Microsoft Word sale prohibited as of Jan. 11, fix promised
Tue Dec 22, 2009 2:23PM EST 


Office workers of America, enjoy your Christmas break. Because come the new 
year, things could get a little hairy around the office. Microsoft Word is now 
scheduled to be prohibited from sale beginning January 11, 2010. That's less 
than three weeks away. The good news: Microsoft has promised a fix, one which 
will be rolled out before the deadline arrives. 

If you don't understand, you might have simply missed this story, or dismissed 
it as something that Microsoft would ultimately use its considerable clout to 
have pushed under a legal rug.

But it's no joke. In August of this year, a court sided with a small Canadian 
company called i4i that holds a 1998 patent on the way the XML language is 
implemented, finding that Microsoft was in violation of that patent. The 
result: Microsoft was told to license the code in question from i4i or 
reprogram it, or else Microsoft Word would have to be removed from sale in the 
market. The original ruling gave Microsoft until October to get its legal 
affairs in order, but appeals pushed that out a bit.

Now a federal court has upheld that original ruling -- plus a fat, $290 million 
judgment against the company -- imposing the new January 11 D-Day on the 
matter. Microsoft Word and Microsoft Office will both be barred from sale as of 
that date -- though naturally you'll still be able to use copies of Word and 
Office that you already own, and Microsoft will be allowed to keep supporting 
those copies.

Unless Microsoft ships the promised technical workaround very quickly, things 
are going to get extremely dicey in the computer world, and fast. Not only will 
retail outlets selling shrinkwrapped copies of the software be affected, 
computer manufacturers (who complained loudly about this injunction when it was 
announced) who bundle Word and Office on the computers they sell will also be 
seriously impacted by the ruling.

There's always a chance things will change again as the January 11 deadline 
approaches, but if your company requires Word or Office to keep operations 
running, it might not be a bad idea to stock up on a few extra copies now.


http://tech.yahoo.com/blogs/null/158160

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