Microsoft to Fight Crime With Spammer's Millions 310
daria42 writes "It looks as if the $7 million Microsoft won from spam king Scott Richter won't go into a Swiss bank account and never be seen again after all. The company plans to dedicate a cool $5 mil to helping law enforcement agencies address computer-related crimes. Another $1 million will go to New York State to "expand computer-related skills training for youths and adults", with the rest being flagged to pay Microsoft's legal costs."
Hmm... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Funny)
No, that's my vomit that you smell. ;)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Check the bottom of your shoes, I think you stepped in something.
I keeeed, I keeeed
Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Excuse me for being cynical !! (Score:5, Insightful)
Crimes like piracy of Windows ?. Patent policing ?. More SCO like allegations on newer projects that imitate or duplicate Microsoft products ?.
Another $1 million will go to New York State to "expand computer-related skills training for youths and adults"Train them to use Outlook, Word and Excel or do they mean .NET,C# and Monad ?. Sort of catch them young approach ?.
I've seen a lot of Microsoft charity - it's often just building a new market for themselves, locking in an expanding market or blatant tax evasionary steps . They sent 250 XP Cds to a school and mark the cost as donations. I went on TV to help FSF guys call foul on that in Kerala - apparently it seems to have made some impact there (they teach about using OpenOffice and FireFox now).Essentially the money is in Microsoft's pockets and they are trying for Maximum ROI, rather than paying it out as dividends to their shareholders right now.
Re:Excuse me for being cynical !! (Score:2)
10.68 billion shares spreading 5 million....I doubt the shareholders would lose much sleep over it. This is essentially free money for MS that they decided to give for some PR.
Basically I agree with you but disagree that possible dividends should even be invoked.
Re:Excuse me for being cynical !! (Score:3, Insightful)
Crimes like piracy of Windows ?. Patent policing ?. More SCO like allegations on newer projects that imitate or duplicate Microsoft products ?.
That's pretty baseless speculation, it could just as easily be stopping financial fraud or breaking online paedophile rings. I doubt the law enforcement agencies are going to be complaining about getting this extra money from Microsoft, I think we can give them the benefit of the doubt on this one for the
Re:Excuse me for being cynical !! (Score:2)
They could win if they do the right thing, and not just as a PR stunt. Look at big evil IBM lately.
So I suppose Bill Gates putting billions of his own $$$ into AIDS research in the developing world is just looking for ROI too?
I'm sure he genuinely feels some joy in giving to a good cause. Should we let this distract us from Bill Gates' bad behavior? Does that now make everything okay?
Read the book... Big Blue: IBM's Use and Abuse of
Re:Excuse me for being cynical !! (Score:2)
Well for fuck's sake, what would "the right thing" be? Clothing and shelter for homeless children? No, because they're obviously just ensuring a future market for themselves. Feeding starving Africans? Nothing but a PR move. Toppling Robert Mugabe's regime in Zimbabwe and installing a democratic government? Clearly on a power trip.
The other poster had it right. Microsoft can't win in your eyes. So why should they even try to do anything
Re:Excuse me for being cynical !! (Score:2)
Re:Excuse me for being cynical !! (Score:2)
Which is what almost every company does, and lots of individuals do as well. Make a big donation, get your name out there. It's a transaction. It's a transaction for all of us who donate, we at least get the warm fuzzies out of it, or we wouldn't bother.
"Punitive damages" and "loser pays" (Score:2, Interesting)
But I am interested and baffled by the concept of "punitive damages" and how they are paid to the litigating party rather than to the general tax revenue base. If a company or person is to be punished for doing something wrong, shouldn't the government be the one to mete out that punishment? Why should a private citizen or company be allowed to reap the windfall of punitive damages? I think the justice system turns the court into a lottery by allo
No "punative damages" (Score:2)
Re:"Punitive damages" and "loser pays" (Score:2)
What's wrong with the guiding principle of a company acting in its own interest? MS will have a better future if people are happier when sitting down in front of their products and not getting killed with spam. MS will have lower costs if their own Hotmail, MSN, and other systems aren't choking on spam. If every company, and every person, acte
Re:"Punitive damages" and "loser pays" (Score:2)
And second, I agree that punitive damages shouldn't go into the hands of the plaintiff, but should be used to benefit society as a whole. As long as actual damages to the plaintiff are covered, anything above that is just an undeserved windfall. The po
Re:"Punitive damages" and "loser pays" (Score:3, Interesting)
Some guy breaks into a house and gets caught. He does some time, for which the tax payers pay his room and board, and
$1 mil for lawyer? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:$1 mil for lawyer? (Score:2)
Typical Slashdot Cynicism (Score:3, Insightful)
The fact is Microsoft has no obligation to use this money to do anything. But they make a nice gesture, and nobody here can say one positive word? There's not one good outcome out of this?
