Massachusetts Appealing Microsoft Ruling 307
linuxwrangler writes "Criticizing the "loophole-filled deal" and saying "We are prepared to go it alone," Massachusetts Attorney General Tom Reilly has announced that Massachusetts is appealing the Microsoft ruling. Seven other states have dropped out and are negotiating enforcement and attorney fees. West Virginia is still undecided on an appeal."
Just great (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Just great (Score:2)
If so, please tell me how a company or individual with money can drag out a lawsuit for years? It seems to blatantly defy logic and the point of the justice system.
Either you're right, or your wrong... WTF!?
Re:Just great (Score:3, Insightful)
Cases are usually dragged out because, suprisingly, lawyers have a lot of work to do. What you see on "Law & Order" isn't even 10% of what actually happens during a case. Arguments have to be prepared, witnesses have to be interviewed, re-interviewed, and re-re-interviewed. Tons of paperwork have to be completed. Jurors have to be selected. This is all *before* the trial itself starts.
The actual trial can take weeks (especially in a major one like this). There is usually a huge amount of evidence to be presented and dozens of witnesses have to be interviewed.
Not to mention, there are some lawyers who have to handle two of these cases at once.
So there is a reason lawyers have such slimy personalities. It probably comes from the immense amount of stress they are under.
Re:Just great (Score:2, Funny)
For example, tie up the Microsoft board of directors and throw them in a lake. If they survive, they abused their monopoly position. If they drown, then there was no illegal behaviour on the part of Microsoft.
This is simple, effective and prompt justice. There is no need for protracted proceedings, because they either survive the ordeal or they don't. No need to waste time on second guessing.
Re:Just great (Score:2)
I still think the firing squad and caning both have their places in the world if used judiciously.
Much more severe, _personal_ punishments should be doled out. Not just cash settlements. To the CEOs of major corporations, it's just Monopoly money anyway.
It's the symbolic last act of defiance... (Score:4, Insightful)
Massachusetts (Score:5, Interesting)
Don't Blame Me. I'm from Massachusetts
Somehow seems strangely appropriate in this context. [smile]
I wonder if we can get a Massachusetts only settlement? ;-)
Re:It's the symbolic last act of defiance... (Score:2)
Although Virginia/West Virginia's behavior doesn't really surprise me, given their proximity to D.C.
[1] I believe in freely sharing potentially useful information with fellow humans in whatever form it may require, including paper, text, and computer instructions/data
BTW, that's a cool quote about the Mensa girls, it's beem years since I dealt with them... *sigh*
Re:It's the symbolic last act of defiance... (Score:3, Insightful)
The Lone Ranger (Score:4, Insightful)
Much respect to Massachusetts for appealing the ruling, but with no other (except possibly one) state to support it, it'll just die a natural death.... I'm sure we will have heard the last of this whole thing by this time next year. After then, it'll probably just be the odd private suit Microsoft is so used to dealing with, certainly nothing which will hurt them or encourage them to change their ways.
Well if you think about it (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Well if you think about it (Score:4, Insightful)
Incidentally, I found this line really funny:
(No, please don't torment my EULAs! They've suffered so much already!)Nope, money is spent (Score:2, Informative)
Double jeopardy? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Double jeopardy? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Double jeopardy? (Score:5, Informative)
Think of it this way. Someone negligently drives their vehicle into your house (Happened here last week, a semi lost control and took out half a house. Everything else in the example is made up.) Now let's pretend that the driver was forced by the company to drive 12 hours a day, clearly against the rules. The trucking company's insurance refuses to pay. You take them to court and allege 1) that their employee knowingly violated trucking rules and regulations 2) that the company knew their driver was breaking the law 3) that the company forced them to break the law and 4) that the driver was on company business at the time of the accident. The jury finds in your favor. The trucker, his company, and their insurance are all found liable. Then the judge says, "You get a dollar out of this to pay for your medical bills and to rebuild your house, and the company can continue to break the rules." First, you'd be pretty po'd. Second, you'd appeal the judges ruling to a higher court. Which is exactly what's happening here.
Re:Double jeopardy? (Score:2, Insightful)
The Nazis for the Holocaust.
When the crime is horrendous enough, we can try them again and again and again.
When the justice system can't deliver justice, its up to the people to do something about it. What we are seeing now is Joe Sixpack losing interest. Theres football to watch afterall.
