Microsoft Bends To Norwegian Pressure 117
Martin writes "Microsoft has agreed to change the terms of its school agreement contract with Norwegian regional municipalities, following a complaint by Norwegian open-source software company Linpro to the Norwegian Competition Authority. Microsoft 'introduced two kinds of flexibility in the agreement, that were previously missing,' the head of the company's Norway operations said. One of these 'kinds of flexibility' involved Microsoft not getting paid a license fee for each Linux and Mac computer in schools."
I don't understand (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I don't understand (Score:5, Insightful)
Not exactly. (Score:5, Informative)
No matter what runs on that machine.
Or how old it is.
Or what it does.
If you do not want to go with the Microsoft contract, you may purchase retail versions of Windows for each machine. And hope that you're fully compliant. Because the fines for piracy are far more than the cost of just paying Microsoft for every single box you have no matter what.
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Re:I don't understand (Score:4, Interesting)
Companies have been doing that a lot and for quite some time.
Its not just Microsoft, other example include SCO, MPAA, RIAA, News Corp,
They simply do it as long as they can get away with it.
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Search: Definition: "Low-hanging fruit"
Re:I don't understand (Score:5, Informative)
The usual licensing terms that Microsoft force on OEMs are that Microsoft must be paid a fee per machine sold, regardless of whether it has Windows installed on it or not. Of course the idea of this is to encourage OEMs to install Windows on every machine they sell, because they can't make a saving from not doing so. If you try to negotiate a "per copy of Windows" price instead of a "per machine" price, the licensing cost goes up to the retail cost, which is deliberately inflated to make it uneconomic.
I don't think they have that anymore to Dell... (Score:5, Insightful)
Though I am sure a lot of OEMs get the per machine treatment.
Re:I don't think they have that anymore to Dell... (Score:5, Informative)
Microsoft has been specifically forbidden in the U.S. for doing per machine sold licenses as a result of losing one of the antitrust cases. I'm not sure about the bundling B.S..
Re:I don't understand (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:I don't understand (Score:5, Interesting)
It's not about individuals buying Windows off the shelf. It's about keeping the big boxshifters (Dell et al) on the Windows treadmill.
A local grey-box assembler in Australia pays about AU$210 wholesale for an OEM copy of Vista Business. Dell pays about AU$40 for the same thing. When a basic business-capable computer can be put together for about AU$800, that difference in the MS tax between the two businesses is what's keeping Dell alive.
Dell's selling Linux boxes now, because most of the grey-box builders offer cheap computers with Ubuntu installed, and they don't want to be left behind. But you can bet your bottom dollar they'll be shitting bricks at the thought of having to compete without that MS built buffer.
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Dell's selling Linux boxes now, because most of the grey-box builders offer cheap computers with Ubuntu installed, and they don't want to be left behind. But you can bet your bottom dollar they'll be shitting bricks at the thought of having to compete without that MS built buffer.
Funny, I always thought that by offering Ubuntu in addition to the unadvertised Redhat, that Dell would be trying to hold onto its current corporate customers and attract new corporate customers that are currently using Windows and will continue to use Windows for a little while, just in case this 'Linux thing' 'ever takes off*'.
*We can debate whether or not Linux has already taken off, but from the corporate perspective, it's still a backend thing because most of their mission-critical desktop applicat
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I've been primarily using Linux for 9 years, but I personally have bought 2 copies of Windows at the store (one for my wife, one for me, in both cases because we had contract work that required it).
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Otherwise, I haven't ever noticed them getting a lot of shelf space - in the stores I frequent it's usually one shelf, down at the bottom, that has Windows,WinPro, Office, and Office Pro. Around the beginning of the year there's a big display with MS Money and Quicken competing.
Re:I don't understand (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:I don't understand (Score:4, Interesting)
To the government of Norway, people are the important ones.
Here in the USA the companies can do almost anything they want and you as a consumer is getting bent over and raped over and over again and all you do, is to say "Thank you! One more time please!" What the fuck is wrong with you?
Re:I don't understand (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I don't understand (Score:5, Interesting)
The worst part about the US society is that people are apathetic. As long as they get their Tv shows and celebrity news along with a healthy dose of bullshit about USA #1, they are happy. And they don't even have the imagination to think that people in other countries are better off.
The real funny part is that many Americans I have discussed with consider the Scandinavian countries to be socialistic but fail to realize that we have as many billionaires per capita as USA does, I even think Sweden has more per capita. Not to mention that even we have a national health care system, most of the players are private and not government run. And they make good money too. My experience is that Americans are socially dumber than Europeans and have been so brainwashed that they can not believe how bad the US society is.
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You make some good points, but given everything you say, why do you choose to live and work in the USA?
I'm not particularly pro-USA. I haven't even been there in the best part of a decade. I do think there are some things they do well or have done well though. The culture of innovation and entrepreneurship is richer and stronger than in many places in the world. Their democracy has been, and in spite of recent setbacks and policy mis-steps, still is, a big net positive for the world, IMO. The USA has the
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1. My company asked me to move here due to my skills.
