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Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft vs European Commission: 0-1 (theregister.co.uk)

Depsidee writes: "Microsoft has lost its appeal against European Commission charges of anti-competitive behaviour.

Bo Vesterdorf the softly spoken retiring judge of the Court of First Instance led the judges into the Luxembourg courtroom and invited everyone to sit. He quickly and quietly delivered the verdict, stood and led the judges out again some six minutes later.

The Court found that Microsoft had indeed failed to supply competitors with sufficient information to allow servers to interoperate effectively. It found Microsoft failed to show that these APIs were intellectual property or that giving them away would have a negative impact on its ability to innovate.

On the bundling of Windows Media Player with its operating system the Court of First Instance again upheld the Commission's stance. It ruled that Microsoft had not shown justification for bundling its Media Player to original equipment manufacturers.

Following the original decision Microsoft had to agree to the imposition of a trustee to oversee the company and check it was complying with court demands. A short list was drawn up and Professor Neil Barrett appointed. But the Court of First Instance ruled that this was an obligation too far. Therefore the court annuled the imposition of a trustee.

On the issue of the 497m fine the Court ruled that the Commission was justified in "assessing the gravity and duration of the infringement and did not err in setting the fine".

Microsoft has two months to appeal the decision based on a point of law."

Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft Loses Anti-Trust Appeal in EU (bbc.co.uk)

sjdaniels writes: "(From of BBCNews) The European Court of First Instance has dismissed Microsoft's appeal in its long-running competition dispute with the European Commission. The court upheld the ruling that Microsoft had abused its dominant market position. A probe concluded in 2004 that Microsoft was guilty of freezing out rivals in server software and products such as media players. It was ordered to change its business and fined 497m euros (£343m; $690m)."
Microsoft

Submission + - EU confirms Microsoft abused its position 2

pioppo writes: There's news in the Europe vs Microsoft anti-trust case. The court of first instance essentially upholds the commission's decision finding that Microsoft abused its dominant position. However, the Court has annulled certain parts of the decision relating to the appointment of a monitoring trustee, which have no legal basis in Community law.
Hardware Hacking

Submission + - Apple's new iPod checksum cracked by GtkPod coders (arstechnica.com)

klblastone writes: The GtkPod development team has cracked the checksum used by the new iPods to block third-party software development and Linux support. Popular open source music management applications like GtkPod, AmaroK, and Rhythmbox will be able to work with new iPods despite Apple's efforts to force all iPod consumers to use iTunes. Although the ingenuity of the open source software community will continue to undermine Apple's efforts to limit freedom of choice, Linux users should consider purchasing devices that are designed to support Linux rather than closed products that are defective by design. Lennart Poettering, who helped create an open source implementation of Apple's ZeroConf protocol, provides more insight into the detrimental impact of Apple's vendor lock-in tactics and explains how Apple has used similar techniques to limit interoperability with its DAAP and ROAP protocols.
United States

Submission + - Ohio '04 elections suffer MITM attack

glassesmonkey writes: "The Free Press is reporting how the IT company that provides Rove's emails and RNC websites, also hosted Ohio's 2004 election results. The country results were sent to Ohio's Secretary of State, Ken Blackwell, and those results were hosted on a SMARTech webserver in TN. Blackwell had the IT guys switch the DNS on election night in order to accomplish a man-in-the-middle exploit on election results."
Microsoft

Submission + - DX 10 on XP, MacOS X, Linux: is it possible?

javipas writes: "A young programmer leading the 'Alky Project' has reverse-engineered the Geometry Shader code on DX10, and if what he says is true, running DX10 apps and games will be possible on plattforms different from Windows Vista. Microsoft made clear that DX 10 would only be available through Vista and compatible hardware, so being able to run DX10 on Windows XP, MacOS X or even Linux could be really interesting. The current preview allows to run several examples of the DirecX SDK on Windows XP. Promising."

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