answer these questions is look at existing law. No, there should not be a limit to how much profit a company is allowed to make selling their product. But if they charge too much, there should be an environment where someone can sell a competing product for less.
I totally agree, monopolies suck. However, there MUST be some wiggle room between what sucks and what is ILLEGAL. Monopolies, in and of themselves, are not illegal. What IDIOT would make a law that punished a company simply because their competitors went out of business?
OK, since I'm on Slashdot, and many people here think "monopoly==satan", and my earlier post got modded down as flamebait when it was just stating the facts, I think I'm going to have to spell it out for y'all.
Say, for example, I'm one of two Espresso stands in Iowa. Nobody else in Iowa knows where to buy espresso beans except me and one other guy, who happen to work on the same street. We each sell tall mochas for $2.50. Now, the other guy gets hit by a truck. BAM! I'm a monopoly, and according you you guys, I'm now illegal. I didn't hire the truck to hit the dude, I haven't even changed my prices yet, but you guys think I should be illegal.
Now, I agree, I hate monopolies. But in and of themselves, they should NOT be illegal. Look, even if my espresso stand starts charging $4.00 per mocha, people who don't think it's worth the money will stop buying them. Everyone else who continues to buy them is making a decision that I am providing a service that is valuable to them to the tune of $4.00.
It only becomes illegal when my business gets huge, spreads all over Iowa, I become a major customer of the espresso bean vendors, and I tell my vendors that I will stop doing business with them if they sell beans to anyone else in Iowa. Do you get it now? THAT'S abuse of monopoly power.
Iowa??? (Score:1)
Wow.... (Score:5, Funny)
um, yeah, but... (Score:2)
More details would be hepful; I can't help wondering if that story didn't simplify to the point of dropping some key point of the suit.
IANALBTISANAY
Re:um, yeah, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, But That In No Way Supercedes State Law (Score:5, Informative)
Yes, they are. They are also subject to state law where they sell their products. Being an interstate transaction adds federal jurisdiction to an already existing state jurisdiction, it does not in any way negate the state's jurisdiction.
In other words, it adds regulations Microsoft must follow, it doesn't supercede any. Just as California emissions standards apply to automobiles built in Detroit (but sold in California), so to Iowa's antitrust regulations apply to Microsoft's sales in Iowa, regardless of where Micrsoft is headquartered, or the floppies and CDs their shabby OS is distributed on happen to have been printed.
Re:Yes, But That In No Way Supercedes State Law (Score:2)
in these OEM cases, the computer dealer bought the software, then sold a computer.... they didn't sell or charge a set price for the OS, they just added it into their computer price.
this isn't cut and dry and because i'm not from iowa, and i would probably be hurt by this law if I was, i don't care much about this case.
Re:Yes, But That In No Way Supercedes State Law (Score:2)
That makes absolutely no difference. Iowa (or any state) has the right to impose regulations on anything sold within their boundries, whether the seller is a resident of the state or not. Iowa cannot regulate widgets going from Nebraska and being sold in Illinois which are just passing through, but if the widgets are being sold in Iowa they can impose whatever (constitutional) regulations they like, whether the manufacturer is in Iowa, Nebraska, Washington State, or Timbuktu.
It is very clear cut, and, once again, Microsoft is in the wrong.
Re:Yes, But That In No Way Supercedes State Law (Score:2)
Cheapskates. (Score:3, Funny)
capitolism is all about screwing people anyway... (Score:2, Insightful)
Hmph...and then I guess it's up to these **direct purchasers** to ensure that the money trickles down to the consumers that are immediately affected by the anti-trust violations. Shows you were everyone's priorities lie, hm?
Is Iowa the only one? (Score:2, Interesting)
here we go with the Iowa jokes... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:here we go with the Iowa jokes... (Score:2)
Re:here we go with the Iowa jokes... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:here we go with the Iowa jokes... (Score:2, Interesting)
Now, unless I'm misinformed (wouldn't be the first time), the University of Pennsylvania made the ENIAC [arl.mil] as the first electronic digital computer.
So what computer is it that you are referring to?
Re:ABC comes before ENIAC (Score:2)
The ENIAC was already well on its way to completion by the time E & M saw Astantoff's machine. Also, the ABC was based on very different technology than the ENIAC.