Re:Double jeopardy? (Score:2)
Hello? CIVIL case (Score:2)
Also, an appeal is of course part of the same action; jeopardy remains "attached." I could explain about acquittals and such
judicata and $$$ (Score:3, Insightful)
These principles can be analogized to double jeopardy, but this is not a new lawsuit but an appeal from the judge's recent ruling. The earlier appeal was from Judge Jackson's order; the circuit partially vacated and sent the case back down for a new judge to evaluate the merits; then the parties settled and the court accepted the federal version with some tweaks, to Massachusetts's consternation.
There, a complete answer. I know, no one cares, but I love this stuff.
Re money, if it seems unreasonable to spend MORE money on the litigation, consider how much has already been spent, and that an appeal will cost pennies in comparison. In for a pound, in for an extra penny. (Well, OK, thousands, but again that's nothing; and the state's lawyers are probably salaried.) Massachusetts has already worked up all its arguments for what it wants; and the trial judge rejected them. I do not know whether MA has good arguments, and hope it is not being a sore loser. The DC appeals court is not going to be disposed to disturb the trial judge's ruling unless she got the law wrong, and it's a fairly conservative court anyway.
As a last note re money, recall the many millions of dollars at stake in the dispute between the parties. From the structure of the settlement, one hopes there will be no need for a new lawsuit on the monopoly Q. However, I seriously doubt this is Microsoft's last time in court.
Re:Double jeopardy? (Score:2)
http://www.ratical.org/corporations/SCvSPR1886.
So according to this, the company is not subjected to different laws when it comes to criminal liability.
A company which allows for shares of ownership or other securities to be traded are subject to ADDITIONAL rules, not different ones.
Although I could be wrong of course.
Consequences? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Consequences? (Score:3, Informative)
Well IANAL, and all of that stuff... As I understand this, this is an appeal of a ruling on the federal level, therefore it will have a national affect. This is not a new case being brought up in Mass. jurisdiction, but an existing federal case, as the state of Mass. being on of the litigants...
btw, what is the next level of appeal for this puppy? I mean, theoretically how long can this thing go on? (read as: How many hops til they hit the supreme court?)
Hops? (Score:2)
One more hop. DC trial ct --> DC Circuit Ct of Appeals --> SC
The Supreme Court has discretionary review (by granting a writ of certiorari) and decides fewer than a hundred cases a year from thousands submitted. As this case is mostly about facts and a judgment call on the engineering of the settlement, I suppose they'd be unlikely to take it.
For that matter, I doubt the Court of Appeals will want to reopen the wound. But there could be this great issue I don't know about. I doubt it, given that the other states jumped ship.
I'm not sure how things are handled when one litigant splits off to appeal. It depends on the design of the litigation and the settlement, which the district court merely approved. Obviously MA do anything to bind the other states; if the circuit court were to vacate and remand, I assume everyone would get together for a reunion in DC.
Re:Hops? (Score:2)
Is there any sort of oversight, or process of appeal to get a case heard if the SC doesn't decide to hear it?
Purely hypothetically, say that Congress passed a law making it illegal to be blonde. Clearly this is unconstitutional, but if it is enforced many people will go to jail. Obviously they will want to appeal it.
What if the SC refuses to hear it?
A law that extreme certainly should be overturned.
But say all members of the SC hated blondes more than anything in the world.
Is there any way, in a case this clear cut and critical, to make them hear it?
(you did say you loved this stuff so I thought I'd ask)
Re:Hops? (Score:3, Informative)
There's a reason the Supreme Court is called Supreme. It's the end of the road. There is definitely no way to force them to review a case, and imagine how cranky they'd be if you did. Even if there were oversight, that could be corrupt, and so on in a sort of Zeno's Paradox [mathforum.org]. Alternatively, the corrupt Court could grant cert. and uphold the law, same result as refusing to hear it but yielding precedent controlling all of the nation's inferior courts.
The Senate can impeach Justices for certain reasons, but being stupid is not one of them. (On that topic, if the Senate abuses the impeachment power, who reviews that? Another example of unreviewability. Don't worry, the President gets a few absolute powers, too.) Also, if the Congress was corrupt enough to pass the law, they're not going to attack the Court for supporting them
Hang on, there is one last super-supreme court -- the public. The bedrock of democracy. For better or worse. They get Congress to repeal the law by replacing all of them if necessary by voting. Unless they all hate blondes, too, or like most Americans don't show up to vote.
Humor aside, we have a Constitution, the supreme law, as a check on discriminatory laws by Congress. No matter how popular, certain kinds of laws can not be enforced, protecting minorities from overreaching by the majority assuming a sane Supreme Court. For example of wackiness, the majority can't sentence the minority to death; that would break a couple of amendments. If you think that's a goofy example, recall that Nazi Germany had a valid court system applying the Nuremberg laws -- with a Constitution the judges could have struck the laws down and gone to concentration camps. Most countries do not have this judicial review, where the courts get the last word.
