EU Rejects Microsoft Settlement Proposal 517
Karl Cocknozzle writes "European Union antitrust officials have dismissed as insufficient Microsoft's offer to settle their most recent antitrust problem in Europe. Spokespeople for the European Commission and Microsoft declined to comment on a report in today's Financial Times that Microsoft had offered to include rival media player software from Apple and Real Networks on a CD-ROM packaged with personal computers to help resolve the case. Previously, the EU had demanded that Microsoft either unbundle Windows Media Player, or also bundle rival media players with Windows. It appears that Microsoft might get more than a slap on the wrist this time around."
Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:5, Interesting)
Happy Trails!
Erick
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:4, Interesting)
And the damn thing is, you end up with piles of crap in your memory on boot-up that you never will use, but they include "Just In Case" so if you do fire up apps they appear to just start right up, unlike those clunky competitors products.
I'd still love to see Windows stripped of all the bundled crap and truly customizable on set-up, like Linux. It's too much to ask for tho, as you note, because Bill wants every desktop to be the same and once you install Windows, there's a indefinite part of your computer that no longer belongs to you, as they have dictated and will continue to do so.
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:5, Insightful)
Need to play a mp3, wav, mpeg, or other multi media file? You could include Quicktime and pay Apple a distributor fee, or you can use Windows Media player libraries which got installed when Windows was installed.
Many of the building blocks of these applications are there for developers to take advantage of. The DLLs get large because Microsoft dictates that they must remain backwards compatible, so that an application coded for dllhell.dll version 1 will still work for dllhell.dll version 6 without recompiling. This is one thing Windows does have that Linux doesn't. Since most of Linux is open source and Windows and applications aren't though, both methods are acceptable for the platform.
What gets Microsoft in trouble isn't bundling this software with the operating system. This software IS the operating system now. What gets them in trouble is that Microsoft can and does use their dominance to push competition out of the market, killing off Netscape, and attempting to push Apple, Real, and others out of the market. They could maybe get away with leaving the dlls in there, but leaving the UI components of Media Player out.
Glad that the EU sees that including a supplemental CD with Windows isn't enough. If it isn't pre-installed, it can't compete with Media Player. If it is pre installed, it still can't compete with Media Player because Media Player will be the player handling the file extensions. The last thing MS wants to do is add a "Select your preferred player application" to the Windows First Boot, but that's the only solution I can come up with right now.
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:5, Insightful)
Plus, define a standard for the way that things are launched. If you want them to stay in library functions, publish the specs. Do you know how easy the Mozilla people could write a DLL for their HTML renderer? And have you seen Firefox lately? Dear God, it's so much faster than IE in rendering.
It's called an API. Microsoft is not publishing the API for the HTML DLL, and that's just crap. I can, of course, install Firefox on Windows, but Windows will still use the IE renderer anytime the DLL is called.
First we had IE.
Next we have Media Player.
Then Messenger.
Then Zipped folders. (Notice no one complained about that?)
C'mon! Who doesn't see a pattern here? MS just needs to open the damned API, and everyone would be happy.
The problem is that Microsoft is extending the idea of "operating system" to equate to "desktop". Everyone who uses Linux knows this is a pile of crap. Microsoft does not control a desktop environment. They control an operating system, and their control over the operating system has allowed them to slowly start to gain control over the desktop environment. And again, that's crap.
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:5, Insightful)
This software IS the operating system now.
When it comes time to arguing legal cases and to leverage the desktop, sure.
IIRC, there'n nothing technically preventing MS from using Windows XP Embedded as a baseline for constructing a basic PC system. Then, uh, essential OS features, such as an HTML renderer and audio file decoders, could be added in a modular way (just as they are with Linux). Such a solution would probably result in more robust and maintainable code since gratuitous complicated ties between the OS proper and the applications would not be needed to support the illusion needed for courtrooms and for marketing new "OS" features.
Built in apps v built in libraries (Score:3, Informative)
Apple has a framework for rendering HTML, for example, that anyone can use. But Safari, Apple's browser, can be removed from the system, replaced with Mozilla, Omniweb, or any other choice.
That is the difference between MS and Apple. Apple includes their own app, but you don't have to use it or even have it installed. MS insis
Forgetting our O/S history, hmm? (Score:4, Informative)
Things like Internet Explorer and Windows Media Player have become part of the operating system? Why? It's good for developers. Need to view a HTML or XML based helpfile? Just use the built in Windows functions.
Hogwash. The browser and the player were previously separate apps which MS decided to wire into the O/S as an end-run around the consent decree and the subsequent actions in which Netscape was involved. Microsoft decided that the decree was a little too confining, and got clever with its coders. No other reasons make sense.
Where the browser is located, under
difference. That it is more consistently available to be called upon is, perhaps, a relief now to developers, that they won't have to stick the latest copy of IE on the CD or link to it on their website. THAT much I'll concede.
Linux hasn't got that level of consistency going for it yet, and no pretty outer wrapper the way MacOS does (and i'm NOT talking about desktops, people!) I'll concede also that Windows makes life simpler by providing fewer options.