The issue is a matter of debate, not a myth.
Re:here we go with the Iowa jokes... (Score:2)
Re:here we go with the Iowa jokes... (Score:2)
Very clever... (Score:2)
Of course, the correct response to your post is something like "Well, of course they invented the digital computer there--what else wsaa there to do?".
You're all wrong (Score:5, Informative)
As for the first electronic digital computer, that wasn't ENIAC, either. I know you USAns like to think that you invented everything, but Colossus [bletchleypark.org.uk] here in the UK beat you by a few years.
The first binary electronic digital computer was German: Konrad Zuse [vt.edu]'s Z1 [epemag.com].
And ENIAC wasn't even the first stored-program electronic computer: while ENIAC had to be programmed by plugboard, the Manchester Mark 1 [computer50.org], aka `Baby', was storing programs in memory along with data, just as all current machines do.
Credit where it's due, please :)
Iowa and Political Power (Score:5, Interesting)
One wonders if this isn't another realization of the power of precedent setting, and perhaps a manifestation of that rumored Midwestern common sense.
Re:Iowa and Political Power (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Iowa and Political Power (Score:2)
I can see this fleet of black John Deere's rumbling down the road at 20mph, followed by a low-noise "stealth" crop duster. Men in black suits with matching John Deere baseball-caps pushed way up high on their heads in the driver's seats.
Re:Iowa and Political Power (Score:2)
Amen!
Re:Iowa and Political Power (Score:2)
The problem is, all my friends and peers now work in Chicago, the Twin Cities, Omaha, or Kansas City, causing a "brain-drain" in the State of Iowa.
I've heard that the governor has a plan that will have the state pay back some of the student loans of students who remain in Iowa after graduating from college. It's a good idea, because of state budget problems tuition has jumped almost 30% here in 2 years, and it's only getting worse. This would at least reward and assist students who stayed in the state, and stop spending the dollars of Iowan taxpayers to churn out skilled workers for other states.
The check is not in the mail. (Score:5, Insightful)
I love the US class action legal system. The lawyers get paid big bucks and the consumers wind up funding a new marketing program that locks them in even tighter to the guilty party!
Re:The check is not in the mail. (Score:2)
Re:The check is not in the mail. (Score:2)
The fee system for class-actions is certainly in need of reform. But until that happens, the people involved in class-action lawsuits need to be as aware as possible of what's going on, and reject settlements that don't help them or remedy the problem.
One-client situations work quite well, because a single client simply isn't going to settle for anything other than cash except in rare circumstances, and if he doesn't like the settlement, the lawyer can't force him to take it. But since class-action suits are so unwieldy, and it's very difficult to get enough of the parties to agree, the plaintiff's lawyer and the defendants now hold much more power than in your typical one-client case.
Well, here's hoping that the class-action plaintiffs stick to their guns.
Like with sprint spectrum class action suit! (Score:2)
Really, it's rare that the consumer gets more than a few bucks in their pocket (I've had some from comcast) but as long as the company being sued views it as a spank, then you have to console yourself with that.
In terms of the sprint spectrum- there was issue that they were pushing the spectrum but planning a new network (Sprint PCS) that was NOT compatible... I was excited to hear about the suit (I had a spectrum (not the sinclair, dummy!)) phone and thought this would be cool-
it turns out the "settlement"- a couple of bucks off getting sprint PCS service was worse than the special they had going on at radioshack at the time!!
The lawyers response? "This was the best we could do. Now excuse me I have this fat check to cash..."
Thank god I married a (soon to be) lawyer...
Re:The check is not in the mail. (Score:2)
Figure there is 500,000 people in Iowa who bought Win98, it'll cost Microsoft $20 million, of which the lawyers will collect about $18 million.
Suing big companies is good business.
How Anit-Trust laws let M$ into console gaming (Score:3, Informative)
Well, Nintendo got busted and as part of a setlement they agreed to a rebate offer for any customer. You called an 800 number and they sent you a $15 dollar cupon for your next game purchace. They also were forbidden to do this again and were watched closely. Microsoft wouldn't even have a crack to slide the X-Box into if Nintendo still kept an iron glove on the retailers.
