The government has become increasingly intrusive over the last 20 years.
Taxes are beyond intolerable; they are now insane. Not only that, but
it's clear that the democrats are out to increase taxes further and do
away with our personal freedoms; second amendment, digital, and
otherwise.  The one thing that the US government is supposed to do well
is protect the people.  So basically the government has failed miserably
to do the one thing that we pay taxes and elect our officials to do; and
that is protect the people.  M$ now has a carte blanc to continue it's
rape.  A license for criminal activity.

To top it all off, there is an Enron bomb simmering at the massive M$
organization that has been hushed up for years; and continues on to this
day.  A highly respected CPA has been attempting to blow the lid on this
one since 1999.  Yet no one seems to have the balls to bring it into the
limelight; note that the top execs (including Gates) of M$ have been
quietly selling off their stock in the company, as you check out the
following URL:

See:  http://www.billparish.com/msftfraudfacts.html

The wrong people have *bought* control of the legislation system.  Now
you guys can get ready for a barrage of laws to be introduced that will
legislate Linux and open source out of existence.  They may not get the
Consumer Broadband and the DMCA through, but they are going to hit us
with such a barrage of new legislation that something is probably going
to be slimed through the cracks.  So keep your eyes peeled; it's coming.

The only answer that possibly may be there is to GET THESE PARASITES OUT
OF OFFICE.  Offenders such as Daschel, Gephardt, and Hollings should be
gotten out of power.  This will require conscious political activism.