2. Climate. I've lived too long in cold climate
3. Interest in space. I live not far from Kennedy Space Center and can watch the launches from my house.
4. Golf. I have around 150 18-hole courses within 1- 1.5 hours drive And I can play year around.
5. Latin women! I just love them, nuff said...
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It's a per-machine distribution, as others already mentioned. The thing is, they will give you an extra discount on every single license, for two reasons:
Old as Standard Oil - the drawback (Score:4, Interesting)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_Oil [wikipedia.org]
"Smaller companies decried the deals as being unfair because they were not producing enough oil to qualify for discounts. In 1872, Rockefeller joined the South Improvement Company which would have allowed him to receive rebates for shipping oil but also to receive drawbacks on oil his competitors shipped. When word got out of this arrangement, competitors convinced the Pennsylvania Legislature to revoke South Improvement's charter. No oil was ever shipped under this arrangement."
This is a minor modification of Standard Oil's drawback, except it works on your customers as opposed to a company supplying you a service. The basic idea is to use your monopoly power to force another business entity to give you money every time they do business with one of your competitors.
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Ignorant anomymous MS shill, c/o Slashdot (Score:3, Interesting)
I saw similar shills on a blog claiming that Office 2003 and 2007 were perfectly compatible after a poster had shown his exact problem in going between the two versions. The replies from the fanbois were insulting, information-free and arrogan
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Re:Why does this not surprise me... (Score:4, Informative)
NATO Allies:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friendly_fire [wikipedia.org]
Industrial competitors:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enercon [wikipedia.org]
and Linux using flag burning commies that are trampling on the constitution of course...
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/31975.html [technewsworld.com]
Re:Why does this not surprise me... (Score:5, Interesting)
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One could guess that the same thing happens inside the United States, not just abroad.
OEM Inflation Reduction (Score:5, Insightful)
It would be very interesting to see the implications of forcing Microsoft to move away from this kind of licensing, and present numbers based on the actual Windows copy installations instead of OEM per-machine licensing numbers. While it won't change the market much and the actual number of copies installed, the updated numbers could very well indicate a market share lower than 85% for Windows.
Just my 2c. I might be horribly wrong
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It would be very interesting to see the implications of forcing Microsoft to move away from this kind of licensing, and present numbers based on the actual Windows copy installations instead of OEM per-machine licensing numbers. While it won't change the market much and the actual number of copies installed, the updated numbers could very wel
Schools (Score:4, Interesting)
Microsoft know very well that when they issue a contract with schools to use their software, and they can sneak in the clause that no other software than theirs can be (factually or economically) used by those schools, they can almost give away their software and still make huge profits.
After all, the pupils coming out of those schools are pre-programmed to accept only Microsoft software. They don't even know there are alternatives.
When they are employed somewhere, and they find Linux or OpenOffice, they claim "I have to be trained to work with this", and the employers are faces with training costs to use open software that they don't need to spend when Microsoft software is used.
This is put on the "cost of ownership" balance, and as training and other costs involving man-hours are often more expensive than software licenses, the balance quickly tips towards using Microsoft.
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CAD and 3d applications require training, word processors do not.
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Furthermore, in many businesses employees are not selected on being computer literate. It is assumed that everyone can use a computer.
When Microsoft can twist the school system so that all young people are "Microsoft literate" instead of "computer literate", that has a very big effect on their future business and the viability of using alternative software.
Re:Schools (Score:4, Informative)
No, it has an impact on the opinion of those students about software. When I started working at Red Hat, the "non-technical" employees were given a brief, 2 hour tutorial in how to use GNOME and OOo. They must be doing all right, because as far as I know they are still employed. The reason is simple: schools don't teach people the details of how to use office suites. In high school, such things were not considered relevant to the curriculum, and in college, such things were expected to have been learned in high school. Microsoft knows that it is just a question of exposure, and the way people think about their computer. How often do you hear the word "powerpoint" used as a synonym for "presentation" or "slideshow?" I've heard people refer to a presentation created in OOo, in OpenDocument format, refer to it as a "powerpoint."
Very few people even know how to use the features of MS Office that would necessitate some level of retraining in OOo. Very people even need those features -- most people just use a word processor (I know, everyone is queuing up the, "you obviously haven't been in the workplace very" comments, to which I reply: you obviously haven't been outside your line of work much) and a presentation creator. Spreadsheets are about the only thing where the incompatibility becomes noticeable, and even then, a 10 minute tutorial on where each button is would suffice for most people. The fact of the matter is, most people are not power users, and this is no more true today than it was 30 years ago. Most people just don't know about the powerful features their software offers them.
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Where I work, the average worker is specialized on alpha sciences and other nontechnical things, and they use Word to write a letter or report. Some of them are freelancers hired at an hourly rate.