Now days Microsoft is doing things along similar lines and using extra tactics to keep their product monoply. Imagine if Nintendo had never been busted, and did not allow retailers to sell other videogame consoles. They might have been able to keep their monoply and we would have the N64 selling for $300 today.
If I got any of this wrong then post a correction as I was quite young when this happened and I'm suprised that I could grasp the concept of price fixing enough to remember it all these years later.
* If you have a product with a MSRP of $100, you may sell it to Wal-Mart @ $50 and to smaller stores @ $75. Wallmart could then turn around and sell the product @ the $75 that the smaller stores are paying and the small guys would never be able to keep up. When you make Walmart sell it @ a higher price to keep business of the smaller guys, you are price-fixing. This is illegal.
Re:How Anit-Trust laws let M$ into console gaming (Score:2)
The Sega Master System says hello. IIRC the overseas version of that console still had decent sales into the mid-'90s.
-Poot
Re:How Anit-Trust laws let M$ into console gaming (Score:2)
Chris Mattern
Gleeful BUT (Score:3, Insightful)
I applaud the notion that a company responsible for price fixing be made to pay for its noncompetitive tactics.
That said, however, I see where this could open up all kinds of cans of worms.
What if it could be shown that the supplier for one part of my Ford Mustang exerted similar tactics and caused the price of some component to be exagerated compared to what a competitive marketplace would support?
Could I get a refund of several dollars from the manufacturer of the power seats?
What about going back two levels of suppliers?
Iowa might be right -- and it might even work -- but on a state by state basis I could see where the feds would get all kinds of complaints from businesses seeking to avoid this kind of potential hassle.
OTOH, if the feds did their job, looking out for development of anti-competitive marketplaces, then we wouldn't be in this mess in the first place. Maybe there's been a de facto rollback of the Sherman anti-trust act that I don't know about.
price fixing (Score:2)
Naaah, too unlikely that such a thing could ever happen.
Sweet (Score:3, Funny)
It wasn't a decision to force a refund (Score:5, Insightful)
It wasn't decided if it was anti-trust or that a refund was due. Only that it should be heard.
Is this enforcable? (Score:2)
Actually, they are. (Score:3, Insightful)
This little bit of the law is why there was all that fuss about Hawaii possibly allowing same-gender marriages a few years back. If they had did it then, then homosexuals could become married *all over the country* by having their marriage in the rather romantic state of Hawaii.
MS can appeal the Iowa decision through Iowa's courts, and then through the federal courts, and they might even file suit in Washington court to block it, but simply being in a different state isn't going to let them get out of whatever Iowa demands.
(And if MS doesn't do anything, they'd get smacked pretty hard. If I filed suit against MS, properly notified them, and they didn't respond, I'd get whatever I could convince the judge was fair for the wrong committed against me.)
Re:Is this enforcable? (Score:2)
What do they do there?
Re:Is this enforcable? (Score:2)
$40 is insiginficant to M$ (Score:2, Insightful)
How I avoided the Micro$oft Tax (Score:4, Insightful)
I built the damn thing myself.
I bought the motherboard, video card, and case from CompUSA. I bought the memory, hard drive, DVD drive, skipped the floppy drive, Ethernet card, and sound card from a mom and pop computer store.
If you have avoided rolling your own computer, I must report that it was extremely intuitive and easy. If you can build Lego models, you can build your own PC.
Just say no to the MS tax. Build your own computer!
Re:How I avoided the Micro$oft Tax (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:How I avoided the Micro$oft Tax (Score:2)
HOWEVER -- I did do some research. Buying a computer from a mom and pop shop was almost identical to the cost of building it yourself. You may be able to find a Compaq/Dell/Gateway for less, but you are also getting a lot less flexibility -- built in video & sound that might be substandard. Welded on memory chips in Bank 1 (Compaq is infamous for this). An OS & Software bundle without the original Install CDs.
In my opinion, you get what you pay for. I got burned on a Packard Bell "special", and I swore to never buy a brand name PC again.
Re:How I avoided the Micro$oft Tax (Score:2)
If I'm interpreting what you said correctly, you're saying that it costs no less to hand-build a PC without Windows than to buy a prebuilt PC with Windows. Because of the MS tax and the labor charges you end up paying the PC manufacturer, this is almost never the case. From my experience building PCs, hand-built PCs generally cost about half as much as prebuilt ones.