What gets Microsoft in trouble isn't bundling this software with the operating system.
That is exactly what got them in trouble!
This software IS the operating system now.
Only by choice did MS do that, not out of necessity (except for legal necessity.) The availability of a consistent IE version on a given target installation platform is still random, so many developers choose to require IE 6.
What gets them in trouble is that Microsoft can and does use their dominance to push competition out of the market, killing off Netscape
And how exactly did they do that? By bundling the browser with the operating system. That's what got them in trouble. It was the result of clever legal scheming, not any particular coding need.
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:3, Informative)
It's well known that Windows has undocumented APIs which are used by Microsoft applications. This was borne out in the U.S. anti-trust trial and again in the recent code leak. And if they were documented such that I could reference them, then I wouldn't be here complaining that Microsoft applications have access to a different platform than what competing applications have access to.
Or are you just making things up and assuming that
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:4, Insightful)
I would suspect that many users(especially office people, like secretaries, temps, etc.) want the same thing. It can be a real pain if every machine were configured differently. Imagine if you had to spend time relearning where everything is every time you change jobs or even departments within your company. I thought(though I'm probably wrong) that Microsoft made their software for businesses originally, not the home user, and thus wanted to create a similar configuration on all machines. Call me naive or whatever(just don't call me late for dinner), but I think that concept is a good thing under those circumstances.
"Just in case" is a bit understated (Score:4, Interesting)
I've been wondering about this. I visited the Microsoft Update site the other day, to download something for my WinXP box. While there, I noticed that some of the security patches go out of their way to say that they are necessary for any PC with Internet Explorer version n installed, even if you don't use it as your web browser.
If the very presence of the software on my machine can cause a security vulnerability, that's surely a compelling argument that just optionally removing the front-end (basically a couple of icons and some menu entries) but still leaving the back-end around is not an adequate standard of "independence".
That's on top of the irritating way that options in Outlook Express now seem to be affected by what the user does in Office, and can't be changed back within OE itself, or the way that resizing the text in IE seems to affect help viewed in numerous other apps, again requiring some relatively fiddly setting to revert it to normal, which in turn reverts IE anyway.
One of these days, I really will get around to intalling a Linux distro on that 25GB partition I've been leaving aside on my new (a year ago...) PC. :-)
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:3, Insightful)
Because I have software that runs under Windows. Some of it is several years old and ran under 3.1 or win 95, but I still need an OS to run this legacy stuff on.
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't want it to be just like linux, that is what linux is for. What I want, is more freedom to customize and configure Windows. I want Windows to be an OS that is flexible enough to allow me to choose whatever browser, email client, media player I want, not what Bill thinks I need.
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:5, Insightful)
It already is. You can use whatever software you want. What you want is the ability to not install software you don't think you use. The problem is, you use it all the time. The same parts of the OS used to play video in Windows Media Player is used to play it in the beginning of games (those which haven't licensed Bink or used their own MPEG decoder anyway, and especially those which have used DirectMedia.) The HTML compositing and rendering system used in Internet Explorer is used to display the Help system in anything using Microsoft help, or CHM (compressed, archived HTML help) and configuration screens in many Unreal-engine games, among many others. Even mail is handled through services which have been present on Windows NT for some time.
The interfaces you know as Internet Explorer, Outlook Express, and Windows Media Player are a relatively small piece of the puzzle.
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:4, Insightful)
This is the opposite of GNU/Linux systems, which are based on a philosophy of freedom of choice. I'd hazard that the Windows philosophy, too, is the exact opposite : limitation of the user's choice (which especially rankles when the stuff that's chosen for you is so bad).
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:3, Insightful)
Windows basically gives you the completely sanitized user experience, and the completely technical background, with no in between, and inadequate documentation. In this respect, it is s
The down side to MS integration (Score:5, Insightful)
If user interfaces, then why not the rest, too? (Score:5, Insightful)
That's true, but there's no technical reason Gecko couldn't support the same HTML-based help format, and thus no technical reason a component installed with the Mozilla suite couldn't offer the same interface to other applications as the IE-based one, with all the attendant improvements in standards compliance, reliability and flexibility that would come with that.
The user interfaces may be only 1/10 of the issue, but that doesn't mean you couldn't replace the other 9/10 with something superior as well. Microsoft simply chooses to structure their OS and its included services in such a way that it's not easy, and to withhold information that would make it easy.
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:4, Funny)
You know, thats what most people tell me as I drive around in my Honda Civic hatchback with a Giant Yellow Wing and big assed stickers proclaiming my awesomness [riceboypage.com].
They all Tell me "Dude! Just buy a space ship and quit pretending you drive one to the night shift at 7-11!" But the answer is still the same: "None of the space ships availiable drive on the ground! I had to get a CRX instead!"
Well I'm off to 7-11.
