Microsoft Sued for Defective Software 641
Door-opening Fascist writes "eWeek is reporting that a South Korean citizen action group, People's Solidarity for Participatory Democracy, is suing Microsoft for putting the SQL Slammer vulnerability into Windows. They are doing so on behalf of the South Korean people and businesses affected by SQL Slammer."
Somewhere in Redmond... (Score:4, Funny)
Ballmer: Yes, master?
Gates: Say, how much would it cost to purchase the country of South Korea?
Re:Somewhere in Redmond... (Score:3, Funny)
Does have a nice ring to it.
Re:Somewhere in Redmond... (Score:5, Funny)
Gates: Ballmer, loyal comrade, I've an assignment for you.
Ballmer: Yes, master?
Gates: Tell GW, South Korea needs to "liberated", too!
Re:Somewhere in Florida, lots of voters are riled. (Score:3, Insightful)
that's not entirely true. at least not in terms of popular vote.
"Not entirely true"? You're dead wrong. Bush won the election fair and square. According to the constitution, he won. End of story. There is no special rules for winning the popular vote. There's no half-winning or half-losing. He won. Complaining otherwise just demonstrates a non-understanding of the US Constitution. Get over it.
And no, I didn't vote for Bush. I voted for Gore.
Re:Somewhere in Redmond... (Score:5, Funny)
Silly lawsuit (Score:3, Insightful)
Second, it seems that it would be like suing Stephen King for causing nightmares.
Re:Silly lawsuit (Score:5, Insightful)
How so? Last I checked, people who released software under the GPL didn't spend millions on advertising that claims said software is secure and reliable.
Plus, GPLed software has the source publicly available, so the argument could be made that reviewing the code before deploying it would comprise 'due diligence' on the part of anyone who wished to use that software, and that if someone didn't do that, it's negligence on their part.
With Microsoft, you can't take a look at their code, you just have to take them at their word (HAH!) when they say how good it is.
Re:Silly lawsuit (Score:5, Insightful)
Just like those admins that didn't patch their boxes didn't exercise "due diligence"? Even though a patch was availible for months before? Negligent like them?
ask Bill ... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Silly lawsuit (Score:5, Insightful)
And the MSSQL patch was available BEFORE the slammer worm hit. I don't see the difference.
Re:Silly lawsuit (Score:4, Insightful)
Wrong. MS was caught by the Slammer worm because some developers had installed SQL Server on their workstations and neglected to keep them patched. Seems your memory is the one at fault.
More importantly the 3 month old MS patch was useless and had caused many complaints which is why MS released a new patch just hours before Slammer struck.
Wrong. The original patch worked perfectly. Where I work, my department runs two SQL 2000 servers which were patched properly before the virus hit. When we came into work that Monday we were one of the few departments that hadn't been affected by the virus. What MS released right before the virus hit was SP3 for SQL Server 2000 which *contained* the Slammer patch along with several other updates.
To summarise in simple words:
To summarise in simpler words:
Re:Silly lawsuit (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure, but you're thinking logically, not legally. Besides, how much would it cost you by the time you proved this in court? It would probably cost as much or more than a mortgage on a house. How many OSS developers could affo
Re:Silly lawsuit (Score:3, Insightful)
Unless you have read the code, then it's no more visible to you than the closed source equivalent. Sure, you can *assume* someone else has read it and thinks it's great, but you have still not taken personal responsiblity.
GPL = no warranty (Score:2)
Therefore, assuming that the GPL is immune, we can now relax and laugh at Microsoft's plight.
Re:GPL = no warranty (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Silly lawsuit (Score:2)
Re:Silly lawsuit (Score:5, Insightful)
If someone gives you something for free it's another story. You sell me your $5000 program, that you only produced once and have now sold 100,000 times, then try to explain to me that I WASN'T supposed to be purchasing something that functioned within reasonable tolerance. Yes I know that's exactly what is done now, but that doesn't mean there shouldn't be consumer protection laws to the contrary.
