EC Suspends Microsoft Sanctions Due to Appeal 204
An anonymous reader writes "The European Commission has suspended sanctions against Microsoft stemming from a ruling that the group had abused its dominant market position."
You are in a maze of little twisting passages, all different.
Easy fix (Score:5, Funny)
Re:There is no such thing as a linux using Christi (Score:2, Funny)
Hopefully (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Hopefully (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Hopefully (Score:3, Interesting)
Loss wont matter (Score:3, Insightful)
Its just a cost of doing business ( and advancing their stranglehold of the world market ) to them.
Re:Hopefully (Score:2)
Re:How I wish I had mod points.... (Score:2)
And this is just... (Score:3, Insightful)
The beginning of the EU caving in to M$ and the US. It is the one of the last bumps in the road before the EU goes the US route of worshipping big corporations at the exclusion of all else. Corps can do NO wrong.
Re:And this is just... (Score:2)
Re:And this is just... (Score:2)
M$ now has only a single set of people to influence in order to rule the whole European continent. And of course this does not just apply to M$...
Re:And this is just... (Score:5, Insightful)
If MS loses the appeal, then the judgement will be reinstated. This is normal.
jon
Re:And this is just... (Score:4, Insightful)
If they stretch the case over a period of a couple of years, that could increase the cost significantly.
Of course, in that time, M$ piggybank would have grown so much to make losing the appeal(s) neglible.
Re:And this is just... (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't think so, and it was always somewhat expected that this legal action would be drawn out. The money in question is peanuts anyway.
The interesting point here is whether Microsoft's legal tactics will work more than once in Europe. It seems the top brass over here are willing to tell them where to go; from accounts I've read, they did exactly that to Microsoft's CEO during last-minute negotations. In that
Re:And this is just... (Score:3, Informative)
You're missing two key points:
Re:And this is just... (Score:2)
Which is when the judge would laugh and say:
"Yes, you're right. The verdict HAS already been decided and you are now appealing it. You think that with your kind of money, you could at least hire some lawyers who at least understand the legal process."
Seriously though, it's blindingly obvious that Microsoft is
Re:What about bail then? (Score:2, Informative)
Don't for a second assume that criminal law and civil law work the same way.
And apart from that, a criminal can very well be released pending appeal too, it's at the judge's discretion.
Bail is something else, that is pending trial, e.g. while you are still innocent, and it's there to guarantee you show up at the trial.
Re:What about bail then? (Score:2)
Either that or stop pretending that companies are "people".
Re:And this is just... (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't think the guy mentioned that he thought the EU was holy and nothing bad happened there. Pretty much I think the danger is the states in the EU still harbor ideals of a superstate and probably subconscious desires
States and Corporations (Score:3, Insightful)
They're right, it's bad.
But there's something worse - when the opposite happens, when business meddles in the business of government, which despite all detractors, Government does governing better than business does.
Re:And this is just... (Score:2)
Where there is people and money in the same place, there is corruption. People of the lawyer and politician persuasion introduce a multiplexor.
Foreseen (Score:5, Interesting)
The EC voted for patenting software. Why should we be impressed by this new decision?
Kisses
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Re:Foreseen (Score:5, Informative)
The EP is choosen directly by voters.
The EC is choosen by the states' govs.
Game not yet over (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Foreseen (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Foreseen (Score:2)
Because we want M$ to desperately hemmorage money right and left anywhere it can even if it means their right to appeal is taken away?
*sigh* Somebody must have been paid off... (Score:1, Troll)
In my opinion the fine should have been collected _then_ returned if the appeal overturned the issue.
Or maybe not returned even then.
Re:*sigh* Somebody must have been paid off... (Score:1, Insightful)
Not having to pay them isn't some welcome relief, it's just an unexpected bonus.
Re: Yes because it works that way for jail time (Score:3, Interesting)
The same should be true for monitary punishments. Pay up, and if you win, you can have it back. It's still better then jail time, because they can't give you back lost time.
Re: Yes because it works that way for jail time (Score:5, Informative)
Martha Stewart is out pending her appeal. So yes it happens, in fact it happens quite often especially in cases involving nonviolent crimes, white collar crimes etc.
Re: Yes because it works that way for jail time (Score:2)
Re: Yes because it works that way for jail time (Score:2)
Plainly put we give people the benefit of the doubt regardles of personal bias against MS which can only be described as rabid.
Re: Yes because it works that way for jail time (Score:2)
Microsoft was convicted, and sentenced. They should have paid up by now.