But wait! There's even trump card on the Constitution: the amendment. That requires a supermajority 3/4 vote of the states, which is hard to get.
Dizzy yet? It's called checks and balances -- Schoolhouse Rock [amazon.com] did a favorite number about it ("We the People."). Plus, you can see why lawyers use so many footnotes, they just can't stop worrying there's something they left out.
civil disobedience (Score:3, Informative)
Jury nullification, too... but you've fallen asleep.
Re:Consequences? (Score:2, Interesting)
No. But since MA happens to have its head screwed on straight (at least with respect to this matter) they could feasibly invoke state laws which would, of course, only apply to MA.
Could MA get away with a law to the effect of "All OS's sold in the state must also release the source" - I don't know. But if even if they did, you can rest assured MS would either ignore the law or just stop selling their OS in MA.
Disclaimer: INAL.
Re:Consequences? (Score:2)
Applicability of ruling (Score:2)
But since this is about punishment for a company and not about declaring a law unconstitutional, I'm not sure what happens.
Re:Applicability of ruling (Score:3, Interesting)
Woah, wait a second. You mean to tell me that the First Circuit has Puerto Rico and all of New England EXCEPT FOR CONNECTICUT AND VERMONT! How did Connecticut and Vermont get pulled into the Second Circuit with New York, while Puerto Rico avoids being part of the 11th Circuit with their neighbors Alabama, Georgia and Florida. It looks to me like all of the other Circuits are neighboring states.
Maybe a better division would be to have all of New England be the 1st Circuit, include New York in the current 3rd Circuit (NJ and PA), and put Puerto Rico in the 11th Circuit with its neighbor Florida. I would say that all of those regions share a bit more in common than the current division.
Maybe it's just me but this sounds like a really odd division of the Circuits
Re:Consequences? (Score:2)
Hmmm... (Score:5, Insightful)
This just seems like a colossal waste of time and money. If Mass could get other states on-side, maybe the costs would be less...
But this piece-meal approach to dealing with monopolies like MS (or IBM in a previous generation) is bullcrap. If the federal gov't can't come up with a reasonable punishment/settlement that all states sign off, there will never be any truly effective measures put in place. Another case when distributed power to states gives companies (and criminals) silly-ass easy loopholes to jump through...
Re:Hmmm... (Score:2)
Glad I don't live there, my ass.
AG, not DA (Score:2)
Cost? Not much compared to what has already been spent -- what's another 1%? Plus state attys are salaried and cheap compared to private practice; those who pursue gov't work take a major pay ct of 50% or more, in exchange for saner hours and that warm fuzzy feeling. I assume they did not contract this out.
This is not piecemeal. If the state has a basis for appeal it should do so, and should not be bossed around by the federal gov't which may have worse or politically clouded judgment.
IBM was a 13-year federal investigation that was abandoned when IBM itself sank in market relevance, and is generally regarded as a disaster. But tech antitrust has proved a whole new animal.
Re:Hmmm... (Score:5, Informative)
Ultimately, their opinions don't matter. It's a federal court, so if Massacusetts wins this appeal and gets harsher punishments out of the process, the results are binding nationwide, Ashcroft or no Ashcroft.
"how much money will this cost Mass taxpayers? (glad I don't live there)"
The MA Attorney General is a full time job. The salaries of everybody involved will be paid whether they're pressing their appeal in this case or not. The only real "cost" on the commonwealth's part is the price of putting people on this case that could be working other cases.
"when is the DA position up for grabs? (i.e.: how many votes is this person trying to suck out of people?)"
Will this be an election issue? Would this help or hinder the incumbent in the next election? Is it possible that the DA is doing this out of principle, at least to some extent?
This should be intersting... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:This should be intersting... (Score:2)
You assume that he can. Most states choose their Attourny General by direct election, not by executive appointment. You're confusing it with the federal government.
So, want to bet ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Like this [sptimes.com] guy, maybe?
Here [miami.com] is a link to another article on the same story. From that article:
Sounds as if it's working already.So, what? (Score:2, Insightful)
Are you saying that it is better to not do anything because someone might say that he is a good boy or that he is doing it out of self-interest? Or are you saying that he is actually doing it out of self-interest? Or are you saying anything at all?
It could be that the action is sincere, or it could be that the action is taken for personal advantage under the pretext of fighting for the common good. But you are throwing dirt without giving any evidence beyond some hearsay.