Government Regulation will kill MS (Score:2, Interesting)
How much has Microsoft payed in fines? (Score:2)
Big deal... (Score:2, Flamebait)
I defy you to take the ads out of the Sunday paper, and find different prices for the exact same items in ads from Best Buy, Circuit City, CompUSA, or any of the big, mass-market, national consumerist chains.
They've even stopped bothering with the fiction of charging $xx.95 at one chain, versus $xx.99 at another chain - prices are for the most part identical.
Where's the competition?
Where's the "free marketplace" that some apologists like to trumpet?
There is no such thing.
t_t_b
Re:Big deal... (Score:2)
Ummm... scanning each other's Sunday paper advertisements, so that if they get undercut they can match their competitor's price by next week?
I'm really, *really* confused (Score:2, Insightful)
When I go to the supermarket I tend to buy the largest package of something that I think my family can consume before it goes bad because prices tend to be better in bulk. I makes a certain amount of sense too. To the producer, a sale of 1 unit package is not worth as much as a packaged sale of 5 units. Of course, this can be messed up, but the general idea still holds.
Also, I tend to work at a lower hourly rate when I know I'm going to get a project that is 3 times larger than a normal project. I do that, of course, because I'm getting more stable work.
So how is Microsoft charging less for bulk purchases somehow wrong?
Re:I'm really, *really* confused (Score:3, Insightful)
as it relates to OEMs: "In a competitive market, one would expect the price of an older operating system to stay the same or decrease upon the release of a newer, more attractive version. Microsoft, however, was only concerned with inducing OEMs to ship Windows 98 in favor of the older version. It is unlikely that Microsoft would have imposed this price increase if it were genuinely concerned that OEMs might shift their business to another vendor of operating systems or hasten the development of viable alternatives to Windows."
as it directly relates to consumers: "A Microsoft study from November 1997 reveals that the company could have charged $49 for an upgrade to Windows 98 -- there is no reason to believe that the $49 price would have been unprofitable -- but the study identifies $89 as the revenue-maximizing price. Microsoft thus opted for the higher price."
This behavior has nothing to do with bulk purchase discounts, but it has everything to do with misuse of monopoly power. That is why the court demonstrated that both resellers and consumer purchasers were harmed by Microsoft's behavior.
They'll probably do what Nintendo did... (Score:2, Insightful)
Funny, but wrong... (Score:2)
Use of the following at the start of each program: int main(int argc, char* argv)
Funny. But wrong.
As I understand it (from my wife, who's a retired Windows developer - which I'm not), Windows programs consist of a bundle of event handlers and an event loop, and don't have a main() - especially a main(int argc, char** argv), which is a unix-system-interface-ism, related to handling command-line arguments.
One of her favorite flames relates to an alleged windows programmer who was unaware of this fact.
Re:Funny, but wrong... (Score:2, Informative)
And, yes, Windows programs have a 'main', it's called WinMain. It *does* recieve the command-line string (though not tokenized like in Unix, and it also recieves some other stuff).
Re:Funny, but wrong... (Score:2)
And, yes, Windows programs have a 'main', it's called WinMain. It *does* recieve the command-line string (though not tokenized like in Unix, and it also recieves some other stuff).
Which ARE the points:
It's not called main with arguments (int argc, char** argv). So the "copyright violation" of the original post is not correct.
The style of programming is different. In Windows you don't take a block of procedural code and wrap it in a main(), doing all the work in main() and its subroutines. Instead you do the equivalent of having your main() do nothing more than set up a bunch of signal handler callbacks, then do all your work in the signal handlers. (Or equivalently, follow the initialization with a loop, which waits for an event and then uses a case or table lookup to dispatch the appropriate handler.)
