Seven States Extend Microsoft Antitrust Judgment 200
Technical Writing Geek writes "A number of states have moved to extend antitrust judgments against Microsoft until the year 2012. California, Connecticut, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and the District of Columbia are all contributing to the decision, and have released a report on the factors that lead to the extension. 'The report laments the state of OEM web browser bundling, saying that no major OEM currently distributes a browser other than Microsoft's Internet Explorer (IE). This is important due to the rise of new middleware platforms (such as Adobe's AIR and Microsoft's own Silverlight) that can create rich, OS-independent, web-based applications.' The report is slightly self-contradictory, but raises some valid points."
they're no stranger to that idea (Score:4, Funny)
Ah yes, the old "embrace and extend" has come full circle.
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Just what I want - (Score:3, Insightful)
For the record, between IE, Firefox, and Everything Else, just because OEM's ship the default browser doesn't mean that there isn't anything else available - it means more often that people are far too lazy to look.
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No probs, check it out: HTML 4.01 Specification [w3.org]
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but one that thing would really help is if they made a standard for the window object model and designMode. designMode in particular is one big glorious pile of chaos.
Re:Just what I want - (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Just what I want - (Score:4, Insightful)
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District of Columbia (Score:4, Insightful)
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Washington D.C.? (Score:2)
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Why? Because it has a usps state abbreviation?
Because so do Guam (GU), Micronesia (FM), Palau (PW), Mariana Islands (MP), Marshall Islands (MH), Virgin Islands (VI), American Samoa (AS) and Puerto Rico (PR)
Not to mention they have state codes like: AP (Armed Forces Pacific)...
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I am not an American either, but that's neither here nor there. I've met born and raised American's who don't know this stuff.
I was just pointing out that the summary and article say "District of Columbia" not Washington D.C. and I thought there was a difference between the two. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
"Washington D.C." properly written as "Washington, D.C." (see the comma I added?) refers to the city of Washington in the District o
What to do... (Score:4, Insightful)
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That includes Firefox, Opera, MSIE, or whatever else the OEM desires. The choice should be with the OEM.
The problem many of us have with Windows preinstalled on machines is the fact that IE is always present in those cases and the other browsers are never present. That creates a tremendous bias amongst nontechnical users towards MSIE and the way it behaves.
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As far as I know, none of the PC manufacturers are required to include IE as the default browser - they can do whatever they want and Microsoft can't stop them.
Which, if true, implies that they must have a different reason for choosing to include IE as the default browser on their machines.
Maybe the Mozilla foundation should start paying OEMs to include Firefox, just like
Why is it a problem? (Score:2)
OEMs don't want to waste time installing three different programs that do the same thing. So if IE is forced to be removed, browsers now will have to pay OEMs to be placed on as the browser.
I don't see having three different programs as being a problem. All an OEM would need to do is create one disk image with all three then use it to clone it on each hdd installed on a PC, "do once, use anywhere". If OEMs aren't already doing this, minus the three different programs, then they need to work on improvin
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Or better yet, they could just put the browsers on a disk and let you browse the folders on the disk to install optional hardware. It could also include links for more options where it retrieves a list from the internet somewhere. And no, you don't need a browser to
Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... (Score:5, Interesting)
I've said it before, and I'll say it again. You cannot punish a corporation the same way you punish an individual, because they don't care about the same things. There's only one thing a corporation values, so there's only one thing you can take away from one: market share. Pass a measure forcing Microsoft and its subsidiaries to halve their advertising budget for, say, five years.
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Your explanation of the origin of incorporation is perfectly correct, according to my understanding. But for one reason or another the law (in America, at least) has over time exten
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You see, When Employee X, whether a lower level supervisor, a member of the corperate ladder or a peon pushing parts together does something illegal, you don't remember it as J
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Sure you can- get rid of the corporate veil. For every $100,000 a company is fined, the CEO and board of directors must stay 1 month in jail, with no possibility of parole. Watch corporations follow the law instantly.
Even better, void the Corporate Charter. Corporate charters were originally granted only if the corporation served the public good. However as corporations gained power they were able to have the public good [bilkent.edu.tr] requirements removed.
Falcon
Or... (Score:2)
Yes, it would be devistating to the corporation, just as devistating as it would be to me if I were locked up for a year.
Yes, those that work for the corporation would be hurt, just like the people wh
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Incorrect (Score:2)
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Kind of like child support, couldn't the law force MS to give half it's advertising budget anyone making a competitive product?
