New Microsoft Dirty Tricks Revealed 207
Conrad Mazian writes "Robert X. Cringely has an article on the Technology Evangelist web site where he claims that Microsoft destroyed evidence in the Burst vs Microsoft case. Specifically Burst's lawyers had asked for certain emails, Microsoft claimed that they couldn't find the backup tapes the emails would be on, and while this was happening the tapes were in a vault at Microsoft — until they mysteriously disappeared. It's a fascinating story, and even names one person at Microsoft."
Oh, NO! (Score:2, Insightful)
Oh, No! A corporation wrangles, delays, misplaces, obfuscates in the face of a lawsuit. Heaven's, what is the world coming to?
Microsoft must be the very first to EVER do this.
Re:Oh, NO! (Score:5, Insightful)
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Deceive. Inveigle. Obfuscate.
Coincidentally, this is also Sony's tactic.
Re:Oh, NO! (Score:4, Funny)
"Schlemiel, Schlimazel, Hasenpfeffer Incorporated!" [wikipedia.org] ??
I swear I had no choice to hide the tapes! (Score:2, Funny)
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"I'm going to f-ing bury that email, I have done it before and will do it again... I'm going to f-ing bury that email."
*throws chair*
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Oh, no! Your SO is cheating on you. How terrible! Must be the first time...
Oh, no! A country gets attacked, some thousand lives are lost, rage prevails and two countries are invaded, hundreds of thousands killed, civil wars started to further break the lives of millions. Must be the first in history!
Oh, no... People drink and drive under influence and kill innocent ones. Heck, I bet this never happened before
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Honestly your defense of MS consists of "everybody else does it". Isn't it amazing what the defenders of MS have been reduced to.
Not every business breaks the law. Some do, but many don't. Please don't defame the entire business community and capitalism itself by saying that every business breaks the law.
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A fine counter-argument. I'm surprised it isn't used more often.
"Come on, Your Honor, it's not like I'm the first to EVER commit this crime!"
Re:Oh, NO! (Score:5, Insightful)
How exactly is this pandering to the Anti-Microsoft element on slashdot?
It is a story about a company that when faced with legal action regarding their behavior deliberately destroyed/hid evidence that showed they as corporate entity were perfectly aware that their behavior was wrong in the legal sense.
The fact that corporations routinely do this is completely irrelevant. All this story is exposing is a pattern of behavior on the part of Microsoft with regards to compliance with the law, or in this case a complete disregard for the law. While it may be redundant as the case against Microsoft has been made time and time again it isn't pandering to the anti-Microsoft zealots. It may be embarrassing to the pro-Microsoft evangelists, but we all know they are nuts ;-).
If Apple, Red Hat or Novell had done something similar they would be called on it. However, none of those corporate entities have done anything like that to my knowledge. But Microsoft has. And considering that Microsoft products are on ~85% of the PCs out there makes it relevant to the slashdot community.
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Since when did Disney become a goody corporation ?
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It doesn't make it right. But people get away with it. Remember a guy named Frank Quattrone. Sent around a mail to his employess asking
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You made a typo there. Let me fix it for you:
Childish simplicity and idealism are the cornerstones of our society.
Ever since the rise of the great French philosophers - Rousseau, Voltaire and co. - an idea has existed that there is such a thing as a higher good. Rousseau depicted it as a Social Contract [wikipedia.org], while Voltaire depicted it as an accommodation between the selfish venality of human nature and the coincidence of our interests.
I
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Meanwhile, how do we know for sure that the military pulled the
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Re:So that makes it OK? (Score:4, Insightful)
Courts of law are not about punishing the guilty they are about protecting the public from the government and from thugs in uniform. A terrorist suspect is only a suspect because some one 'thinks' or 'decides' they should be one, there is no proof, if there was, that person would be arrested and sent to the courts where the validity of the evidence could be tested and to ensure some incompetent ass wipe didn't falsify the evidence or just outright lied to get promotion or even to hide their own incompetence (if you can't catch the guilty then convicting an innocent can still get you re-elected).