There should also be laws against the new conditions in MS EULA that state you cannot share your negative experiences with the software.
If I install office, when I click finish my computer explodes, I think I should not only be able to sue microsoft for being negligent in distributing the software this way, but I believe I should be able to bitch to my neighbors, news stations, tabloids, rant sites, slashdot or to anyone else I care to.
Re:Silly lawsuit (Score:2)
That'd be more like suing Mattel if Stephen King wrote a story that gave you nightmares of barbie dolls.
Re:Silly lawsuit (Score:2, Insightful)
GPL license text [gnu.org] And in capitals, too:
Re:Silly lawsuit (Score:5, Insightful)
no warranty does not matter (Score:5, Informative)
Second, products come with an implied warranty of merchantability and fitness for purpose. It essentially means that they are manufactured correctly and that they will be able to do what it is claimed they do.
Bottom line is that anyone can claim that there is no warranty that goes along with their product, but some warranties the court will imply and refuse to not enforce, or will enforece other law tantamount to a warranty. The implied warranties above are examples of those that rise above that of contract, that they can be enforced regardless of what is put in the agreement. The agreement may create a presumption that you have waived these rights, but the court could also find that agreement void as unconscionable.
Re:Silly lawsuit (Score:5, Interesting)
On the other hand, Microsoft software is "leased (not sold)," which means any damage done was done by Microsoft property.
Re:Silly lawsuit (Score:4, Interesting)
Not bloody likely, though. This lawsuit is being brought in South Korea, so that even if they win, the precedent doesn't really apply over here (here being U.S. in my case).
Re:Xenophobic Bigotry by Koreans Against Americans (Score:3, Insightful)
Do you really believe everything you read printed on the side of boxes? The mere fact that M
"Putting" the vuln in? (Score:5, Funny)
Conspiracy theories inside, who actually intends to put a vulnerability into a product? Perhaps this should be "not fixing the vulnerability" or potentially even "ignoring the problem". I don't think any of Microsoft's programmers intentionally insert bugs into their shipping products... although... nah, it couldn't be.
Re:"Putting" the vuln in? (Score:2)
Wouldn't be the first time. (Score:5, Insightful)
A Serious Message and the Code That Produced It [ddj.com].
Microsoft included a bug in the Win 3.1 Beta that caused Dr. DOS users to crash.
Unsurprisingly the makers of Dr. DOS lost their jobs, like many other victims of malicious code.
Re:"Putting" the vuln in? (Score:2)
I think this is what the submitter meant by "putting the SQL Slammer vuln [back] into Windows".
Just a hunch...
Re:"Putting" the vuln in? (Score:5, Interesting)
You want to sue someone, sue the sysadmins who
A) Didn't patch
B) Left MS SQL right out on the open internet
C) In short didn't do their jobs.
If you're running MS products it might not be by choice, but there is no excuse for not being aware of patches and the state of your firewall. They were all probably too busy rebooting Windows desktops to have time, but still.
EWeek article on WHY many didn't patch (Score:5, Interesting)
"...many IT departments did not install the initial patch because installation could not be scripted. Instead, DBAs were required to manually stop each instance of the software running in their organizations, rename or remove some files, and paste the patch files into each instance
Maybe... (Score:4, Insightful)
I hope the Judge kicks these people through the goalposts of life.
Re:Maybe... (Score:4, Insightful)
It seems life's arelady kicked you or your brain through the goalposts.
Re:Maybe... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Maybe... (Score:3, Insightful)
Face it. Running unpatched servers connected to the net are the sysadmins' faults. Not Microsoft's. Nobody's forcing them to use Microsoft software.
I disagree! (Score:5, Interesting)
yet if your car was to suddenly veer off the road from a known defect you'd expect the auto company to deal with it! Driving the car down the road doesn't generally cause the wheels to just 'fall-off'! That is the issue with MS.
