Microsoft Leaves U.N. Standards Group 246
pk2000 writes "Microsoft withdrew from a United Nations software standards group for commerce. 'Unfortunately, for now, we have made the decision to stop participating in U.N./Cefact for business reasons and this serves as notification of our immediate withdrawal from all U.N./Cefact activities.' This might be connected to Microsoft's intention to build up its patent portfolio. Currently it has about 5,000 patents and seeks to at least double this number by the end of 2005."
Nice! (Score:4, Insightful)
Once their corporate clients realize a decision to go MS is a decision to STAY with MS for a LONG LONG time, that TCO will get a hard second (and third) review.
Re:Nice! (Score:5, Interesting)
Are the patents enforceable (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Are the patents enforceable (Score:3, Interesting)
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Are the patents enforceable (Score:2)
Re:Nice! (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Nice! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Nice! (Score:2)
-1 yawn
-2 blablabla..
Re:Nice! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Nice! (Score:3, Informative)
Can't speak for other countries, but the Australia/US FTA can be dissolved unilaterally on six months notice and agreement to pay reparations as decided by an independant board.
YLFIp.s. - plug, plug, UNSW students can read all about it in the upcoming issue of "tharunka".
Re:Nice! (Score:2)
Oh god no, don't do it. Please no! [Glory to the many!]
Re:Nice! (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure, they're "on our side" now, but in the future, who knows? They may revert to their bad old ways if given sufficient incentive/reason.
Re:Nice! (Score:2)
The difference of course is that IBM actually engages in (or has in the past) research, both of a software kind and otherwise, while Microsoft has a division called research which works on experimental chat programs. That is not to say that Microsoft doesn't have some sharp software people of all kinds, but their emphasis has never been
Re:Nice! (Score:2)
Re:Nice! (Score:2, Funny)
Isn't that what Leia said just before millions died on Alderaan?
Re:Nice! (Score:5, Interesting)
Does this mean that the USA is cutting its own throat too?
Re:Nice! (Score:5, Funny)
Repeat that a couple hundred times per day and you'll feel fine like the rest of us.
Re:Nice! (Score:2)
Re:Nice! (Score:2)
damn I need to wake up
Re:Nice! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Nice! (Score:2, Interesting)
Um, no you kinda missed the point there chief. With no microsoft at the table the standards group has no teeth, no point, and now is effectively worthless. Case in point, see internet explorer.
I don't know why it happened, but its probably the same thing that always happens when a bunch of academics start dickering with businessmen. The academics get all excited that they're in toe to toe with "the man", and the businesspeople get tired of debating in circles, quietly pull out, and circumvent around the g
Re:Nice! (Score:3, Insightful)
by the UN must support these open standards. Then if MS doesn't implement them,
they're shutting themselves out of the UN's market and everyone else who must
be able to do business with the UN.
This is the same reason that F/OSS wins in small governments are really big
wins.
Heh (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Heh (Score:3, Interesting)
Money is to MicroSoft as votes are to politicians.
Or, paraphrasing a bumper sticker I saw the other day, 'Guns kill people like spoons made Rosie O'Donnell fat, and non-market considerations drove a Microsoft decision'.
Makes Sense? (Score:5, Interesting)
You will see that, historically, standards supported or developed by Microsoft are mostly those that enable Microsoft products to work better, whereas support for standards that enable interoperability of MS products with other products has been lacking, if even considered at all.
mod parent up (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:mod parent up (Score:5, Insightful)
There's still competition. Some make robust, expensive plugs for important equipment that can't afford to fail. Some make cheap plugs for budget consumer kit. Some make plugs with groovy features like circuit breakers and easy fuse access. They compete with one another, and yet none feel the need to breach the standard for how a plug should interact with the socket.
Re:mod parent up (Score:2)
No-one needs Windows, but if Windows conforms to nothing but its own standard then MS is digging its own grave. It's as if they have forgotten to how create useful software and just want to make stuff that you have to use
Re:mod parent up (Score:2, Informative)
Power sockets are a standard for power distribution. Solar, coal powered, etc are methods of power generation. Even the solar panels on my roof supply me with power through standard power sockets.
Re:mod parent up (Score:3, Insightful)
Here goes my karma (Score:5, Insightful)
It's very rarely in the interests of a dominant entity to engage with a group like the UN. Whether you're talking about international law and the United States, or IT standards and Microsoft, you have the group wanting everyone to play by the same rules and the dominant player wanting to leverage its advantages.
Doesn't mean that Microsoft (or the US) is bad; that's just logical behavior for an entity in a dominant position.
Now I've just drawn a comparison between the US and Microsoft, so I know my karma's shot to hell.