At least that's my limited understanding of the point my wife was making. Perhaps I DON'T understand Windows programming, just as you say. (Not surprising, since I haven't DONE any. B-) )
Re:Funny, but wrong... (Score:2)
int PASCAL WinMain( HANDLE hInstance,
HANDLE hPrevInstance,
LPSTR lpszCmdParam,
int nCmdShow )
{
}
Re:Funny, but wrong... (Score:2)
Program Startup: the main Function
A special function called main is the entry point to all C++ programs. This function is not predefined by the compiler; rather, it must be supplied in the program text. If you are writing code that adheres to the Unicode programming model, you can use the wide-character version of main, wmain. The declaration syntax for main is:
int main( );
or, optionally:
int main( int argc[ , char *argv[ ] [, char *envp[ ] ] ] );
The declaration syntax for wmain is as follows:
int wmain( );
or, optionally:
int wmain( int argc[ , wchar_t *argv[ ] [, wchar_t *envp[ ] ] ] );
Alternatively, the main and wmain functions can be declared as returning void (no return value). If you declare main or wmain as returning void, you cannot return an exit code to the parent process or operating system using a return statement; to return an exit code when main or wmain are declared as void, you must use the exit funct
Re:What does "GPL" stand for. (Score:2)
The basic idea is to invert copyright, to not just make your code public but also to KEEP it public, including versions of it modified by other people.
You copyright your code, then
license it to others, with the licence provision that provision that, if they distribute your code OR CODE DERIVED FROM IT (i.e. modifications or things containing it) they must also provide the source and sublicence it under the same terms.
Upsides:
Nobody can fix a bug and copyright the fixed version, keeping YOU from using the fix.
Creates a large "commons" of public code that other people can build on.
Lets a large body of users see the code and potentially debug it.
Downside (for proprietary software vendors): If someone trying to make a non-open-source product uses GPLed code as a small part of the product, unrelated to the product's key features, they must now publish the code to all their key features. (Exception: There's a variant called "LGPL" that essentially lets people use libraries without publishing anything but the libraries they used.)
To proprietary software vendors, who place a high value on keeping their "neato-keen inventions" secret, this is seen as "more expensive than money".
Re:What does "GPL" stand for. (Score:2)
Downside (for proprietary software vendors): If someone trying to make a non-open-source product uses GPLed code as a small part of the product, unrelated to the product's key features, they must now publish the code to all their key features. (Exception: There's a variant called "LGPL" that essentially lets people use libraries without publishing anything but the libraries they used.)
Trying to paint the GPL in a poor light? Any software publisher should be aware of the license associated with stuff they use in their product. If they aren't, then too bad - software is expensive, and it pays to protect your investment. If they are aware of what the GPL means (and it is a very simple license), then, since the GPLed feature is not core and fairly small, they should reimplement it, right? This smacks of Microsoft and their incessant whining about how it's so unfair that they can't just use somebody else's work for free.
Re:What does "GPL" stand for. (Score:2)
Trying to paint the GPL in a poor light?
Not at all. Just trying to explain why some software companies shy away from using anything GNU. A real drag when you're working for them and would like to use GNU toolsets, for instance.
Any software publisher should be aware of the license associated with stuff they use in their product. If they aren't, then too bad - software is expensive, and it pays to protect your investment.
Oh, but they are aware. And they're also concerned about the possibility that, if they use any GNU tool in development or even have the code in house, some GNU tool (i.e. Bison) or a lazy programmer might insert GPLed code in their product. Then once it's discovered the FSF or Stallman drags them into court and forces them to disgorge their source code.
Rather than risk this, some software shops just refuse to let it in the door.
And since Linux (or GNU/Linux, as Stallman likes to say) is under the GPL at the kernel, application, and development toolset level, this forms a barrier against the adoption of Linux.
If they are aware of what the GPL means (and it is a very simple license), then, since the GPLed feature is not core and fairly small, they should reimplement it, right?
Right.
But the net result is that GPLed and proprietary software are two separate worlds, with neither side able to incorporate the work of the other. (Or at least not witout serious reverse-engineering and hassle.)
Now this is FAIR. (The proprietary types won't let the GNU types use their proprietary code, the fruit of perhaps a decade of work by hundreds of people. So why should the GNU types let the proprietary types use theirs, which is the fruit of several decades of work by thousands?)
But it's a massive pain in the ass.
This smacks of Microsoft and their incessant whining about how it's so unfair that they can't just use somebody else's work for free.
Nah. Just trying to be "fair and balanced". B-)
I worked for several years in a shop where the corporate software stars were constantly flaming GPL as "more expensive than money". (A decade or so after they went comatose for lack of funds they threw in the towel and released their orphaned source - too little and too late.) I just wanted to make sure their ideas had been included in the discussion.