Maytag repair guys are what 100,000-to-1 with their insalled base? even doctors are about 100-200-to-1. yet PCs are supposed to be 10 or 20-to-1 for admins. It's a crock! If any other business system was this terrible, it would be bankrupt in a year! And MS only answer is that the admin should run around and babysit the system? They offer automated updates, then again blame the admin for not "testing". You all check the gas quality going in your car before you fill up right. Or, you consult medical texts after going to the doctor just to be sure he called your illness right.
I'm sorry, this stuff should just work. Compaies have invested 10 years and billions of dollars into windows and it still doesn't just work! Billy designed the system so that MS had 'plausable deniability' After all, they don't make hardware [not their fault], or drivers [not their fault], or systems [oems didn't test, not our fault], or software [sure we have Secret APIs but not their fault], they pretend to train admins [but not their fault if admin shamans don't dance right], and of course users because they make the computer do "stuff" MS might not have planned! [if MS did plan it, they'd charge more!] They have no techincal support without outrageous fees [Linux cost is mostly support--and you can afford to use it!] Well, it's basicly like OSS only costs more. They offer the same package of benifits!
That said, I don't think a lawsuit is the way to go either. We're trying to get rid of stupid IP laws, not tie ourselves to them more! If the liability cost of software goes up, then free software will die a horrible death. We're not sophisticated enough to have software "building codes" yet and license "Software Accountants" to set them up. Even then without 100% control of a system, you just can't have that kind of liability...Then again, maybe that's what MS wants [OK we know they want it] total control of the systems and your wallets!
Pre-Installation warning (Score:5, Funny)
WARNING: Unplug your computer before installing this software. And under no circumstances should you connect it to a network until all the patches have finished downloading and installing.
Nuke The B******s! (Score:5, Funny)
What they'll be told: (Score:5, Interesting)
Shut up and patch your systems like the rest of the planet.
Software isn't a physical thing so it's impossible to make it bug-free.
You knew about this vulnerability for months, there was a patch for it, and you did nothing about it."
Pick a defense, any defense...
- A.P.
Re:What they'll be told: (Score:5, Interesting)
My mail server runs on Linux, but it was unavailable for at least 30 minutes because of the Slammer worm. Not because it was vulnerable, but because of all the idiots dumb enough to put SQL server on an open network...
Re:What they'll be told: (Score:5, Insightful)
1) It's the end of software sales in South Korea. That means Red Hat and FreeBSD, too.
2) Lawyers come up with some new way to avoid liability. EULA's become more convoluted and "ownership" of software becomes even more tenuous.
No idea how a case like this would be tried in the Korean system, but that's a lot of damage a witless or simply anti-American jury could do to a major technology power.
Re:What they'll be told: (Score:4, Interesting)
Software companies like to argue that, because code is intangiable (and, to a lesser extent, because development cycles are so darn short these days) it is impossible to spot and fix every bug in it, so no one should realistically expect software to be reliable all the time.
This argument has become more and more valid over time as companies use it more and more often to justify increasingly defective products.
- A.P.
bad news for opensource (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:bad news for opensource (Score:5, Interesting)
Here somebody is suing MS. Let's see how that works out.
Re:bad news for opensource (Score:2)
Should you be able to sue a restaurant if their food doesn't taste very good? Should you be able to sue your car manufacturer if a criminal smashes the window and steals your stereo? Microsoft doesn't claim that their software is uncrackable. Perhaps if someone made a false claim, they
Precedent? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm glad to see that someone is trying to hold MS liable for their mistakes, but this is the wrong way to go about it.
Re:Precedent? (Score:2)
Your group of people would get laughed at, pointed at, and ridiculed while they are being told to have audited all code they were going to use before using it on production systems. If I wanted, I could read through the entire Apache source code to look for any bugs before compiling it. I can also choose not to do t
Re:Precedent? (Score:2)
I doubt that this case will get very far though, MS's lawyers, armed with the EULA will put the smack down I'm sure.
