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Microsoft at the power point [why Linux is slandered at FR]
The Economist ^ | 13 September 2003 | Economist staff

Posted on 09/13/2003 7:32:43 PM PDT by chilepepper

Governments like open-source software, but Microsoft does not

IN MAY, the city of Munich decided to oust Microsoft Windows from the 14,000 computers used by local-government employees in favour of Linux, an open-source operating system. Although the contract was worth a modest $35m, Microsoft's chief executive, Steve Ballmer, interrupted his holiday in Switzerland to visit Munich and lobby the mayor. Microsoft even dropped its prices to match Linux—a remarkable feat since Linux is essentially free and users merely purchase support services alongside it. But the software giant still lost. City officials said the decision was a matter of principle: the municipality wanted to control its technological destiny. It did not wish to place the functioning of government in the hands of a commercial vendor with proprietary standards which is accountable to shareholders rather than to citizens.

Worryingly for Microsoft, Munich is not alone in holding that view. Across the globe, governments are turning to open-source software which, unlike proprietary software, allows users to inspect, modify and freely redistribute its underlying programming instructions. Scores of national and state governments have drafted legislation calling for open-source software to be given preferential treatment in procurement. Brazil, for instance, is preparing to recommend that all its government agencies and state enterprises buy open source.

Other countries are funding open-source software initiatives outright. China has been working on a local version of Linux for years, on the grounds of national self-sufficiency, security and to avoid being too dependent on a single foreign supplier. Politicians in India have called on its vast army of programmers to develop open-source products for the same reasons. This month, Japan said it would collaborate with China and South Korea to develop open-source alternatives to Microsoft's software. Japan has already allocated ¥1 billion ($9m) to the project.

Why all the fuss? Modern governments generate a vast number of digital files. From birth certificates and tax returns to criminal DNA records, the documents must be retrievable in perpetuity. So governments are reluctant to store official records in the proprietary formats of commercial-software vendors. This concern will only increase as e-government services, such as filing a tax return or applying for a driving licence online, gain momentum. In Microsoft's case, security flaws in its software, such as those exploited by the recent Blaster and SoBig viruses, are also a cause of increasing concern.

Government purchases of software totalled almost $17 billion globally in 2002, and the figure is expected to grow by about 9% a year for the next five years, according to IDC, a market-research firm (see chart). Microsoft controls a relatively small part of this market, with sales to governments estimated at around $2.8 billion. But it is a crucial market, because when a government opts for a particular technology, the citizens and businesses that deal with it often have to fall into line. (In one notable example, America's defence department adopted the internet protocol as its networking standard, forcing contractors to use it, which in turn created a large market for internet-compliant products.) No wonder Microsoft feels threatened—the marriage of open-source software and government could be its Achilles heel.

Policymakers like open source for many reasons. In theory, the software's transparency increases security because “backdoors” used by hackers can be exposed and programmers can root out bugs from the code. The software can also be tailored to the user's specific needs, and upgrades happen at a pace chosen by the user, not the vendor. The open-source model of openness and collaboration has produced some excellent software that is every bit the equal of commercial, closed-source products. And, of course, there is no risk of being locked in to a single vendor.

That said, open-source is no panacea, and there are many areas where proprietary products are still far superior. Oracle, the world's second-largest software company, need not worry (yet) about governments switching to open-source alternatives to its database software. But Microsoft is vulnerable, because an open-source rival to its Windows operating system exists already, in the form of Linux.

If Microsoft is indeed squeezed out of the government sector by open-source software, three groups stand to benefit: large consultancy firms and systems integrators, such as IBM, which will be called in to devise and install alternative products; firms such as Red Hat or SuSE, which sell Linux-based products and services; and numerous small, local technology firms that can tailor open-source products for governmental users.

As a result, the company has been fighting back. Microsoft and its allies have sought to discredit open-source software, likening its challenge of proprietary ownership to communism and suggesting that its openness makes it insecure and therefore vulnerable to terrorism. The firm also created a controversial slush fund to allow it to offer deep discounts to ensure that it did not lose government sales to Linux on the basis of price. And Microsoft has paid for a series of studies, the latest of which appeared this week, which invariably find that, in specific applications, Windows costs less than Linux.