Re:What does "GPL" stand for. (Score:2)
once it's discovered the FSF or Stallman drags them into court and forces them to disgorge their source code.
IANAL, but if it was demonstrably unintentional, wouldn't the court be likely to assess a fine and require the removal of the GPL code?
And since Linux (or GNU/Linux, as Stallman likes to say) is under the GPL at the kernel, application, and development toolset level, this forms a barrier against the adoption of Linux.
Well, Linus has stated time and again that running a program under linux, while in requires some linking and interaction with the kernel, constitutes normal use. The issue with the standard libraries is the main reason that the LGPL was written - I don't think RMS ever intended to co-opt applications through the libs. He's an idealist, but he doesn't seem to like sstrongarm tactics.
Re:What does "GPL" stand for. (Score:2)
IANAL, but if it was demonstrably unintentional, wouldn't the court be likely to assess a fine and require the removal of the GPL code?
Probably. But the perception is that while FSF might be reasonable, Stallman has a socialist axe to grind and may push for draconian remidies. Copyleft is based on Copyright, and Copyright law recognizes that enforcement is a game of whack-a-mole. So it compensates by giving the copyright owner a sledgehammer for the moles he does hit.
But in business if you're dragged into court you've ALREADY lost, regardless of the outcome. The costs are high, you don't recover them if you win, and they come right out of your profit margin.
Winning one big suit can drive you into bankruptcy. So businessmen will generally avoid the risk, unless there's a lot of reward for taking the risk. Do Linux and GNU tools provide that improvement over the alternatives? Many companies say yes. But many say no - or "I don't know, but I DO know I don't need it. So I won't bet the farm."
Well, Linus has stated time and again that running a program under linux, while in requires some linking and interaction with the kernel, constitutes normal use. The issue with the standard libraries is the main reason that the LGPL was written - I don't think RMS ever intended to co-opt applications through the libs. He's an idealist, but he doesn't seem to like sstrongarm tactics.
I agree with both points. With the LGPL and the public statements of Linus (and others in similar positions in the Free Software movement) it's clear to me that with minimal care there's less of a risk with even (L)GPLed software than with proprietary software. (Imagine one of your guys using a Microsoft library, or reverse-engineering and cloning part of Microsoft's code to get around a problem, then finding that Microsoft actually intends to enforce some of those ELUA provisions. B-) )
But it's not MY opinion that matters. It's the opinion of the appropriate executives in thousands of companies, big and small. Many are Pointy Haired Bosses and all have been heavily propagandized by Microsoft. So some of just say "No GNUs is good GNUs."
Well *I* think it's a good idea... (Score:4, Interesting)
Well *I* think mass refunds ARE a good idea. A slap on the wrist that causes no pain is not very effective at changing future behavior. "First you get his attention."
As for "really did have a choice in the end", what choice? I've bought at least three computers with included Windows that I've never used, because there was no way to get a computer of similar characteristics WITHOUT bundled Windows due to Microsoft's anticompetitive practices. The ELUA that appeared on the screen when I booted 'em always said if you don't like it, don't use it and you get a refund. I've spent hours per machine trying to get that money refunded and have yet to see a cent.
I've always thought that one of the sanctions against Microsoft from the antitrust trial should be requiring them to set up a refund center for people who didn't use the bundled Windows and hadn't been given a refund, requiring them to return the entire added cost (including the computer company's and retailer's markup, and a bit extra for the user's time and trouble applying for the refund).
THAT would be the appropriate sanction for forcing the manufacturers to chose between charging for Windows on all their machines or having it on none.
Avoid the MS tax by making HD a separate line item (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Well *I* think it's a good idea... (Score:2)
You haven't priced building your own computer lately, have you? You used to be able to save money that way, but no more. It's generally cheaper to buy a system and pay the Microsoft tax than to roll your own. And it's not easy finding a computer dealer that does enough volume to have low prices that doesn't include Windows on every machine.
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Re:Well *I* think it's a good idea... (Score:2)
It saves hastle to buy it in one shot, but unless you happen to want exactly what they are offering, you are going to pay more that doing it yourself.
