your over-reacting.
TCPA has some anti-free software designs in it, but it's nothing more then anything else that Microsoft gets into. It's more about customer lock-in. The idea is that people will buy their DRM-protected media and games and only be able to play that stuff on Microsoft or Apple (*cou..Itunes..gh*) operating systems.
You'd still be able to install whatever you want on it, nobody is that insane to think that they'd get away with consipiring with other companies to eliminate Windows only remaining compitition. People like to dog on Bush and conservitive-ness in the government, but they are 100x more likely to care more about dairy farmers then Microsoft. (beleive me, they need the votes from the red states). Nobody realy cares and the government is just as likely to use Linux as use Windows.
The more socialist European countries tend to be very economicly protective, true. But kicking Microsoft out would be insane. A large part of their infrastructure is based on Microsoft, like everybody else around the world and it would be stupid to go to economic war over a operating system anyways.
This anti-media player crap is just politics. It's 'oh, American corporation suck! So lets beat up on MS for a bit and make our surfs.. er.. citizens happy'
Same thing with cigerettes here in the US. It wasn't so much trying to stop smoking as letting the states get their cut of the profits by going after politically vunerable industry.
It's all a bunch of crap. Nobody is going to kick Microsoft out of their country. Nobody is going to create incompatable hardware platform just to avoid TCPA.. . It would allow them to impliment some crappy laws and regulations they wouldn't otherwise be able to screw around with.
Worst thing that would happen is they'd raise the Microsoft-will-pay-us-to-do-business-in-Europe tax, ....er sorry anti-monopoly fines... (I forget which BS excuse they used this time to milk money out of business and their citizens.)
If you want proof of what I am saying look at Ireland. They are a fairly small, but politically potent part of europe. Microsoft operations provide a VERY high percentage of their gross national product. And a few other countries in the EU are big freinds with MS.
Thinking that governments will kill off Microsoft is just a pipe dream for some people. Nobody in government realy gives a shit. The most they do is would tax... er sue... Microsoft time to time as a alternate source of income and to use MS as a political football to gain browny points from the more anti-corporate voters.
It's just silly.
China, maybe. But what is the point? Realy. What would it get them?
Nothing. And TCPA is something that would be very attractive to them, it would help with the whole censorhip/we will put you in jail for saying we suck-thing they have going for them.
TCPA has some anti-free software designs in it, but it's nothing more then anything else that Microsoft gets into. It's more about customer lock-in. The idea is that people will buy their DRM-protected media and games and only be able to play that stuff on Microsoft or Apple (*cou..Itunes..gh*) operating systems.
You'd still be able to install whatever you want on it, nobody is that insane to think that they'd get away with consipiring with other companies to eliminate Windows only remaining compitition. People like to dog on Bush and conservitive-ness in the government, but they are 100x more likely to care more about dairy farmers then Microsoft. (beleive me, they need the votes from the red states). Nobody realy cares and the government is just as likely to use Linux as use Windows.
The more socialist European countries tend to be very economicly protective, true. But kicking Microsoft out would be insane. A large part of their infrastructure is based on Microsoft, like everybody else around the world and it would be stupid to go to economic war over a operating system anyways.
This anti-media player crap is just politics. It's 'oh, American corporation suck! So lets beat up on MS for a bit and make our surfs.. er.. citizens happy'
Same thing with cigerettes here in the US. It wasn't so much trying to stop smoking as letting the states get their cut of the profits by going after politically vunerable industry.
It's all a bunch of crap. Nobody is going to kick Microsoft out of their country. Nobody is going to create incompatable hardware platform just to avoid TCPA.. . It would allow them to impliment some crappy laws and regulations they wouldn't otherwise be able to screw around with.
Worst thing that would happen is they'd raise the Microsoft-will-pay-us-to-do-business-in-Europe tax, ....er sorry anti-monopoly fines... (I forget which BS excuse they used this time to milk money out of business and their citizens.)
If you want proof of what I am saying look at Ireland. They are a fairly small, but politically potent part of europe. Microsoft operations provide a VERY high percentage of their gross national product. And a few other countries in the EU are big freinds with MS.
Thinking that governments will kill off Microsoft is just a pipe dream for some people. Nobody in government realy gives a shit. The most they do is would tax... er sue... Microsoft time to time as a alternate source of income and to use MS as a political football to gain browny points from the more anti-corporate voters.
It's just silly.
China, maybe. But what is the point? Realy. What would it get them?
Nothing. And TCPA is something that would be very attractive to them, it would help with the whole censorhip/we will put you in jail for saying we suck-thing they have going for them.