MS Anti-ODF Lobbyist Named As MA Tech Advisor 170
Andy Updegrove writes "For the last year and a half, Massachusetts has been a battleground between Microsoft, on the one hand, and IBM, Sun and open standards advocates on the other over the state's plans to implement ODF. That effort has sparked similar initiatives around the world that threaten to erode Microsoft's multi-billion dollar profits on Office software. Now, we have a new governor set to take office, and observers are waiting to see if he will continue to support ODF like his predecessor, or back off in favor of Microsoft Office. Last week, Governor-Elect Deval Patrick named a new transition advisory group to make recommendations on the state's IT structure, and one of the eight members he appointed was none other than the Microsoft lobbyist that has been leading the charge to not only defeat ODF in the Bay State, but to gut the power of the State's CIO and Information Technology Division as well. Not a good sign of independence from special interests for an administration that has yet to even take office."
Both Sides are Special Interests (Score:2, Insightful)
Just because you agree with one side more than the other doesn't make it any less "special".
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Re:Both Sides are Special Interests (Score:5, Insightful)
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This does not sound like they are going to carry on with ODF. Ok, perhaps they won't cancell it, but you can bet 'new facts' will emerge that cast doubt, huge discounts will appear, and suddenly ODF won't be as interesting as it once was.
Re:Both Sides are Special Interests (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Both Sides are Special Interests (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Both Sides are Special Interests (Score:5, Informative)
A standard is not owned by anyone. DOC files are not standard and are subject to change at the whim of one and only one company. As we keep on playing with words, one day we will no longer understand each other.
Re:Both Sides are Special Interests (Score:4, Informative)
The term special interest
The slogan special interest is used for all of these variants, but never to describe political allies. Use of that term, especially in the United States, implies that the "special" interest is not the "public" interest. Many scholars dislike the term special interest, since it carries this loaded, negative connotation. Among other things, it presumes that we know exactly what the general interest (or public interest) is. Some use vested interests or particularistic groups, but in academic literature, these have been replaced by "interest group".
While this comes from Wikipedia it is also how it's defined in a few other paper prints. "Special Interest" denotes not in the "Public Interest". A standard is in the public interest. A proprietary format is special interest, in this case Microsoft.
If we continue playing we can make the words say what we want and no longer understand each other. If you look closely at your definition it implies "not in the public interest". In a sense you make my point.
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On the other hand if the US government would legislate that all citizens would be given a gun and all the ammunition they could possibly use, the NRA would not go away. (OVER SIMPLIFICATION) They are
If that was an example, you missed your point. (Score:2)
What sort of crack are you smoking? That's not even close to right. The original purpose of the NRA was to promote marksmanship and other shooting sports, because at the time of its founding, Americans really sucked hard when it came to hitting anything with a gun, and this meant the military had to spend a lot of extra time training people. It was a public service organization.
Today, depending on which part
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I didn't own a gun after 9/11.
I bought my gun after the Patriot Act was passed. I figured that given the legislation the government was passing, I needed to do more to _really_ be patriotic. That is, be willing (and ready) to stand up to a tyranical government.
If the secret torture prisions, NSA wire tapping, etc. haven't convinced you that a gun is a tool you should own, then by the time you really need it, you won't be able to get one.
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Your argument is somewhat spurious and misses the point that the interest on the other side from Microsoft is not the other companies, but the general public.
Keeping a proprietary Microsoft format means at a minimum, requiring a Microsoft operating system to view the files. This assumes the O/S comes with a free (otherwise cha-ching, more money) 'doc' viewer and does not also require the person to have to pay for an internet connection to download the viewer. And unless their viewer is NOT like most, if
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The person who started this was the CIO for the state of MASS not open office. It wasn't the MS competitors fighting. In fact I haven't really seen any fighting (except for MS trying to keep their market dominance). The state of MASS have made it a business requirement to use ODF to avoid 'lock in'. Any vendor can choose to meet the requirement or not. You really are starting to sound like a shill for MS. Do you complain so much when you hear about software projects abstracting their data persistence
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ODF is an open standard, which is entire
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So, you are saying that if i find 2 offices that don't use doc and excel out of the 1,000 Billion here on earth, i have proved you wrong?