The bitterness with Microsoft got old and stale 10 years ago. It's past time you people gave up this hatred and obsession with the 'Borg'.
Typical because of experience (Score:2)
Re:Typical Slashdot Cynicism (Score:2)
The sarcastic and cynical attitude are well deserved. Microsoft worked hard to earn it.
$5 Million? The vague, and possibly self-serving purpose of "fight crime" ?
Re:Typical Slashdot Cynicism (Score:2)
"Fashionable" opinions? (Score:5, Insightful)
The bitterness with Microsoft got old and stale 10 years ago.
Oh ... and there I was under the impression that the anti-MS sentiment was about the fact that the company actually continues to behave unethically to this day, not about whether or not it was "fashionable" or "not fashionable" to be anti-MS ... silly me. I didn't realise bashing Microsoft "was, like, so yesterday!"
Your post reminds me of how Nike successfully turned around rising negative sentiment against the company over their sweatshop labour practices by creating a clever youth-targeted ad campaign that manipulated young people into simply thinking it was no longer "cool" to whine about the sweatshop labour because the topic was, well, 'so yesterday'. Of course they never stopped the sweatshop labour practices.
Are we so divorced from reality that our opinions about serious, real-life problems are now mostly based on how "hot", "current" or "fashionable" a topic is, rather than on, you know, facts?
Call me skeptical... (Score:2)
Also, which ag
Sounds like they are just moving it around... (Score:2)
1. The money is spent directly on objectives that MS wants to help.
2. The
Microsoft to fight crime (Score:2)
My Thoughts (Score:3, Insightful)
Everyone who thinks that Gates is going to dress up in a batman costume is very wrong. The costume would be more like Howard Sterns fart man!
What about the billions of ill-begotten dollars (Score:2)
Is the million dollars to New York (Score:2, Funny)
NY Law enforcement (Score:3, Interesting)
In other news... (Score:2)
The Unfortunate Truth (Score:2, Funny)
We need to come up with something more agressive and effective. I for one am a fan of the much discussed idea DOS attacks against the spammers websites, despite the moral and ethical issues people have raised. A nice side effect is that it will somewhat discourage ISPs from hosting them also.
In related news.. (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
"expand computer skills training for youths" = (Score:2)
I'm confused... (Score:2, Funny)
One Word: (Score:2)
OCP.
Looking forward to Microsoft RoboCop v1.0 (SP3, plus KB990212 to address the gun-holster jamming caused by the earlier KB990112 patch for the 'erroneous firing into crowds of civilians' issue).
Re:Dupe of the week (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Dupe of the week (Score:2, Offtopic)
Smith said that Microsoft will reinvest all of the money, after legal expenses, including $5 million that will go to increase Internet enforcement efforts and expand technical and investigative support to help law enforcers to address computer-related crimes.
So I ask the question: how is this a follow-up to the previous article when in fact the linked article is a day behind the orig
Re:Not enough (Score:5, Insightful)
Charity, when compelled through coersion or threat, is just a nice word for slavery.
Re:Not enough (Score:4, Insightful)
-
Re:Not enough (Score:3, Insightful)
Who cares if it's such a small percentage? The recipients of the $6 million that Microsoft didn't actually have to donate to them definately don't care.
$6 million is a hell of a lot of money irrespective
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
No shit, you well never do right by the MS haters on this site. MS could give 25b away and people would still be screaming "Yeah yeah charity my ass, they still have 25b left!". Or maybe I'm wrong, maybe I should be offended that, since MS is worth so much, and they probably misplace more than 10 grand without blinking an eye, that they're not paying off my truck.
Bet y
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Demonstrably untrue. Consider the Gravina Island bridge project - $250,000,000 to build a bridge from a city of 8,000 to an island with a population pegged at 50 or smaller. Nobody in the private sector has this much money to bury in an Alaskan swamp, yet the public sector - which is unfettered by the bounds of accountability or revenue generator - will drop this wad of cash like a mangy cat sheds it fur.
PR fluff and posturing and empt
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
I said often. And I wasn't refering to pork barrel products either. I'm talking about local polcie departments and agencies that aren't getting money for teh war on drugs.