Someone does something, and won some acclaim for that (deserved or not), then that someone must be doing it for his own good only, according to your logic? This kind of tenuous accusation will only work on people who don't use their whole reasoning faculty to examine real evidence and instead jump to conclusion easily (especially if the insinuation is inline with their preconceived idea of How Things Should Be (TM)). Unfortunately, that describes way too many people.
Cheers,
e.
All a matter of perspective (Score:5, Insightful)
Slashdot headline: Massachusetts Appealing Microsoft Ruling
The NYT [newyorktimes.com], WSJ [wsj.com], and McNews [usatoday.com] seem to agree with Slashdot's perspective, FWIW.
Re:All a matter of perspective (Score:3, Interesting)
Frank Rich, an NYT columnist, has railed repeatedly against the risk of corporate monsters, esp. Disney, buying media outlets. This could be an example of subtle influence -- I mean, which is the better journalistic headline? Report of the has-beens or the still-be's? At least MSNBC is upfront about its potential conflict of interest, if anyone stops to wonder what those letters stand for.
Go for it Massachusetts (Score:2, Interesting)
Microsoft will respond as it normally does (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Microsoft will respond as it normally does (Score:4, Insightful)
Saying "extend and embrace" is kinda like saying "conquor and divide".
*most times the 'improvements' are indeed real and should be paid for, they just have the 'unfortunate' side effect of locking out competition from less innovative companies, just like progress in the technical arts has the unfortunate side effect of forcing you to throw out a perfectly good machine and buy a new one. Sorry about that. But sometimes the incompatible extensions largely ARE anticompetitive. I think that's one way to nail Msft's tactics is get a judge to consider something like the Kerberos extensions that make Msft's incompatible with other implementations. Is the inconvenience of this incompatibility actually a real 'improvement' of such value to a customer that it's worth ditching competitors and going with the alledgedly superior single vendor solution? I think not - it's incompatibility for the purpose of leveraging a monopoly position in one segment into others.
Well (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Well (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Well (Score:2)
Re:There's more (Score:5, Informative)
There is no real need for the coffee to be that hot, except to convenience McD's which doesn't want coffee to cool too quickly sitting out, and doesn't want annoyed customers coming back. So they consciously made a business decision to scortch the occasional patron -- and got the ire of the jury for this. The food service industry responded to the decision by lowering coffee service temps.
She initially offered to settle for slightly more than her medical bills. This was not a gold-digger.
The punitive award WAS excessive. The jury was evidently pissed and exceeded its power, but in its defense consider that a punitive damage is supposed to hurt -- hence punistive or punish -- and how much does it take for a behemoth like McD's to even notice? The judge properly intervened to reduce it radically, by over 2/3 (my memory of the numbers differs from what the linked article says). The plaintiff then had a choice whether to retry the case or take the remittitur. The point is that the system worked.
I used to laugh at this case, too. Until I got a real accounting of the facts halfway through law school, not the bullshit blindered version reported by the media and trumpeted by the conservative critics who would like to gut tort law. The only thing good about them is that most did not know the truth either, and negligently parroted what they had heard somewhere, an urban legend. With the internet it is more difficult to get away with this sort of propagandizing.
Re:There's more (Score:2)
more to read (Score:4, Informative)
Note also that these were really nasty burns, sometimes with no culpability of the victim.
Beware the words "tort reform" accompanied by deliberately distorted stories, as has happened here. The reform proponents have to be able to come up with at least a few good anecdotes without corrupting stories that actually contradict their position. And even if they do come up with worthwhile anecdotes, remember that anecdotes are unreliable (!) and that statistics or a broad sampling is a better foundation for changing the law.
OT (Score:2)
Did you actually take a shit each and every time you flushed the toilet?
Re:Well (Score:3, Funny)
The cost of this appeal (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The cost of this appeal (Score:3, Informative)
Well, maybe you have missed something: this could be a profit center for the states. From this story [miami.com]:
There is also the name-recognition factor, which is so dear to the politically ambitious Attorney General, in any state.
Re:The cost of this appeal (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm sure others can think of better ideas than this. Simply crying "Oh, it's too expensive, better let them go" is a bit shortsighted. If Standard Oil had been allowed to go about its practices, it would no doubt have cost the average taxpayer a whole lot more in *being ripped off for every gas-related (and more!) purchase*.
Am I way off here?
The fight must ALWAYS go on (Score:4, Insightful)
You make it sound like it's time to give up.
