Appeals Court OKs Microsoft Antitrust Settlement 227
mbstone writes "The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit has upheld [pdf] the settlement reached between Microsoft and the U.S. Justice Department in the antitrust case filed in 1998, beating back a challenge by Massachusetts, the only state that didn't settle. Many critics, of course, believe that Attorney General John Ashcroft took a dive on the case which was originally filed by former Clinton Administration Attorney General Janet Reno."
articles (Score:3, Insightful)
Court:This is a resounding victory for the Justice Department and American consumers. The Court addressed the merits of every argument raised against the Department's remedy by two industry groups and the sole remaining state plaintiff (Massachusetts), and it clearly and thoroughly rejected all of them. The Court's forceful decision confirms what the Department has been saying all along - our settlement protects the public by providing a full and effective remedy for Microsoft's anticompetitive conduct.
MS: "We remain 100 percent committed to fulfilling our obligations under the settlement and earning the trust of our customers and the industry," Smith said. "We are excited about the potential our industry has to bring new innovation into people's lives and help them realize their full potential."
My comments: In order to see what a real inovation is, one has to compare firefox's mouse gestures to Ie's SP2. I mean, who gives a damn about mouse whatnot, we don't want viruses, right?
But I actually don't care since I switched to Gentoo..
Re:articles (Score:2, Insightful)
Not meaning to stray offtopic, but have you bought or sold on eBay lately? If you did business on there, like I had, you were probably instantly frustrated and angered beyond mere contempt for the way they just threw out a whole pile of changes about a month back. Customers were furious at the way it was simply thrown o
Rate of Declining Returns (Score:2, Interesting)
Declining returns means more effort put in for less yield, like a mine what was initially opened because rich deposites of ore were found on the surface, now poorer ore is deeper down and requires more expense to extract. Windows, in case you haven't noticed, and to which I alluded, isn't about the operating system, but all the junk that comes bundled with it. To mainta
Re:articles (Score:2)
Re:articles (Score:2)
Re:articles (Score:2)
Re:articles (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:articles (Score:2, Funny)
Microsoft wins in court.... (Score:2)
I wonder what'll happen in the EU (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I wonder what'll happen in the EU (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I wonder what'll happen in the EU (Score:2)
Re:I wonder what'll happen in the EU (Score:4, Informative)
I wonder what'll happen in the EU anti-trust sanctions.
This just in: Microsoft already paid the fine of 497.2 million Euro. Details at Heise [heise.de] (in german, but you can always use babelfish).
Greetings, Graf TypoWho cares about the fine (Score:3, Interesting)
Look up sometime how much money Microsoft is throwing away on the XBox with no apparent hope of recouping a cent of it anytime in the forseeable future. Next to that 500 million euros doesn't seem significant.
Microsoft loses a drop (Score:5, Insightful)
The only hope now is that the negative publicity will affect sales somehow. Stupid Ashcroft.
Re:Microsoft loses a drop (Score:5, Insightful)
Its not stupid to cut off [commoncause.org] the hand [commondreams.org] that feeds you [commoncause.org].
More Political Discussion (Score:4, Interesting)
GroupShares Inc. [groupshares.com] - A Free and Interactive Investment Community
bankrupt the state (Score:3, Interesting)
Wrong (Score:5, Informative)
From a news article [theregister.co.uk]: "Massachusetts was the only state to hold out against the DoJ settlement. And it is still talking a good fight. According to Massachusetts Attorney General Tom Reilly, the judgment shows that antitrust laws are not working. 'Our high-tech economy will not reach its full potential unless regulators and the courts are willing to deal with Microsoft and its predatory practices,' he said, Reuters reports."
Re:Wrong (Score:2)
Re:Wrong (Score:2)
Stallman founded FSF because he couldn't get a printer driver, because of a license issue. The license issue was because of money.
You know what they say: Follow the money.
Why are people switching to OS? The Money.
Why is M$ bitching? Again, the Money.