Re: Yes because it works that way for jail time (Score:3, Informative)
Re: but... (Score:2)
Re: Yes because it works that way for jail time (Score:2)
Well, they don't throw you in jail until there is a final rouling - i.e. no more appeals. It is possible that you get arrested as a suspect to prevent escape and destruction of evidence but that is in no way related to a court decision that is being appealed.
parent + 12 insightful (Score:1)
certainly for a company with that much $$ laying around, its not unreasonable to collect the fine before the appeals process is done. im all for innocent until proven guilty, but you only need to be proven once. then you are proven guilty until overturned.
Re:parent + 12 insightful (Score:2)
Why should the justice system work differently for monied entities? Isn't that one of the complaints here, that they're being treated different because they've got money (they must have bought off somebody)? What happens when you're charged, in your mind unfairly, with a crime? Will you pony up then and ask for a refund if it's overturned?
Re:parent + 12 insightful (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:parent + 12 insightful (Score:2)
A death sentence is an irrevocable loss of life. We're talking about a fine against a large company. The fine could be collected and held in a court appointed account until the appeal is finished.
And anyways part of these types of problems is that we're treating corporations like people. They aren't people - they are a company. Despite what the
Re:parent + 12 insightful (Score:2)
In the past I would have agreed with you and some businesses are still as you describe.
Micro$oft is not one of them in my opinion. More than a few former M$ employees have spoken up about the internal policies of that company in the past to show that something is wrong ethically
Re:parent + 12 insightful (Score:2)
Guilty until proven innocent, huh? I sure hope that you're not one of those people who gets frothy at the mouth about John Ashcroft and USA PATRIOT.
Re:parent + 12 insightful (Score:2)
I've met several CEOs over my decade plus in I/T. Not one of them that was of any worth couldn't tell me what was going on at the lowest levels of their company. A good CEO always does. You can't be a good CEO and not know as far as I'm concerned.
Re:this just in. (Score:2)
One man's troll is another man's Insightful.
Its all and fine for the source code, but (Score:2, Informative)
Microsoft has vowed to fight the EC's ruling
The European Commission has suspended sanctions against Microsoft stemming from a ruling that the group had abused its dominant market position.
The move came after the world's largest software company appealed against the decision at the EU court early in June.
The EC stressed that the move was an "interim measure" until a court had ruled on Microsoft's request. Microsoft has also asked for a long-term suspension o
Re:Its all and fine for the source code, but (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Its all and fine for the source code, but (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Its all and fine for the source code, but (Score:3, Informative)
Yeah, that's reasonable since they were not required to release source code in the first place. They have to release the API.
Re:Its all and fine for the source code, but (Score:4, Informative)
Are you mad? Mirroring the BBC website? Methink you overestimate the power of Slashdot. Check out their network [bbc.co.uk] diagram. Still think we'd make any dent in that [bbc.co.uk]?
Court ruling (Score:5, Funny)
Microsoft was ordered to unbundle the software within 90 days - that deadline runs out on Monday.
Paraphrasing:
EU: "You must unbundle the software in 90 days"
Microsoft: "Is it ok if I decide to not do it instead of doing it?"
EU: "Ok!"
Sometimes, court rulings should be just that.
Let the market speak (Score:5, Interesting)
Anyone involved in risk management shoudl by now have woken up to the fact that the MS platform combines high cost with high risk. Does it surprise anyone that people choose alternatives that combine low risk with low cost?
The law is too slow - let the market decide.
Re:Let the market speak (Score:5, Insightful)
The entire point of these sanctions was to punish Microsoft for NOT letting the market decide. Anti-competative practices and monopolising in any situation is bad for a free market, even if the product meets the peoples needs.
Re:Let the market speak (Score:2)
The market's too slow, let's decide in hand to hand combat! c'mon! It'll be fun! We're 100 times as many...
Re:Let the market speak (Score:2)
a little hypocracy.. (Score:3, Insightful)
their monopoly and the choke hold on the market is coming to an end. we don't need no stinkin' corrupt legislation/lobbying to bring that about. let the big corps and the legislators shake hands and shake whatever else they do for each other. the people will have moved on. they will become irrelevent. and in this respect the GPL is brillient. it's a check-mate to them, using their rules, on their turf. long live the GPL/FOSS.
yesterday it was apache/linux on the servers. today it's firefox on the desktop. tomorrow it will be one more. the dominos are toppling.
Re:a little hypocracy.. (Score:2)
Re:a little hypocracy.. (Score:2)
Re:a little hypocracy.. (Score:3, Insightful)
And on a similar note:
Why do we waste all this effort thring to stop a guy who's shooting people? He'd run out of bullets eventually.