More strikingly, Microsoft has been imitating the ways of the open-source “community”. Last year, the firm launched a “shared source” initiative that allows certain approved governments and large corporate clients to gain access to most of the Windows software code, though not to modify it. This is intended, in part, to assuage the fears of foreign governments that Windows might contain secret security backdoors. Microsoft has also made available some portions of the source code of Windows CE, which runs on handheld PCs and mobile phones, to enable programmers to tinker with the code. Tellingly, this is a market where the company is a straggler rather than a leader.

Jason Matusow, Microsoft's shared-source manager, says that developing software requires leadership and an understanding of customer needs—both areas where proprietary-software companies excel. As for proposed legislation that would stipulate one type of software over another, it is anti-competitive and could leave users hamstrung with products that are not the best for their specific needs, says Robert Kramer, executive director of the Initiative for Software Choice, a Microsoft-supported lobby group. Microsoft will advance these views next week in Rome, where it is hosting the latest in a series of conferences for government leaders. But the signs are that many of them have already made up their minds.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Technical
KEYWORDS: communism; computers; fraud; linux; microsoft; monopoly; sco; security; terrorism; viruses
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A good summary of the Microsoft/Linux war to date... clearly certain FReepers who will go unnamed are playing their part in trying to slander Linux anyway they can.
1 posted on 09/13/2003 7:32:46 PM PDT by chilepepper
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To: rdb3
Penguin alert.

}:-)4
2 posted on 09/13/2003 7:35:36 PM PDT by Moose4 (I'm Southern. We've been refighting the Civil War for 138 years, you think we'll forget 9/11?)
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To: John Robinson; B Knotts; stainlessbanner; TechJunkYard; ShadowAce; Knitebane; AppyPappy; jae471; ...
The Penguin Ping.

Wanna be Penguified? Just holla!

Got root?

3 posted on 09/13/2003 7:41:58 PM PDT by rdb3 (Which is more powerful: The story or the warrior?)
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To: chilepepper
Aww go on...name 'em and let's hear the "slander" :). It's a slow night here anyway....
4 posted on 09/13/2003 7:42:06 PM PDT by Leroy S. Mort
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To: chilepepper
Programming for and working on Microsoft products every day puts a roof over my kids heads. But I am no zealot; there is a tool for every job. Sometimes Microsoft makes the best sense, sometimes not. But Microsoft is now feeling the forces of raw capitalism squeezing in - they must start producing superior products, or be crushed. They've been lax for far too long. Its as simple as that. Their current shoddy security practices I fear will prove their undoing.
5 posted on 09/13/2003 7:42:18 PM PDT by egarvue (Martin Sheen is not my president...)
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To: chilepepper
Ther only ones who slander Linux are those who are full of smug self-righteousness about being anti-Microsoft etc...

Me? I use both, and am a happier person for it.
6 posted on 09/13/2003 7:44:36 PM PDT by Chad Fairbanks ( I honor my personality flaws for without them I would have no personality at all.)
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To: chilepepper
It's not Linux that is the problem: it is the idea itself.

Europeans and Japanese are marvelous in improving the production process and reverse-engineer the existing process. But what about the ideas themselves, the new products? Why is it that they invariably come from the States?

This is because private ownership stimulates innovation. Undertaking a new enterprise is risky, and the only compensation for an increased risk is higher reward. Remove that possibility --- and there is no reason to take risk; no reason to develope new products. Socialists invariably miss that point, not surprisingly: socialistm is about equitable redistribution of existing wealth. Iht has failed everywhere, in all forms, to create new wealth --- even when it was protected by the military migh of the U.S. and hardly spent on defense.

This has nothing to do with the features of Linux or Microsoft's policies. The issue is at the heart of our world outlook.

7 posted on 09/13/2003 7:44:43 PM PDT by TopQuark
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To: chilepepper
Live by the monopoly, die by the monopoly.
8 posted on 09/13/2003 7:47:51 PM PDT by Imal (The World According to Imal: http://imal.blogspot.com)
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To: chilepepper
Hmm, downloading songs for free bad. Making Microsoft give away their work for free good?
9 posted on 09/13/2003 7:51:29 PM PDT by SCHROLL
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To: egarvue
Their current shoddy security practices I fear will prove their undoing.