What's wrong with monopolies? Money.
Money Money Money!!!
It's all about money.
There's a jingle in there somewhere.
Re:Wrong (Score:2, Insightful)
Its only about money until you have a buttload, then its about power.
Re:Wrong (Score:2)
No, in fact I have enough.
Re:Wrong (Score:2)
the state DIDN'T settle--they lost on appeal.
Re:Wrong (Score:2)
Re:Wrong (Score:2)
But today's news is about Mass. losing on appeal.
Re:Wrong (Score:2)
Re:bankrupt the state (Score:5, Insightful)
Unfortunately, the courts will probably never be a good place to rein in a monolopy. By the time it works it way through the entire legal process, none of the real competitors are still alive to benefit from any decision.
Within the last year, the Dr. Dos suit got settled. Who benefitted from that? And it is unlikely that Netscape (which exists in name, but not much else) would have gotten much out of this suit if things had gone differently. And as much as I love FireFox, the biggest thing it has going for it is the fact that IE development has stagnated for some time.
When it comes to technology, things change so fast that any delay in settling any issues means that whatever decision is finally made, it will probably be pretty much meaningless. Inertia is a powerful force, and most people don't bother to download updates to their OS, let alone download and install alternative replacements for something that already came on their box.
Re:bankrupt the state (Score:2)
The billions of dollars that pour in annually from their various monopolies make even the most obscene fines look like a joke (and even the 500 million euro fine from the EU seems to be locked in appeals hell, so they're not really even getting hurt by that.)
-fren
Law is like sasage (Score:4, Insightful)
Local politician? (Score:2, Informative)
Didn't this happen yesterday? (Score:4, Funny)
Microsoft is like.. the man.. and I am like.. the person being oppressed by said man. Yo.
Re:Didn't this happen yesterday? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Didn't this happen yesterday? (Score:2, Informative)
Of course Ashcroft went soft (Score:4, Informative)
From here [commondreams.org]:
During the last election campaign, Microsoft employees gave more than $50, 000 to the Bush campaign, while the company and its workers gave $500,000 in unlimited, soft money donations to the Republican National Committee for use in Bush's battle against Democrat Al Gore. Gore did not receive any money from Microsoft, according to election commission records.
According to data supplied by the Center for Responsive Politics, Microsoft employees also donated $22,500 to Bush's recount effort, and a Microsoft executive gave $100,000 to the Bush-Cheney Inauguration Committee.
Of course, nobody should be surprised by this anymore.
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Of course Ashcroft went soft (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Of course Ashcroft went soft (Score:2)
To be fair, this sort of logic is used all the time against Microsoft. Microsoft is so large with so many people working for it with so much money going in every which way that this sort of logic can be used to prove Microsoft is behind every evil thing that happens in this world.
For example
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Of course Ashcroft went soft (Score:2)
While assumptions are never entirely safe, I think it's reasonable to assume that there is more going on here than we are looking at.
I think it's time for you to get a clue about Dubya, and perhaps another one about Microsoft.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Of course Ashcroft went soft (Score:2)
The question isn't whether you're paranoid, the question is whether you're paranoid enough. Of course, I might be too paranoid, but I'm not saying there was, I'm just saying that you can't say there wasn't with the available information.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Of course Ashcroft went soft (Score:2)
The only reason this case is any more "high level" than any other is because the defendant is one of the wealthiest companies in the world. Are you saying that whether they broke the law or not is less important than who they paid money to? In court, I think the prosecution proved its case pretty well. They caught several MS employees in lies and uncovered quite a few very incriminating emails. That combined with testimony from several witnesses pretty much sealed the case. I think that Microsoft was v
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Of course Ashcroft went soft (Score:2)
Except they didn't donate to Gore's election campaign. Can you not read? And whether it's legal has no bearing whatsoever on whether it was moral or right.