Re:Here goes my karma (Score:2)
"Sure, the Devil enslaves souls for all eternity, but that's just to be expected, it doesn't mean the Devil is evil..."
"Sure, Microsoft abuses their monopoly and sabotages standards efforts, but that's just to be expected of large corporations in their position, it doesn't mean they're wrong.
One can only hope (Score:5, Insightful)
On the other hand, once patent laws are the way MS and others want them to be world wide open standards will simply not matter anymore. What a bright future lies ahead for freedom of information and freedom of choice...
from the least-surprising-news-of-the-day dept (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:from the least-surprising-news-of-the-day dept (Score:2)
Re:from the least-surprising-news-of-the-day dept (Score:2)
Sure, one can follow the development of various OSes that use Linux without using Bitkeeper, including some GNU ones, but Linux is a separate matter.
Lumping the GNU project together with Linux does a disservice to both.
They win (Score:5, Insightful)
They can't even win the battle, much less the war (Score:5, Insightful)
They only win if the rest of the IT industry and society accept that it's reasonable to allow one company to "patent" such obvious ideas as timed clicks, TODO lists in code, etc. -- especially concepts that have been in use for years or decades.
So Microsoft bought their way out of penalties, can force the USPTO to approve bullshit patents, and has a few billion in cash.
Just how much do you think that matters when the other side of the court has IBM, Sun, HP, Novell, Cisco, Oracle, Sybase, ... and they all see more benefit in OSS and a shared technology stack than a lock-in for one vendor.
Re:They can't even win the battle, much less the w (Score:2)
Whether or not you fundamentally agree with software patents is another issue altogether, but they are playing within the rules.
It would appear to be Microsoft vs. The Rest of IT (Score:5, Insightful)
In this corner, we have Microsoft with a platform-specific lockin solution designed to drain business revenue without actually committing to fix reported problems.
In the other corner, we have IBM, Sun, HP, Novell, RedHat, Mandrake, Oracle, Sybase, and a few thousand other vendors supporting full POSIX stacks, international and national standards, and essentially working on the philosophy of building from a shared technology foundation.
While Microsoft may have bought their way out of court-imposed penalties by delaying the case until a change of government occured, they can't buy their way out of the opinions and mistrust they've built for the past 2-3 decades.
As they've refused to compete on quality, reliability, security, and performance of business solutions, what choice does Microsoft have except to try to use the courts and barratry to survive?
After all, they can't accept (or perhaps can't grasp) a service/quality based market. Their whole mindset is package and sell, not long-term services and support that generate stable revenue instead of bursts during purchase/upgrade cycles.
Business hates upgrades. A minor patch for an existing release means much lower retraining and deployment costs.
Consumers love upgrades, they get a whole bunch of new gadgets, features, toys, and shiny icons.
It's simple: Microsoft can service one market or the other, but not both. Any attempts to use their IP portfolio for barratry are likely to get them pimp-slapped by the vendors I mentioned above: they don't like Microsoft's intrusions on their turf any more than Microsoft want's Linux on the desktop.
Re:It would appear to be Microsoft vs. The Rest of (Score:2, Informative)
Re:It would appear to be Microsoft vs. The Rest of (Score:3, Insightful)
``In the other corner, we have IBM, Sun, HP, Novell, RedHat, Mandrake, Oracle, Sybase, and a few thousand other vendors supporting full POSIX stacks, international and national standards, and essentially working on the philosophy of building from a shared technology foundation.''
That coalition will only last as long as there is a common enemy. After that, there will be a new era of Unix Wars, a
Re:It would appear to be Microsoft vs. The Rest of (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It would appear to be Microsoft vs. The Rest of (Score:2)
I think they grasp it rather well. Instead of shipping a software package that needs a system administrator to work well, they ship software that any idiot can work with, and they handle all the issues for you. Not enough features? Not secure enough? Not enough "seen on the net" buzzwords? Don't worry, it will all be fixed in the next release. Just sit back and relax.
You're kidding, right? Microsoft is constantly
BTW, I like the way you think (Score:3, Insightful)
RAMMS+EIN, I just wanted to mention I like the way you think. I might not agree with your conclusions, but I like your approach anyhow.
P.S. The difference between the *nix "coalition" and the old Unix fragmentation is that the coalition is driven by agreed-on standards. Business is like people -- it has to learn and grow. The vendors I mentioned see the potential of a services-based business model and realize it's a better fit for the industry. Like the buggy and whip makers, those companies who resi
Some "consumers" loathe upgrades, though (Score:5, Insightful)
That's if the upgrade even works.