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That's not the point (Score:5, Insightful)
Indeed, but you have to understand the difference between a lobbyist advocating a solution (he was paid to do so regardless of the merits) and a civil servant advocating a solution (he was paid to dispassionately figure out what the best solution is). Appointing a lobbyist for a policy-making committee is silly not because we may disagree with his former employer, but because lobbying and making policy decisions require completely orthogonal skills. For example, I would expect a former lobbyist called upon to make decisions to give undue credence to other lobbists, and to care about political agenda more than technical issues.
It's even worse (Score:5, Informative)
Re:It's even worse (Score:5, Insightful)
This practice needs to be performed at all levels of government except where it's not practical. We shouldn't have the dairy association making USRDA recommendations to the FDA when it comes to milk consumption. We shouldn't have a Microsoft employee (and likely stock holder) in a position to make recommendations or otherwise influence decision making about whether or not to make ANY decisions where a choice to include or exclude Microsoft products or services for the public is concerned. It's simply inappropriate.
If anyone here is living in that state, I recommend pushing for a recusal policy where such a person would be required to recuse himself from any policy making decisions where his employer's interests are involved.
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If the State decides to stick with ODF and the committee has no Microsoft representation then Microsoft could claim that both sides were not heard. With this MS employee on the committee they can never say that their side of the story w
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To have decision makers HEAR from all parties interested is just common sense. But to have a decision maker that is employed by one of the parties under consideration? Come on.
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If the State is to make an informed decision then it needs to hear the Microsoft argument for sticking with the Office formats.
True... but completely beside the point. Microsoft salespeople and engineers will definitely be presenting information, just like every other vendor looking to sell things to the state. That is completely different from one of their employees being on the state payroll to help make decision about whether or not buy things from their employer. It's like hiring an executive from Co
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Not sure what about my post would suggest that I don't understand there is a difference. My post was merely to criticize the original story poster for ignore the fact that the ODF-side of things are also a special interest. Furthermore, there is no reason to th
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Disagreed (Score:2, Interesting)
Why is that? Because there are plenty of NON-MONETARY motivations someone can have to bias a statement, research, experimental piece or whatever. Pa
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The new Office OpenXML format should improve things though, but OpenOffice will still be locked out. Novell is supposed to
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On one side there is the special interests of the citizens of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts who would rather not have to purchase a specific brand of computer program in order to interact with the local government.
On other side are the special interests of a convicted monopoly abuser, who is willing to spend a huge amount of money for not allowing really open formats being mandated as it would undermine the very monopoly it loves to abuse.
Re:Both Sides are Special Interests (Score:5, Insightful)
Both sides of the Microsoft vs ODF battle are special interests.
No. One side is a vendor neutral policy created by the state and aimed at improving the technology used by the state. The other is one company lobbying the government to get rid of the vendor neutral policy and standardize only their company as a supplier. Appointing an employee of one of the companies bidding as your tech advisor is not exactly indicative of impartial decision making.
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I thought the same thing
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The question is, is he still employed by the same lobbyist firm?
It is my understanding that he works for Microsoft directly and is still employed by them as a regional director of PR. I read something about a comment where he would be acting as a private individual not an MS employee for that issue. It seems a clear conflict of interest.
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If using MS Word and Windows allows them to do thier jobs quicker and/or do them more efficiently then so be it. But if you want to switch away from it, you'd better be able to PROVE it's all going to be worth it, and frankly I haven't seen that, or believe it.
Government officials evaluated their needs and then made a policy based upon what they felt was best for the state. That was ODF. That is not a special interest. A special interest is when some group or company tries to convince the state to do som
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Actually no, one side is a special interest. Microsoft is paying lobbyists to sway government policy so that Microsoft will profit. Microsoft is the special and the profit is the interest. The Microsoft side of the arguement serves only Microsoft's interest in profits. Microsoft can sell software that supports ODF so the only reason to not support ODF is to again ensure their own interest, profit in a monopoly.
ODF is a standard developed by an
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Truly the bastion of objectivity here. A short, non-agressive comment be modded "troll" just because it doesn't agree with popular thinking.