Consider the long term ramifications. Through out history, torturers where isolated from the rest of the community because any individual they can achieve job satisfaction and a personal sense of accomplishment from the infliction of pain, suffering and degradation upon others, is a dangerously deranged psychopathic individual and a threat to the community. Honestly, would you want a US military approved torturer living next door to you and having access to your family (a thug that listened to the agonised screams of human beings 8 hours a day with out a qualm whilst eating undisturbed meals, sleeping peacefully and collecting what they considered to be their well deserved pay check).
How many thousands of CIA trained torturers will the US government be releasing upon an unsuspecting public, torturers who no longer have the legal means by which to fulfil those urges they have became accustomed too. Check with any real law enforcement authority and they will tell you exactly what kind of long term threat those individuals who voluntarily participated in that kind of abhorrent behaviour really are.
Uh, because it doesn't work? (Score:2)
Jesus Christ! (Score:5, Insightful)
- Nth hand unverified, information (My best friend's sister's boyfriend's brother's girlfriend heard from this guy who knows this kid who's going with a girl who saw Ferris pass out at 31 Flavors last night. I guess it's pretty serious. )
- this is about stuff along time ago.
- There is a lot suspect in what's being claimed in the article as well.
Well, as the tagline says:
Re:Jesus Christ! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Jesus Christ! (Score:5, Funny)
The corraborating evidence comes up missing ?
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He's mostly just in charge of the destruction of chair evidence though.
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According to Cringley:
You are welcome to quest
And your point? (Score:5, Informative)
If you do, and actually get caught, you get some token fine and you chalk it up as a cost of doing business and move on.
Re:And your point? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:And your point? (Score:5, Insightful)
Enron is not gone because they broke the law and got obliterated for it, Enron is gone because the reality that they actually had no money overtook their fiction and they collapsed into overnight bankruptcy. Legal recourse against Enron only really began after it was long gone, and was against the company's directors.
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To blindly say there are never any consequences is wrong. There are rare legal and often economic consequences.
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But not because of their questionable activities. Enron didn't collapse because they were lying about their financial situation, they collapsed because their financial situation was bad in the first place.
It's sad... (Score:3, Interesting)
What on earth does it take to revoke a corporate charter these days?
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Oh, that can destroy a government, too. If I live long enough, with the US Federal Deficit as deep as it is and climbing like it is, I might even see it happen.
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And if your talking about losing the ware, your probably talking about the american civil war. And they lost because a general gave up in Appomattox Virginia. But that wasn't the end of the war, It was just the official folding of the south back into the united states. The gun owners of the south continued to
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Don't think that I'm anti-gun ownership as such; I think it's a complete load of shit that banning gun ownership will turn the world into some sort of utopia. However I dispute that gun ownership automatically prevents totalitarianism.
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Re:And your point, redux? (Score:2, Interesting)
Enron is not gone because the reality that they actually had no money overtook their fiction, Enron is gone because they changed their name to CrossCountry Energy Corp. While most of their business activities stopped they were too well connected to just disappear.
http://www.enron.com/corp/pressroom/releases/2003/ ene/062503release.html [enron.com] /index.htm? [cnn.com]
http://www.igorinternational.com/press/bloomberg-c orporate-business-name.php [igorinternational.com] - read down a bit.
http://money.cnn.com/2002/02/22/news/enron_roundup
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I notice Ford is still around despite some evil behaviour (although they seem to be in some financial shit finally) as are IBM (they weathered their financial shit) and no doubt dozens if not hundreds of evildoer corporations which haven't been destroyed for their crimes. The all-powerful market doesn't punish criminal corporations only unprofitable ones and most corporate crime convictions don't really affect profits.
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So there have been consequences. You're correct that none have gone out of business, but that certainly doesn't mean they didn't pay some price.