I can tell you one thing for sure, if Microsoft saw no opposition to its buisness practices why should they give a damn about reforming them? In this regard, even one voice is better than none.
Oh well - I will admit the days of hope (however false it was) during the early days of the whole States vs. Microsoft thing has long since faded, but at least one state is willing to prolong the fight.
More power to them! I only wish my state (OH) had some ballz.
Re:The fight must ALWAYS go on (Score:2)
Better use for that money (Score:2, Insightful)
Another year or so in court will never stop microsoft from doing their business. Not supporting/buying their products is the best way to let them know that you're not satisfied with their product.
Figures... (Score:2, Offtopic)
Honestly, though I have no great love for Microsoft (having suffered through WinMe, and being raised on Macs and IBM DOS will do that to ya)- I'm glad the government is at least keeping it's nose out of something in a day where it wants it's nose in everything [darpa.mil].
I mean, let's face it, for even your intelligent computer user, Linux is no solution. I went through the process of partitioning, and installing Red Hat and only came out dissapointed. I could never get a PPP protocol to sign me onto the internet, and even though the computer didn't crash, I couldn't use my CD-ROM either. Until Linux is as intuitive as Windows (or even better, Mac's OS X) it's doomed to be for businesses and hobbyists.
Re:Figures... (Score:2)
What does Linux have to do with the Antitrust lawsuit? Furthermore, what does a solution have to do with Microsoft?
-BrentRe:Figures... (Score:2)
Mass., home state of the FSF (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Mass., home state of the FSF (Score:3, Funny)
I think I just decided... (Score:2, Insightful)
a bad thing? (Score:5, Insightful)
I know
Think about how far along MS has come in a short time. Where will it end? If they are not stopped - it won't end. It sounds cliche, but MS is clearly on the path to world domination (ok, that was maybe just added for dramatic effect).
MS will control "digital currency", "digital passports", etc. Mostly because of naive public acceptance.. but nobody else will ever gain a voice with that same public if MS can continue on their path as they have been.
In the end, I think logic and common sense will sweep the masses - but I don't see that end for many years (if not decades). Good for MA if they can impose some restrictions on MS early in the game (or maybe we are about mid-game).
Maybe you can say to yourself "MS can't decide what I can and cannot do" - and you may be right (for the time being). But you are a minority and MS is quickly moving into a position to decide what the general public can and cannot do with PC's, what hardware manufacturers can and cannot do (corporate politics), what software makers can and cannot do (neophyte strangling). Outside of the technology sector, MS has a great deal of pull in the media and even in politics.
Please, don't sluff off the efforts of MA as "wasted" or "useless" - instead, you should show support for their efforts as MA really is looking for a solution in the interest of the public. (and I know, there is always political motives involved)
Re:a bad thing? (Score:2)
Think about how far along MS has come in a short time. Where will it end? If they are not stopped - it won't end. It sounds cliche, but MS is clearly on the path to *world domination* (ok, that was maybe just added for dramatic effect).
Pardon? Yes, I'm sure MS does aspire to be the sole provider of the world's software; most businesses want to be the only one in the market.
That said, I don't think they're on that path at all. In fact, I was having this discussion with a couple of friends just a few nights ago. I argued, to some success, that MS is actually losing mindshare. I've talked to a number of people recently; my bosses (both retired Air Force officers) both appreciate the value of having source code, and one even mentioned it to me (which came as a total shock) that for our new project, we need to get the source, not just binaries. I was flying from Oklahoma City to Indianapolis a few weeks ago, and got to talking to one of my passengers. I don't remember exactly how, but he and I discussed open-source software and alternative operating systems. These are not isolated incidents; I can't count the number of people to whom I've spoken who "have heard of the Linux thing," or are just tired of 'doze bugs (and IE, and Outlook). I've sold a good half-dozen people on Mozilla, and use it in a production environment at work, with many people being happy. I installed it for my parents, too; they like it as well. Again, not isolated incidents.
So yes, I'm sure MS would like to further strengthen its dominance in the market, but I don't see it happening. Too many people are starting to notice. More importantly, too many organizations are starting to notice: the New York Times, the BBC, IBM, any number of embedded system producers (systems for which software must be developed, and systems which will be used by many people). MS's own FUD mentions Linux frequently; that will (and does) generate questions. Even the government is looking at open-source as an alternative; having worked in government, I can tell you that the inertia there is nothing short of phenomenal. The tide is changing, my friend; maybe not quickly, but I assure you, it is changing.
Re:a bad thing? (Score:2)
AG Reilly's Comments... (Score:4, Informative)
Also, a nice timeline/chart of the litigation is here [state.ma.us].
