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07.10.11

Journalists Fail to Report Microsoft Racketeering as Microsoft Manages to Shape the News

Posted in Apple, GNU/Linux, Google, Microsoft at 2:35 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

What ever happened to real reporting?

News of the World

Summary: A critical look at Microsoft’s and Apple’s innovation-harming lawsuits that the mass media/press fails to cover as properly as it ought to

IN THE FORM of “Android”, Linux is taking over yet more areas of computing. Apple and Microsoft are both rather nervous because nothing technical that they can do is going to stop Google. Instead then, Microsoft goes ever more thuggish and Apple gets very litigious (at least Apple names the patents, but it does not sue Google, instead targeting those further down the ‘food chain’). Google is “disappoint[ed]” to see Apple and Microsoft forming yet another patent cartel against rivals like Google and the second Microsoft booster in a while plays along with a headline like “Is Android Microsoft’s next cash cow?”

It’s shoddy reporting like this which helps us see why “Microsoft boosters” as we call them are a major part of the problem as they do the opposite of watchdog press. To quote:

In the hunt for the next billion-dollar business, Microsoft may have discovered one in mobile software. It costs Microsoft nothing to produce and sell, and it’s not Windows Phone.

It’s Android, the wildly popular — and free — mobile-phone software made by competitor Google.

In the past nine months, Microsoft has gone after a handful of companies that make Android phones and tablets.

It has either sued or persuaded the companies to pay it license fees for some technologies found in certain Android features. Microsoft contends it has patents on those technologies.

Being Bill’s fan press (Seattle Times), almost nothing is done there to chastise Microsoft. This particular reporter, being Microsoft-focused, has vested interests, too. So watch out for Microsoft’s attempts to shape the news. As we explained a couple of weeks ago, Microsoft grooms journalists before announcements of such extortion so that they improperly cover the news, spreading the twisted versions of the story and linking to a press release from Microsoft. This is not journalism, it is churnalism. People must challenge poor reporting in order to discourage Microsoft from this whole racketeering operation. This is not a case of “licensing deal”, it is extortion, it is probably a clear violation of the RICO Act, but nobody bothers reinforcing the law, especially when real reporting gets overshadowed by Microsoft’s PR machine.

Timothy Lee, an unusually good journalist and blogger, does a good job explaining what Microsoft does here:

This story sheds light on the recent string of stories about Microsoft demanding royalty payments from various companies that produce smart phones built on Google’s Android operating system. Intuitively, this doesn’t make much sense. Most people would say that Google has been more innovative than Microsoft in recent years—especially in the mobile phone market—so why is Microsoft the one collecting royalties?

The reason is that Microsoft has more patents than Google. A lot more. The patent office has awarded Google about 700 patents in its 13-year lifetime. Microsoft has received 700 patents in the last four months. Microsoft’s total portfolio is around 18,000 patents, and most of those were granted within the last decade.

Even if you think Microsoft is more innovative than Google, the engineers in Redmond obviously haven’t been 25 times as innovative as those in Mountain View. So why the huge discrepancy?

Getting software patents takes a lot of work, but it’s not primarily engineering effort. The complexity of software and low standards for patent eligibility mean that software engineers produce potentially patentable ideas all the time. But most engineers don’t think of these relatively trivial ideas as “inventions” worthy of a patent. What’s needed to get tens of thousands of patents is a re-education campaign to train engineers to write down every trivial idea that pops into their heads, and a large and disciplined legal bureaucracy to turn all those ideas into patent applications.

[...]

The result is a transfer of wealth from young, growing, innovative companies like Google to mature, bureaucratic companies like Microsoft and IBM—precisely the opposite of the effect the patent system is supposed to have.