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:3, Insightful)
The aim at a suit like this should be to punish MS for strong-arming manufacturers like Dell, Gateway, etc into using MS software over the competition. Its the manufacturers responsability to bundle third party softw
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:3, Insightful)
This is because Microsoft knows that Real and Netscape are not competitors of WMP; Real Player sucks and, well, what's to say about Netscape... But it does make for good press, after all, the ignorant press guys will just parrot Bill Gates saying "look, M$ has agreed to include competitors software" totally oblivious that Microsoft no longer cares about Real and Netscape, two technologies that Billy-Boy has already wiped.
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:4, Interesting)
The reason that Microsoft suggested that they bundle competing products with Windows is that Microsoft knows that there is more to winning the streaming media contest than simply having your software installed.
Right now, as we speak, Microsoft is busing lining up all of the large content providers and selling them on using Windows Media Player as the the new distribution medium for their content. Hollywood and her allies are dying for a way that they can use the Internet to distribute their media, but up until recently there wasn't really a distribution system that was secure enough for their needs. Microsoft is promising that delivery system, and they are using the fact that they already have WMP installed on millions of machines as the carrot. The stick is that if the companies don't start sharing their content under Microsoft's secure DRM system that end users are likely to beat Hollywood to the punch and start sharing content on their own (like they already do with music). No one else has the comprehensive DRM system that Microsoft has, and certainly no one has anything close to Microsoft's install base.
Real is done, and Apple is done too, they just don't know it yet. In the long run the fight is going to be between Microsoft's DRM-supported formats and unencrypted formats.
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:5, Interesting)
The unfortunate reality of all this, however, is that Microsoft will still have an unfair advantage ,when it comes to the number of installations of competing products, due to the collaboration between the OS and Apps.
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:4, Interesting)
I agree. What happens if I go home tonight and create my own crappy media program that no one uses. Will they have to bundle that too? No? The EU seems to think it makes sense to give preference to a few products that they deem worthy. This doesn't seem like a good way for business to operate at all.
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:3, Insightful)
Bundling Windows Media Player with Windows XP (and having it installed as the default media app.) removes any need the typical consumer might have to investigate other options. This is why the EU is protesting M$'s solution. Unless Real is installed along with WMP, the average consumer won't use Real or WinAmp, thereby stiffling competition.
Re:Gates versus Europe - Round 1? (Score:3, Insightful)
I think including Windows Media Player has this effect. I think for the pruposes of these trials, bundling means to make the app a part of the OS. It means WMP can't be removed, you will always have it on your system, even if you expressly don't want it. And also that WMP has more access to the system than competing products, so it ap
Not a "Virtual" Monopoly (Score:4, Insightful)
On a side note. When a monopoly is leveraged it starts affecting other markets, not just the one it currently occupies. Revenues from the Microsoft OS let them loose money everywhere else to stifle competition. Which is why hinging on single issues with a monopoly won't have a detrimental affect to it's continued status as such.
What the chairman of Microsoft believes or doesn't is irrelevant, as the actions of the corporation as a whole are in question.
Must be Punished (Score:5, Insightful)
It's got to. If the risk of breaking the law and getting caught is not substantially worse than the negative consequences of acting lawfully, then rationally, there is no reason to follow the law. That is what MS has done for years. And if the trend continues, they would be smart to continue doing just that.
I beleive the EU may have this in mind as part of the reasoning for sticking it to them a little harder this time.
Breaking the law gets off easy (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Must be Punished (Score:3, Interesting)
What are the range of punishments that the EU can hand out? I know that they can impose large fines, I believe as high as 10% of global revenues. Can they also ban a company from operating in the EU, or otherwise block its products? Not that I'm sure how they would justify such a ban (certainly, the inability to buy or import a Windows PC would create a great deal of consumer inconvenienc
Re:Must be Punished (Score:4, Insightful)
Although it preaches free trade, the US rarely practices it (cf tarriffs on Canadian lumber, worldwide steel, etc). You can bet your bottom dollar that it would be more than happy to kick off a trade war with the EU if it were to ban Microsoft products, even if such a ban was legal under EU law. Any President who wasn't in the pocket of big business would still do it, in only to gain a few points in the polls: there's nothing a politician loves more than a "them vs. us", flag-waving contest.
Expect fines (big by our standards, pocket change by Microsoft's), and perhaps (if you're lucky) a shake-up in the way that Microsoft bundles apps such as Internet Explorer and Windows Media Player but don't hold your breath for anything more than that.
if it was up to me... (Score:5, Funny)
What's the big deal with Media Player? (Score:5, Interesting)
Of course, what they might be doing (although I haven't been able to find any reputable sources for this) is disallowing OEMs to pre-install, say, Quicktime and Realplayer on the systems they sell. If indeed they're doing this, that is (imnsho) abusing their monopoly, and they should be forced to allow OEMs and others to pre-install whatever software they want.
But to require them to bundle Quicktime/Realplayer/whatever with Windows? That seems wrong on so many levels
Dlugar
Re:What's the big deal with Media Player? (Score:3, Informative)
Or, for a one word response, RTFA.