That type of attitude is silly. The government exists for EXACTLY these type of situations.
Someone is acting illegally. A government is acting to stop that. If a government is not going to act to enforce the laws it creat
Screw (Score:5, Interesting)
Screw the money.
Screw "business remedies".
All of these could be said to "excessively hurt Microsoft", and most importantly *do not reduce barriers to entry* (with the possible partial exception of the code).
What competitors *really* need is Microsoft forced to open their file formats and network protocols, so that they can fully interoperate.
Microsoft got where they were by bundling products together and keeping them from interoperating with competitors' products. Fining Microsoft and then letting them continue doing what they were doing may help out the EU, but doesn't do a whole lot to solve the problem.
There are *very* few arguments Microsoft can make against opening file formats and network protocols. There is minimal IP value in each -- it doesn't take a smegging horde of PhDs years of research to create the Word file format. It does nothing but help the consumer, and helps mean that Microsoft always needs to compete.
Re:Screw (Score:3, Insightful)
Untrue, intellectual property alone grants them the right to keep these closed.
A better solution is for the court to rule MS must release fully functional versions of it's software for all of it's competitors operating systems. This free's people from having to use windows if they want Office or IE or whatever while still protecting MS's IP rights. Once people get out of windows new doors (pun intended) w
opening file formats and network protocols (Score:3, Insightful)
Another type of "standard" that could be forced open: Any communications between the government and its agencies and the general public will be in formats t
Re:The login loophole (Score:2, Interesting)
Actually, IMHO when the government publishes data in a MS encumbered format, such as the Windows Media Player stuff on NASA, they're aiding an
Why IP? (Score:2, Insightful)
intellectual property alone grants them the right to keep these closed.
I don't know what the root justification is for copyrights and patents in Europe, but in many countries, copyrights and patents exist to promote the progress of technology. Wouldn't such a strong barrier to entry run against this justification?
Incorrect, - there is still a right to interface (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Screw (Score:3, Informative)
For reference, Article 19 is:
Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.
As far as I'm concerned, I"P" law is plain evil (well, I'm a bit vague about Trademarks, but certainly Copyright and Patent), but Article 27 (which I have doubts about) also says:
(1) Everyone has the right freely to participate in the cul
Re:Screw (Score:2)
t doesn't take a smegging horde of PhDs years of research to create the Word file format.
Nor does it take that much to reverse-engineer it.
But they've banned reverse-engineering, didn't they? Argh...
Re:Screw (Score:2)
That may be true when it comes to the file format alone, but they also make the only tool that's 100% compatible to read/edit/write that format, which they sell for a pretty penny.
No suprises here... (Score:3, Insightful)
So, I'm not surprised that patents, consumer rights as related to music, and now this Microsoft thing, are going in the favorable direction of Big Business, rather than the consumer.
Re:No suprises here... (Score:2, Interesting)
The WORST thing that could happen is for computer geeks to interpret the law as some sort of declarative computer code like a makefile rule, and suddenly stop coding patent-infringing code if patents are legitimised in europe. If anything, we should go out of our way to write as much code as possible. Most laws only have as much power over y
Re:No suprises here... (Score:2)
If, in the end, the sanctions are upheld, it's pure speculation that it will help consumers (AKA lusers at Slashdot) in any way.
Re:No suprises here... (Score:2)
As the buyer for a company that uses server products, I *AM* a consumer. I am a consumer of IMB, or SUN, of Cisco, and many others.
Re:No suprises here... (Score:2)
First, your definition of "consumer" is wrong. You are merely acting on behalf of the company you work for, so the relationship is business to business.
Second, as a customer of server products, your company may or may not benefit from the sanctions.
Re:No suprises here... (Score:2)
Re:No suprises here... (Score:2)
At one time it was believed that if IE became the dominant web browser, MS would dominate the web. That never happened. Punishing a market leader doesn't always result in greater competition.
Microsoft's found the perfect scheme. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Microsoft's found the perfect scheme. (Score:2)
"software codes" (Score:3, Interesting)
i cannot _quite_ understand how microsoft's lawyer believes, unless they are admitting that by releasing details of "interfaces" that somehow extra viruses will be written to target them, that "damage will be done to other software development companies".
Not surprising really (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Not surprising really (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not surprising really (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not surprising really (Score:2, Insightful)
Ideally, the sanctions would remain, despite the appeal, much like how in the 'States a convicted felon doesn't get his sentence suspended -- he continues to serve his time, despite the appeals process, and if he wins (presuming he doesn't die of old age first) he's released.