Re:Of course Ashcroft went soft (Score:2)
Re:Of course Ashcroft went soft (Score:3, Informative)
"While Microsoft donations favored Republicans (who got 72 percent of the money from 1995 to 1998), its employees were more inclined to support the Democrats. Democratic PACs received $222,100 from the company's employees, compared to the $42,875 for Republican PACs."
you forgot to mention that. nice slant.
Re:Of course Ashcroft went soft (Score:2)
Microsoft appearing among the top 20 donors for a given candidate:
GEORGE W. BUSH (R).... $171,650
JOHN KERRY (D)
HOWARD DEAN (D)
DENNIS KUCINICH (D)
Last updated: 6/30/2004 6:58:00 AM
$996,000 to Democrats during 2000 election cycle (Score:5, Informative)
Besides, the person who really lost the antitrust case was Judge Jackson. If he hadn't gone on about Microsoft being a bunch of evil bullies his breakup order would've stood. However, when an appeals court sees a lower Judge out spouting off belligerence in public interviews while a case HE is working on is winding through the legal system, they tend to act in favor of the person being punished.
Re:$996,000 to Democrats during 2000 election cycl (Score:2)
And thus was invented "The Microsoft Defense" (Score:2)
Please!! (Score:3, Informative)
"Overall, Microsoft and its employees were the country's fifth-largest political donor in the 2000 election -- contributing $4.7 million to politicians and their committees. Republicans received about 53 percent of that money."
and
'"Companies that are really toeing the 50-50 party split on donations are basically pragmatic," said Sheila Krumholz, research director for the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonprofit group that monitors political contributions. "They
Re:Of course Ashcroft went soft (Score:2)
Of course, nobody should be surprised by this anymore
Actually, everyone should be surprised by this.
Not that they gave money to Republicans, but that they didn't give money to the Democrats.
The wise corporations cover both bases, so that no matter which party is in power they can still get on the horn and obtain access to legislators like the common voter cannot.
Re:Of course Ashcroft went soft (Score:2)
$50,000 doesn't buy you a single full page newspaper add in the major media markets: Advertising>Business>Cause & Appeal/Political [nytadvertising.com].
You need about $800,000 a week to blanket a state like Illinois with TV adds: Media Costs [dailykos.com].
The Bush campaign committees raised $193 million for the 2000 campaign: 2000 Presidential Race: Total Raised and Sp [opensecrets.org]
Re:Of course Ashcroft went soft (Score:2)
He gets about that much from Ken Lay (remember Enron?). Mr. Lay then gets a seat on Cheney's super-secret energy commission, which puts into play the policies that allow Enron to screw consumers out of hundreds of millions of dollars an
The cold hard truth (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The cold hard truth (Score:5, Insightful)
What this basically means is that Microsoft squeaked Windows XP out before the restrictions went into effect, giving them an OS they can market until the restrictions are lifted in November of 2007.
So, if you pay attention, the release date for Windows Longhorn will be November 13, 2007 - the day after the restrictions are lifted.
Re:The cold hard truth (Score:3, Insightful)
Microsoft get to "print" their own money these days in the form of vouchers...
Re:The cold hard truth (Score:3)
Quite true, but when's the last time a hardline republican governemnt busted up such a successful company? Was it AT&T? The ideal solution would have been to split the company into at least 2 bodies. Politiks in the last few years have demonstrated that governemnt sees the Sherman anti-trust act as more of a slot machine than something to protect consumers.
Re:The cold hard truth (Score:2)
The government fell short in the long run (Score:5, Interesting)
There was an article by Scott Hacker called He who controls the boot loader [birdhouse.org]. It mentions how the DOJ missed the real issue entirely.
It wasn't web integration that did the damage. It was Microsoft classifying its boot loader as a trade secret that toppled competition.
Now that the lawsuit is done with (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Now that the lawsuit is done with (Score:2)
So this little shop in italy tries to make better pizza than all the other mafia-owned pizza joints... Gonna be hard to make pizza when you're bleeding from the stab wounds everyday. Police? Who need the police when you're making better pizza!