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It's always like that. The only thing that matters is whether the rewards and "cost of doing business" do or don't exceed the rewards and cost of working within the law.
Not just any illegality (Score:2)
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Sad but true. And I think I finally know why it happens...
Microsoft is so large, so widespread, and so universally relied upon, that it is very hard to punish Microsoft the corporation without also significantly hurting the rest of the country. For example, if we force them to reveal their s
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These days when you are as large as microsoft is, it doesnt really matter if you break the law.
On the flipside, when you're as large as Microsoft, it doesn't really matter if you don't break the law - you'll still get sued by gold-diggers.
Not completely right... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Not completely right... (Score:4, Funny)
And the DRM wouldn't let them access the content?
New? (Score:4, Informative)
names (Score:5, Funny)
Oooh! It names someone at Microsoft. I'll tell you, but you gotta keep it a secret, okay? Bill Gates. Shhhh, don't tell anyone I told you...
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the irony (Score:5, Funny)
And Microsoft wants to be number one in search?
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Huge cost effective backup (Score:3, Insightful)
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Actually, that is also basically the problem with my backups on a smaller scale. Then again, I'm not a company and non-finding backups usually means I have to reprogram that small Java application in 5% of the time it took me originally
Here's the second part (Score:5, Informative)
Microsoft's M.O. (Score:2)
The same repeating pattern: msft destroy's evidence, then msft accuses others of destroying evidence. Msft steals code, then accuses others of stealing code. Msft abuses the public by controlling the standards, then msft has a screaming hissy-fit accusing others of trying to control the standard. Msft lies to the public with astro-turfing, and hiring others to front for msft etc., then msft screams and crys
Re:Microsoft's M.O. (Score:5, Insightful)
They do? And assuming they do, is that a get out of jail free card?
If so, why?
"they make the software that has made computers cheap and ubiquitous for everybody on the planet,"
There were many others in that game too, till they were crushed.
And they have made a very pretty penny from it.
And it is not like it would not have happened anyway ( there is nothing all that special about Microsoft
in that regard )
"and Bill Gates personally funds one of the largest charities in the world."
Again, is this a get out of jail free card? Why do you bring it up?
Is it OK to destroy evidence because you donate money to a charity?
"Now, if I can only get one of their salespeople to call me back about a large new installation I'm getting ready to do..."
Good luck on that.
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Because, if that's true, then making Microsoft dissapear off the face of the earth would have a significant effect on the economy of the United States. That is, like it or not, more important to the US government than applying absolute justice to Microsoft is.
That doesn't mean the government can't levy huge fines, etc. They
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There would be some minor turbulence for a short while, but I
cant see a "significant effect". Enron "disappeared", what
was the result? Nothing, really. People's computers would
continue to run. Also, who said anything about the company
disappearing? You cant really punish a company, excepting maybe
taking money from it, or cutting it up. Were it to "disa
Sounds like old robber barrons to me (Score:2)
I suppose we should let those guys off the hook as well?
Corporate Records Retention Law (Score:2)
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It's a criminal organization that is completely above the law. Passing more laws isn't going to curb it.
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I think we need a corporate records retention law to help avoid these sorts of situations.
Good point. Accurate and long-term recording of, say, username <-> timestamp <-> IP mappings would be great for some lawsuits...
One small problem (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:One small problem (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm kind of confused why this story is being treated as it is in the comments. MS is supposed to be helping other businesses avoid the possibility of losing data... hmmmmm MS wants to be the preferred supplier of software to government agencies and this is a bad mark on them if you ask me. Sure, they might have lost tapes which is not part of their software per se' but they are supposed to be designing software / systems that provide REALLY good backup processes in mind. If you can't demonstrate that you know how backup processes should work, perhaps your software shouldn't be used by anyone with legal requirements to backup data?
The end of Robocop 2 (Score:2)
What if this was the work of one individual?
A person who had her own agenda, wasn't in sync with the goals of our company?
Well, that usually works.