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No OS installed (Score:2)
Better yet, prevent retailers from bundling operating systems with new computers
A BIG problem with this is that most people when they buy a new computer they just want to plug it in when they get home and have it work out of the box. Maybe it would help if a new computer came with different OSes came on disk. A Windows disk, maybe two or three different versions, and disks for different versions of Linux and BSD. However I seriously doubt most people ever want to install an OS unless they call tech s
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Nonsense! What about all those Windows recovery CDs? You just insert it into the drive, boot with it and soon the system is returned to exactly the same state as when you got it from the store. One of Microsoft's original arguments against distributing Windows this way was that it would make piracy easier, but that defense has become much more diffi
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I've said it before, and I'll say it again. You cannot punish a corporation the same way you punish an individual, because they don't care about the same things.
I agree.
There's only one thing a corporation values, so there's only one thing you can take away from one: market share.
I disagree. The company cares about money and the people directing the company care about money, power, and their own well being.
Pass a measure forcing Microsoft and its subsidiaries to halve their advertising budget for, say, five years.
The brilliance of capitalism within a free market is that it relies upon greed and self interest to bring benefit to society. As companies compete with one another to give customers what they want, they are rewarded based upon how well customers believe they have succeeded in that.
Because of MS's monopoly, that is no longer the case and the only way I think things
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That might actually be doing M$ a favour if this guy's allegations [billparish.com] are true. What about a settlement that means something to competition and getting M$ to declare patent indemnity for all Linux Vendors or force them to publish the patents in question?
Seems to me the competition only needs a little leeway to be able to move forward and that browser wars don't mean much anymore.
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What about a settlement that means something to competition and getting M$ to declare patent indemnity for all Linux Vendors or force them to publish the patents in question?
I'm not opposed to software patent reform, but I don't see it as related strongly to monopoly abuse.
Seems to me the competition only needs a little leeway to be able to move forward and that browser wars don't mean much anymore.
On the contrary, I think the browser tie-in is one of MS's biggest competition blockers. The prohibitive cost of moving away from technologies and services tied to IE is a large factor in preventing both companies and individuals from moving away from Windows and to other platforms. MS's refusal to support modern Web standards have prevented the Web from being a real platform for applications that woul
Hedging bets (Score:5, Interesting)
+1 Insightful
Microsoft is hedging their bets. If their cash cows are really threatened in the near future they need a backup plan. I think they're not sure how they would profit, be it software-as-a-service or infrastructure or development tools. But they know they need to cover as many angles as possible to survive long term.
Boy... (Score:4, Funny)
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mednwhile, back at The Money Bin... (Score:2)
for the hammering Microsoft takes on Slashdot, we all know what Microsoft's next quarterly financial report is going to look like. we all know why "Apple' is no longer "Apple Computer." Apple sells a half dozen or so configurations of the Mac that either meet your needs or they don't. that is a profitable strategy, but it is not a strategy that dramatically increases your market share.
Not wise (Score:2)
Ie they "might be able to" leverage the next version of Windows to push people toward silverlight. Kinda dangerous ground.
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Those who have been found to have committed wrongdoing in the past are often subject to future restrictions based on what they might do; this relates to the concept of incapacitation [wikipedia.org] as a tool in a justice system.
I don't see why companies should be less subject to this than individuals.
The irony (Score:2, Interesting)
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How is this "irony"? Its really very simple, the states who don't see a viable choice for themselves besides the existing monopoly would be most likely, not least, to see the monopoly as ha
No OEMs that bundle something other than IE? (Score:3, Insightful)
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There is a difference. They can all be completely uninstalled except for IE.
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There is a difference. They can all be completely uninstalled except for IE.
That is not an important difference at all. The reason bundling Safari with OS X or Firefox with RedHat is not an issue is because Neither OS X nor Linux wields monopoly influence in a market. If Apple is ruled to have monopoly influence in the portable music player market, it will be just as illegal for them to bundle iTunes with every iPod sold, regardless of how easy it is to uninstall.
I just don't understand why it is so hard for people to understand what a monopoly is, why bundling and tying are an
What about alternative OS'es? (Score:2)
Regardless, There's a definite rising trend of market share in alternative browsers, especially FireFox. Most likely the OEM's are not including Firefox (as well as other free software, such as Openoffice) because the Mozilla Foundation isn't willing to pay the OEM's (unlike Google, AO
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Right... (Score:2)
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Some are lazy, some don't even realise anything else exists. Leave it too long, and so many websites will be locked into proprietary ie-only extensions that you lose the ability to choose completely.