Re:What's the big deal with Media Player? (Score:3, Insightful)
The only fair thing would be to force Microsoft to not bundle the player with the OS - and that is just what EU wants.
Re:What's the big deal with Media Player? (Score:5, Insightful)
It isn't the player, it is the file formats! (Score:5, Insightful)
In Windows 3.1, there was no Windows Media format, and there certainly was no DRM. The player isn't the problem, it is Microsoft's ability to leverage their marketshare to push out open multimedia formats in favor of their own.
Now you can argue that there will always be alternatives, but the company with the huge advantage in the Operating System marketshare should not be able to use that monopoly power to kill competition in other areas such as multimedia. Remember, it isn't illegal to be a monopoly, it is illegal to abuse that monopoly power. Which Microsoft has done, and continues to do.
OEM exclusion the argument of Real's recent suit (Score:3, Informative)
That is one of the arguments of Real's ongoing suit against Microsoft (they sued 18 Dec 2003): "Other charges allege that Microsoft used contractual restrictions and financial incentives to "force PC makers to accept Windows PC operating systems with the bundled Windows Media Player and to restric
Re:What's the big deal with Media Player? (Score:3, Insightful)
Here's a question for you. Why does Microsoft get to determine what comes with a Dell computer? Think about that for a second. Microsoft wants to "improve Windows" for the "consumer", or so the argument goes. I don't see things that way. Imagine a world for a moment where Windows has a standard API interface, disk formats, and drivers, and Dell can put any text editor, any browser, any media player,
Re:What's the big deal with Media Player? (Score:3, Informative)
Keep in mind this case is about AT activity where MS has been accused of leveraging their technologies into new markets.
Assuming MS continues it's current bundling practice. What products are content providers likely to select, especially when you factor DRM, into the picture once mediaplayer is installed on 95% of the desktop market?
The simple answer is that they will select win media server and the wmv format. While media player does, and has supported other
Hello EU IT Administrator (Score:5, Funny)
After processing your request, we have determined that your upgrade cost will be:
$12,000,000,000.42.
Thank you,
Microsoft Sales
Re:Hello EU IT Administrator (Score:5, Funny)
Thank you for the price quote on Microsoft software.
However, we feel we could save money for our clients, the taxpayers of Europe, by migrating our systems to FreeBSD.
Thank you,
EU Ministry of IT
(Microsoft sales officer mutters to himself: Lost another one to DyingTech [freebsd.org].)
Re:Hello EU IT Administrator (Score:3, Funny)
FRENCH ACCENT VOICE ON PHONE
"Hello, is this Suse - I got a large order for you!"
Why the EU should want more... (Score:5, Insightful)
There is some logic in the US going easy on Microsoft. They aren't nearly as impartial. Microsoft contribute greatly to the US economy, providing jobs, and significant cash/balace of trade inflows.
The EU is impartial, as they doen't receive similar benefits. The end result will be closer to what the US result should have been, but wasn't, unless Massachusetts prevails.
no, not really (Score:3, Insightful)
Microsoft is sitting atop tens of billions of $ that isn't is no longer in circulation.
Really, I think the U.S. going easy on Gates is simply our corrupt rich leaders scratching the back of another rick man. I really don't see how it could be taken any other way.
You do realize t
half-arsed settlement proposal (Score:5, Interesting)
Who decides which (presumably free) media players go on the CDROM then? Is it just RealPlayer and 1 or 2 others (the major ones) or can anybody get in, i.e. Mplayer and other lesser known media players? And surely Microsoft's own WMP would have stayed the one installed by default, effectively nulling the advantage of having other alternatives available on the CD.
No really, that was obviously a trick to fool the EU antitrust commision. I'm glad they saw through Microsoft's "good will" proposals, unlike their US counterparts.
Re:half-arsed settlement proposal (Score:4, Insightful)
That's like these class action lawsuits (the one against monitor manufacturers for selling 15.9 inch "17 inch" monitors comes to mind) where you get a coupon for some insanely small amount ($5) off of a new monitor! Jesus... that's not a penalty! Give me cash! Make Microsoft pay reparations! Where's the BEEF?
Let's hope (Score:5, Interesting)
Seriously, I'd like to see Europe calm down Microsoft. Let's them compete on pure merits, and stop quashing competition. One can only hope that in a few years, you will be able to choose between different OS, without locking oneself out of a lot of content.
I know that some alternatives start to emerge, and that you can now play a lot of videos on Linux, but the Microsoft lockin is still very strong.
Europe slapping Microsoft could mean more money from investors in rivals, thus leading in acceleration of competition's offerings.
A good thing, IMO.
Why the option? (Score:5, Interesting)
However, even if they are told to remove their media player, it will most likely be how you can "remove" MS Messenger. Hell, last time I reformated and uninstalled MS Messenger it didn't even delete the icon which as far as I can tell, is all it is supposed to do.
When is it too much? (Score:5, Funny)
Real Media? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Real Media? (Score:5, Insightful)
I hope the EU puts the squeeze on Microsoft since the USDOJ did not have the spine and/or gumption to do it...