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Next up on the polticial agenda... (Score:5, Funny)
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"Ambassadors! Ambassdors! Ambassadors! Ambassadors!"
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Hold Your Enemies Closer... (Score:5, Insightful)
A reasonable strategy would be to throw the two sides into a kettle and see who wins out. This may be an attempt to shorten the communication lines and ultimately be a good thing.
Knee-jerk, get thee behind me!
An even more reasonable strategy (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh wait
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after Microsoft had a "chat" with them, as I recall.
Furthermore, they are misinformed because OpenOffice has pretty good accessiblity support--just not on Microsoft Windows , due to Windows issues and no fault of its own.
Quoth Peter Korn [sun.com]
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I use it to indicate the presence of what Feigl would call "scientific meaningfulness"... scientific statements are those that can be confirmed intersubjectively, or falsified. Discussions are scientific when the statements therein *could be experimentally tested, whether or not they actually are so tested.
Re:Hold Your Enemies Closer... (Score:5, Informative)
Technology Working Group:
Chair, Charles SteelFisher, New Media Director, Deval Patrick Committee
Creative director at ALIPES CME [alipescme.com]. Original Flash site that takes a few minutes to figure out what the hell is going on. I like it and hate it all at once. Wife(?) is director of Strategy at Cogent Research [cogentresearch.com]. Verdict: Not promising, but who knows.
Chair, Richard Rowe, CEO, Rowe Communications
Not a lot of info there! [rowe.com]
More info in the bio here [onlisareinsradar.com]. Looks like an interesting guy. "He is the author of numerous articles and frequent speaker on the impact of digitization and the internet upon society with a particular focus on access to and preservation of academic, scientific, technical and medical knowledge." That could go either way, but sounds good.
Brian Burke, Microsoft
For what it's worth, this is a broad technology working group (not just on, say, standards), so I don't think it's insane to have MS at the table. But there are software companies with deeper MA roots...
John Cullinane, Principal, The Cullinane Group [cullinane-group.com]
Was a trailblazer in the proprietary software industry (a href='http://www.softwarehistory.org/history/cull
Louis Gutierrez, former State CIO and Director of ITD
Former as in about a month ago. He's our man! [com.com]
Keith Parent, CEO, Court Square [csdg.com]
Let's see, found here [csdg.com] that they have "Extensive experience with Wintel, Unix, Citrix and Linux platforms" and "Successful migration projects include; VMS to NT, NT to Unix, NT to Linux." Sounds reasonably OK to me, though a little dated!
David Lewis, Private Consultant
I presume this is him [watervilleconsulting.com]. On the board at the Mass Tech Dev Corp [mtdc.com], and has done a lot of state IT work, so he's certainly relevant. Can't find anything about him re: ODF.
Larry Weber, Chairman, W2 Group
This talk [itconversations.com] suggests that Larry "gets it", but I haven't listened to it yet. IT Conversations is awesome, by the way. find the Clayton Christensen talk on open source. Here it is [itconversations.com].
All told, as someone sympathetic to FOSS, who thinks FOSS is good for most businesses, I find this group to be well qualified, and apparently with a diverse set of viewpoints on standards and such. Diversity is good. I'll be watching this group as closely as I can.
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More info here [bluemassgroup.com]:
"BOSTON - Wednesday November 22, 2006 - Governor-elect Deval Patrick and Lieutenant Governor-elect Tim Murray announced today the creation of 15 Transition Committee issues working groups that will help shape the new administration's policy agenda as it prepares to take office on Jan. 4, 2007.
Continuing in their grassroots outreach, Patrick and Murray also announced
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I wonder, has he been appointed specifically because of his previous involvement, or did Microsoft ask for this appointment?
And remember, these committees will not be meeting in public when they define
Re:Hold Your Enemies Closer... (Score:4, Informative)
You mean, you'd rather have Symbolics [symbolics.com] on the board?
For those who don't know: Symbolics was a spin-off of MIT that made Lisp machines. They had a fairly aggressive policy on intellectual property, which basically drained brains and knowledge away from MIT and their competitor LMI, another MIT spin-off that made Lisp machines. This is what motivated Richard Stallman to start GNU (after furiously working at LMI to compete with Symbolics).
