The Jakarta Post and OIN Talk About Patents and/or FUD
Dr. Roy Schestowitz
2007-07-09 07:33:25 UTC
Modified: 2007-07-09 07:34:03 UTC
Early this morning, The Jakarta Post was brave enough to slam Microsoft for its tactics. While trying to remain balanced, the article seems to be accusing the company of fighting emerging trends by moving goalposts (changing laws), making unsubstantiated threats, and attempting to outmuscle the competition rather than concentrating on its own products.
Perhaps what Microsoft should do as a whole is to play better with others and listen to its user base. The world and markets have changed, yet a number of companies and organizations continue to struggle to maintain their old business models. Using legal tactics instead of true technology innovation will not endear nor create loyal customers.
Thumbs up to The Jakarta Post for doing what the press in the West is usually unwilling to do in quite the same way. The popular press, unlike the mainstream press, sometimes offers criticism and balance. It is not as dependent on large corporations. Whatever you read, always mind where it comes from. There is too much financially-motivated bias in the outlets which many people still trust.
For what it's worth, here is a fuzzy and short video of OIN's top man. It is incomplete. He speaks about patents, but does not refer to Microsoft's accusations. We are hoping to find some better videos that cover this topic, so stay tuned.
With over 6 million pounds in debt (nearly 10 million US dollars) we guess it's likely some other company will take over the site (if it deems it worthwhile)
The crash of this bubble isn't just inevitable, it's already happening and receding sporadically because of false announcements about money that does not actually exist (to "buy time")
When Debian wanted to stage a seemingly legitimate election it needed to have more than one candidate running; so eventually the female partner of a geek rose to the challenge (had no coding skills at all, no technical history in Debian) and lost to the "incumbent German"
Even back in the 90s many people converted programs from one language to another. That could invalidate copyleft (and copyright), which already existed