Many people "upgrade" only when forced kicking and screaming by external factors such as format and protocol changes or hardware failures. I don't blame them, though personally I'll often prefer to upgrade.
Re:It would appear to be Microsoft vs. The Rest of (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It would appear to be Microsoft vs. The Rest of (Score:3, Insightful)
Not at all. GNU was started in response to the lockin of IBM, AT&T, DEC, Pyramid, and others. Microsoft wasn't much more than Bill Gates' brain-fart at the point GNU began.
In fact, Microsoft began their approach to marketting from the same perspective as GNU: freedom from the big vendors and outrageous licensing fees.
What both were really saying is that competition is good for business. It leads to better solutions.
What Microsoft forgot is that business only benefits when the better solutions
Re:It would appear to be Microsoft vs. The Rest of (Score:2)
And it's not like Microsoft haven't gone the distance with some collaboratively-designed open standards: I'd nominate SOAP as an example.
It's my opinion that all of these companies have exactly the kind of schizophrenic approach to standards that makes business 'sense'.
Re:It would appear to be Microsoft vs. The Rest of (Score:2)
Consumers love upgrades, they get a whole bunch of new gadgets, features, toys, and shiny icons.
Maybe they should have stuck with their Windows NT and 98 philosophy. One OS for business, with a long time between releases but lots of nice security and bug patches. One OS for consumers, with frequent releases (95/98/ME) and few bugfixes.
Sounds familiar.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Sounds familiar.... (Score:2)
On the specific issue of Iraq, the oil for food program [wikipedia.org] was a scandalous [go.com]mess. In which Iraq artfully man
Re:Sounds familiar.... (Score:3)
The oil for food programs was an aboniation because it was done to counteract the immoral and illegal embargo which caused the death and sickness to millions of people.
"The UN was created as a forum such that memeber coutries could debate issues and policies without resorting to war."
It has been a miserable failure in that regard. The UN was unable to prevent a strong country from invadin
Time for some quick action (Score:4, Insightful)
What could be more in the public interest than the commoditisation of web services?
Someone needs to be able to overrule patents.. (Score:5, Insightful)
If Microsoft start patenting things the group is working at making, waiting until the standard is out to start suing (Hi, my names Rambus, id like to help you with your DDR tech!), or perhaps even joined, had a look what the groups doing, realises they have patents that covers it then pulls out.. ooh, i'll be angry!
Re:Someone needs to be able to overrule patents.. (Score:2)
If this were the case, I think companies would stop joining working groups!
CSS & W3C (Score:5, Interesting)
If Microsoft start patenting things the group is working at making, waiting until the standard is out to start suing (Hi, my names Rambus, id like to help you with your DDR tech!), or perhaps even joined, had a look what the groups doing, realises they have patents that covers it then pulls out.. ooh, i'll be angry! :/
Well, Microsoft did patent - behind the other members' backs - Cascading Style Sheets during the time the standard was developed at the W3C. Shortly thereafter they left the W3C.
zRe:CSS & W3C (Score:2)
Group A at MS joins the W3C, with official blessing, as a representative of MS.
Group B, meanwhile, applies for a patent that covers (doubtless amongst other things) CSS.
At some point, either Group A, their sponsor, or someone of a similar ilk discovers this, decides that there's a conflict of interest (or that there could be perceived to be one), and decides to leave/orders Group A to leave the W3C.
Sure, it sucks, but never forget that MS, like any lar
Relevant links (Score:2)
But geez, that is one major patent! Surely even MS wouldnt have the guts to try and collect on that one?
Not yet, anyway. There's a royalty free license for it's use, however there are also prior art issues that might arise should they decide to relicense and cash in on it.
Here are some relevant links:
Microsoft patents CSS? [slashdot.org]
MS Withdraws From WC3 Web Services Working Group [slashdot.org]
z
Re:Relevant links (Score:3, Informative)
FUD. Microsoft left one working group, which deals with Web Services; that is what your second link refers to. Microsoft are still members of the W3C's CSS Working Group [w3.org] (and quite [w3.org] a few [w3.org] others). And as far as prior art goes, the method described in the patent is basically the same as the way Microsoft Word applies styles, which potentially dates back to 1983 [wikipedia.org].
Will there really be a patent war? (Score:4, Interesting)
1) Really not help their case in terms of the whole monopoly thing.
2) Tell everyone that this company is on its way out, and treat it accordingly. When a company starts working the legal system to pay the bills, you know it's ready to sink.
3) Piss off countless unwashed computer/information systems people who have grown fond of application X, which may have to stop development due to legal fire from Microsoft.
4) Call into question a lot of Microsoft's more questionable patents.