Eventually, LMI went under, and Symbolics is only officially still alive. The Lisp machine IP has been a big mess for years, most of it basically lost, because no-one is in a position to remove the intellectual property restrictions. However, recently some source code for one of the old Lisp machines has been released by MIT, bringing back some life.
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So that's what killed Lisp mindshare (?).
No, I wasn't thinking of that one per se. Gee, I had forgotten all about the FSF (Boston based) in this context.
Though, for that matter, I would not want to see RMS in the working group- his people skills could use a little, uh, refinement.
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Well, I wasn't there, so I can only give my uninformed opinion, but I think it was one of many factors. Lisp had also become very much wed to AI, and when the AI winter set in, Lisp froze with it. Also, Lisp machines were hideously expensive, so they were killed in the same micro revolution that killed all the other Real computers.
Interestingly, Lisp still has a hard core of followers (some of which are the dreaded Smug Lisp Weenies), and is still being used in s
Will It really help all that much? (Score:4, Interesting)
Pessimism (Score:5, Insightful)
I think e.g. when China and/or India standardize on a Redmond-free set of office applications, they're going to be feeding amazing innovations into the FOSS pool.
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when China and/or India standardize on a Redmond-free set of office applications, they're going to be feeding amazing innovations into the FOSS pool.
Just be sure that we have a good base of translators for documentation and web site homes to get involved. I imagine that most peoples' Hindi and Standard Mandarin is pretty rusty. There could be a fantastic open source tool that you'd use now, but you'll never find it because Google won't find the site relevant in a search in your native language.
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Define 'most'...
http://www.krysstal.com/spoken.html [krysstal.com]
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for example, use XHTML rather than HTML, and have your website use the application/xhtml+xml content type. when your customer complains that your website is broken, explain to them that the bug is with their browser.
yeah, it probably wont work, but it's certainly worth a shot. and it will bring more mainstream attention to the issue.
It'll work fine (Score:2)
Here's hoping that WGA and other attempts to stop pirating of Windows succeeds! The result would be about a billion migrations to FOSS.
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Yeah, and why have laws at all, when people are just going to break them? Why take showers when I'm just going to get dirty again?
I agree that there's no need for everyone to use the same file format, but it'll be good if we can all use open standards. Microsoft is coming more in line with HTML and CSS as time goes on, partially because people have recognized that their implementation is the "broken" one. It's not perfect yet, and Microsoft hasn't always been cooperative, but don't surrender before the
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The difference is huge: money.
People use IE because it's "free" and pre-installed, not because it's good.
People use Word because it's "the standard", but they (or their IT department) have to pay serious coin to use it. So if ODF becomes the HTML of word processing, MS will have two options: support it,
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having important documents stored in a proprietary format that only one vendor implements half-properly, changes at the whim of that vendor (breaking existing documents), is tied to one application, tied to one platform, and may be completely undocumented at some point down the line
and
having important documents stored in an open format that anyone can freely implement, won't change at the whim of a singl
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From my perspective... (Score:2, Insightful)
Can anyone explain how this makes MS look good?
Not Automatically bad (Score:3, Informative)
If he can provide a reasobale argument as to why ODF should not be implemented, He should be an advisor. If I were in charge I would want both sides fully represented along with third party experts (which were also appointed). But alas, given the state of US governance, he's likely just there to funnel money to the right people in order to get his way.
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If I presented your average mayor with some stereo manuals, flowcharts of how bees make honey, and some maps of galactic background radiation, while telling him in my best Ben Stein voice that it'd be best for his constituants if he rerouted engine plasma through the bussard ramscoops to generate a static warp shell which will refill the bli
Wrong decision-making procedure (Score:2)
I think this kind of thinking exemplifies a fundamental problem with the way decisions are made in the US. Certainly all sides should be heard -- but they should not be represented in the actual decision-making. Public employees who make decisions should report to only one boss -- the people -- and should know the technical business and
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As opposed to the independence of an... (Score:2)
Independent opinion vs. paid shill (Score:3, Insightful)
I think you're confused: biased doesn't mean "I like [foo] technology better;" biased means "[foo]corp paid me to like [foo] technology better." There's a key difference there. Can you spot it?