Re:Not surprising really (Score:2)
I'm so tired of this black-white those-who-are-not-with-us-are-against-us stuff, it makes me wanna puke.
The EU court have fined and convicted so many EU corporations that it should have shown by now that they are doing what any court does: Applying its law and looking anyone gets what he deserves when he's trespassing it.
Do we have to
Progress? What progress? (Score:2)
They are entitled to it, the judcial systems in the different parts of the world simply are not equpped to deliver justice in a timely manner, that is why MS can stall things, but they will lose at the end (because it is as clear as water that they are doing unethicla and illegal things).
Sanctions suspended only for months -- not years (Score:5, Informative)
What the Commission has offered is to suspend the sanctions only for a few months until the Court rules on whether they are acceptable as "interim measures".
The European Court of Justice is expected to take several years to decide on the Microsoft appeal as a whole.
But the ECJ ruling on appropriate "interim measures" is expected much sooner, literally within months.
Re:Sanctions suspended only for months -- not year (Score:2)
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Smug Git! (Score:2, Insightful)
Its like three-way football ... (Score:2)
EU can go flock itself (Score:3, Informative)
It appears they havent seen this [microsoft.com]
As for unbundling windows media player, how do ppl without internet get a media player? Aside from media player classic, windows media player is the best one out there
Re:EU can go flock itself (Score:3, Insightful)
It appears they havent seen this[msdn]
As for unbundling windows media player, how do ppl without internet get a media player? Aside from media player classic, windows media player is the best one out there
As to msdn it's the secret API calls and propietary formats that aren't listed on MSDN that rivals need to make compatible formats.
And a
Re:EU can go flock itself (Score:2)
Not a fan, but... (Score:2, Interesting)
Microsoft are playing a dangerous game... (Score:3, Insightful)
I mean think about it for a minute, what government is going to tolerate Microsoft taking the piss out of them and trying to worm out of punishment in this way? Okay, the US government (no flamebait intended), but at least you can see their point of view... MS is a large, profitable US company, and hurting MS could also hurt the power of the US. However, this time we're talking about the EU, and although MS may employ many people in Europe or whatever, they are essentially a foreign company, and I do not think the EC really gives as much of a shit if it hurts MS or not.
Anyway, I am no expert on international politics or legal proceedings or anything, but I am just imagining myself as a politician who is looking at Microsoft defying the legal judgement of my government and having a big old hearty laugh about it. I'd be pretty pissed off, and I'd be wanting to do something about it.
Anti Trust (Score:2)
And it is obviously irrelevant which side of the atlantic it happens on.
Abolish antitrust and make the markets freer. Let the small entrepreneurs snak the heels of the Microsoft gigant.
http://liberterran.org
smug overload (Score:2, Insightful)
So there it is (Score:4, Insightful)
How the EC should run this case... (Score:2)
No no no no NO !!!!! What kind of logic is that? They're setting the example that Microsoft can get away with anything by introducing legal fights and making motion after motion to keep the thing in the courts forever. I'd bet Microsoft can afford to put the EC out of commission and/or bankrupt them before the EC will win any case, and when the EC will find that out, they'll let Microsoft have its way just to end the battle.
No, the proper pr
Get some balls already (Score:3, Insightful)
EU courts found that Microsoft's prior behaviour is bad for their citizens, and yet they are going to allow this behaviour to continue for 3 more years? I understand suspending the fine, but since when suspected murderers are allowed to go and murder more people while their case is decided?
Re:Angry.... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Angry.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Microsoft has a very strong case for a temporary restraining order, and the court was overwhelmingly likely to have granted one if the EC had tried to play hardball. No, make that "the court would have granted one" -- the court of the first instance needs to decide whether or not there's going to be irrevocable harm in enforcing the EC order before the order is allowed to come into force. Because the order would have come into force tomorrow, the court would have had to grant a TRO until after the motion to set aside the penalties had been heard and decided.
If a TRO is granted, the EC loses control over the penalties; it has to go to the court and grovel if it wants to threaten MS with them. This step makes it less likely that a TRO will be granted prior to the first hearing, which leaves the EC with at least a little leverage. Worse, if the EC had chosen to play hardball here, the court would likely have looked askance at any attempt to reactivate the sanctions -- any judge would look at the EC's representative and ask "How do I know you won't try to railroad this court again?" That's not a question any attorney wants to be asked by any judge anywhere.
No, the EC made a wise strategic choice here. It's better to make a tactical retreat than make your strategic position infinitely worse.
Re:stunt innovation? (Score:2)