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not sure it's the right thing (Score:5, Interesting)
A real solution would be to ship completely without the media player and any DLLs relating to it, and make people download it, or allow OEMs to install a competing player if they so wish. Same should be done for IE. I know that both are buried deep into the system, but it's their problem, not mine.
Additionally, they should be required to disclose their audio and video formats. If they are truly a part of the system, then this information is needed for interoperability. Let's hope we get open file formats, and not RealPlayer rubbish being forced down our throats in addition to WMP!
Re:I'm not sure it's the right thing (Score:5, Insightful)
This is the crux of it... currently the OEM restrictions are pure evil. The big one is the dual-boot clause: no non-Microsoft OS to dual boot with a Microsoft OS. So if you want to offer a version of Windows (and they all do), you can't offer Linux or *BSD (or previously, Be) on the same box.
This was the issue that the US govt wimped out on badly, and I'm hoping the EU will stand firm.
Justin.
Re:I'm not sure it's the right thing (Score:3, Interesting)
After all - Windows is Microsoft's Operating System. So what's the problem here?
And since MS owns the OS, Microsoft should be legally allowed to break other vendors applications by changing the Windows API, or by changing the File Formats for it's data
I am not a microsoft stooge...but (Score:5, Insightful)
As far as Microsoft is concerned, those who need Real/QT can just download it from their respective sites.
I think where Microsoft should really have been hit hard was with the whole IE/Netscape saga. With that, it wasn't simply a matter of not packaging Netscape with Windows, it was a matter of Microsoft's systematic attempt to destroy Netscape as a rival browser.
Ah well, just my 2 cents. And yes, I use Windows at work, but I'm a *BSD guy everywhere else.
That is not the problem. (Score:3, Informative)
MS makes deals in which they forbid PC manufacturers to bundle any other software but MS's own.
THus if DEll, HP or another company want to distribute MS Windows *and* a non MS media player, MS will not sign a contract that would allow a manufacturer to do just that.
You may undertand Bill Gates, I also understand Jack the Ripper, and frankly I don't like my understanding of him.
Re:That is not the problem. (Score:3, Interesting)
Making WMA the standard key to MS's strategy... (Score:5, Interesting)
microsoft tax (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe is microsoft is banned to sell their software to OEM vendors at preferential prices, so as not to give big PC vendors a reason to force people to buy windows PCs, we could atlast have a free market?
Entertain yourselves (Score:5, Insightful)
BOUND BY THE TERMS OF THIS EULA BY
INSTALLING, COPYING, OR OTHERWISE USING THE
PRODUCT. IF YOU DO NOT AGREE, DO NOT INSTALL
OR USE THE PRODUCT; YOU MAY RETURN IT TO YOUR
PLACE OF PURCHASE FOR A FULL REFUND."
THAT is in the licensing agreement of Windows. Just for fun and to create a lot of headaches, go to your nearest retailer and tell them to take $200.00 off of the price of a computer you want and to delete windows from the hard drive because you do not agree with the terms of the license. They will jump up and down and say lots of funny things. They will tell you that "we cannot do that". Tell them that they are bound by the license agreement the same as you. Then after they are finished throwing their pop-eyed double-barrelled hissy fit, tell them that you decided that you can spend your $2K elsewhere and that they just lost a sale! It's fun, try it sometime.
Even better... (Score:5, Interesting)
Buy the computer, and then return it [cypherpunks.ca], because you don't agree with the EULA (that you couldn't even read).
Absolutely. (Score:3, Insightful)
Windows not the only thing Shuttle don't bundle (Score:4, Funny)
Heh. Shuttle don't even bundle a CPU, RAM, or hard drive! (Note: I'm not complaining.)
Problem is MS OEM contract- Shuttle don't sell Win (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously though, the problem is not the bundling of Windows - most non-geek people actually want it bundled for convenience. Rather, it is the clause in Microsoft's OEM agreements that says "if you want to ship any PCs with Windows at all, you must include an OS with *all* of your PCs".
That's why Dell are shipping their new 'OS free' nSeries with FreeDOS included in the box [com.com] (but
It's not about what products are bundled (Score:5, Insightful)
Different story same game.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Far be it from our own congressional leaders or regulators to take any inspiration from a EU success, but that is a separate tangent.
It is my opinion that Microsoft has the monopoly they have at the behest of the consumer market which continues to support their products with dollars or euros in this case. Dollars have always spoken louder than votes, and until a viable competitor arises any regulation/restrictions/bundling/unbundling current or future will be seen as nothing more than a minor set back for Microsoft, not a solution.
The recent success introducing Linux (or any other alternative) definitely suggests that such a thing is not the barrier, rather it is the mind set. It was "marketing", t-shirts and stupid stuff penguins. And it will take something similar, if more tangible to convince CEOs and CTOs that there is a viable alternative to windows. It is rather ironic that they complain with one handand then buy 100K in licenses with the other. It is the responsibility of the entrenched IT community to instigate change where such change is economically viable. This is not a principal issue, but an economic one and the ultimately, the best solution to the problem will win if presented correctly on a case by case basis.