This author used to write for Ars technica which nowadays does a lot of Microsoft PR. One of its pro-Microsoft writers, Peter, is in our IRC channels now, promoting MPEG-LA and Microsoft talking points. It’s very selfish and not objective at all, so we no longer cite that site as much as we used to. In general, people who harbour the continued practice/high pace of software patents tax on innovation can either face the truth in a polite debate or simply assumed to be too zealous about monopolisation. Upon closer inspection it usually turns out to be the latter. To Microsoft, software patents are generally a wonderful thing at this stage.

In light of Microsoft’s latest extortions, even Mother Jones says that patents are broken and asks readers for suggestions

So then, a question for people who think that software patents are out of control: what should the rule be? No patents at all on software or business processes? Probably not. But if patents aren’t flatly banned on business processes, is there some kind of rule that would raise the bar in a reasonable way on just how novel something has to be to deserve a patent? I hear a lot of complaints about software and business process patents, and I’m sympathetic to them. But exactly what kind of reform would improve things?

This site says that the patent system is broken and the audience reading this site is vast. We are definitely getting the message out there and increasing pressure on those who can change the status quo. Ryan Kim asks, “Can patent licensing fees derail the Android express?” Microsoft and Apple would love to believe it and at this stage Google should just work towards abolishing software patents or reporting Microsoft’s racketeering.

One pro-Linux site has compiled a list of companies that we know are paying Microsoft for Android. From the introduction:

According to Microsoft, Google’s Android OS is infringing on many of its patents and hence those manufacturers who use Android for their devices owe royalties to Microsoft. But the intriguing fact is that, instead of suing Google itself for infringing on its patents, Microsoft is finding it easy to sue or threaten smaller firms which don’t have the financial muscle to fight a legal battle with the Redmond troll giant. Following is the list of companies who are already paying royalties or being sued by Microsoft for using Android.

Techrights has a list of companies to avoid for paying Microsoft for Linux and/or Android. Microsoft’s co-founder Paul Allen is also among those looking to tax Android and Groklaw has this update on the case from Interval the patent troll.

We must not forget what Apple is doing to Android, either. Not only Microsoft is attacking; in some way it is aligning with Apple:

While Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) may have lost its claim to the phrase “Appstore” in court, it’s not giving up its other creations without a fight…

The company recently issued a warning to Samsung, claiming that the smartphone manufacturer was basically just selling an iPhone copycat.

In the lawsuit, Apple alleges that Samsung not only mirrored the iPhone’s form factor with the Galaxy S, but also that some of the user interface elements infringed on its software patents.

As if that wasn’t enough, Apple also demanded that the U.S. court order Samsung to take the device off the market and pay for damages and lost profits.

Going back to Microsoft, its former CTO who had become the world’s largest patent troll with Microsoft funding, was passing patents around, sometimes targetting Android in this way. One example of this is Lodsys and Novell is said to have fought back. “Novell has become the eighth outfit to ask a Judge to tell patent troll Lodsys to go forth and multiply,” says FUDZilla. “Novell is one of the ten companies Lodsys already sued in February and had asked for a bit of time before it filed its answer.

“Yesterday Novell not only denied Lodsys’s claims, it brought counterclaims, requesting declaratory judgment of invalidity (and non-infringement) of Lodsys’s two core patents. These patents are the same ones that Lodsys has been using to squeeze money out of Apple developers.”

Pamela Jones from Groklaw has returned to the site to give her assessment as well:

I thought you guys would want to know an intriguing detail in the Lodsys against the World litigations. Novell has filed its answer [PDF] to Lodsys in the Lodsys v. Brother et al case in Eastern Texas — a patent infringement case, same patents, but not against apps developers — and it’s the mighty Sterling Brennan of Workman Nydegger listed on the team representing Novell. Lodsys is in trouble now, methinks. Brennan was also prominently on the team that won for Novell against SCO in the jury trial, if you recall. I thought he was stupendous.