Tom Reilly is a nice guy. He even shook my hand in my office! (Granted, it was really his office... that I just happen to work in, but he was still nice enough to stop by and say hi.)
It should also be noted by anyone who accuses him of doing this for votes that he ran unopposed in November's election.
Just mix the words and you get... (Score:4, Funny)
This whole State thing started in Mass. (Score:2)
Effort counts (Score:3, Interesting)
1) They know that they are wrong in their support of MS.
2) They know that the AG is SUPPOSED to represent those who have been injured when the law is broken. They just wish it weren't true in this case.
3) They can't find the right words to make "GUILTY" go away...it's a stigma no matter what the punishment to MS is.
4) They are fearful that their true lack of knowledge in the tech world will put them at a competitive disadvantage if ANY non MS (read...non-understood) technology were to become popular. They don't do *nix because they don't understand it. And won't. And don't have to so long as the monopoly keeps them safe.
It doesn't matter if the AG wins or loses. His efforts keep the truth closer to the front page where people read about it. Perception is reality so let the charges fly.
By the way, I just e-mailed Mr. Reilly as well as phoned his office (617-727-2200) thanking him for his efforts and offering my support. He should know we care.
Delaware should be appealing (Score:2, Interesting)
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
In unrelated news... (Score:5, Funny)
A Microsoft spokesman downplayed suggestions that this was in retaliation for the States' refusal to let the antitrust suit die. Instead he commented that "We feel that we can better serve our core customer base at this point by adding these changes. It will be better in the long run for our youngest users. We're doing it for the children. Don't you care about the children."
A spokesman from the state of Massachussetts could not be contacted, since all of the communications and utilities ran on versions of Microsoft software, and have since been shut down.
Funny (Score:2, Funny)
I'm a mass resident... (Score:2)
Besides, if we can spend 100's of millions of dollars a day on the Big Dig (largest public works project ever) we can kick out some cash to fight microsoft.
Colleges and Universities in MA (Score:3, Interesting)
Is it legal to... (Score:4, Insightful)
1) Federal laws, people's right to choice, etc. clearly violated--not just once, but many, many times.
2) USA justice dept. and judicial branch too corrupt
3) Federal gov't and MS have "buddy deal" to make MS the USA standard, and let the rest of the world choose between Linux or MS, much the way they choose between Metric and English units. (I hope Linux ends up being the international equivalent of Metric units--successful).
So, is it legal for a state government to declare itself "Microsoft Free", now that they are a convicted criminal organization? Why don't the "solaris seven" use this option, and rather than fight the biased judicial and federal justice dept., that is, just declare themselves microsoft free, as far as state government purchases, and let people use whatever they choose, but urge them to choose freedom?
It seems fairly obvious to me that we will soon see the politicians shrilly supporting the US "corporate welfare for microsoft program" as they did the use of british units in the seventies--even though the rest of the world was switching to metric right in front of them.
That will be a sick sight indeed..a bunch of fat ass senators screaming about america, god, the flag, apple pie and microsoft. Sickening, but it will probably come to that.
Update on the appeal... (Score:3, Informative)
They'd better win.. (Score:2)
If Microsoft wins, rumor has it they're just going to take over MA for their East Coast campus.
Bad News (Score:2)
However, I feel good--I just watched Antitrust [imdb.com] again.
This is great news (Score:4, Insightful)
Other states reps' argument about keeping MS on their toes by watching and enforcing rulling if necesarry is a very weak one. Actually, it's a load of crap, complete and utter bullshit and good sign that MS have shelled out few milion bucks where it was needed.
You can try keeping MS on their toes only if you take the battle to the next level, which is what Mass AG is doing. And rightfully so, since settlement was not the propper remmedy for breaking the law. In fact, it was big win for Microsoft.
Kudos to Massachusetts Attorney General Tom Reilly, he deserves all help he may need. I'll do my part:
1. Show how neat Linux is to at least 2 people a week and help them run penguin on their PC.
2. Activelly advocate Linux and Open Source anywhere, anytime.
3. Keep the fight for Linux at my workplace going, despite the fact that some guys have already been sacked for doing so.
That's what I can do. Have you asked yourselves what can you do and have you started doing it?
West Virginia!?! (Score:3, Funny)
Yay (Score:2)
Boo US.
Vote Tom Reilly for AG (Score:2)
MS Buys European Anti-Trust Top Commisioner (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/11/30/technology/30
I guess it's on way to end their trouble in europe by hiring everyone who opposes them.