Of course, this all circles back to my original point. Unless, the mind set of the consume is altered (ideally in the work place where I find most of the user trends are set), then and only then will the "monopoly" be broken. Any attempt to regulate/bundle/unbundle Windows and its products will fail so long as the dollar/euro votes continue to pour in.
Just my 2 cents.
Re:Different story same game.... (Score:3, Interesting)
So what? They don't have to. Microsoft is incorporated in several european countries. If the EU puts a fine on them, they can either pay up, or have their shops closed down and their assets confiscated.
Obviously, that won't happen overnight, but the threat for M$ is very real, and "but we're a US company" won't help them the least.
What's OS and What's Not? (Score:5, Insightful)
Interesting argument, much akin to the argument they used about IE.
Now, let's ask a hypothetical question. If this were about automobiles, and the question was about whether or not the manufacturer could force a person to use ONLY the built-in radio what would be the argument?
"Well, judge, if we had to remove the radio, we would also have to remove all the stuff it uses, like the wiring, the alternator and the battery, so the car wouldn't run. So, you see, the radio is an integral part of the car and forcing us to remove it and letting people use someone else's radio would cripple the car."
Absurd? Well, that's exactly what they said about their browser and are now saying about the media player.
I hate to say it (Score:3, Insightful)
While Windows Media player is pure evil forged on a workstation powered by souls of the damned that is used at the peril of one's immortal soul and all that, it is hard to imagine why someone would need 7 different media players on their computer. Joe Average is going to want to play mp3s and videos on his PC, not spend time trying to understand the distinctions between WMA, RMA, MOV, etc.
It just doesn't seem right that choice should be forced on people. If Microsoft wants Windows to default to Windows Media when someone wants to play a CD, I do not understand what the problem is. They built the product, they understand how it works, and they have to field the support calls when someone wants to know why something doesn't work right. If somebody doesn't like it, they can install another player or turn to Linux just as easily.
M
Re:I hate to say it (Score:3, Insightful)
As far as I can see, no-one is making MS install loads of different things. All they want is to allow the OEMs to install what their customers want, and remove (remove) things they don't.
Is that so unfair?
J.
Shouldn't the onus be on the competetitors? (Score:3, Insightful)
It may be 'uncompetetive', but surely if RealPlayer or Quicktime were SIGNIFICANTLY better alternatives, and advertised as such, people would voluntarily switch media players. Why do you think iTunes is doing so well?
If anything they should be forced include an uninstaller with WMP.
And why should iTunes or RealPlayer be candidates for bundling? Is swapping one proprietary format for another accomplishing anything?
One possible penalty (Score:5, Interesting)
The OEMs would be free to ship with no operating system, but would probably want to ship *something*, so they may choose a Linux desktop. If Be were still around, this might have changed their fate, or perhaps Apple might choose to release OS X for x86.
A variant would be to prohibit site licenses or other volume discounts for Windows.
In exchange, Microsoft can "innovate" all they want, if that's truly what they think they're doing.
All of which completely sidesteps the real issue (Score:5, Interesting)
Open these up and Microsoft could bundle any damned thing they want and not be able to effectively leverage their monopoly status.
Bundling competing super secret (and often viral) formulas only compounds the issue, not relieve it.
Free standards means free competition.
KFG
Alternatives (Score:3, Insightful)
You cannot legislate the stupid out of the masses.
UNINSTALL (Score:5, Interesting)
I hate Windows Messenger. I hate the damn sticky key feature. I hate most of the accessories. Now, WMP ain't so bad, but BSPlayer is what *I* need. Did I mention ActiveX? Damn, I learned to hate IE... but, of course, is needed to patch Windows. MSN explorer? You keep it!
But, of course, to uninstall some of those you need to sell your first born male child... and the others (hint: IE) are just plain uninstalable.
You know what? It's an operating system. Bane EVERYTHING that's not using and following open protocols. TCP/IP? open - leave it. Outlook Express that connects to hotmail? Proprietary - erase it. IE? kind of uses open protocols, but we know it's not following standards. Bane it, or force them to change it. Oh, they want proprietary stuff? Ok, no prob, but not in the OS I paid for.
And, BTW, a ssh client would be nice, not to mention the daemon... I mean server.
Its fine until it happens to you. (Score:5, Insightful)
This may be fine for some people until Microsoft large feet step on you. Stacker was a good example, Stacker was making money hand over fist until MS released "their" version as a part of DOS. Stacker was no longer needed and sales dropped dramatically. Turns out that MS used Stackers own code and were too lazy to even change part of it to keep Stacker from finding out. Thanks to its deep pockets MS dodged the bullet and paid them off...Stacker died.
If you ran a bakery and I opened one next to you and gave everything away for free you would pitch a fit and try to have me closed down. If I copied your best seller by letting you do the ground work and then gave it away for free you would sue me. The customers could care less they get it for free but when your money is on the line it is a different story.