Novell asserts four counterclaims regarding the two patents Lodsys asserts against Novell, asking for a declaratory judgment of invalidity and noninfringement. And its affirmative defenses include failure to mitigate damages. That makes me smile, because Lodsys is in what business, exactly, leading to what damages? And that’s Novell’s point, which it makes explicit in another affirmative defense: “Lodsys’s Complaint, and each and every claim for relief therein, is barred because Lodsys has not suffered any damages.”

it is encouraging to see Novell fighting in court because it has the SCO and Microsoft cases to get on with. Sadly, however, Novell gave a lot of its patent ammunition to Microsoft and Apple (through CPTN). Where all these cartels leave GNU/Linux is a discomforting situation where the laws and practices are simply designed to be discriminatory. The same goes for reporting in the English-speaking press, which is too conformist and cowardly. Debian has meanwhile released this “Community Distribution Patent Policy FAQ” (with help from the Software Freedom Law Center). It says:

This document presents information about patents and patent liability useful for developers working on community distributions of Free and Open Source Software (FOSS). By community distributions, we mean collections of free software packages maintained and distributed by organizations composed of volunteers, where neither the organization nor the volunteers seek to make a profit from the activity. Such community-based distributions may sell as well as give away their work product, possibly on CDs or USB storage media or by paid-for downloads as well as by gratis distribution.

This document has been prepared by lawyers at the Software Freedom Law Center (SFLC) at the request of the Debian project, and may be helpful to similar community FOSS distributions. Its statements about legal matters are accurate as of the date of composition regarding US law, and may be applicable to other legal systems. But this document does not constitute legal advice. It has not been based on analysis of any particular factual situation, and any lawyer providing an opinion on the questions presented below would need to ascertain the particular facts and circumstances that might vary this information in a particular setting. You should not rely upon this document to make decisions affecting your project’s legal rights or responsibilities in a real-life situation without consulting SFLC or other lawyers.

Patents are the #1 problem GNU/Linux is having, even if the news keeps going on about FUD like “hard to use” and “too many versions”.

United Kingdom Might Need to Stop Unfair Procurement in the Public Sector

Posted in Europe, Microsoft at 2:29 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

NHSSummary: The NHS is told to “freeze all Microsoft spend,” according to an unusually good report from The Register (based on a leak, which is crucial for real journalism)

LAST month we wrote about the Bristol story which was a great example of tenders going wrong and people who favour Free software (i.e. public interests) losing their job. We have seen many such stories, and not just in the UK. Recall for example the story of Massachusetts.

Well, The Register, for a change, has an investigative piece based on a leak where it shows the inner/internal politics of the NHS, particularly procurement-wise. To quote the report:

The Cabinet Office is halting all but emergency purchases of Microsoft software in the NHS as it negotiates a pan-government procurement deal with the software giant.

The Crown Representative, headed by former Micro Focus CEO Stephen Kelly – appointed by Cabinet Office minister Francis Maude in April – is leading talks with 20 of the largest suppliers to the public sector, including HP and IBM.

Efforts to cut a deal with Microsoft are happening now, Kelly confirmed in letters sent to NHS Trusts mid-June, leaked to The Register by sources.

“It is my intention to develop a commercial arrangement with Microsoft which will provide better commercial terms; reduced cost and add greater flexibility,” said Kelly.

We will keep a close eye on this. And thanks to The Register for actually doing decent reporting like it used to before signing a deal with Microsoft (which our readers tell us insistently was the reason for change).

07.09.11

OpenSUSE Project: Quick Picks

Posted in GNU/Linux, Google, Novell, OpenSUSE at 8:54 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Internet and future

Summary: A few bits of news from the OpenSUSE world (2 months after Novell’s sale)

THE PROJECT called “OpenSUSE” does not receive direct support from Attachmate. It is up to itself and to donations from Google Summer of Code [1, 2, 3] to drive the project further, even though there is no considerable progress.

Among the events attended by OpenSUSE there might be HCL Week
and the OpenSUSE Conference which looks for papers:

The third openSUSE Conference will occur on September 11-14, and there are only a few days left to submit a talk: the call for papers is open until next Monday! So don’t think twice, and go submit something now. If you really want to think twice, take a look at our guidelines for speakers, they should convince it’s worth the effort!