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
They have enough money to park an officer in chatrooms for hours on end pretending to be a 16 1/2 year old girl but don't have enough money to investigate the theft of a $15,000 driveway (true story - the bad guys dug up the brick pavers that constituted the driveway one by one and hauled them off). It is a question of priorities: give the local LEAs a billion dollars and unless there is specific incent
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Five billion ($5,000,000,000) or five million (remove the last three zeros)?
I don't have issue with MS doing whatever they want with their private funds. They should spend their own, private money on anything they want. But generous gifts usually end up in a zero net increase in expenditures on the targeted application as gifts tend to cause existing funds to be diverted or are
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
We are not talking about a problem that affects a small town where $10K makes a difference. We are talking about a world-wide problem that is a MULTI billion dollar problem.
BTW, (and this is also for the MS fanboy moderators tha
Logic 101 (Score:3, Informative)
That is stupid. $5M might be a "miniscule" portion of their R&D - it's not, but I'll grant it for the sake of argument. Even so, it does not follow that because it is a small amount in relation to their R&D budget, it is not a sufficient sum to aid law enforcement. That inference just does not make a bit of sense.
Of course, not only both your premise
Re:Logic 101 (Score:2)
--
telnet://sinep.gotdns.com [gotdns.com] -- TW2002 and LORD registered!
Re:Logic 101 (Score:2)
-bs
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Good God people a company of it's own free will gives 5 million to different groups and you still moan about how crappy it is. Do they get PR out of it yeah probably, so does any Tom Dick and Harry that makes a donation to a
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Oh come on.
Now granted, this is MicroSoft we're talking about, an entity that is evil to the core.
But by that definition, there is no charity, ever. It's ridiculous. People do things for reasons, corporations do things for reasons too. Just because they have a motive doesn't make it any less charity.
Re:Not enough (Score:5, Insightful)
2. Get mod points
3. ???
4. Profit!
As always this is slashdot. If MS closed up shop, put their source code in the public domain, and gave all their money to starving street kids, close to half the posts would be insulting them or questioning their motives.
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
"You, in specific, were using charity, but there is no reason that anything compelled through coersion or threat won't be a nice name for slavery."
My apologies for any confusion.
(I fucking hate this "It's been 4 minutes since you last successfully posted a comment" bullshit. I've had it go up to 34 minutes before. Maybe it'll work if I post this using the-cloak.com
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
I would tend to agree, he merely chose a poor word. Someone else picked a better one - extortion. Taxation may also suffice (if properly qualified). But that's the whole po
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Charity, when compelled through coersion or threat, is just a nice word for slavery
I think the word extortion is more appropriate than slavery.
SiO2
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
I can't find the actual law that says this, but people who seem reliable cite summarize the law, including:
http://www.resurgence.org/resurgence/issues/hinkle y213.htm [resurgence.org]
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Re:Nobody's saying they HAD to do it (Score:2)
Re:Nobody's saying they HAD to do it (Score:2)
As you stated, Microsoft does many things for charity. The man we all love to hate, Bill, has done more for charity than all of us would ever be able to do, even if we took all of our gross income and combined it and just gave it away. Just because we dislike their busin
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
I am no fan of Microsoft software, I spend a good deal of time discussing Microsoft alternative with friends, family and collegues, but frankly people with your attitude are hurting this cause.
When folks read posts like yours they begin to get the impression that people who critize microsoft do so because it is 'trendy' to hate the leader. They then assume that my evangulism of tools like Firefox are just d
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
What kind of "crime" (Score:2)
Not only that, one is also forced to wonder what sorts of "cybercrime" this money is targeted at. Will it be used to go after phishers, spammers, virus, trojan, and worm authors, or will it be used to persecute teenagers trading Britanny Spears tunes and television episodes they forgot to tivo (or don't receive in
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Dude, just say thank you and be done with it. Bill doesn't owe you, New York or anyone else any money for things like Spam. He did not create it. Just appreciate the fact he is doing this.
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zombie_computer [wikipedia.org]
Re:Not enough (Score:3, Insightful)
People need to stop pointing the finger at MS and start pointing the finger at the malicious hackers, and then themselves.
Bill Gate
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
There are several OSes out there that this can't happen.
Windows problems are so bad that instead of being able to fix the problem, they've tried to fix the symptom
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Yes because with each copy of windows, you get an MS technicion who stands behind you to hit you over the head when you go to do something stupid.
There are several OSes out there that this can't happen.
What OS has zero spyware/virus/worms/etc targetting it?