I hope the EU sticks to its guns. MS has had this coming for a while and it is nice to see that they can't buy their way out of every problem they make.
Missing the point (Score:3, Insightful)
This means a lock in to one proprietary format, and locks out other formats.
Windows Update (Score:4, Insightful)
How does that really help the situation?
Re:How Ironic... (Score:5, Funny)
Don't do that. No one should be forced to have Real on their system. Don't punish the users.
Re:How Ironic... (Score:5, Insightful)
The EU has not deemed that Apple has monopoly; Microsoft does.
Are you saying that it's more 'fair' that the same rules should apply to a minor competitor as to a monopoly actor?
Because it's certainly not fair if you feel monopolies are bad.
Those skulls are thicker than I thought. (Score:5, Funny)
Most be a calcium overdose....
Re:How Ironic... (Score:5, Informative)
Apple has never strong-armed its vendors into bundling quicktime and forced them to drop competing products... Because Apple doesn't have any vendors selling OS X systems.
Apple is very friendly towards Real, and Real Player. A little less so since RealPlayer started playing quicktime on the PC (that pisses Apple off... a LOT), but they're still civil about it, and Apple knows that people want RealPlayer for OS X.
There was never any attempt to block the product from working with the OS (quite the contrary, we got lots of help making it work w/ the OS, and even got some time @ Macworld to show it off. I worked @ Real on the product) I don't think Apple has any kind of obligation to include the player, given their position in the market, vs. MS's
Re:a load of nonsense (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I actually feel a mite sorry for them.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, you are probably right. The EU probably wants to make some kind of a political statement to corporate America, and show that *they* won't be bribed.
But, Microsoft probably deserves to be smacked anyway, they got away with it once, and I'd be rather disappointed to see them get away with it again.
Re:I actually feel a mite sorry for them.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Which kind of bothers me.
The last thing I would like to see is a prolonged political/economical stand-off between the EU and USA.
The present silliness with the freedom fries madness over there and general uninformed anti-American crap over here is already enough.
Re:I actually feel a mite sorry for them.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, they do need laws to help, because they have amassed a disproportionately large amount of power and without laws they will literally be able to do whatever they choose. This isn't a question of being a Microsoft fan or not, this is a question of a single company having enormous power and reach, and without laws that company can do (and has already done, even with laws, because they are always able to manipulate the circumstances in their favor) things that are unfair to other companies.
I'm no Microsoft fan either, but I stand in complete awe of their ability to succeed, regardless of the circumstances. Despite doing many things "wrong" according to
Re:I actually feel a mite sorry for them.. (Score:5, Insightful)
This is utterly ridiculous. Microsoft got where they were because of the law. If they can ignore the law now, why shouldn't I? Without law, let's see... someone could go raid their campuses, steal their hardware, take their softwareware, kill their employees, and destroy them with a physical assault. But no: there is law, and law enforcement, to prohibit this, and allow Microsoft and other companies to flourish.
There is other law, and law enforcement, to prevent Microsoft (and other companies) from doing bad things, too. That's we're seeing right now, and for the most part, it's unfortunately weak.
Some laws are stupid, and need changed (DMCA, USA PATRIOT, etc), but for the most part, society is the scale, and law is the balance. Without law, there would be no society, and without good law, and enforcement of the law, the balance will tip.
Re:If I was running Microsoft (Score:3, Insightful)
Probably because BMW don't have a virtual monopoly on the car market.
Re:If I was running Microsoft (Score:4, Interesting)
I dunno, did it go away? Did they get any effective action against them? Or did they laugh and go about their day? Yeah, that was it. Plus, the OEMs that sell Beemers are allowed to change the radios. Fuckwit.
I'm reminded of Bill Hicks line when people complained about him going on about JFK...
"Come on man, it was a long time ago, just let it gom OK?"
"Long time ago, huh? OK, I'll leyt JFK go if you'll shut up about Jesus"
Or brilliant words to that effect ;-)
J.
This is so idiotic that begs disbelief. (Score:3, Insightful)
BMW is not armtiwsting its distributors to only sell BMW (correction, they were, that was declared illegal in the EU).
How do you call this:" if you don't install my media player you can't bundle Windows with your PCs". Coercion, blackmail come to my mind. Add a monopolistic situation and frankly I don;t know from which planet you are coming from (are you some kind of hyper monopolistic Klingon or what?).
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:If I was running Microsoft (Score:5, Informative)
This is absolutely nothing like your example with BMW. To correct your analogy, the Microsoft BMW would
1) Enforce strict legalities on BMW dealers that they are not allowed to switch out the radios. Doing so can lose them their rights to deal in BMW products.
2) Design their engine so that if you removed the radio & replaced it with another, the engine would no longer start.
3) If a 3rd-party radio manufacturer finds a way around point 2, include legalities with your car's "license" (owner's manual/lease papers) that replacing the radio, even if it works, nulls and voids any manufacturer's warranty on the car.