On Tue, 2002-04-16 at 13:19, David Rankin wrote:
> Antitrust Division, U.S. D.O.J.
> 
>     We the people, in order to promote fair opportunity for competition
> in the computer software and operating system markets, want to know why
> Microsoft is allowed to continue is predatory practices within the
> software market.
> 
>     Of greatest concern is Microsoft's continued ability to eliminate
> competition and harm consumers who choose Linux as a competitior to
> Microsoft. The following article by Bruce Perens exemplifies our
> complaint that Microsoft is still able to harm competition and consumers
> with its practices.
> 
>     The issues contained within the article deserve your departments
> consideration and special attention. Mr. Perens article follow below the
> signature.
> 
> --
> David C. Rankin, J.D., P.E.
> RANKIN * BERTIN, PLLC
> 1329 N. University, Suite D4
> Nacogdoches, Texas 75961
> (936) 715-9333
> (936) 715-9339 fax
> 
> ****************************************************************
> 
> The Microsoft penalty that isn't
> By Bruce Perens
> April 15, 2002, 12:00 PM PT
> 
> In its antitrust settlement with the Justice Department and nine states,
> Microsoft promised to publish technology that would allow competing
> products to interoperate with Windows. But Microsoft has sidestepped the
> penalty by crafting a technology license that excludes the company's
> only viable competitor.
> 
> Linux, which was described by Windows Division Vice President Brian
> Valentine as the long-term threat against Microsoft's core business, is
> banned from interoperating with its common Internet file system,
> otherwise known as Windows File and Printer Sharing.
> 
> The Microsoft license specifically excludes software under the General
> Public License, commonly known as the GPL. The GPL is the software
> license used by Linux and by SAMBA, a popular open-source program that
> allows non-Microsoft systems to share files and printers with Windows.
> Microsoft has also banned software under the Lesser General Public
> License, or LGPL. That license is used by the Mozilla Web browser, the
> GNOME graphical desktop, and many of the software libraries shipped with
> Linux. The GPL and LGPL are the most popular licenses used for
> open-source software, and cover tens of thousands of free programs.
> 
> A second Microsoft license on extensions used in Windows 2000 and
> Windows XP will require royalty payments, excluding all software
> produced by the open-source developer community. Because Microsoft has
> patented features of the file-sharing protocol, open-source developers
> who implement the protocol could be sued for infringement.
> 
> Microsoft is likely to use this same license on future "standards,"
> embedding patented features in the standards and excluding free software
> like Linux from use of the patents. While patented features in file
> sharing would handicap Linux from being able to exchange files over an
> office LAN (local area network), similar future efforts could ban
> open-source tools like OpenOffice and AbiWord from operating with
> documents created using Microsoft Office, and Web browsers like Mozilla
> from viewing Web sites produced with Microsoft software.
> 
> It's the share-and-share-alike provision of the GPL that Microsoft can't
> accept--the requirement that modified versions of software under the
> license be available for anyone to further distribute and modify. But
> this is the aspect of the license that made Linux a threat to Microsoft
> while even the mighty IBM could not dent Microsoft's monopoly with its
> OS/2 operating system.
> 
> The GPL, brainchild of MacArthur "genius" grant recipient Richard
> Stallman and his GNU Project, creates a fair partnership among many
> thousands of independent software developers that is difficult for
> Microsoft to swallow. Microsoft previously responded by influencing
> government and universities to choose weaker OS licenses that lack the
> share-and-share-alike provision.
> 
> Because Microsoft can make proprietary and patented enhancements to
> software under the weaker licenses, it can apply its embrace-and-enhance
> strategy: Microsoft introduces incompatibility into the Microsoft
> version of the software, and forces the public version of the software
> out of the market because it won't interoperate with the Windows
> version. Only a vendor that dominates the market could use such a
> strategy to maintain its monopoly. The GPL-licensed Linux system is the
> only one that has been able to make a dent in that monopoly.
> 
> Microsoft executives justify their position with the mantra, "We are for
> strong intellectual-property protection." But only when it's to
> Microsoft's advantage; otherwise, Microsoft wouldn't be pressuring
> others to weaken their open-source licensing. Even during the penalty
> phase of their antitrust prosecution, the company still can't settle for
> a piece of the software industry pie. Although Microsoft's compromise
> with the U.S. Department of Justice is crafted to make it seem that a
> competitor could enter, it still leaves Microsoft owning the whole pie.
> 
> This situation also illustrates the dichotomy of software patents versus
> copyright. Copyright laws protect your rights to the software that
> you've created. Even the OS advocates use copyright law to enforce their
> share-and-share-alike provisions.
> 
> In contrast, software patents create a legal monopoly that allows the
> holder to prevent someone else from creating and distributing their own
> software. If software patents were awarded justly, they might not be
> quite so bad. But according to patent expert Greg Aharonian, 95 percent
> of software patent claims are not inventions at all, and should never
> have been awarded. Blame the U.S. patent office, which rewards its
> examiners for awarding patents, not denying them, and gives them only a
> few hours to examine each application.
> 
> When an open-source developer is prosecuted under an invalid patent
> claim, can he prove that the patent is invalid or does not apply? The
> legal fees for a patent defense often exceed a million dollars. The
> little open-source developer will be forced to settle with the big
> corporation, regardless of the merits of the case. To foster open-source
> development, we need to provide developers with a safe harbor from
> software patent prosecution.
> 
> What should you do if you aren't happy about Microsoft escaping an
> antitrust penalty? Don't be passive about it. Since Microsoft hates the
> GPL so much, give them more of it to contend with: Deploy systems like
> GNU/Linux as Web servers and other infrastructure, and consider Mozilla,
> OpenOffice and Evolution for the desktop. Look around fors oftware
> projects that you can place under the GPL: internal tools, research
> work, products that you built and then didn't sell--and get your
> employer to release them.
> 
> But most importantly, let the U.S. Department of Justice and the nine
> U.S. states that want to settle with Microsoft know that you won't
> tolerate a sham. The remedies in the antitrust case must not exclude
> Microsoft's only real competitor.
> 
> 
> 
> ----
> 

> Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
> Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
-- 
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Enlightenment 0.16.5    Evolution  1.02
Registered Linux User #268899 http://counter.li.org/
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