Not so long ago they were also looking for sponsors because Novell is not around anymore and it never properly supported this project anyway (not even with server space).

Audio/Video Statistics

Posted in Audio/Video, Site News at 8:36 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Summary: A lot of multimedia files served over the past week

TOMORROW the blogging will resume at full steam, but today we took a quick look at the past 6 day’s retention for non-cached, i.e not Varnish-served, pages (logs older than 4 weeks are deleted). These suggest a record high of 9462 .ogg files, 15613 .ogv files, and 1498 .mp3 files downloaded in the past 6 days without the proxy/cache. This is roughly twice the usual number and today we also noticed a PageRank surge. In terms of PageRank, we are one of the highest ranked Linux-oriented sites right now (PageRank 7 front page) and the server has been slow due to heavy bandwidth usage. This was like an unintended experiment.

Techrights Back to Text

Posted in Site News at 4:01 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

K-Swiss 10K

Summary: After much time spent off the Internet, more time will be spent on Techrights again (it is PageRank 7 now)

VIDEOS are quick to make and audio — as in TechBytes — is also easy to put out there provided Tim is off work. This requires no preparation and no proofreading (or post-processing). But as readers have pointed out, there are many drawbacks to multimedia, so this site will get back to text, provided I find enough time to write. Due to high workload (several jobs) and some leisurely activities [1, 2] I haven’t had much time to run the site recently. As always, people who have articles to contribute can use IRC or E-mail to do so. Later this month I take another 1.5 weeks off the Internet (lab work/research), so we really do depend on the contributions of others. G. Forbes helps keep the wiki tidy. The IRC channels have 5 new ops, Goblin, MinceR, Tessier, Cubezzz, and AMarsh. Let’s keep Techrights strong. “Boycott Novell” was victorious and we have other objectives on the horizon.

Thoughts on Apple in 2011

Posted in Apple, Videos at 3:34 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Summary: Apple has turned from somewhat of an underdog nearing bankruptcy into an attack dog and master of mass hypnosis. I explain my concerns about Apple in this ramble.

YouTube: Thoughts on Apple in 2011 – Part 1

Or as Ogg:


[More below...]

Read the rest of this entry »

IRC Proceedings: July 8th, 2011

Posted in IRC Logs at 3:29 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

GNOME Gedit

GNOME Gedit

GNOME Gedit

#techrights log

#boycottnovell log

#boycottnovell-social log

Enter the IRC channels now

Links 9/7/2011: Ian Murdock Resurfaces in Interview, Firefox Aurora 7

Posted in News Roundup at 3:17 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

GNOME bluefish

Contents

GNU/Linux

Free Software/Open Source

  • Anti-rantifesto: Why free software and free culture aren’t the same

    Nina Paley, a professional illustrator and animator, has produced a fairly energetic rantifesto arguing that the “four freedoms” of the Free Software Foundation (FSF) should apply to free cultural works as well. While that might be nice, I think Paley is way off base.

    Let me say at the outset that I have no problem at all with artists who choose to adopt the “four freedoms” espoused by the Free Software Foundation that Paley wants applied to free culture. What I do have a problem with is the idea that the FSF is hypocritical for distinguishing between culture and code. None of this should be taken to assume that I’m not in favor of artists and creators willingly adopting the same freedoms that the FSF argues in favor of for code. I simply disagree, very strongly, that it’s a one-to-one comparison or that having different standards for code and culture make one hypocritical.

    And I would agree that some freedoms are more desirable than others, both for free culture and for works that hold traditional copyright. I have some qualms with Paley’s attack on the Non-Commercial restrictions, but my primary problem is with the attack on the No Derivatives (ND) restriction. Since most of my concerns lie with her argument against ND restrictions, that’s all I’m going to focus on here. Commercial restrictions can wait for another day.

