Microsoft Debuts MySpace-Like IT Site 181
snib writes "Microsoft has launched Aggreg8, a 'social networking and collaboration space for the IT community.' Apparently, the owner of the popular open-source RSS reader of the same name sold the domains to Microsoft for $5000 in August in order to host what was then called 'Microcosm.' Microsoft hopes their new service, which utilizes Windows Live ID (formerly .NET Passport) authentication, will become a 'MySpace-like forum for developers to share scripts, tools, or best practices, or even to just connect with others within the profession.'"
Seems a great place to post yer code! (Score:5, Informative)
Microsoft does not claim ownership of the materials you provide to Microsoft (including feedback and suggestions) or post, upload, input or submit to any Services or its associated services for review by the general public, or by the members of any public or private community, (each a "Submission" and collectively "Submissions"). However, by posting, uploading, inputting, providing or submitting ("Posting") your Submission you are granting Microsoft, its affiliated companies and necessary sublicensees permission to use your Submission in connection with the operation of their Internet businesses (including, without limitation, all Microsoft Services), including, without limitation, the license rights to: copy, distribute, transmit, publicly display, publicly perform, reproduce, edit, translate and reformat your Submission; to publish your name in connection with your Submission; and the right to sublicense such rights to any supplier of the Services. No compensation will be paid with respect to the use of your Submission, as provided herein.
Or; post code for your pet project on this site and we will use it and sell it as our own.
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Re:Seems a great place to post yer code! (Score:5, Funny)
No compensation will be paid with respect to the use of your Submission, as provided herein.
Hmmph. They should've called it "OurSpace".
Re:Seems a great place to post yer code! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Seems a great place to post yer code! (Score:4, Insightful)
If it were true by default that what you posted, everyone could use, Microsoft wouldn't have had to include that paragraph. But it's not true, copyright laws apply even if you post in public.
Also, Microsoft doesn't just claim to be allowed to use it, they say they'll be allowed to sell it as their own without paying you. Which is just wrong.
Mod parnet up (Score:2)
I imagine they're right about one thing: this site will be an awful lot like myspace (throngs of idiots posting drivel)
Re:Seems a great place to post yer code! (Score:4, Informative)
They use the term 'interactive' to describe their news services, but thats just a menu system to move between streams. Can you add news? Nope, except by going postal and getting your very own slot.
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Do check the dictionary, it even mentions tv.
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Still, I don't consider tv to be a forum, I consider it to be a waste of time.
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all carefully crafted to make you keep watching the adverts that are the real reason for the content in the first place.
The bbc, which has no adds, has web forums, and feedback sites on the interweb, but the actual broadcasts are not truly interactive.
I am not the best person to make broad statements about tv though, since I gave up on that crap years ago. I listen to the bcc radio services, but that's all.
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it's quite common (Score:4, Interesting)
There are actually quite a few companies that post source code and other information on the web with licenses that impose obligations on you if you as much as look at it.
For example, go to the Sun web site and look at the licenses under which they make Java documentation and source code available; read them carefully and then roll your eyes.
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So go to a company's web site, and look at code from a product they own, posted in a forum that they own...
The little voice in my head that tells me about things relating to common sense is saying that what you just described is not remotely.
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By that logic, I would loose the rights to my photos when I upload them into Flickr, including giving them rights to use it commercially... Just because you can see it doesn't mean you can do whatever you want with it! Same with GPL projects, the code is in a public space, but when you use it into your own software you have to agree to a license.
However, MS is free to put any clause they want in their terms of use so, as long as it is clear
Re:Seems a great place to post yer code! (Score:5, Informative)
You people are all missing the point here. The license does not remove rightsfrom you, it only gives MS the right to publish it as a message on a public forum. Without these rights, they would not be able to even list your message after you pressed the submit button.
So it's pretty simple: if you send a message to their forum, you're giving them legal rights to distribute it (using the forum scripts), backup, sort, search, yadda yadda yadda.
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Sorry, but you're just acting trollish. They're
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Then why to they need to "edit" my submissions (in addition to merely "reformating" them)? Also they're not just asking for permission to be able to mollest my works, but permission to give other people permission to do whatever they want with it to. I can only think of a few things that aren't covered by the License.
Not necissarily. IANAL, but I
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Well, if you submit a message with questionable words, they might replace them with ****. Is someone complains you posted some GPLed code at the forum, they might edit the message to take it o
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Actually you might want to reread the EULAs for things like MSN mail. At one point the EULA basically stated that any and all messages and attachments sent through their email service automatically granted Microsoft the right to use the content. It may have been intended for AV scans and such, but the phrasing effectively meant that if you sent out sensitive information (e.g. business related, code, etc.), Microsoft could use that information in their own business (and presumably software development.)
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GPL code (Score:2)
I thought that code under GPL cannot be taken out of being GPL
It can't (I think). However, that doesn't mean Microsoft can't use it - it means you can't post it on MS-MySpace. You would be violating the GPL, not Microsoft.
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Nothing to see here without an Live ID (Score:5, Informative)
Passport (Score:2)
You cant even browse around without logging in. Sites which require logins for visiting should be boycotted and not promoted on Slashdot.
You forgot, logging in requires registering with Passport. That should not only be boycotted, the submitter should be tracked down and killed.
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*shutters* (Score:3, Interesting)
Mod me down if you so please, I hope to never see the light of day after seeing what I just witnessed.