Re:Now that the lawsuit is done with (Score:2)
Re:Now that the lawsuit is done with (Score:2)
Re:Now that the lawsuit is done with (Score:2)
No, the fall of the dot-com economy and the recent recession was the real reason why VC has fallen. Not because of a sudden increase of so-called abuses of MS's 'monopoly'.
Paging Michael Moore... (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe he could call it "Justice 1.0," or something.
Re:Paging Michael Moore... (Score:2)
What a fucked up ruling.
Re:Paging Michael Moore... (Score:2)
Wait, better.... I think I'll actually e-mail Mr. Moore with your idea.
Re:Paging Michael Moore... (Score:2)
In a situation like this, where there actually is sufficient logical and pertinent information (as opposed to the unassociated and unrelated information he shoves into f/911), you want as honest a presentation as possible. A movie with 30 minutes
Re:Paging Michael Moore... (Score:2)
And we all know that anything that comes in contact with Microsoft is completely non-functional until version 3 arrives.
-
Re:Paging Michael Moore... (Score:2)
My question is... (Score:2, Interesting)
...how is this a victory for consumers when most of them complain that they buy Windows and then need seperate antivirus software, seperate firewall, and seperate software to do everything? Making MS not bundle WMP or IE with their software is just going to make it more difficult for Joe Public consumer and they'll probably just go to Microsoft.com and download all the MS software anyway.
So does this mean that PC companies like Dell will be able to bundle RealPlayer with their PCs instead of WMP? How does
Re:My question is... (Score:3, Informative)
Its not. In fact the prosecution failed to demonstrate that consumers where hurt by Microsofts actions. Something that is required in many such anti trust cases.
Anyone check the lawyers' names? (Score:2, Informative)
The CCIA represents a group of non-Microsoft software companies who were trying to intervene and argue that the settlement was not in the public interest. The Court let them in as a way of wrapping their arguments into its opinion.
CCIA wanted the court to order MS to incorporate a Java platform into Windows. They also object to the pa
Another reason? (Score:3, Insightful)
At the start of the trial the common wisdom was that the Microsoft monopoly prevented competition. It was generally believed that Microsoft would simply purchase, aquire or destroy any who stood in their way, and that they would use every illegal means to do it.
But the impossible happened. Along came Linux. From some perspectives this was inevitable. Despite Slashdot myths to the contrary, Linux was not written to be a Windows competitor. It didn't have to be Linux, it didn't even have to be Open Source. The evolution of the personal computer created a vacumn for a cheap powerful and customizable operating system, and Linux managed to be there at the right time and place.
Now come to the end of the trial. Linux had become a household word. It had sucessfully prevented Microsoft's domination of the server market, and even managed to score higher market penetration in certain areas. Microsoft still retained its monopoly on the desktop, but it was slowly but surely being eroded. Beyond Linux, Apple was back from the dead in an time when people said no one could compete with Microsoft.
In short, the Microsoft threat had been dulled. The primary purpose of the trial was not to punish Microsoft, but to correct a problem in the market. The situation was being corrected by market forces.
Re:Another reason? (Score:2)
Microsoft is abusing its monopoly position more now than ever to further entrench their monopoly and exterminate Linux.
Microsoft simply had to announce to the entire computer industry that the next version of Windows will NOT properly function with their product unless their product is Trusted Computing compliant. CPU makers, motherboard makers, BIOS makers, video card makers, sound card makers, they have ALL been extorted into compliance. Any product that is "incompatible" with Windows has esse
Re:Another reason? (Score:2)
People who don't know what an OS is, or even care which one is on their computer, probably don't know what Linux is. But people who are concerned about the Microsoft monopoly certainly do.
