Microsoft Finally Bows to EU Antitrust Measures 365
Rogue Pat writes "Microsoft ended three years of resistance on Monday and finally agreed to comply with a landmark 2004 antitrust decision by the European Commission. Competitors will be able to buy interface protocols for 10.000 Euro to make their software work better with Windows. Moreover, Microsoft won't appeal the 500 million Euro fine any further."
Microsoft should have payed the fine (Score:5, Insightful)
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Is that you, George?
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Re:Microsoft should have payed the fine (Score:4, Insightful)
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Not if they invested it in the development of Vista.
Re:Microsoft should have payed the fine (Score:5, Informative)
They already paid directly after the EC decision three years ago. The money was placed on a special bank account where neither the EU nor MS could touch it until the decision by the European Court.
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http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20071022114731199 [groklaw.net]
Not if you don't want to be paying Microsoft for each copy
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Took long enough... (Score:5, Insightful)
I think the saddest thing here is that it seems to take us three years to enforce a judgement against a major corporation, and even then the reporting in the media is all written as if Microsoft have kindly agreed to co-operate and not as though they've been forced to accept the judgement of a court that found they had done wrong and ordered them punished for it. If legal systems are this slow, it's no wonder people get concerned about the power of megacorps and that we see everyone from Big Software to Big Media taking some pretty major liberties with things like antitrust law.
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Plus consider it a landmark case - it's always easier to enforce any rulings if you have a precedent. Especially a precedent that prooves that a convict IS a monopolist who hasn't played fair.
I wonder what the next case is going to be. Maybe unfair pricing in OEM market? There was a case in France recently...
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Back during the 2000 US election, it was widely reported that Microsoft had become the largest single campaign contributor to both major parties. This is generally understood as the explanation for why the Justice Dept's case was terminated on terms very friendly to Microsoft shortly after George Bush took office.
As far as I can determine, Microsoft hasn't become nearly as important a campaign contributor in the EU as it is no
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The EU is a combined political entity composed of 27 sovereign states. The US is a combined political entity composed of 50 sovereign states. The diffence is only in mindshare. The states of the US had a common enemy and since they repelled the enemy together they quickly formed a strong union. The EU states only formed a union very recently and had a great deal of independen
Re:Took long enough... (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually, it might be best for the world if the USA defederated and the relatively sane states joined the EU or Canada, leaving the inbred christrian fundamentalist nutter states to die.
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It is analogous to making and selling the only car most people use, but refusing to tell anyone else how to make the best petrol for it, so no-one buys petrol from the competition, or if they do its not as good. Sooner or later someone is going to start complaining of monopoly.
No-one is
Re:Took long enough... (Score:4, Insightful)
If you are in the US, then this is damn hilarious. The US, where toture has become accepted practice to obtain secrets.
Microsoft can keep there secrets, but it is going to cost them. They are free to get up and leave Europe, I am sure we will do fine. The simple fact is, that if they did that, then a huge amount of effort would be put into getting Linux as a perfect replacement. This would weaken Micrsofts stronghold on the rest of the world as well.
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Contrast this to say, Dell... If you buy all your computers from Dell, and suddenly they pull out of your market... You can start buying new computers from HP instead with very little disruption to y
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Re:Took long enough... (Score:4, Insightful)
So let me get this straight. You think Microsoft could tell a sovereign nation what they are "allowed" to do within their borders?
Re:Took long enough... (Score:4, Insightful)
And that's just the first day. Soon it will become obvious that international companies with branches in the EU need to migrate away from MS as well if they want to keep their software homogeneous in their enterprise, subsequently forcing, in time, US national companies that are working with these internationals away from MS. In a year it would be over for MS.
stop selling MS software in Europe (Score:3, Insightful)
couldn't microsoft essentially say that their software was no longer allowed to be purchased or used by any country in the EU?
Heck, MS can't stop it's software from being sold in Cuba how in the world can they stop it n Europe?
FalconRe: (Score:2, Insightful)
If I have a secret, I don't care what the antitrust european court says, it's my secret, they shoudln't take that nor my money away for me.
Except that there is no justifiable reason for keeping it a secret since pretty much all of their "secrets" were proprietary extensions based on already known protocols. In fact, some of those protocols were items Microsoft pushed onto the standards track themselves so they have no excuse really.
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1. ~10 years ago the US determined that, under US law, it was illegally using it's monopoly in one section of a market to dominate another. The fact your government did nothing about it is not our fault. Look closer to home first before complaining.