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KFG
Open Arms?? (Score:5, Funny)
it's got to be better than the alternative (Score:2)
From the license (Score:2, Informative)
What the hell did you expect?
Social networking sites (Score:2, Insightful)
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Well http://www.openofice.org/ [openofice.org] certainly isn't it.
Or maybe I am missing the subtle joke in your sig.
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ALL YOUR CODE ARE BELONG TO US (Score:4, Insightful)
Please stop renaming things! (Score:5, Insightful)
Stop renaming stuff! It's hard enough keeping track of all of these marginally useful services already.
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KFG
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Maybe next it will be somethingdead.
I have this theory. It goes like this. In the halls of MS there are vending machines which dispense free LSD and all MS employees eat a few tabs every day. This theory explains zune, rebranding everything every three years, fifty thousand data access libraries, and error messages such as "there is no message f
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Maybe. Because unfortunately, somethingawful.com was taken.
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Don't knock MS alone for messed-up error lookup tables. Try getting MIT's com_err error library to work right when you compile something yourself. I'm sure it's possible (after all, it works right on the official binary distributions), but it's decidedly non-trivial.
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awesome (Score:2, Funny)
Navigation is painful (Score:5, Insightful)
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jk..
innerweb
Already done, sort of (Score:2)
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ms will bash'em (Score:1)
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Hi There! (Score:5, Funny)
Would you like me to
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Not falling for that baby ! (Score:3, Insightful)
Well-known procedure. Id especially suspect that when it comes from a company that doggedly fought freedom and open source and lost.
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MicroSpace (Score:2)
The Software.. (Score:2, Informative)
Have to stop threatening to sue developers (Score:2, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
it doesn't even make sense (Score:5, Interesting)
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I guess you think you're quite the modern day G.K. Chesterton....
Is passport not dead yet (Score:2, Insightful)
"Why do I need to use Passport?"
"We chose Passport in order to help you consolidate the number of logins you have to manage."
*sigh* here was me thinking passport was dead.
[1] http://www.w3.org/RDF/ [w3.org]
[2] http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/ [xmlns.com]
[3] http://aggreg8.net/Aggreg8_Help_Pages.htm#registra tion_passport [aggreg8.net]
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Now, maybe they are trying to get little developers to get used to it, incorporate it and promote it. Sounds like a coven of vampires. Hasn't Halloween already passed us?
;-)
innerwebHow To Make A Hyperlink (Score:2)
Boring Home Page (Score:2, Funny)
Boring home page. At least on myspace they try to invite you into the site with some content and "new profile" pics.
Is it just me, .. (Score:4, Insightful)
Buying hotels (the Four Seasons hotel group).
Developing an iPod-clone (Zune).
Launching what's essentially a copy of MySpace.
Removing the one-reinstall restriction from Vista.
The Vista voucher scheme (promising XP->Vista upgrades for PCs bought now).
The MS-Novell deal (which has a dozen different perspectives, but at least promoting Linux).
To me, it seems like MS is genuinely scared of becoming largely irrelevant in the not-so-distant future.
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I wouldn't say lately. I would say for years. It's just now their actions seem desperate because their modus operandi doesn't worked like it used to. They just can't copy a trend or buy someone out. In a way since the antitrust, they have become more emboldened. When the Zune thing was announced, I was waiting for a lawsuit from some of their former PlaysForSure partners. That kind of actions seems to be anti-competitive to me.
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Bill Gates, or rather an investment group led by him, is doing that, not Microsoft.
The Vista voucher scheme (promising XP->Vista upgrades for PCs bought now).
They've always done that as far as I remember - for a few months before a new Windows or Office release. IIRC, Apple does that also and so do many other software companies.
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Microsoft dictates the cost of software. Windows 3.1 cost about $50. Windows Vista costs $200 for the Home Basic version, and $240 for the bells and whistles, and $299 for the Business version. That sounds to me like the cost of software is merely going up. Remember that it is still impractical for businesses to switch their works
Irony abounds (Score:2, Insightful)
This is not to say that if they can add a search I won't try it out in ear
Windows Strategy written in code (Score:2)
It's a slow Sunday: It's been written in Java to protect the innocent.
Fire the designers (Score:2)
Obligatory : (Score:2)
MICROCOSM! How appropriate (Score:2)
It's a perfect analogy to how the MS model of closed development died on that day in 1991 when the web was born. Not even MS can field enough developers to compete with "everyone else".
"127.0.0.1 FOR IT PROS" doesn't make sense (Score:2, Funny)
Yet another.... (Score:2, Funny)
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Understanding By Analogy (Score:2)
a MySpace-like forum for developers
Re:MSFT just doesn't get it, do they? (Score:5, Insightful)
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No, this one will be much better!! (Score:3, Funny)
Yay!! Steve Ballmer is in your extended network!!
Minesweeper Certified Solitaire Expert (Score:4, Interesting)
It will be full of sage advice and code samples from MSCEs.
We have a tester at work who is an MCSE. I've been teaching him shell scripting using bash in Linux, for which he is immensely grateful, embarrassingly so, as he bows and scrapes and calls me "Mr Unix Genius." His productivity has improved 10-fold, and now he has a new job at another company with better pay.
One Monday morning he proudly informed me that he'd spent a lot of time over the weekend reading the Advanced Bash Scripting Guide and that he'd, "copied and pasted it," so that he could, "read it on Windows." He'd spent hours copying and pasting all 800 pages from the web browser into Microsoft Word.
I asked him why he didn't just download the file. "But I want to read it on Windows."
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