Lamlaw.com: Microsoft's Patent Manoeuvre Could Be Illegal
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2007-02-19 20:02:53 UTC
- Modified: 2007-02-19 20:58:04 UTC
According to
Lamlaw.com,
the Novell/Microsoft deal is illegal as far as intellectual property and third parties go. This is not the first time such an argument is made.
When Microsoft agreed with Novell to cross their promises not to sue customers, Microsoft (and Novell) have likely violated the law
[...]
Intentional interference is an intentional tort. When you have parties A and B in a contract and a third party “C” comes along making an agreement with A with the intent to destroy the relationship with B (or cause A to breach the agreement with B), then you have the basis for such a charge
To cite
Microsoft's take, whether it is bogus or not:
"Novell actually saw the business opportunity, because there's so many customers who say,
'Hey look, we don't want problems. We don't want any intellectual property problem or anything else. There's just a variety of workloads where we, today, feel like we want to run Linux. Please help us Microsoft and please work with the distributors to solve this problem, don't come try to license this individually.
So customer push drove us to where we got'"
Comments
Draconishinobi
2007-02-19 22:57:05
And, of course, if you have as much power as M$ (infinitely more than OJ), well, there's not much that can stand in your way.
But, hopefully, I'm wrong about this and M$ will be forced to dissolve the agreement. (I believe in Murphy, if no one else, so I'm betting for the former and against the latter)
Roy Schestowitz
2007-02-19 23:02:09
Nine weeks after it started, this case is closed
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