Re:Precedent? (Score:5, Insightful)
This is all fine because they made no representation to you about what it could do. They never made any claims that it was fit for purpose.
Sure - Mandrake, RedHat et al might be in trouble, but open source software and especially the writers are legally in the clear.
Personally I believe that if someone impliments OpenSSL badly _in a way that I cannot check_ and requires me to trust my data to them then they _should_ be liable for damages. (So this would cover, say, implimentations of SSL where the host was cracked or traffic sniffed at a later point where it was in plain text, or the key was compromised.) However, this is not the fault of the OpenSSL developers, and so they should not be liable.
In contrast to this Slammer was caused (in part) by Microsoft making it very hard to install a critical security fix, and not properly notifying people of the peoblem (in their usual 'security fix language' it was described as a minor issue), when part of their responsibility in selling you SQL server was making it secure. Thus they should be at least partly responsible for the damages.
Read before you file (Score:5, Insightful)
IANAKL (Score:4, Interesting)
Does anybody know if the click-through license is worth a rat's ass in Korea? Does Korean law give the plantifs an edge that they wouldn't have in the US? Any Korean laywers out there?
Re:Read before you file (Score:2)
Re:Read before you file (Score:3, Insightful)
Not really, since the vast majority of Outlook viruses relied on the end user to activate them (it would be a bit like suing RedHat because Linux lets you alias "rm" to "ls" command and a user inadvertently deleted all their data with it).
There was a period - briefly - while a buffer overflow was present in Outlook that could be used to run attachments automatically, but it was patched quickly. Do we
Re:Read before you file (Score:5, Informative)
Because clauses like that are "exculpatory" (if I remember the term from my "legal environment" class correctly). They have no meaning, other than to scare the uninformed. As our instructor put it (a lawyer, mind you): "If things like that worked, I'd have a big sign on my car that said, 'Not responsible if I hit you.'"
--RJ
I'm not surprised by this (Score:2, Funny)
Many American lives have been killed by the Koreans, and if we don't stop Korea now with diplomacy or force if need be, there will cert
Re:I'm not surprised by this (Score:2)
I often recall penis enlargement spam, actually, "sir."
Funny this came up today... (Score:3, Interesting)
Silly how little explots like this can cost millions of dollars.
Re:Funny this came up today... (Score:3, Informative)
You have only your sysadmins to blame.
Shifting blame... (Score:3, Insightful)
I feel sorry for the companys who were sent to their knees over this vulnerability, but if there was a patch out months and months beforehand that could've avoided all this, the end-user needs to share some of the blame for this... There's not much more Microsoft could have done for it, if they'd forced the installation of the patch they'd have been even higher on the privacy zealots' shitlists than they already are.
I do seem to recall in the back of my mind that there was some nasty side-effect of the patch though, although it escapes me at the moment...
Like (Score:5, Funny)
Microsoft fixed the problem before it happened (Score:4, Interesting)
Duh (Score:3, Insightful)
True, Slammer was bad, but it's not like MS intentionally added it, and they DID agree to a EULA when they installed it. Of course software companies should be responsible, but it's not like MS isn't trying (though they're not doing a terribly good job.) Idiotic lawsuits like this set a bad precedent.
Re:Duh (Score:3, Insightful)
No automobile company would get away with selling products as defective as most commercial software. Why should the software industry be immune from product liability?
Re:Duh (Score:2)
1. Everyone knows Windows is buggy. Everyone knows software is buggy; especially Microsoft software.
2. You essentially agree not to hold a company liable for bugs when you install their software and agree to the click-through EULA. (This is not true of all software; but is definitely true of MS software.) IANAL, but technically, this lawsuit is a violation of the EULA, which makes it even more preposterous.