On the other hand, why would they amass such a huge patent portfolio if they don't intend to use it? Perhaps just to ensure that nobody can use those silly patents against them? Hrm.
Out in flames? (Score:2, Interesting)
How is this different (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:How is this different (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:How is this different (Score:2)
Because Sun and Java are not monopolies.
Amusing, isn't it? (Score:4, Interesting)
Now I'm no fan of the UN at all, but stuff like this is why folks don't want to collaborate with MS. Note to Microsoft if you're even listening - the Open Source community wants open standards. By continuing to try to close your file formats and program standards, you are continuing to motivate those who would like to see you out of business.
I guess the whole "team up with MS" was a pile of BS, anyway. Now they can say "OSS hates us, we tried to play nice, therefore we have no qualms about going them after with patents".
Who... what... (Score:4, Funny)
Someone tell me what to think here.
Re:Who... what... (Score:2)
Re:Who... what... (Score:2, Interesting)
The idea of the UN is great, an open group of nations deciding on fair and peaceful ways forward for the world. The current implementation of the UN sucks but that is another matter.
The idea of Microsoft is bad, a closed company deciding on unfair and uncompetitive ways forward for the world.
One good, one bad; are you less confused?
What it means (Score:5, Insightful)
The real problem is that Microsoft just doesn't get along with standards groups. Witness their history with XSL, Kerberos, ISO character sets, etc., etc. They go in determined to be good, cooperative techno-standard citizens, but always reach a point where continuing to participate means they can't do things exactly their own way. And they always want to do things exactly their own way.
You almost can't blame them -- the industry is dominated by emotionally immature technogeeks who always have to have their own way. Unfortunately, MS has the financial clout to make their tantrums into defacto standards.
Re:What it means (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't know anything about that.
Kerberos
Hm, don't know anything about that either.
ISO character sets
Aaah, I _do_ know something about that. Specifically I remember the years of waiting for ISO to come up with sets that actually had needed characters while MS at the same time was listening to users and making the appropriate character sets, sticking as close to ISO as they could while still actually empowering users to communicate with each other.
THAT, and not 'finan
Re:What it means (Score:2, Insightful)
> Why? If their patent becomes a standard, it's just more profit for them.
If you read carefully the cnn article about quiting the standards group, this is exactly the reason why they quit. "[MS withdrawal] stemmed from a set of thorny issues over control of intellectual property that is being contributed to the standards-setting effort.". They want to patent a standard and then charge everybody for using it, and the UN standards group (thanks god :) doesn't like that. I suspect that thay will try the
Wow, this could be a big problem. (Score:3, Insightful)
This could cause huge problems in the IT world...
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Wow, this could be a big problem. (Score:2)
Microsoft gave most of that money back to their shareholders, and is no longer growing at 20% a year.
In the future... (Score:4, Insightful)
This will be very damaging for the entire rest of the software industry including open-source - I mean you're going to have to think harder and harder to come up with a new software idea that Microsoft hasn't already thought of and patented...
Patents were introduced to level the playing field for the little guy with a big idea, helping him to compete with the giant corporations - what Microsoft is doing is exactly the opposite. The entire patent system needs to be overhauled before its too late.
Re:In the future... (Score:2, Insightful)
Patents were introduced to give a creator control over his "big idea", regardless of corporation status. It's all about who comes up with it FIRST. Little guy or big guy.
Now, you can argue that even if the little guy patents something, a corporation can sick its lawyers on him until he gives in, but that's not an issue with patents or with the USPTO -- that's an iss
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
"moving away from Microsofts expertise" (Score:3, Funny)
babelfish.av.com
Bullshit > english
Out priority is to make money by keeping buteforcing the patent system, and training genetically modified lawyers to enforce them in the future.
We are not known for our expertise in playing fairly, we preffer a borderline illegal approach to doing business.
Open letter to Microsoft:
Dear Microsoft,
Suck on my chocolate salty balls,
Hot lovin',
Chef.
Must be a 'Merican company (Score:4, Insightful)
Next you will hear Ballmer refer to UN software standards as "old-tech".
"/Dread"
Re:Must be a 'Merican company (Score:4, Informative)
And then fails to pony up.
Bottom line? The money owed to the UN is in the form of promisory notes that the US has failed to pay. Mostly because of situations like with the WHO where certain religious groups have recoiled at the fact that the WHO supports education on things like birth control and abortion for women in the third world and have pressured Congress and Senate into stopping funding for the WHO as a whole until those education programs are cancelled. That this also interferes with things like disease prevention and control, public medical research that would end unencumbered by patents and similar benefits seem to be completely outweighted by the need to deny women in the third world education about and access to birth control and abortion.