I guess everyone as a price
Re: It's Not Pointless, It's Sending a Messsage. (Score:5, Informative)
"Reilly characterized the settlement between Microsoft and the federal government, which a U.S. district judge approved earlier this month, as a ''loophole-filled deal'' that won't affect the software maker's aggressive practices or send the appropriate message.
''Microsoft has been found to have repeatedly violated the antitrust laws,'' Reilly said. ''We believe that remedy must send a message that breaking the law does not pay.''"
It may ultimately prove futile for Massachusetts to send this message to Microsoft, but it is worth the attempt. The only other way that Massachusetts can send a message to Microsoft is by replacing Microsoft products with other vendors' commercial or open source products.
Did Microsoft give up its aggressive practices? (Score:3, Informative)
Did Microsoft give up its aggressive practices? This article gives an overview of the present state of things; judge for yourself: Windows XP Shows the Direction Microsoft is Going [hevanet.com]. If Microsoft ended its aggressive practices, why continue legal action? If Microsoft continues being aggressive, why shouldn't legal action continue?
Re:Pointless (Score:5, Insightful)
Regardless of the merits of the case I don't see the Appeals court overturning a settlement. One of the major problems with the case was that attempts at settlement were made impossible by the states who were determined to hold out for electoral reasons.
As for the case itself, it was blown once that nitwit Jackson got involved. It is one thing to be a judge with opinions, if you discuss them with the press during the trial those opinions are very likely to be considered bias. Once the appeals court threw out the penalty phase of the trial there was no prospect of a final judgement against Microsoft for a decade. Microsoft could reasonably expect the Supreme court to be sympathetic to the argument that having found the judge to have been biased they were entitled to a completely new trial.
I also thing that the DoJ could have put up a much better case if they had concentrated on the contractual issues where there were real problems and not getting side tracked into the Web browser issue. Netscape failed for a simple reason, the business model was to sell Web server software and that rapidly became a commodity item, particularly once Apache started to gain traction. There were 10 free Web browsers before Marc had heard of the Web, the idea that Web browsers would be a paid application was wierd. Netscape would not have had the market share it did if it had been really charging for the browser.
Re:Pointless (Score:3, Insightful)
Bingo! I never had any problem with Microsoft packaging IE along with Windows. Everyone else was doing this- Jamie Zawinksi's home page mentions something about finishing Netscape 1.0 in time for SGI to ship it with Irix 5.3. On the other hand, forcing Compaq and Apple to ship only IE on their systems is far beyond mere sleaziness, as is forcing OEMs into agreements that preclude pre-installing other OSes. Too bad the DOJ couldn't make a decent case, or find any execs with the balls to stand up to Microsoft.
The whole browser-tying issue made for some hilarious embarassments for Microsoft, but it just didn't deserve much more than a slap on the wrist. It actually bothered me, because the government appeared to be getting into the business of regulating technological advancements rather than regulating contract law etc., which enabled Microsoft to spew bullshit about "freedom to innovate" that wouldn't have lasted for a second if the main issue had been bullying PC makers. It's only a short step from preventing browser tying to requiring integrated DRM tech or mandating crypto backdoors.
Browser useless? (Score:2)
They said, I did wonder how the IE strategy could ever work, unless they managed somehow to privatize HTML. I guess it was not clear until recently that small lightly-funded groups would produce excellent browsers. (I use Chimera for Mac OS X, Opera as second choice, IE if nothing else works.)
I am still not clear on why the Bush Administration immediately abandoned a tying claim on which they had been successful, other than it is the Bush Administration. [partisan jab in velvet glove]
Re:Pointless (Score:3, Insightful)
No, they weren't.
Jamie Zawinksi's home page mentions something about finishing Netscape 1.0 in time for SGI to ship it with Irix 5.3.
So you're saying that SGI wrote Netscape?
Or are you saying that Netscape 1.0 was integrated into Irix 5.3, so that you couldn't remove it?
You're completely and totally wrong.
MS wrote IE, and gave it away, and made it essentially uninstallable soley to squash Netscape.
In other words, they used their monopoly in one market to gain a foothold (and now a majority) in another unrelated market.
Re:Pointless (Score:2, Insightful)
If you were, for example, writing your own operating system, would it be fair for someone to force you to include the competition's software? No, that would be ridiculous. That's like saying Ford is strong-arming the car market by not allowing Chevy parts to be easily installed into their cars. Microsoft should be free to do whatever they want with their operating system. Whatever you may think of Windows, Microsoft's employees laboured over the operating system to make it work good (if it didn't work good, why would so many people use it?). They're entitled to include -- or exclude -- anything they wish.