Re:Duh (Score:2)
Your point 2 is not necessarily true. The EULA claims to disclaim certain types of liability, but that is necessarily subject to applicable law. If the law says that you can't give up your implied warrant of merchantability, you haven't given it up even if you sign a document purporting to do so. I don't know what Korean law says on this point, but it's entirely possible that some of the disclaimers in the Microsoft EULA are not legally valid there, in which case Microsoft could be liable. Companies con
Re:Duh (Score:5, Insightful)
So you'd also like to hear "Your Pinto exploded? To bad, you shouldn't have gotten rear-ended."
No automobile company would get away with selling products as defective as most commercial software. Why should the software industry be immune from product liability?
Well in this case, "you shouldn't have gotten rear-ended" is not a good analogy. A better analogy would be the front door on your house. If you leave it unlocked, well that's pretty stupid. It's not the lock manufacturer's fault you didn't lock it. Similarly, if you don't patch a server for a vulnerability that's been known for months, it's not the software developer's fault.
This isn't to say Microsoft software is inherently secure or better or blah blah blah. Don't take it that way. But in this case, it is the fault of the sys admins for not patching their damn systems. Or for that matter, running SQL servers accessible by the public internet. There's a difference between getting rear-ended, and backing out into traffic without looking first. If you don't take adequate precautions, you (at the very least) share the burden of guilt for what happens.
Re:Duh (Score:3, Interesting)
But that's a bad analogy, too. Failing to lock a lock is not the same thing as failing to patch a server. Failing to lock your lock (or, to use an automotive equivalent to keep things consistent, leaving your keys in the ignition) is like failing to change the default password on a server- a basic thing that's an inherent part of the job.
Re:Duh (Score:2)
If your Pinto explodes because you ignored the recall, that's your fault, not Ford's.
Re:Duh (Score:2, Informative)
For the less well educated we esentially lie in a software monoculture. If you are an average small business owner, what choice do you have _but_ Microsoft products? (Lack of information rather than lack of choice here, not helped by constant FUD from a certain company.)
Hence, they did not choose to use the product - they were, to a greater or lesser extent, forced.
Re:Duh (Score:2)
lemme get this straight... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:lemme get this straight... (Score:5, Interesting)
This is what's needed (Score:2, Interesting)
Setting precedents, and liability (Score:2, Interesting)
Here's an interesting thought: maybe closed source software could be hit harder by this because keeping the source closed could be considered hiding the vulnerability? IANAL, of course.
Another thing - aren't there liability issues for engineers in other fields as well - like holding a bridge engineer accountable if the whole thing falls down? Of course, a software bug isn't quite that serious, but st
slammer (Score:5, Insightful)
SQL has a pretty good record for security. The exploit had also been patched before the worm.
The exploit was not put in on "purpose". I guess it could have been, but that is a pretty hard to believe.
The virus spread fast, but only because there is not a million SQL servers out there exposed. So it spread across the web fast, big deal.
Furthermore good administration ( especially for a db server), ie. a good firewall could have blocked it. There is the desktop engine that could have been hit, but most apps that use it are still in the server category.
The exploit itself is not a defect. Sure it could be used by an attacker, but in itself it didn't make the software defective. This could spawn a big argument. Is an exploit that would never actually impede a program unless someone uses it really a bug?
Code red was a buffer overrun in an ISAPI
I agree that companies should be held accountable, but intent and the way a company handles the defect also.
MS essentially called a recall by issueing the patch. It said, send in the part and we'll fix it, but in a more modern approach. How can you sue a company that found the exploit and offered a free fix?