2. The Vichy government was put in place under threat of arms - you have absolutely no understanding of history; the Vichy government did everything it could to resist, just in other ways.
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Even the judge of the Court of First Instance was on to Microsoft trying to paint it that way, and he's a judge not a programmer. All involved parties, with the notable exception of Microsoft itself, have repeatedly publicly stated that they DO NOT WISH to see Microsoft's preciousss source code, because that is not required for interop
I heard oink-oink outside of my window... (Score:5, Funny)
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Paid for the dinner (Score:5, Funny)
"I paid for the dinner," she said.
If they had their dinner where I think they had their dinner, that should nearly cover the fine.
Re:Paid for the dinner (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Paid for the dinner (Score:5, Funny)
And I would recommend a Japanese restaurant for dinner with Steve...you know, where they sit on the floor. Less dangerous that way.
Re:Paid for the dinner (Score:4, Insightful)
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Considering the standard Microsoft tactic of Extinquishing after Embracing, I find the thought of Ballmer wooing anyone a bit disturbing.
This is Great! (Score:5, Interesting)
Maybe we can finally see some competitive open-source software platforms, like a better Evolution client (full Exchange capability, maybe?) or a better OpenOffice.org?
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The old exchange protocol which was nearly impossible to emulate is on its way out for a number of reasons. All newer Microsoft clients are aiming to switch from this original RPC driven protocol to WebDAV through OWA. The protocol is reasonably well documented. The parts that are not have been reverse engineered long ago. This is the "native" protocol of the current Evolution connector and the problems with it are entirely Evoluti
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Thanks for the reply.
I'm just curious; why was the old Exchange implementation very hard to reproduce in other software? Isn't RPC still used to this today (included as used actively in Outlook 2007)? I know that their Entourage software uses WebDAV, but I thought that RPC was still being developed actively, which, if reverse-engineered, would solve Exchange incompatibility issues??
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I'm just curious; why was the old Exchange implementation very hard to reproduce in other software? Isn't RPC still used to this today (included as used actively in Outlook 2007)?
It isn't hard particularly. Microsoft use an only slightly modified DCE/RPC [wikipedia.org]. SambaTNG and now Samba include the tools you need to read and write this "MSRPC".
The problems are: (a) The protocols have huge numbers of calls, making it impractical to implement every one, so you have to implement the ones that are used (but eac
Re:This is Great! (Score:5, Informative)
Thing is that curtesy of the Openchange project which is building on top of the IDL stuff from Samba the Exchange MAPI protocols are being fairly rapidly reverse engineered. At which point the prescence or absence of any documentation from Microsoft will be irrelevant. In fact the OpenChange documentation is probably useful in that it won't cost 10,000 Euro and come with strings attached.
Re:This is Great! (Score:5, Informative)
Interoperability between Outlook and non-Exchange servers typically happens with client-side connectors that attach to MAPI (which is not a protocol; it's the API that Outlook uses to talk to stores and transports). Bynari has a pretty good one that uses their IMAP server, but it still saves calendar and address book data in Microsoft's proprietary TNEF format on the server. The good news is that an improved version is currently in late beta that will work with servers like Citadel [citadel.org] storing calendars in iCalendar format and address books in vCard format.
Don't get too cozy (Score:3, Interesting)
Perhaps. What worries me is that Microsoft recently vowed to start buying open source [slashdot.org] companies. Most of the work on standards based collaboration software and related technology that I'm aware of (e.g. Chandler [chandlerproject.org], Bedework [bedework.org], etc.) (exception: Apple's iCal server [apple.com]) is done by a few small tight groups. Are any of them going to withstand millions of dollars in cash for the sake of principle? I'm a die-hard F/OSS advocate myself, but if someone wer
any takers (Score:5, Interesting)
<NotFlameBait>
The courts have made Microsoft make those protocols available. It will be interesting to see how many people actually pony up to buy those protocol specs - in part, that would be a measure of how valid the EU's judgement was.
</NotFlameBait>
Only one taker (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Only one taker (Score:4, Insightful)
Microsoft WON this case by wearing down the court, the EU didn't effect a punishment that will actually hurt M$ and the ruling will be twisted in M$ favor for years to come. The EU LOST the case!!!
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IBM or whoever will buy a copy for the Open Source projects that needs.
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3 years is a little late. In that time competitors have entered the marketplace. You can pay lots to use the Microsoft Portocols or use the Linux Protocols for free. Open Office works fine on Ubuntu.
