I was very pleased yesterday to get another response to add to my collection in relation to my letter to my MEPs about the European Interoperability Framework. Now if you missed the fuss in the first place the interoperability framework is a document outlining an EU approach to software that avoids being locked in to particular suppliers, promotes free choice of member states, and protects tax payers from being ripped off by predatory monopolistic practices. Good stuff in other words. It had a few rough edges so EIF 2 was proposed. A draft was written, and public comments from interested parties were submitted. Microsoft and the BSA (which has been accused of being a Microsoft sock puppet at times) were perhaps the most critical, but their comments were generally welcoming and constructive, the BSA in particular pointed to some areas where the proposed EIF2 went impractically far on issues relating to patents. I was, in short, totally fine with these public comments. Some time later a second draft was leaked and this did cause concern. It was nothing like the first draft and after careful reading of every submitted comment I could not see how you could start at the first draft, and by implementing the public comments arrive anywhere near the second. The original letter has a few more details of specific problems, but here is what my Conservative MEP has to say on the matter. (Responses from Conservative, Green and Lib-Dem so far)
“Visible Technologies is some truly evil malicious bastards, always up to no good.”
--Ryan FarmerOur reader Ryan Farmer told us last night: "Visible Technologies is some truly evil malicious bastards, always up to no good. [Microsoft MVP] Chris Pirillo gave them two thumbs up though :)
"Finding people that badmouth their customers and slip in infiltrators to try and derail the conversation or coerce the person who started it into taking it down. They not only try to infiltrate blog posts, they do it with forums too."
Ryan knows this because he was targeted by Visible Technologies and then researched the subject [1, 2]. They tried to silence him on an important subject. "My strong objections to Windows Media Center DRMing incoming cable TV got their attention for a moment," he wrote, summarising it as follows: "I always tell people now that buying a TV tuner to use with Windows 7 is akin to setting the money on fire because it will never do what you want it to." Microsoft has been doing a lot of policing around Vista 7 coverage. ⬆