  • VLC media player suffering in face of crapware and uncaring Google

    Ludovic Fauvet, one of the developers working at VideoLan, has done a blog post about the extent of these malicious alternative versions of VLC. He lists 18 common URLs that appear in search results for VLC, all of which include crapware/adware/spyware. By far the most common are associated with pinballcorp.com, eorezo.com and tut4pc.com (do not visit them).

    The reason they manage to get so high up on the search listings is because they are willing to pay for adwords. At the same time, Fauvet states that asking Google to remove these links turns out to be pointless because “Google ignore us, they’re making money with these scams.”

  • Web Browsers

    • Mozilla

      • Mozilla Is Back: New Firefox Aurora 7 Looks Promising

        Mozilla today released a new Firefox Aurora release: As Firefox 6 is moved into beta, Firefox 7 is beginning to take shape and will deliver substantial performance improvements across the board.

      • Mozilla Thunderbird gets Conversations Mode

        Love it, or hate, Gmail introduced millions of people to the concept of fully threaded email conversations.

        It’s a concept that Mozilla is now delivering to its Thunderbird email users by way of a the Conversations add-on.

        Conversations this week got it’s first stable release, tagged officially as version 2.0 (now up to version 2.0.4 for some incremental bug fixes). The real push with this add-on is that it is fully integrated with the new Thunderbird 5.0 release which came out last week.

      • Aurora 7 is here
      • Firefox 6 (And 7!) Are Right Around The Corner — Here’s What’s New

        Yes, you read that headline right.

        Even though Firefox 5 launched just a few weeks ago, Firefox 6, and even Firefox 7 are already chugging along nicely.

        Since the launch of Firefox 4 this year, Mozilla has moved to a rapid release schedule. That means new versions of Firefox will come out every six weeks or so.

      • Mozilla releases SeaMonkey 2.2 based on Firefox 5

        The SeaMonkey Project developers have made version 2.2 of their “all-in-one internet application suite” available to download. SeaMonkey 2.2 is a major update that is based on the same Gecko layout engine as the recent Firefox 5.0 release.

        Like Firefox, it offers improved canvas, JavaScript, memory, and networking performance, and introduces support for CSS animation. Users can now change archive options via the Copies & Folders Account Settings pane. Other changes include updated standards support for HTML5, XHR, MathML, SMIL and canvas, and improved spell checking for some locales.

  • Oracle/Java/LibreOffice

    • Oracle coughs up Java 7 release candidate

      Oracle has published the first release candidate for JDK 7, the long-awaited next version of Java set to officially debut on July 28.

      On Thursday, during a webcast from the Oracle bunker in Redwood City, California, Java chief architect Mark Reinhold said that the most significant thing about the new release is that “we’re finally shipping it”. Though it has been nearly five years since the release of Java 6, the new version isn’t exactly a huge leap forward.

    • Oracle v. Google – The Daubert Motion – Final Briefing

      One of the things I enjoy in the law is reading briefs, especially in the context of the give and take of the parties briefing a topic in contention in litigation. That is certainly the case with respect to the pending Daubert motion [PDF], filed by Google, in which it requests the court to exclude Oracle’s damages expert, Prof. Iain Cockburn. On June 14 Google filed its opening brief in support of its Daubert motion, and about a week later Oracle filed its response. Now we have the final piece of the briefing debate in the form of Google’s reply [PDF] to Oracle’s response.

    • Oracle Expands Virtual Desktops for Linux

      The VDI 3.3 release is also the first from Oracle that is supported on Oracle Linux.

  • Funding

    • Investing In Open Source

      In addition to two other talks, I had the opportunity to speak as the co-presenter in a session about the evolution of OpenOffice.org. The growth of the developer community for that codebase was always stifled, and while there are some excellent and experienced developers on working on it, very few have affiliations beyond Sun/Oracle. Following Oracle’s decision to withdraw, the maintenance of the code is moving on from corporate sponsorship to community management under the auspices of The Document Foundation and the Apache Software Foundation.