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
What OS has zero spyware/virus/worms/etc targetting it?
See my sig.
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
As for Unix/Linux - here is some articles you can check out Here [about.com]
Maybe you should modify your sig?
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Those links are for security issues that have NEVER been actually exploited.
As for the MP3Virus.gen, it was a script that required admin access. This is a 'security hole' on every OS ever created.
And it's not MAC, it's Mac. And the company is called Apple. Know what you're talking about before you reply.
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
I will not provide a link to an actual virus, trojan worm or malware. That does not help the situation - plus it puts me at risk. Also, the fact that OS X is not as popular (by FAR) as Windows means there are fewer people trying to target OS X.
Some OS X
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Espranto and Mac.Simpsons were viruses for OS 9, from about 5 years ago.
Try checking your facts next time.
And MAC stands for Media Access Control. But you're probably a Minesweeper Consultant and Solitaire Expert and wouldn't understand that.
Interestingly, I bet you had virus protection on the entire time. Because you had to. Thanks for proving my point!
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Actually MAC stands for a few things:
Military Airlift Command
maximum allowable concentration
a waterproof raincoat made of rubberized fabric
Got all those nifty things from Dictionary.com, oh and look it includes MAC (yes in capitals) and says Macintosh...darn
You would lose that bet...I didn't invest in a virus protection or firewall until windows 98. The reason I knew I didn't have a virus on windows 95, is because I did the upgrade from 95 to 98 (those upgra
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Think about it, create a mostly financially independant child company or foundation, or even division, and give them the $7 million. That entity then uses the $7 million to sue other spammers. It then gets more money from other spammers, and uses that to fight additional spammers.
This way, Microsoft could have a spam-fighting operation going costing them nothing, since it would make it's own money to continue operating. They'd also g
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Re:Not enough (Score:2)
Re:computer related crimes. (Score:3, Insightful)
We have probably all done it at some stage (piracy that is), and flame wars aside about ethics and monopolies, it's really time for people to pull their heads out of their collective butts and accept that it is stealing (and no I don't want an argument about definitions. I know nothing physical was taken, but under current law it's still stealing. Don't like it? Get the laws changed).
This doesn't mean I'm against pushing for change in the software industry, and moving to
Re:computer related crimes. (Score:2)
Re:Bzzt, thanks for playing (Score:2)
This is my all-time favorite distraction comment. You know, argue the semantics of "theft" vs. "infringement" and hope that nobody notices that your purpose is to make everyone comfortable with ripping off artists, no matter what you call it. It's wrong. Period.
I'd love to see the typical P2P-using teenager stand in front of their "favorite" artist and tell them that they love their work, and
Re:Bzzt, thanks for playing (Score:2)
No, I'm saying that you should pay what the producer of the product, service, content, entertainment - anything - asks, or go elsewhere for what you want. AOL doesn't want to sell you their install software - they want to sell you their service, and that's why they ask you to pass the CD along to your friends. If the artist says, "I want you to enjoy my music, but the way I'm going to be able to spend my waking hours making it all day long, instead
Re:computer related crimes. (Score:5, Interesting)
Don't get me wrong. Child pornographers deserve their own special ring of Hell. But it seems that to law enforcement, computer crime == kiddie porn. Period. No other crime occurs on a computer. Ever. Just child porn. Nothing else. End of line.
There are other crimes occuring involved the magic, glowing grey box.
Re:computer related crimes. (Score:2)
Re:Please.... (Score:2)
Re:Please.... (Score:2)
Look, I'm having a bad day. This damn thing [gprime.net] stole my cursor....
Re:Hmm... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:grow up (Score:2)
I wasn't bashing your precious Microsoft. I was pointing out it wasn't enought for a Multibilion dollar company to worry about keeping. They get more by buying goodwill. It's a business decision that has nothing to do with the concept of good or evil except in the public perception. If anything the "not enough"offended you, apply it to the spammer. Fine him enough for MS to worry about keeping some of it.
Re:grow up (Score:2)
And that is a great example of the kind of fuzzy, uninformed overly-sentimental pro-company feelings that no regular marking campaign can buy! Those donations are obviously worth every cent in PR value. (Now go research the other, unethical side of Microsoft, so you can perhaps have a more balanced view.)
Re:News? (Score:2)
I figured Bill would just blow the money on strippers and coke. Or perhaps on a death ray. Maybe even buy a grilled cheese sandwich off of ebay with the image of Don Knotts wearing a burka while training a horse to ride a unicycle burned into it.