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Re:any takers (Score:4, Funny)
Which of the four zeros is the extra one which turned ten into ten thousand?
not good enough (Score:5, Insightful)
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It's not that simple at all. Providing the complete interface spec completely free of charge imposes a huge (some might say unrealistic, even) burden on businesses. How would you feel if distribution were prohibited for every open source application that didn't provide and maintain comprehensive, correct documentation on all their interfaces and protocols? (If anyone is about to argue that open source is a moving target and such a prohibition could never work in practice, they're ducking the legal/ethical i
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Code is not interface documentation (Score:2, Insightful)
Open Source software generally comes along with the interface document, the code itself.
I'm both surprised and disappointed that within a few minutes of my post, three people have all challenged it on this basis.
Just dumping the whole code base is in no way an acceptable substitute for providing good interface documentation. Sure, code should be self-documenting by using appropriate names in interfaces. Sure, designs should be clean and easy to understand. But the goal of this ruling is to facilitate interoperability in the spirit of the law. It is unreasonable to require people to scan th
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It's called the source code.
If Microsoft were to simply post their source code up on their website, nobody would be asking them to write this "burdensome" documentation.
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there's a difference between complete specs and revealing all secret doors. besides, your example is fundamentally broken : the source accompanying your open-source project contains all relevant information.
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Requiring a businesses with a monopoly advantage to provide access to such interface documentation as they have themselves internally, at no more than a reasonable charge to cover the legitimate costs of supplying that information, for the purposes of allowing interoperability, is one thing. Requiring them to provide complete specs, at no charge at all, to anyone who asks for any reason, is something else entirely.
Oh, and that is why the GPL completely fails to work, which requires every distributor to provide full source code to any user who wants it, monopoly advantage or not. Oh wait, the GPL works just fine. So Microsoft, with several tens of billions of dollars to its advantage, ought to be able to muddle through somehow, hmm, don't you think?
Actually, I would say you missed the point by a wide margin. The point is, those who need the specs can get them. Which amounts to a handful of CIFS developers.
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2 questions (Score:5, Interesting)
and 2.Does the license exclude OSS/GPL or have Microsoft finally been forced into allowing GPL software to use its "secret sauce"?
Re:2 questions (Score:5, Informative)
See the EC ruling [europa.eu] (PDF), especially article 999 on page 277:
Also interesting:
The decision does not seem to give a hard number for how much MS may charge for disclosure of the specs.
"work group" server (Score:2, Interesting)
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Also, what is a "Windows work group server"? Would that be a PDC, or a simple server on a given workgroup with no domain control features whatsoever?
And finally...
> Microsoft should be able to impose reasonable and non-discriminatory conditions to ensure that this access to the disclosed specifications is
> granted for evaluation purposes only
"For evaluation purposes
So still refusing to comply (Score:5, Insightful)
This is no different to when they paid the last fine and announced they'd finally given in to the EU demands and offered the documentation at 50k with restrictive license.
So they drop the price a little, and the restrictions a little, but so what? It's the same game. The EU needs to force compliance here. Or they'll play this game forever.
Whence the chipper tone? (Score:3, Insightful)
Balls. They've just taking the fight to the next level, that's all. The expression "cold, dead hands", comes to mind, when contemplating any usable spec belonging to MS.
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Tax Euros put to work? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm all for interoperability, but it's not like I'm going to pay $10000 for half-undocumented Microsoft protocols. At least a small portion of all those millions would be put to good use, instead of it all disappearing into the black hole that is the EU budget.
Re:Tax Euros put to work? (Score:5, Informative)
peanuts (Score:2)
I'm to lazy to read the exact ruling, but charging 10k for it would seem to at least violate the spirit of the ruling
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That's it? (Score:4, Informative)
[1] http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9001926 [computerworld.com]
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Microsoft still wins (Score:5, Insightful)
Fortunately, there may be workarounds: people can write small binary-only Microsoft compatibility plug-ins which plug into larger open source applications that eventually can replace Microsoft's applications.
Re:Microsoft still wins (Score:5, Insightful)
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Well, no. E.g. You have to pay a fee for most public documents (say, court records), but you're free to redistribute them. If they're copyrighted, you can still write your own documentation/description of the information and distribute that. (Remember folks, copyright only covers the expression, not the idea itself) Take the Linux kernel an
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right. (Score:2)
Nominal for large multinational corporations you means. How many open source projects will stump that?
Sure MS paid the fine, but have they succeeded in making things hard for the little developers?