4) Since no radio manufacturer is going to produce radios for that line of BMW because of 1-3, perhaps an end-user will attempt that. Assuming they are intelligent enough to bypass point 2, and careless enough to ignore point 3, BMW would not release technical specifications for how the radio actually plugs into the car's wiring system. In fact, they would intentionally make the wiring as confusing as possible, so that you have little chance of creating a radio that works as well as the factory radio.
I don't mean to start a flame war either. I'm just tired of hearing poor analogies like these that only indicate a lack of understanding of what a monopoly actually is.
Finally, let me point out that most countries agree that monopolies are perfectly ok, as long as you don't illegally use your fortunate market standing to maintain your monopoly.
Re:If I was running Microsoft (Score:4, Insightful)
You own MobileCoffeeCo that makes in-car coffee makers. You sell your coffee makers in the after market. All of a sudden, BMW, which owns 95% of the world auto market (Bentley owns the other 5% and few people can afford one) decides they're including their own in car coffee maker in their cars. You're out of business. Eh, no harm done, people still have their coffee makers right? Yeah, you're out of business through a completely anti-competitive move, but it's not unfair according to your argument.
Now can you see where the *combination* of having a monopoly and employing bundling strategies is anti-competitive? It's leveraging that monopoly power that's illegal. Back in the real world, if BMW had a 5% market share and bundled coffee makers, you could still compete. However, if the other auto makers *colluded* with BMW to put you out of business by bundling, again it would be anti-competitive.
uhhm, hello? (Score:5, Informative)
Good riddance! Unfortunately, I don't think microsoft would actually abandon the largest market in the world.
I am totally against ethically dubious practices to achieve a monopoly. But I don't consider "bundling" anti competitive behavior. This is just another example of the EU over regulating.
That's funny, cause that was exactly the reason for US DoJ anti-trust case against microsoft: ms leveraged monopoly in one market (desktop OS) to gain monopoly in another (web browsers). It was web browsers then, it's media players now. Microsoft was found guilty, and, as a punishment, was required to primise not to do it again.
Why aren't they suing BMW for including radios in their automobiles?? After all, it is a "value added" additional component. It's not a car.
Is BMW a monopoly? Are they trying to "cut off the air supply" to a competing radio manufacturer?
I don't mean to start a flame war, but isn't this Microsoft Monopoly crap getting a little old?
Yeah, cause we all know that if we just stop saying that then microsoft will not be a monopoly any more! I mean DoJ seems to think so...
There are countless examples (especially in the computer industry) of companies that seemed like monopolies (IBM for example) that were devastated overnight when a superior idea entered the market place.
You mean like the way mozilla took over IE's market share as soon as it was released? Oh wait... Let me spell this out for you: you cannot compete with a monopolist on the basis of better products that compete in the same market. That is why we have the rules to restrict abuse of monopoly.
BTW, the only reason IBM lost the market power it had is that the market became (mostly) irrelevant. IBM still has monopoly in mainframes (which is what they were sued for), but mainframes are disappearing. It has absolutely nothing to do with building a better product.
Re:If I was running Microsoft (Score:4, Interesting)
Because whether you have an aftermarket or stock radio in your car has ZERO effect on the standard format for radio broadcasts. THAT is strictly regulated by the FCC (in the US). There is no such regulation for file-formats, and network protocol streams. If one vendor can lock up the broadcast format with a proprietary scheme, then all other vendors would be locked out.
Your analogy fails to take this into account - and that's why bundling, in itself isn't a crime - but in the context of computer operating systems, where file formats and protocols are not open or regulated, we can all wake up one morning and find ourselves in a world owned by a corporation. It's not speculative paranoia.
I'm not advocating government regulation of file-formats and protocols (but effectively, that's what we have with the current software-patents and DMCA environment - but it has the OPPOSITE effect that rf spectrum regulation has). I think it's important that companies be allowed to compete in this area so that a "best of breed" solution can evolve. But when a monopoly ties up the marketplace and excludes competitors, someone's got to step in somewhere, because the invisible hand ain't gonna fix it.
What I am advocating is a special class of patent, or perhaps the application of copyright law instead, some government regulation which mandates interoperability, (or, perhaps, in return for patent protection, open-source is required, so that interoperability can be maintained without infringing on IP), and that has to be overseen by a standards body, because the interoperability-vs-noninfringement is a delicate balance that would have to be intelligently maintained on a case-by-case basis - unworkable? Probably. Prone to abuse? Most likely. But better than the situation we have now. Closed, proprietary formats and protocols are the problem. Not necessarily bundling. Bundling is just higher-up the food chain, where lawyers can get a foothold, because the law doesn't deal with protocols very well.
Re:What about Apple? (Score:5, Informative)
On the other hand, nothing prevents you from removing iTunes or iPhoto, or even QuickTime from MacOS, on top of the obvious fact that Apple is not a monopoly and therefore inherently abides by different rules.
Re:What about Apple? (Score:4, Informative)