That said, there's also another reason that Internet Explorer is so biasedly packaged into Windows; it's part of the operating system. Explorer and Internet Explorer, while separate, are closely tied together. Microsoft's target market (or, more specifically, the market that uses Microsoft products) don't care about third-party browsers. They LIKE the fact that they can type a URL into Explorer and have it connect straight to it, without having to wait for a less-integrated third-party browser to load up separately. The list of IE tie-ins goes on.
It's ridiculous to pick at this subject. If you don't like Internet Explorer, don't use it. You might not be able to uninstall it, but you can sure as Hell use Mozilla/Netscape/Opera/whatever if you want. You can set the default Web browser to something beside Internet Explorer. Sure it's still there, but why do you care?
PS: Obligatory disclaimer: I'm not a huge Microsoft fanboy, and i enjoy using alternate operating systems and even alternate browsers; please don't ass-rape me with flames suggesting the contrary.
Re:Pointless (Score:3, Insightful)
No. They can't.
The reason? They are a monopoly, and monopolies are held to a higher standard than the average company.
Your Ford/Chevy analogy falls apart because of this. If there was only one automaker in the world, then that automaker would be similarly restricted from making it impossible for third parties to make replacement parts.
Microsoft's employees laboured over the operating system to make it work good (if it didn't work good, why would so many people use it?).
I never understand why people bother trolling.. is there a point to it?
At any rate, you could just as easily ask why do so many people buy Campbell's Tomato Soup when making it from scratch costs less, tastes better, is more nutritious, and really takes no more time? It boils down to marketing and to people being unaware of the alternatives.
Re:Pointless (Score:3, Insightful)
Microsoft are not done expanding yet. Everything they do is based on the need for their business to be ten times bigger than it is, years from now- hundreds of times bigger, decades from now, etc.
They're not gonna start cashing in on stuff that they can still use to leverage their past successes. Hell, they're mostly not gonna cash in AT ALL for the simple reason that expansion is the policy, not maximum income.
It's valid to wonder what the HELL Microsoft could possibly be doing in twenty years that would warrant their being ten or a hundred times as big as they are- since they already own computing, and are moving in on media in several ways, possibly they will need to obtain monopoly control over ALL worldwide communications, placing them on very much the level of a first world country as far as geopolitical power.
It is NOT as valid to expect that since they have not tried to cash in on their existing monopolies, therefore they're safe to have around.
Browsers, Disk Compression, Winsocks (Score:2)
Trumpet had a business selling Winsock software, which made TCP/IP possible on Windows 3.1. Microsoft included native support in the operating system. Operating systems are now considered unacceptable if they don't include TCP/IP support in the base package.
So there's the rub... what's the difference between advancing an operating system, and using it to undercut other people's businesses?
Re:Pointless (Score:2, Insightful)
Bias assumes prejudice. (An unfavorable opinion formed without reason.) Given the behavior of Gates and the MS attorneys, I would argue that Judge Jackson's statements were reasonable and logical.
His mistake was attempting to explain this to the population at large. (Heaven forbid that the judicial process might be so transparent that people actually understand it.)
I have to agree that the DoJ didn't seem to get it.
Re:Pointless (Score:3, Interesting)
This is a courtroom, not a democracy. Ultimately, it doesn't matter how everybody else feels about the settlement, all that matters is the validity of Massachusetts complaints.
Besides, how can you say the appeals court was "pro-Microsoft?" It wasn't Judge Kollar-Kotelly's (sp?) place to say whether or not the settlement was good or bad.
"Once the appeals court threw out the penalty phase of the trial there was no prospect of a final judgement against Microsoft for a decade."
Um... you missed something there. The penalty phase was the only thing thrown out. The final judgement stands.
"Microsoft could reasonably expect the Supreme court to be sympathetic to the argument that having found the judge to have been biased they were entitled to a completely new trial."
The appeals court already smacked that one down by throwing out only the penalty phase. Microsoft will have to pull something out of its rear end to convince the USSC that the appeals court was in the wrong.
" I also thing that the DoJ could have put up a much better case if they had concentrated on the contractual issues where there were real problems and not getting side tracked into the Web browser issue. Netscape failed for a simple reason"
They're one and the same. Microsoft OEM contracts originally said "You must install IE." They got taken to court, lost, and then 'integrated' IE into 95 and 98. The browser issue is just one example of the many contractural problems Microsoft has with OEM distributors.
Re:Pointless (Score:2, Funny)