Re:Well *I* think it's a good idea... (Score:2)
LOL. That's some rather interesting logic. How about this alternate conclusion:
The customer has the right to complain (and receive legal remedy) if the price is higher than it would have been in the absence of illegal price fixing.
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Good luck! (Score:5, Insightful)
That way, they get you coming and going. You paid for the OS you didn't want or need, and you don't intend to buy anything from them in the future anyway, so the coupon will remain unused... Microsoft smiles. The lawyers smile, too, since they got paid. Consumers? Hey, you won, right? Be happy about it.
Re:Good luck! (Score:3)
Here's how it might work:
Windows (tm) XP 2003 edition U.S. Full Edition price list:
$199*
----
* Prices may vary in Alaska, Hawaii, and Iowa**.
** Iowa price $239.***
*** Special Iowa settlement offer: for a limited time, get $40 off of the standard list price. To qualify, fill in the following form and send to iowa-special-discount@microsoft.com
Name________________________
Address______________________
Age_________________________
Daytime Phone________________
Occupation___________________
SSN__________________________
Mother's Maiden Name________________
Your CPUs Unique ID Number___________________
Credit Card (MC/Visa/Discover) Number__________________ Exp Date_____
Re:Light on details? -- apples to apples please (Score:3, Insightful)
<blockquote>
According to Outpost.com:
MacOS X 10.1.3 - $129
</blockquote>
That's for the full version of OSX. I couldn't find an upgrade version.
Also according to Outpost.com:
Windows XP Home Upgrade - $99.
Windows XP Pro Upgrade - $199.
Windows XP Home Full Version - $199.
Windows XP Pro Full Version - $299.
Now obviously the big OEMs don't pay that much, but if you're going to compare retail price, at least compare the prices of equivalent products.
Re:Light on details? ... dumbass (Score:2)
Re:Light on details? ... dumbass (Score:2)
Re:Why can't a company be punished (Score:2)
Re:Why can't a company be punished (Score:2)
What a crock!
Do you have any faint clue as to the amount of Micro$oft'$ cash reserves?
At all?
BillG wouldn't walk across the street to piss on the money this judgement might cost him.
t_t_b
Re:Why can't a company be punished (Score:2)
If those other companies' stock prices are a function of Microsoft's price, then it either means: 1) They have invested in Microsoft, and therefore share responsibility for the damage that Microsoft caused or 2) Their prices are not based in reality to begin with.
What's good for them is good for the rest of the industry? (Hmm.. tell that to Apple, Novell, Caldera, AOL/TW, Nintendo. Tell it to the countless companies that have gone out of business because users felt they "needed" MS products, regardless of what the user wanted.) Policies and judgements should not be influenced by an abstract line on a graph that says "nasdaq" at the top, especially when there's so little correlation between the shape of that graph and the productivity and actual value of the companies.
Re:Wish I was in Iowa (Score:2)
But since I live in Seattle...
Big deal. You live in Seattle. So does everyone else.
Get over yourself.
Ten-to-one you moved here in the last three years, and you're from California.
BFD...
t_t_b
Re:MS is not a monopoly (Score:2, Informative)
Sure, it's not a clean, 100%-of-the-market textbook economic monopoly, liked you learned about in 7th Grade. Nobody ever said it was.
Fortunately, economists typically have more than a 7th Grade education. So, "monopoly" isn't usually that pure even in economics texts. Lookup up "Four Firm Concentration Ratio" or "Herfindahl-Hirschman Index" [usdoj.gov]. By either of those measures, MSFT enjoys unprecedented monopoly power (which doesn't require 100% market share).
Re:A Benefit (Score:2)
I agree.. just can't believe their statements. I don't care if it is improved to give me a shave and make my morning coffee when I sit down at the computer. I can't get over their comments that, IMHO, they're saying as long as they do something they feel is 'beneficial', they can violate the law and gouge due to lack of competition. Talk about arrogance, spin, and double talk. That's similar if Rockefeller said back in the old Standard Oil monopoly days 'but I'll put a service station on every corner as soon as I put all the other people out of business. I'll triple the price and gouge you, but you won't have as far to go to get gas. It's a public benefit, so you can't break up Standard Oil'. It wouldn't have floated then and shouldn't now.