  • Openness/Sharing

    • Open Hardware

      • An open hardware license from the folks who brought you the web

        CERN announced version 1.1 of its Open Hardware License (OHL), a legal framework “designed to facilitate knowledge exchange across the electronic design community. The license is intended to become for hardware what the GPL (General Public License) is for software, the organization says.

      • For the good of all of us: CERN launches open source hardware effort

        Open source software is used extensively by CERN, the particle physics lab behind the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) experiments. In fact, the organization even maintains its very own Linux distribution—based on Red Hat Enterprise Linux—called Scientific Linux CERN. Inspired by the productivity of Linux development, a group of CERN engineers have decided to bring the advantages of the open source software development model to the world of hardware.

      • AMD in open source push

        Chipmaker AMD wants to increase its presence on Linux and has hired two familiar names to the open source community.

        Michel Dänzer and Christian König are well known Linux graphics driver developers. They are joining John Bridgman and Alex Deucher in working on the open source driver stack.

  • Standards/Consortia

    • Samsung releases code of WebCL implementation for WebKit

      The WebCL standard is still a work in progress, but the first experimental implementations have already arrived. Samsung has opened the source code of its WebCL prototype for WebKit, which is designed to run on Mac OS X. The company has also published some videos that demonstrate the efficacy of WebCL in action.

Leftovers

  • Trolls: The Town Drunks Of The Internet

    A study conducted by researchers at Northwestern University has reached a conclusion that many of us have entertained but dismissed as “not having a study conducted by researchers at Northwestern University behind it.” Namely: trolling is like being sloppy drunk.

  • Security

    • Solitary critical Windows update to star in modest Patch Tuesday

      Microsoft is to issue four bulletins next Tuesday – one of which is critical – as part of the July edition of its Patch Tuesday update cycle.

      The sole critical update involves an unspecified flaw restricted to Windows 7 and Windows Vista. Another bulletin tackles a remote code execution bug in Visio 2003 SP3.

      The other two “important” updates both involve security bugs in Windows7, Vista, XP and 2008.

  • Finance

    • Liberty Mutual Sues Goldman Over Freddie Mac Investment Losses

      Boston-based Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. and several of its subsidiaries have sued investment banker Goldman, Sachs & Co. for “making materially misleading statements and omissions” in a preferred stock offering of mortgage lender Freddie Mac in November 2007.

      The insurers invested $37.5 million in the Series Z offering of Freddie Mac (Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.) shares backed by subprime mortgages and underwritten by Goldman, according to the filing made in U.S. District Court in Massachusetts.

      The insurers say that if they had been informed of the “true state” of Freddie Mac’s capitalization, they would never have purchased the Series Z preferred shares. They say that as a result of what they charge is Goldman’s “fraudulent conduct,” their more than $37 million in investments are “virtually worthless.”

      Their complaint says they have suffered “huge losses” on the shares of stock they have sold, as well as on the shares of stock that they still hold.

      They are asking treble damages and a jury trial.

      The plaintiffs include Liberty Mutual and its subsidiaries Safeco, Employers of Wausau, Peerless and Liberty Life.

      Goldman Sachs told Insurance Journal it will fight the suit.

    • Fed Releases Details On Secret $855 Billion Single-Tranche OMO Bailout Program: Just Another Foreign Bank Rescue Operation

      A month ago we reported about Bob Ivry’s discovery that the Fed had been conducting a secretive bailout operation between March and December 2008, under which banks borrowed as much as $855 billion over the time frame for a rate as low as 0.01%. As the Fed itself explains following a just disclosed launch of a page dedicated to this Saint OMO, “The Federal Reserve System conducted a series of single-tranche term repurchase agreements from March 2008 to December 2008 with the intention of mitigating heightened stress in funding markets.

  • Intellectual Monopolies

    • Copyrights

Clip of the Day

Nina Simone – Love Me Or Leave Me


Credit: TinyOgg

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