SQL SQL Server (Score:3, Insightful)
I have noticed a trend recently that people are more and more often referring to SQL Server as SQL. This is wrong! SQL is an ISO standard [jcc.com], and this habit, which I have noticed especially among Microsoft staff, of trying to conflate the standard with the Microsoft product is just another example of the company trying to create a meme that is misleading.
let 's put things in perspective ... (Score:3, Interesting)
Anyway there is a very important point about *incidents* like this : they get people's attention about the completly crazy EULAs that some SW companies (namely Micosoft) and content providers (RIAA/Hollywood mob) are currently imposing to they 're costumers ...
imposing a bit of regulation about the limits of what could be put in a EULA is IMHO a very good think ...
if the ppl who launched this lawsuit make the
Cheers from Portugal
Re:let 's put things in perspective ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Consider the reasons why Slammer was such a problem:
- there was a bug in SS2K
- exploit used a stateless connection (UDP)
- the state of Internet border security is "allow everything but
- admins didn't apply a patch that had been available for 6 MONTHS (more than enough time to test)
- admins don't properly protect their servers
Of these, only the first is Microsoft's fault and they are the only ones who fixed their contribution to the problem proactively.
But, since Microsoft has deep pockets and geeks hate them, let's sue them
Time to grab some perspective -- patch and defend your fucking systems, people !!!
Cheers,
JAKD
The obvious answer (Score:5, Funny)
Owned.
elsewhere.. (Score:2)
"american hegemoney moust stop ! the secureless systems we have can be used to launch attack on our country", he was heard saying.
In other news... (Score:5, Funny)
We should sue them (Score:2, Funny)
Warranty of marketability (Score:3, Redundant)
So you could recover damages from a car that explodes when you try to start it, since that's not what a "car" is supposed to do. But you can't recover damages froma car that explodes when you hit a tree, since that is outside the expected use of a car.
I'd say there's no case here since SQL did what it was supposed to do, it just had a flaw. Since the flaw was not covered by any warranty, tough luck.
-Ryan C.
Hypocritical (Score:3, Funny)
SQL License agreement (Score:3, Funny)
In court:
Judge: "So can the court see the software license for this software?"
(shuffling of paper)
"Ah we see from this that you have 10 user licenses for your SQL server."
"Yes your honour"
"...yet your server was connected to the Internet - correct?"
"Correct your honour"
"But according to this license agreement, you must acquire a separate CAL for each Device that
*thud*
Judge:"...and then we have the Windows 2000 server CAL's..."
Software Liability (Score:5, Insightful)
A legal remedy here would set a really bad precedent - as a software developer who is not unrealistic about my skill level, I am terrified of software liability becoming either law or accepted assumption.
If MS loses this, I see absolutely no way I could defend myself if, god forbid, a program I wrote or even maintained caused catastrophic dataloss, or in worse cases, physical injury.
Note: Ironically, just *yesterday* I was bitch-slapped, albeit in an odd way, by Slammer: in certain situations, applying one of the hotfixes to SQL server that closes the Slammer vuln. without having SQL Server SP2 installed *completely* horks up SQL Server. The ISP (Rackspace) of a dedicated rack unit I "manage" on contract (client has almost no $$$) installed said hotfix in the process of physical maintenance, so I got a panicked call from my client in NYC that the "server is down". A couple of hours worth of research later, I was fine, but it sucked my afternoon away.
I hate the stacks of dependant/conflicting patches and service packs, not to mention the damn bugs, but I'd prefer to take the risks on this end than be open to litigation of software I write contains bugs.
--astro
Illegal copies of Windows (Score:3, Interesting)
Possible?
Nah, like this: (Score:5, Funny)
Ballmer: Sir, I don't like it when you call me...
Gates: Shut up lapdog.
Ballmer: Yes, sir.
Gates: Buy Korea.
Ballmer: What's by Korea?
Gates: No, purchase it.
Ballmer: Which one?
Gates: There's more than one?
Ballmer: North and South.
Gates: Oh...does it matter? No. Buy both.
Ballmer: I don't have that kind of money sir.
Gates: Charge it to the company.
Ballmer: Yes sir.
Call me naive (Score:3, Interesting)
First, if Microsoft's EULA already prevents them from being sued, software is as-is, why do they release patches in the first place?