Besides, fining MS is like siphoning your water from the Niagara falls - sure you get wet but you don't make a dent. I have held the view for a long time that fines for companies should be based on a percentage setting, that way firms of all size
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Nominal for large multinational corporations you means. How many open source projects will stump that? That's the least. An sufficiently popular open source project could simply raise the funds. But will they be able to use the specifications in an open implementation, or will they effectively need to sign an NDA for the specs and stay closed source?
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Its not meant to help hobbyist open source projects. I mean come on, my -hobby- development tool stack is worth almost 10k. What I use everyday for work
Place for GNU? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Place for GNU? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Get an AD or Exchange compatible replacement royalty free and any company worth its salt will consider implementing it as an emergency backup solution. Once it gets in, it's neve
I still don't understand .... (Score:5, Insightful)
What restrictions come with the specification that we pay 10,000 Euros for? If there are restrictions on what we can do with the knowledge gained, then we can't use it. M$ could argue that publishing code written using their spec is the same as publishing their spec and so everyone who reads the code has to pay 10k Euros.
Until this is explained in full: we need to hold back on popping the champagne corks.
How good will the spec be? If it is anything like the OOXML one then there will still be huge holes. M$ is smart enough to only publish in the spec the bits that have been reverse engineered: this allows it to claim that it has revealed a lot without adding anything to what is known by the rest of us.
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Another Misleading Summary (Score:2)
Your post should be modded interesting and the summary should be edited to include a healthy dose of scepticism.
Resistance (Score:2)
We told you so (Score:5, Informative)
Re:We told you so (Score:4, Insightful)
Nelly Kroes from the EU just declared Victory to retreat faster. Please read and link the EU press release, there (English only): http://www.europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=IP/07/1567&format=HTML&aged=0&language=EN&guiLanguage=en
- Any decisions as to wether Microsoft complies will be made by an English court, some day, with a rule probably but which one nobody knows. But - by Jove ! - those rules have just changed... More delays, more legal battles, more defeats for the good guys.
- They have not settled about the fees... Or has Reuters more information? Or more disinformation?
- The press release if filled with patent-talk (with consequences) even while software patents are still not recognised in the EU. In this respect, this IS a full blown victory for the huge patent troll that is MSFT, because the commission plays by US-UK rule.
Conclusion: the US corps rule the EU through proxies. It's as simple as that.
Next: more GM food, getting rid of all those bees, enforcing all those patents on living things created long ago. "Someone patented a one-click, so I patented a gene. And _I_ earn money with it! Waaaaa!!!"
NDA? (Score:2, Insightful)
Only 10,000 euros! (Score:4, Insightful)
So after years of illegally leveraging their monopoly to drive others out of business and drive up the price of software and goods, their "punishment" is to charge people even more. This "justice" things sounds great, wish I could get some of that!
Rich.
To quote the borg.... (Score:2)
Resistance is futile. Sadly, it won't make a difference IMHO.
She's one brave woman. (Score:2)
Miss Kroes, I salute you.
Available under what conditions? (Score:4, Interesting)
10,000 Euros (Score:4, Interesting)
Even more interesting than that, though, is the fact that the article mentions Microsoft can not use its large software patent portfolio against open source projects. I'm not sure that it was ever an issue since most European countries don't recognize software patents, but that strikes down all of the FUD Microsoft have been spreading (at least for the Europeans) regarding their trusted Linux "partners".
The EU LOST the case!!! (Score:4, Interesting)
I just wonder how useful the protocol will be (Score:4, Funny)
Section 73.12
Network communications will use the LikeDos63 format.
Section 110.42
Shared disk communications will check for the SAMBA tag. If true, return "network device driver" error.
Section 173.01
Packet Aw1: We don't even know what purpose this serves any more. However, one must be with every message or after 10 hours a memory leak starts.
Packet Zzz: This puts the message reader to sleep for a few seconds. One must be sent each hour or weird problems develop. It looks like it gives the message processor time to catch up.
Section 174.13
Check for media windows player version 13 and WGA confirmation before sending messages. If either fails, disable the subsystem.
etc...
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Straw man. (Score:3, Insightful)
Nobody's asking Microsoft to give up their secret recipe. They're asking Microsoft to document how you eat their chicken.
This isn't information you would use to duplicate Microsoft's software, this is information yu need to make your products work WITH Microsoft's software.
Netscape tried to sue Microsoft because they felt their browser was unfairly marketed since it came with the system.
Not only did it come wi