Yer right as rain! I believe that deep within MSFT the original programming gurus, who direct and control current efforts, still have a single-user DOS mindset.

10 posted on 09/13/2003 7:54:30 PM PDT by upchuck (The Palis are a bunch of wackos with a 14th Century mentality and 20th Century toys. Kill 'em.)
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To: chilepepper
For me, Linux and FR go together ... I am reading FR on my Linux box right now, I've done this since 1998, and I've had linux since 1995 ... My current PC desktop used to be dual booted, but when I upgraded the motherboard to 2.5GHz Athlon, Win98 croaked and for some reason just wont run ... but linux (RH 9.0) does. :-)
11 posted on 09/13/2003 7:55:03 PM PDT by WOSG (Dont put Cali on CRUZ CONTROL.)
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To: upchuck
hear, hear - 2 viruses on my PC Win2K machine last 2 weeks at work. very annoying, had to get patches etc. A non-problem for linux. some sys admins are beginning to notice. hmmmm.

12 posted on 09/13/2003 7:56:54 PM PDT by WOSG (Dont put Cali on CRUZ CONTROL.)
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To: Leroy S. Mort
Bush2000, Golden Eagle, TheEngineer and me up to Labor Day
weekend, However I have since turned to a solid penguin and no longer post anti Linux bilge.
13 posted on 09/13/2003 7:56:54 PM PDT by Coral Snake (Biting commies, crooks, globalist traitors, islamofascists and any other type of Anti American)
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To: chilepepper
For the most part, the countries that refuse to buy Microsoft, such as the Germans and the Chinese, do so because they are looking for ways to weaken the United States. It has nothing to do with monopolies, antitrust, or that sort of thing. They just want to undermine U.S. exports and intellectual property.

India has a long record of doing this, too.
14 posted on 09/13/2003 7:57:35 PM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: Bush2000
A good summary of the Microsoft/Linux war to date... clearly certain FReepers who will go unnamed are playing their part in trying to slander Linux anyway they can.

I think he's talkin' bout choo, Willis. ;)

*sits in the corner with his Mac and watches the show; got no dog in this hunt*

15 posted on 09/13/2003 7:59:11 PM PDT by Timesink
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To: TopQuark
Europeans and Japanese are marvelous in improving the production process and reverse-engineer the existing process. But what about the ideas themselves, the new products? Why is it that they invariably come from the States?

With all due respect, the history of technology does not quite agree with your implication. The airplane, the automobile, electronics were all originally invented in the US. If US companies lost domestic or world share for these products it was, nearly always, the result of the companies that produced the product allowing the quality to deteriorate. When management becomes lazy or arrogant, quality suffers.

16 posted on 09/13/2003 8:01:12 PM PDT by elbucko ("Velcome to Kalyfornia, Comrade Kennedy's from Taxachusetts".)
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To: chilepepper
"playing their part in trying to slander Linux anyway they can."

The Mac crowd is welcoming you to the party...

The M$ Mafia will do anything... anything to peddle their pathetic crap they call an operating system. How dare these Munchners to try to escape the M$ HELL.
17 posted on 09/13/2003 8:01:56 PM PDT by observer5
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To: egarvue
"they must start producing superior products, or be crushed"

You got to be kidding... How about just products that WORK!
18 posted on 09/13/2003 8:03:05 PM PDT by observer5
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To: elbucko
airplane, the automobile, electronics were all originally invented in the US.

That's what I said.

19 posted on 09/13/2003 8:04:12 PM PDT by TopQuark
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To: upchuck
I believe that deep within MSFT the original programming gurus, who direct and control current efforts, still have a single-user DOS mindset.

Wow! I don't know Jack about computers, other than what I need to know and even I understood the implication of your post.

20 posted on 09/13/2003 8:05:09 PM PDT by elbucko ("Velcome to Kalyfornia, Comrade Kennedy's from Taxachusetts".)
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