Use computers (Score:2)
Yes, it is best if they have a person search through the tape backup database to see where the tape is physically stored. It would take millions of hours. A computer could perform the database search in a couple seconds, but the query keeps crashing SQL Server ever since the Vista upgrade.
It Wasn't Microsoft's Fault. (Score:2)
That's why Burst won the courtcase (Score:5, Informative)
To the courts, it doesn't make much difference whether you say "sorry, we lost these emails by accident" and say the truth, or you say "we destroyed these emails, take that!" and say the truth or not, or whether you say "sorry, we lost these emails" and are in fact hiding them. In each case, the emails are not there, and the courts will assume that whatever they might have contained was not good for you. So whether Microsoft really lost these emails or was just hiding them, it doesn't matter.
Similar, if you are taken to court because someone claims you downloaded music illegally, and you just happen to format your harddisk by accident, you are in deep shit. And it doesn't matter whether there was evidence on that harddisk or not.
Evidence no longer necessary? (Score:2)
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Stupidity trumps malice here (Score:3, Interesting)
Microsoft's lawyers aren't stupid, though other parts of the company may be. If Microsoft were deleting incriminating documents that are subpoenaed, how does my signature exist? How could these documents be any more damaging than the others that did get released?
I'm not convinced.. (Score:2)
The key question is very simple: what makes them KNOWINGLY risk this, or (put another way) what are they hiding that would be worse when discovered knowingly and willingly destroying potential evidence?
In both cases (Enron and Microsoft) I had a real problem with accepting things of this magnitude as 'accidents'. Too convenient, and too much a feeling of even more skeletons present in the mass burial closet than were discovered. In
What is the liability of the sysadmins? (Score:2)
Could you be sued? Thrown into jail for obstruction? Probably.
If anyone asks you to do this, or help out, just say 'no'. Then look for another employer because the one you are working for is both evil and stupid.
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Nonsense, if Micro$oft never bought the CPM rip-off 86-DOS and renamed it "PC-DOS 1.0" Gary Kildall at Digital Research would have just marked CPM directly to IBM and today we'd all be running GEM XP [wikipedia.org].
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Nonsense, if Micro$oft never bought the CPM rip-off 86-DOS and renamed it "PC-DOS 1.0" Gary Kildall at Digital Research would have just marked CPM directly to IBM and today we'd all be running GEM XP.
He did. IBM would sell you a PC with CP/M if you wanted it.
However, a bigger problem with your argument is that the underlying logic dictates you can't give anyone/anything credit for any achievement, since "if they hadn't done it, someone else would have".
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And if your in a certain businesses that is regulated like s
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I doubt it. Deleting old e-mails is perfectly reasonnable. I don't need it, I don't keep it. Do you keep all letters or or tape all phone calls made by employees ?
"In other words, If i said i was going to sure you, and you deleted e
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If they are just hat, old irelevent emails then no problems at all. And yes, I do keep a copy of every email and a record of every phone call made to potential customers and clients. I also do the same with creditors and people offering services to me. Why, Because you never know when someone will make a claim contray to what has actualy transp
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I guess mabe a better limit mihgt be beyound a common statute of liability or whatever it is called when a person has a certain amount of time to file a lawsuite if they claim they were wronged. But even then you have to look out for items that get discovered after that time and are grandfthered in.
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And yes, real legaly run companies use email and the telephone to discuss contracts and sales and much more. On more then one occasion something has gotten lost or misrepresented. And they have come back to bite them.
Go ahead and not worry about it. If it ever bites you or your company in th
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Re:How convenient (Score:5, Funny)
Well, long story short, When I would eat a peanut butter sandwich while doing my homework the dog would seem interested in my backpack that night. When I left the zipper open or worse yet, it broke fro shoving too much stuff in it, the dog went in and ate the papers I was working on while eating the peanut butter sandwich.
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Of course they are. (Score:3, Funny)
Who here is letting Apple off the hook? (Score:2)