Plus, you saw what happened, without competition ie never got updated so the entire web stagnated for years (and is still doing so)
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Re:Oh, come on (Score:4, Interesting)
i'd similarly wonder how many mac OSX users use firefox instead of safari
for everyone to have a win-win situation, the OEMs need to start pre-installing firefox AND opera AND safari in the windows boxes. OpenOffice can come too
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i'd similarly wonder how many mac OSX users use firefox instead of safari
for everyone to have a win-win situation, the OEMs need to start pre-installing firefox AND opera AND safari in the windows boxes. OpenOffice can come too
No, no.. wait, to have a win-win situation, all computers should come with 500GB disks loaded with a selection of 10 different OS, and the user can pick which to launch on startu
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OEMs don't have a choice in the matter. There's no supported way of installing Windows without installing IE. There's no supported method of uninstalling IE after Windows is installed. And I don't know what the current system is, but I remember past accusati
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The fact that Apple's System Updater doesn't depend on Safari also helps there.
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I believe I once saw Firefox on a new PC too.
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a modern day warrior
Oh, I think I got the wrong CD.
Re:Oh, come on (Score:4, Informative)
For two perfect examples, you have to look no further than some major software out there. I will give two examples of software that we have implemented at my workplace. Maybe you'll recognize these (major, multinational) companies?
Cognos 8 Business Intelligence: Works 100% with IE. Works for report consumers with Firefox (with some loss of functionality). However, Report Studio (one of the report-authoring tools) doesn't work on anything but IE. There's no reason it couldn't be implemented with standard AJAX-type code.
BMC Software Service Desk Express (baby brother to the "Magic" helpdesk software that is very common): Works *only* on IE, doesn't work at all on other browsers.
Yes, part of the problem is these software vendors coding for IE-specific things. However, if they knew that most of their customers are probably using something else, they would code their products to support open standards. However, because MSFT has such a huge marketshare of browsers due to antitrust practices, third-parties code to support that, thus tying THEIR customers to MSFT as well.
It's a circular loop, but one possible only because MSFT used their OS dominance to push a certain browser 'standard'.
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For example, right now at my company we're coding an intranet site that automatically logs in a user using their Windows domain credentials, which IE automatically passes to the IIS if it detects that a site is a local intranet site and IIS issues a certain WWW-Authenticate header. You can get the same in Firefox by manually typing your username/password in, but the user is already logged in, they shouldn't have
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One or two? I'll name one, then you tell me what the other thing is.
One thing we haven't been able to do here is access a government employee required web email account. So my relative was forced to switch from Firefox to Internet Explorer, or lose her job.
So, what was that other thing?
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As part of her job with the government, she need to access her new government Email account. Guess what? It's a Microsoft mail server and you have to use Internet Explorer to access it. It REFUSES to work with Firefox.
So it's actually the US government now FORCING people to use Internet Explorer. And the only reason that insane shit is flying is because Internet Explorer is tied to Windows. The US anti-trust conviction of Microsoft was bec
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And regardless of what server software it is and regardless of why it doesn't serve to Firefox, it makes my point that Microsoft tying IE to Windows not merely forces people to *have* IE, it has direct and secondary marketplace distorting effects that severely pressure or even force members of the general public into *using* IE instead of their preferred browser.
Which is why anti-trust law makes things
You really don't understand monopolies do you? (Score:2)
Bundling isn't right now hurting opera or Firefox, it's hurting the OEMs. The OEMs can't complete by providing, say Firefox and advertising that their bundle is mo
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Sure they can bundle Firefox or Opera. Take a look at the Windows Principles [microsoft.com]. These principles are the same ones that mean Dell can ship Linux on PCs without affecting their business with Microsoft (except to the extent that pricing is based on volume of Windows licenses shippe
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Mozilla and Opera make money from their browsers. They don't make you pay for their browsers, but that doesn't mean they aren't money-making ventures. They have a deal with Google to set Google as the default search engine. They have deals with other people to put bookmarks to those companies in your default bookmarks. Things like that.
Why do you think Microsoft wants the browser market share so badly? Microsoft doesn't just install IE for free-- that's not the complaint. The complaint is that they s
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They were concerned that browser based applications would quickly become the next big thing, thus making the underlying os irrelevant. If this were to happen, linux would take over _VERY_ fast due to cost, and microsoft would be in dire trouble.
They push their services now, and use whatever methods they can because they've come to realise that they can't stop their os becoming irre
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When Microsoft started developing IE, there basically weren't any browser-based applications. The purpose was more like running an advertising service.
