Some pointers on European Software Strategy, WIPO and further reading

It’s been one of “those” months. Again.

First and foremost, the European Software Strategy has taken up a lot of time and energy for myself and others in FSFE. Having been invited to contribute our expertise to the process of drafting input into the strategy, we’ve participate in several working groups, including the one on Free Software that made it to Slashdot. That article was probably well-meant, but made representation of Free Software interests in the group harder.

The next time I would encourage people to pause to consider three things:

  • Without knowledge about the procedure into which any document is embedded it is impossible to know what a particular document means and how much influence it has.

  • People working for the European Commission have some political experience and may be aware of any particular interests motivating a specific statement, and that they are bound to inclusiveness of opinions and possibly should not choose to exclude one set of opinions or another.

  • It is practically impossible for an outsider to know which person in the Commission is responsible for which decision. The chance that anger is misdirected is high. Imagine a situation in which hundreds of angry emails are launched at you for something that you have not been responsible for, and what that does to your opinion about the group of people launching that barrage.

The obvious reaction of another proprietary software representative was of course to insinuate that FSFE were not able to maintain the procedural confidentiality customary in such a process. This was aimed at weakening our contributions and additionally implied that it would be better for future working groups not to include representatives of Free Software interests.

Suffice it to say that this leak was not helpful and primarily increased the workload and pressure of those working for Free Software interests, and that everyone we worked with as part of this process credibly explained to me that they were not responsible for it.

But tactical maneuvers and individual agendas aside, some of the discussions around the European Software Strategy were quite enlightening, and helped me gain new perspectives that I am planning to share over the next weeks and months.

In the meantime, preparations for the 13th Standing Committee on the Law of Patents (SCP) at WIPO are ongoing. Recommended reading: “Innovation Policy: The Balance Between Standards and Patent Regulation” which was published by IP-Watch.org as an inside views column and already began attracting interesting feedback.

And if you are interested in a more personal perspective on how FSFE got started, Stian interviewed me for the Fellowship Interview series. Maybe this interview will encourage you to get involved, and run for the 2009 Fellowship seat, candidates can register until 31 March 2009.

So don’t forget to register yourself. I hope to see you at the June 2009 General Assembly in Spain.

Posted in DG INFSO, European Union, Free Software Foundation Europe, United Nations, WIPO | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on Some pointers on European Software Strategy, WIPO and further reading

Gearing up for Document Freedom Day

Document Freedom Day (DFD) was launched in 2008 as a global day for the promotion and awareness of Document Freedom in particular, as well as Open Standards and interoperability in general. 205 teams from around the world registered for the first edition of Document Freedom Day. The things they did ranged from mini-conferences and hands-on lessons for applications supporting ODF, such as OpenOffice.org, over creation of awareness by taking to the streets and engaging people in discussions about Document Freedom, to awarding a special prize to the Foreign Ministry in Germany for its exemplary support for Open Standards and Free Software.

This year, Document Freedom Day will be on 25 March, and now is the time to start preparing for it.

Here are some thoughts on the why, the how, and the what.

Why Document Freedom Day is special

While software remains abstract to many people, documents are something that we can all relate to. They are central to everyone’s daily life and work. Document Freedom affects us all, and also makes it easier for people to understand Open Standards and interoperability in other areas. Document Freedom allows to build awareness for these issues with people who are not computer experts, but computer users. Declaring a global day for Document Freedom allows us to raise our voice together, it provides a rallying point in the year where we can put this issue on the agenda and into the newspapers.

An elevator pitch for Document Freedom

Like all Open Standards, Document Freedom provides users with the freedom to choose their application freely, and yet still be able to communicate and collaborate with others. This freedom of choice provides the basis for competition in the field of text processing software. Where there is healthy competition, companies and software developers are driven to innovate, and monopoly pricing becomes impossible. So Document Freedom means better software and lower cost. Document Freedom also means that yesterday’s documents can easily be read with tomorrow’s software, protecting and preserving your data against forced vendor incompatibilities through the upgrade treadmill.

For governments, Document Freedom translates into control over its data, now and in the future. It also means that citizens can freely choose their software to communicate with the government. And finally, Document Freedom protects against monopoly rent extorted from the government, providing the benefit of lower taxes to society.

