Originally posted by: manly
DaveSimmons,
I understand your point, and everybody knows I'm no fan of Mickeysoft, but if they truly hold patent(s) on that technology, then they are trying to cash in on it like any other corporation. The only shady part of that would be if any such patents were purchased from SGI, but even then you'd have to blame SGI as much as MS. Cash-strapped SGI could have sold its IP to any number of companies for probably the same price; apparently they chose to deal with the bottom feeders in the industry. =) The real problem is with the flawed patent regime, one that grants patents on technology that the Patent Office does not understand and often that is not innovative or novel.
I find it somewhat amusing that this thread and the recent WMP EULA update thread generated a lot of bad publicity for MS (at least within ATOT). For years now, as exposed in the anti-trust case, MS plays dirty and clearly at the edge of the law (if not past it) and many consumers seem to happily support them as a good corporate citizen. I think the recent flaps are more an aberration than a shift in perspective.
I see the problem as being Microsoft buying IP then using it to block open source and open standards in order to lock people in to their proprietary formats / APIs (and hence into Windows). Since MS has been convicted of abusing their monopoly power they should not be allowed to further extend their reach this way, especially since the money they're buying the IP with was generated by their abuses.
I work full-time in Windows software development and haven't even gotten around to installing my copy of Red Hat so I'm not rabidly anti-MS, but as a developer I've watched them abuse their power for at least the last 12 years. Everything from crushing Borland by refusing to give them Windows API headers until long after they'd been made available in VC++, to forcing people to distribute IE with their apps if they wanted to use the updated common controls, to forcing people to install the latest IE to use the MSDN library.
As a consumer I've watched them destroy competition and innovation in browsers, utilities, backup software, media players and encoding and more, by bundling "free" mediocre versions of the software with Windows in order to "justify" keeping the OS price artificially inflated, as well as other dirty tricks like bundling "free" media encoding with Windows servers to damage competitors in both the encoding and server OS markets.
If all this bundling was done to "benefit the consumer" (and trial documents proved that was not the case) then why isn't MS Word bundled "free" with Windows?