The browser would come pre-loaded with bookmarks. So let's say your browser comes with a bookmark to CNN. Why do you think this is? Most likely, it's because CNN paid the people who make your browser for bookmark placement. There would also be bookmarks for things like photo processing, for example, so if you wanted to get your GIF files printed on nice
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Because IE is designed to not follow standards, and encourage web developers also to not follow standards, thus creating sites which require IE... This takes away the end user's freedom to choose their own browser (and by extension, choose the os and hardware to run it on), which for those of us who believe in freedom is one of the worst ways you can hurt someone.
That's why people support firefox and opera, because they represent choice. The more actively used browsers there ar
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It's worth thinking *why* are they free. They're free since they can't compete with IE. Historically browsers were not free. The search boxes though still make plenty of money to support those vendors, as long as they can convince people their product is better than whatever comes with Windows.
That said, the proposed solut
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Opera [gigaom.com] and Mozilla [calacanis.com] certainly do make money from their browsers. They both get revenue from partnering with search engines.
Anyway, by the time the antitrust case made it to court, Microsoft's decision to bundle IE with Windows had already devastated the browser market. After killing the competition off, IE was able to grab up to 96% share of the browser market. They came quite close to so totally dominating the browser market that they could ignore web s
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The reason it seems strange is because you are misunderstanding the purpose of anti-trust law.
Who gives a shit? The only other browsers worth using, Firefox and Opera, are both FREE. How is bundling IE with Windows hurting them? They don't make any money from their browsers anyway!
Right there - that's what you're misunderstanding. Anti-trust law is not about that. It's not about protecti
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Commonwealth has nothing to do with communism or communal wealth distribution.
According to Wikipedia:
==The original phrase "common wealth" or "the common weal" comes from the old meaning of "wealth" which is "well-being". The term literally meant "common well-being". Thus commonwealth originally meant a state or nation-state governed for the common good as opposed to an authoritarian state governed for the benefit of a given class of owners.==
Kentucky, Pennsylvania, and Massachu
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Am I the only one that sees the irony of that paragraph, vis-a-vis the "fascist/fundamentalist right wing" bit. From Wikipedia: "Fascism is an authoritarian political ideology (generally tied to a mass movement) that considers individual and other societal inte
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Perhaps you are unfamiliar with extreme right wing fundamentalist talking points:
- Don't criticize the administration or you are "supporting terrorism."
- Broad wiretap spying programs on citizens is important for nationalist security.
- Torture and indefinite imprisonment of the accused, with suspended Habeas Corpus, is critical t
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Here's a crazy idea: how about suggesting that what websites you see in a browser window are kind of like "the commons" (somehow public) and therefore, to ensure that the commons can be consumed by everyone, that all web browsers must, BY LAW, adhere to an internationally maintained standard for web browser rendering.
Although we know that might never happen for political reasons, at least that way, which browser you use would no longer be an issue - if they all render the same! Then i
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The logical solution then is to order Firefox be preinstalled on all copies of Windows
Why not also require Opera, along with every other browser, to be installed?
FalconRe: (Score:2, Flamebait)
Tell me why the "logical solution" is Firefox and not any other competitive browser.
I can't help thinking that for all the Geek's talk of "freedom of choice" for the user that choice disappears when anything other than "free and open source" is available.
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The logical solution then is to order Firefox be preinstalled on all copies of Windows, OEM or otherwise.
Such a solution does not go far enough. For it to work all browser makers that wanted their browser pre-installed on Windows would have to be allowed to have theirs included. Of course bundling IE and Windows is only one of the dozens of abuses of MS's monopoly.
Inefficiently and slowly addressing the abuses one at a time is simply not going to work. The only solution I have confidence in is removing the monopoly so that MS has no ability to abuse it. Break MS into at least two companies with full rights
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I am absolutely *not* an expert on Vista and maybe my information is old, but last I heard I'm pretty sure your statement is wrong. As I understand it Microsoft does *not* let IE be removable, that they merely have an option to install a SECOND browser and partially "hide" that IE is still installed and still active and that it does still seize control away from your selected browser in a variety of cases.
If you have a link that IE can actually be *removed* I would be mos
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It is neither a state nor a city.
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At anytime a simple vote in the house can undo or override anything the local government of Washington DC does. The Idea behind it is to not show favoritism to any state with the location of the government and to keep any favoritism to the location neutral. So while washington DC is refereed to as a city, it is only in the
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Under the law under which D.C. and the other states brought the antitrust actions at issue in TFA against Microsoft, D.C. is a State. What D.C. is or is not in other contexts is hardly relevant. I suspect your understanding of the rest of the issues
Just Highly Compatable (Score:2)
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