Similar situations exist across a broad swathe of UN organizations who have already made budget and project commitments and used funds according to the promised contributions from the US, and then dicovered that the money were not forthcoming after all.
That's the sense in which the US owes money - because they said they did. Not because the UN asked.
Members? (Score:2)
Re:Members? (Score:2)
This is a good thing (Score:2, Informative)
Its primarily a political body, and really, politics have no purpose in what is supposed to be a technical arena.
That's why EDIFACT has lost out to other non-UN bodies now that XML has come to the forefront. Nobody is going to the UN on purpose these days.
So I say good to MS for stating the obvious.
You guys are paranoid! (Score:5, Funny)
I mean really guys. You totally need to take some Prozac or something. This could never happen.
Companies love their employees, competitors, and their customers. They always try to do what is best for everyone!
And on the slim chance they didn't, our legal system is more than capable of putting any company in their respective place!
GOD BLESS AMERICA!
Is this a bad thing? (Score:4, Interesting)
Even better would be if MS made their own propreitary objects to compete with the UN standards, and LOSE (a la IPX and Novell). Because now not only do they lose say in something that's popular, they also wasted time on their own protocol that nobody uses.
Hasn't anyone currently in the US Patent Office... (Score:2)
Really, whatever the situation, it's past time that things were fixed so that you can only have patents on things which are demonstrably yours.
Re:Hasn't anyone currently in the US Patent Office (Score:3, Interesting)
Microsoft isn't QUITE the big problem.... (Score:2)
The larger impact won't be Microsoft's patents, but their position as a trend setter in the industry. This sets the tone for a software world of greater patents.
My conspiracy theory... (Score:2)
We all know that the US patent office is overwhelmed with patent applications and that the back-log worsens everyday. Patent officials are basically rubber-stamping many of the patent applications through without checking for prior-art and relying upon the "community" to bring that to their attention. Further, we are in agreement that the system is in dire need of an overhaul
Typical (Score:2)
Why would anyone be surprised?
SCO angle is bogus? (Score:2)
While popular, I think the Rambus Jedec issues are more an example of the kind of disputes that
IP standards can create then SCO.
I fail to see the relevance of the SCO remark in this case. The SCOIBM case was totally different (and the suing of the individual users totally nonsense and legal wrestling at best)
Microsofts plan... (Score:4, Interesting)
MS has rooms full of Linux computers with people learning Linux and open source software inside and out. Developers are tearing apart the source code to the kernel, KDE, Gnome, Apache, etc using/testing every little feature, making notes, and dicussing where they think the developers will go next. They even have people who monitor development mailing lists and forums.
This is a direct quote:
"The plan is no to patent where Linux is now, the plan is to patent where Linux is going."
Technically, the MS stratefy is the 'head them off at the pass'.
Gathering clouds.... (Score:2)
The reason i feel this way: take a look at what they have been up to. They started looking at actually improving security (SP2), hey, it's a start. Longhorn is on the way - it's not going to be XP SP3 when it comes out. There is going to be stuff in there not seen before, might even be great stuff. Think IE isn't getting a face lift/massive-rewrite? Think again.
They have begun the (succ
This is the death knell... (Score:3, Insightful)
Let me paint you a picture:
1) Microsoft patents as much technology as it can under US jurisdiction.
2) If you want to make something new, and retain control over it, you must do it outside the US. The rest of the world will make IT innovation more attractive to the masses by championing open source and open standards.
3) All non-Microsoft IT development goes overseas. (Heck, the labor is already being offshored. Just offshore the whole shebang.)
4) US loses much of it's ability to innovate in the IT market.
5) US becomes a technology consumer instead of a technology creator.
This process is inevitable when so much greed is involved. Witness the US energy industry. By and large it is addicted to foreign sources. This is because of greed and an unwillingness to change the status quo. (i.e. moving to alternative sources other than oil.) Is being addicted to foreign oil a benefit to the US economy? Absolutely not. Is the control of all IT innovation by a central source a benefit to the US economy? Again, no. Does it matter to the short sighted corporations pushing these agendas? Nope. Not one bit.
Re:déjà vu? (Score:3, Insightful)
We probably wouldn't be using those if Microsoft weren't four years late to the party. Ahh, the old Win 3.1 days, where you needed a third party set of utilities, such as Trumpet Winsock, to even get the PPP connection started.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:déjà vu? (Score:3, Informative)
Here's how the scam allegedly worked: Saddam sold oil to his friends and allies around the world at deep discounts. The buyers resold the oil at huge profits. Saddam then got kickbacks of 10 percent from both the oil traders and th
Re:déjà vu? (Score:2)