Bonum Certa Men Certa

Not Even Dumping Will Save Microsoft's Business in China Amid Diversification With GNU/Linux

Summary: China's move to GNU/Linux is now being extended to the private sector (not just public sector) and there is nothing Microsoft can do to stop it this time

CHINA is abandoning Microsoft not for financial reasons but for security-related reasons. Bill Gates already tried dumping 'free' (gratis) software on China whilst arrogantly accusing the Chinese of 'piracy'. Gates and his fellow criminals also bribed Chinese officials. Well, these days of Microsoft crimes may be over. It won't work.



Aspirations for Chinese independence and growth seem to make the Windows ban irreversible. It's not just in government anymore; state TV encourages the public to follow suit and in corporate press like CNN it is now common to see the Chinese smeared over the decision to ban spyware with back doors. See this article in ECT, showing that the anti-China rhetoric (insulting their intelligence) reached even FOSS sites, quite oddly in fact.

From a purely economic perspective, never mind security and technical advantages of GNU/Linux over Windows, Microsoft is unable to compete. As Pogson pointed out the other day: "M$ charges as little as $15 in the low-end notebook space. This is only the second or third time in PC-history that M$ has had to compete on price with */Linux (and their own installed base)."

Still, Microsoft can no longer compete so well with Android and Chrome OS. All it is trying to do right now is extort companies that distribute devices with Linux on them, establishing a new form of control or Microsoft tax (through patent racketeering).

The press in Korea shows what it labels "A tablet running the China Operating System, based on Linux." The press in China continues to explain how a Windows ban "encourages domestic developers" (which is true actually). To quote the article:

Instead, the Chinese government is calling for the increased purchase and development of domestically developed operating systems, specifically those created on Linux. Although the ban of Windows 8 does not directly affect the general public, Sina News reports that the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology is pushing for domestic users to gravitate from Windows XP to domestic operating systems too. It's not too far fetched an idea, either–China has a long history of successfully developing domestic software. The messaging software QQ, for example, is more popular than the foreign-developed MSN, since it was specifically developed to cater to Chinese people's sensibilities.


Here is another such article that says: "Windows 8 Business use has been banned from Chinese government computers. This leaves an open door policy for OS makers to come into a huge personal computing market. Since China has the world's largest population, it is safe to assume it may have the biggest logistics, Government records and computers to keep track of this information."

China has not one Linux-based operating system. It has several. It would be funny if China was to actively encourage diversity in operation systems, more so than in the West (where Windows dominates desktops) because we are commonly taught that 'true' capitalism encourages many players (competition) rather than monopoly and even state-imposed monopoly (which is exactly what China is moving away from). Perhaps Free software is going to bring China a lot of healthy competition among domestic players, instead of a monopoly maintained by a foreign player that facilitates espionage against companies like Huawei.

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