Like I said, Microsoft still has a monopoly on home desktop. But I dare you to find one system or network administrator ANYWHERE who ha
thanks, Gov. Mitt Romney and AG Tom Reilly (Score:2)
Re:thanks, Gov. Mitt Romney and AG Tom Reilly (Score:2)
Re:Seriously: Why is this a YRO article? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Blaming Ashcroft is just ignorant. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Blaming Ashcroft is just ignorant. (Score:5, Insightful)
Wha...? The lawyers she had on the case knocked it out of the park. It's now out bobbing in the ocean somewhere. Every time David Boies brought up a MSFT witness, he was able to discredit them and show that MSFT was indeed using its monopoly power to limit competition.
Reno has nothing to do with what judge is assigned to a particular case (would you want the DA to be able to choose what judge hears every case? I didn't think so either). What Judge Jackson did was pretty bad and he should have known better.
But Ashcroft pretty much rolled over as soon as he was AG. He settled and tried to get everyone else to settle as well. Why is a different debate, but he certainly had enough evidence to win in a new trial.
Re:Blaming Ashcroft is just ignorant. (Score:5, Insightful)
Here's a link [opensecrets.org] for you. When the (then) richest man in the world donates to your boss's campaign, I think you're going to pay him back in some manner or another.
A quick note, though...There are as many Democrats as Republicans on that list of donation recipients. Bill Gates donates to those with power...not necessarily to those of any particular party.
Re:Blaming Ashcroft is just ignorant. (Score:2, Interesting)
There was no longer any grounds for a breakup, the government had to rollover. A hypothetical Gore DOJ would have settled this in a similar manner.
(Actually, Clinton DOJ was begging for a settlement the whole time -- see Wired's reporting. But Gates just would not deal with them.)
Re:Blaming Ashcroft is just ignorant. (Score:3)
Don't ignore Ashcroft's complicity (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Don't ignore Ashcroft's complicity (Score:2)
I disagree. MS, like them or not, played a big part in making PCs popular with the general public, most of whom are not knowledgeable enough to run an OS like Linux. Whats more, by having such a huge competitor, rival companies are forced to increase innovation, not decrease it.
"And the instability of the Internet, due to the vast hordes of compromised M$ computers around the globe is a daily nuisance,
Re:Don't ignore Ashcroft's complicity (Score:3, Insightful)
I disagree. MS, like them or not, played a big part in making PCs popular with the general public, most of whom are not knowledgeable enough to run an OS like Linux. Whats more, by having such a huge competitor, rival companies are forced to increase innovation, not decrease it.
Bacause of MS's leaning on PC manufacturers, it was suicide for any of them to even offer alternative OSs. That was what the fir
Re:Don't ignore Ashcroft's complicity (Score:2)
But the case we were talking about, that the Justice department just settled on, involved MS bundling IE with windows.
"No one. Linux is only able to challenge at all because it's supported by a community, not a company."
Don't forget Apple and a variety of companies that produce Unix operating systems.
" As for "making PCs popular with the public"; that was initially Apple, later IBM. "
They made computers available to the public, not popular. MS m
Re:Don't ignore Ashcroft's complicity (Score:2)
Re:Don't ignore Ashcroft's complicity (Score:2)
Yes! BLAME CLINTON! (Score:4, Funny)
Congrats!
- A.P.
Re:Blaming Ashcroft is just ignorant. (Score:2)
Re:"Took a dive on the case"??? (Score:2)
Re:"Took a dive on the case"??? (Score:2)
Thanks for generally informing people about the phrase, but I'll supply a little correction so it makes more sense. Usually the heavily favored well-known boxer is the one paid to take a dive because the betting odds of the fight are in his favor. Whoever fin
Re:"Took a dive on the case"??? (Score:3, Informative)
This may be why Tyson has not as yet been successful in regaining a license to fight in Ne
Re:horrible bias in article blurb! tsarkon reports (Score:2)
Re:The original judge blew it... (Score:3, Insightful)
On appeal, Jackson was actually given a lot of deference on his findings which is the cultural norm for courts of appeal. It was that same cultural norm that made it unlikely that the settlement would be overturned.