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But are they being paid by Microsoft's competitors? If not, then the opinion counts as independent. That's my point!
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That may well be, but if you're going to argue that having an opinion vs work to actively promote is on the same continent, you're being rather foolish.
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Did any of you bother to check and see whet
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No, according to The Friendly Article,
Furth [cio.com]
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And a key difference between the pro-MS and pro-ODF is that the pro-ODF may also be pro-MS while the pro-MS is definitely anti-ODF. ;)
There is nothing stopping Microsoft from supporting ODF and the ODF standard is not a ploy to push Microsoft out of the market. You could be pro-ODF and still recommend Microsoft Office as the application of choice, as long as it meets the ODF requirement.
The same can't be said for the pro-MS bias because the MS
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I presume you mean that being pro-ODF doesn't make you anti-MS. It certainly does in my experience, although you're right in that it shouldn't.
Microsoft, iirc, is actually planning on standardizing an open XML based format, just not ODF.
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Hey, its not my fault if the same rational logic that leads someone to be pro-ODF results in a realization that doing business with Microsoft only fuels future illegal business tactics so its best just to stay away.
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As for the decision to use ODF or not, people like yourself seem to not understand how the free-market works. Microsoft is a PUBLIC COMPANY. Public companies have one primary task, to enrich their shareholders. That's why pensioners, mutual funds, school systems, city governments, et al., invest in them. Arguing that Microsoft should do something that endangers their company bedrock is "not
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By a Democrat, no less! (Score:3, Insightful)
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Democrats aren't often on the Free side of things. Think Hollywood- it has many liberals who think their livelihoods depend on DRM.
That said, I have a lot of hope for the Deval administration. My wife and I actively supported his candidacy from early on; he's one of those rare leaders who is actually inpsiring. That said, I am a little worried about his ability to follow through as an effective administrator. We will see.
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Right. Senator Leahy, who was behind Mickey Mouse (Michael Eisner, having grown up in Vermont, has been a regular Leahy contributor for years), is also the senator who is the most concerned about the loss of habeas corpus and the civil liberties infringements in the "Patriot" Act. So while he's centrally concerned with the l
wait and wait (Score:2)
The best strategy here is not to deliver a crippled ODF, or one with optional "licensing tags" built in, or even a "binary format option" that is defined by an existing member (MS).
No, the strategy is simply not to deliver. Stall. The longer ODF is not standardized by this group, the more things can slip out of focus among product deliveries. Not a new strategy, and I don't expect to hear much about this for some time.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
WE MUST KEEP FIGHTING... (Score:2)
Keep your friends close, but your enemies closer.. (Score:2, Funny)
Do something about it (Score:3, Insightful)
Contacting Mr. Patrick (no email address available; but you can fax his campaign at (617) 628-3519 ) WILL make a difference.
Speak up. Now! Or STFU and take it daily from Microsoft.
"Why do you hate microsoft ?" they ask ... (Score:2)
YES goddammit !
And it is because of CRAP like these microsoft pulls off.
Suckers (Score:2)
Deval Patrick might have some really good stuff going for him, but he's also doing some really dumb things like putting the fox in charge of the IT hen h
MS Office Support on ODF (Score:3, Insightful)
Just out of interest, in the last month or two Microsoft has actually put a note about OpenDocument support into their Office support pages [microsoft.com]. Notice how they insist on identifying it solely with a specific product (OpenOffice.org, whose name they get wrong). Their comments about why ODF is crap and MSXML is sweetness and light are also pretty ... partial, which isn't really surprising I suppose. More intriguing to me is how they basically say the whole debate is grandstanding by Sun (and not, say, something to do with public interest).
Public service (Score:2, Insightful)
accurate headline .. (Score:2)
The headline is completely and fully accurate. As you pointed out, the rest of the article fills in the details. But even one anti ODF lobbyist on the group is bad.
was Misleading Headline (Score:1)
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