A few years ago we tried to switch to OOo. While it is true that at that time there were some minor problems, the mai
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Unfortunately, this is not true.
When I was in school, we still used typewriters, and calculators were just replacing slide rules.
But my youngest has had to submit her homework as MS Word
And my middle child has taken a for-credit "computer" class in the local college which only taught basic MS Office usage.
At least my oldest, who is in graduate school going for a PhD in comput
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This unfortunately is how it starts. They are not required to submit their homework "done in a wordprocessor", but "done in MS Word".
I have heard this discussion before. "I need a copy of MS Word". why? "because I have to use it for school". Can't you use OpenOffice.org? "No, we have to use MS Word!".
That inconvenience is usually solved with piracy, but MS will not be worried because whe
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I would be more inclined to solve that inconvenience with a visit/discussion to the teacher, followed by the prinicpal, and followed by the school board (as necessary).
Are they teaching your kid how to use a computer, or just how to push magic and mysterious buttons?
Wordpad (Score:3, Insightful)
Please do. Wordpad is a decent program, much better than MS Word, unless you need some of the feature bloat, in which case Worperfect is better.
Still I prefer Gedit for most things.
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If they can do their job using no more than Wordpad, if Wordpad is adequate for their requirements, then why would they require more?
If I am hired to do a job that requires the use of a shovel, I wouldn't expect the company to provide me with a backhoe.
Re:Microsoft og norske fylkeskommuner endrer samar (Score:2)
Same old crap M$ has been pulling for years (Score:4, Interesting)
A weasel thought occurrs (Score:1, Insightful)
You may actually get away with merely calling them different NAMES and not full companies...
Extortion? (Score:3)
Isn't that similar to the illegal per-processor licensing scheme [usdoj.gov] that Microsoft was doing over a decade ago?
what i dont understand (Score:2)
What i dont understand is how that is legal ANYWHERE in the world. How many govt types must MS own in the USA in order to get away with that? Thats just criminal behavior - akin to a mafia protection racket.. ok, so im exaggerating but not by a long stretch.
Can you imagine bridgestone knocking on your door one day demanding a "car type license" for your dunlop-
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But you still have to buy OEM licenses. This was described to me at Work by our DELL licensing representative and by Microsoft employees who gave a presentation on Vista...
Time to bust MS accounting... (Score:2)
Hmm, Wouldn't this fall under Piracy - as mentioned http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/06/17/0
Certainly this is an act of consumer fraud and thieft.
Typically Slashdot (Score:1)
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Ya, last I heard it was as tough to give up as smoking.
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Look, just like all of you, I like the Linux world much better than MS (note that I don't use the words love or hate). I agree that this shit what they did in Norway sucks. The one thing what annoys me is that every time a MS against Linux issue comes up, everyone repeats the same damn phrases, without giving any arguments, or any new argume
Ironic (Score:4, Interesting)
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Good to see we surprise you :)
I must live in a different Norway than the one you've heard of. We're only doing what all sane countries should, smack down on corporate BS when it threatens healthy competition. Our system is in place to ensure fair competition, not to "stifle it". It works very well, and discourages dirty business practices.
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I must admit that the Conservative element of our brand new centre-right government worries me in these regards; they are so eager to suck up to Americans that I'm sure they'd be willing to totally sell the farm in order to get a pat on the head from Microsoft... the parliament is unfortunately rather incompetent in technical matters, and with ideological bias thrown in, I'
Re: Microsoft Bends To Norwegian Pressure (Score:4, Funny)
Such a deal! (Score:3, Insightful)
From now on, schools will only be licensed for PCs actually using Microsoft software,
And people wonder why I set up my latest business venture on a non-Microsoft platform. It's bad enough trying to deal with quarterly taxes, reporting, regulators...why would I want to add another profit leech to that mix?
Isn't it amazing (Score:4, Interesting)
It makes you wonder why the government and/or educational bodies themselves didn't say anything about such an obvious ploy.
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"Just because you, I, or someone else does not enforce a particular clause at a given time, or if a particular clause is voided for whatever reason... The rest of the contract still applies."
Of course, contracts don't say it in these words, but the intent is the same.
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I was under the impression that (here where I live anyway) that applies to practically any contract, whether it says it in text or not.
In this case, the clause would be of advantage to the Norwegian schools. "You have to pay for a Microsoft licence for every computer" might be considered unlawful, and thus be invalidated. But the "You can get X copies of Windows for
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Re:Buyer beware (Score:5, Interesting)
This is not a contract that all schools in Norway, or the norwgian directorate for education entered into. This is Microsofts licensing option for schools, used by SOME schools and school districts. I dare say the schools who used this licensing scheme did abide by it. Parts of this licensing agreement has now been deemed unlawful.
Did you even read the slashdot summary? Some parts of the contract are illegal in norway. So I think Microsoft will have to change them, since our justice department is bought, like yours. FTA:
Re:Buyer beware (Score:5, Informative)
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