This isn't a question about whether or not a user can sue, but a more basic matter of accountability and responsibility. These are the most fundamental issues in selling anything to the public.
Microsoft is responsible for this snafu, but they have never been held accountable. Their bugs, their glitches, their crashes. Its become a running joke with techies. It shouldn't.
When Slammer first hit, people said installing the patches required taking down the servers, running several patches, and praying it still worked. No garunatees about anything. What's the justification? Time wasn't available. Who could afford to do this? How high was it on MS list of things that had to be done?
But no one is mentioning those same arguments now. Its South Korea's fault for not doing the updates.
As I recall weren't the patches buggy enough to cause another major security hole?
We know Microsoft is responsible. We know who should be held accountable. But MS throws in a disclaimer and all is good. The disclaimer is not a silver bullet. There must be accountability for faulty software, no matter who wrote it.
Will it stifle open source development? Probably scare off crap coders is what it will do. If everyone working together reviews, checks, and verifies, they are going to catch most of the bugs before it goes out the door. The remaining bugs are fixed with patches.
I honestly don't see anything wrong with suing them. The EULA is not a catch all. The EULA should be thrown out, and rewritten. Users have the right to hold developers accountable.
Its about time someone figure out how.
One more responsible party (Score:5, Insightful)
To borrow the Ford Pinto analogy from previous posts, it seems somewhat like somebody cutting your brake lines and then you suing Ford for making the lines so easily accessible. I think the person who cut the lines is truely responsible.
Re:One more responsible party (Score:3, Interesting)
No, it's more like if Ford made a defect in the locking system where there is another hole right below the keyhole, and if you stick a pencil in it, the door pops open. No key needed. Who is more stupid? The company who made a car with such a stupid design flaw, the idiot who bought a car with stupid defects and stupid design flaws, or the idiot who thinks it's fun to abuse the situation and go joyriding in everyone's cars?
Re:One more responsible party (Score:3, Informative)
No it's not. You are clearly unaware of the facts of the situation. Yes, MS had a patch out before the worm hit, but:
How did it work with automobile recalls? (Score:4, Interesting)
This seems to be what this software has done: there was a defect and a capacity for a customer to do work to fix it, they didn't do it, and damage resulted.
Any cases like this with products in the automotive area, and did they favour the defendant or the plantiff?
Best wishes,
Robert
That's the sound of Pandora's box opening.... (Score:3, Insightful)
If people start flinging lawsuits at software producers then it'll kill open source pretty quick (OK, maybe kill is too strong; how about 'chill' or 'drastically reduce').
Micro$oft at least has $40Billion in the bank to fight such suits, but your average open source programmer doesn't have enough cash to even hire a lawyer for a couple of hours. These sorts of lawsuits could quickly have a chilling effect on OSS creation.
Re:That's the sound of Pandora's box opening.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Commence conspiracy theory:
Bill gates to South Korea: Hey, you know, you've been pissed off about our software not working? Well, here's 2 billion dollars. Sue us, and don't put up much of a fight.
S. Korea: Why w
the poster is an idiot (Score:3, Interesting)
BAD Korlas (Score:3, Insightful)
1) A patch exists.
2) Software has bugs. It's a fact of life. If you dont' like bugs, don't use software. (Or hardware for that matter).
3) M$ never claimed their products are perfectly secure. "Secure" is relative. M$ platforms are secure to an extent. Weather that's goo enough is up to the individual.
Once again another case of M$ being in the right. I hate these, but it's stupid to say they're bad JUST because they're M$. They do enough bad stuff to satisfy anyone's faming needs. I'm glad that a fair number of perople do oppose this, though.
Re:BAH (Score:4, Funny)
fuck them!
Wow. Your logic is flawless.
In other news MS is worth more than Ty(15982) [slashdot.org] ...
Re:HUMM.... (Score:2)
Re:Good Luck! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:THIS WILL NOT AFFECT OPEN SOURCE (Score:4, Interesting)