Some ideas for DFD

If you already have an idea for Document Freedom Day, you can move right ahead. You don’t need to ask for permission and there is no paperwork, although it does make sense to register your team and let others know what you are doing. By sharing our local activities with others, we give visibility to Document Freedom on a global scale.

In case you don’t yet know what you would like to do, the DFD ’08 team page has activities from all around the world that might give you an idea. It might also be a good idea to subscribe to the  mailing list for DFD teams in order to find others to work with, or exchange ideas and plans. There are also various companies that have declared their support for Document Freedom Day. If you work for one of these companies, you could ask around to find out what others are planning. If your company is not yet listed, you could suggest to take DFD ’09 as an opportunity to declare your support for Document Freedom.

DFD ’09 is coming. Let’s make it an even bigger success than 2008.

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Why the Commission is doing the right thing on antitrust

Previously on “European Commission Antitrust”

Free Software Foundation Europe has been supporting the European Commission’s DG Competition in its antitrust work since 2001, when it first offered its expertise to the former Competition Commissioner Mario Monti. In 2003 it brought the Samba team to the table, and our cooperation was able to provide the Commission with substantial evidence for its final decision in 2004. We stood by the side of the Commission in the European Court of First Instance when most of the industry had meanwhile accepted out-of-court settlements with Microsoft, and saw the case through to the end.

Of course the European Committee for Interoperable Systems (ECIS), which joined the case in 2005, was a seminal contributor to victory in the court case(s). Indeed it seems unlikely that the European Commission would have had such a complete success in Court without their support. But the steadfast support by FSFE and Samba played an important role in keeping the ball rolling with the Commission, and the technical experts of the Samba team were invaluable witnesses in Court.

This was the first time that the Free Software community got so involved in an antitrust case, and many people raised the question why FSFE should be actively pursuing this issue instead of big industry working the problem out amongst themselves.

Part of that answer is already contained in the above paragraphs. FSFE is not willing, indeed incapable, to compromise on the long-term interests of the Free Software community for short-term financial benefits. The settlements that parts of industry entered as part of this court case were financially beneficial for them, but weakened the case and had strategic impact that continues until today and radiates into apparently unrelated issues, e.g. the MS-OOXML standardisation process.

The other part of this answer is the immediate and tangible benefit of better software with more interoperability.

Ciaran O’Riordan described this in one of his blog posts. Summarised in my own words: The antitrust victory gave Samba direct access to necessary information to achieve interoperability, and re-established the constructive dialogue with Microsoft’s engineers, which had previously been cut off by Microsoft’s management for reasons of strategic monopoly abuse. Now, whenever the Samba team hits a part in the specification that is unclear, or discovers behaviour of Microsoft servers that is unexpected, they can ask Microsoft, and will receive a timely and helpful answer.

This, and not the record fines, is the true benefit and remedy of the case. As explained in an earlier article: Competition is slowly being restored, and step by step innovation is being re-enabled.

The Opera Complaint

As a good friend of mine likes to say: “Microsoft is a one-trick pony, but it does that one trick really well.”

The same behaviour that we observed in the workgroup server market also exists in other markets, so the above establishes the context for the ECIS complaint with the request to apply similar remedies to other areas and the  Opera complaint specifically on monopoly abuse in the browser / web standard domain. FSFE supported that complaint because we know that Free Software browsers such as Mozilla or KDE’s Konqueror are suffering from the same problems. We even came across scenarios where a migration to Free Software had to be rolled back to Microsoft’s Internet Explorer because of manipulations on the protocol level that made using Free Software impossible.

It is good news for Free Software and the free internet that the European Commission has decided to take up the Opera complaint.

Microsoft’s perspective on the whole issue was a bit different for obvious reasons. Since the media was very critical of them in the previous case, they immediately started to spin the story to journalists, which was reflected in various articles that are critical of the Commission for being anti-competitive and anti-innovative, and portrayed Microsoft as the victim of discrimination. Some comments in various discussion forums also reflected that spin, asking why Apple or GNU/Linux distributors were not treated the same way if they only ship one browser.

The answer is so simple and should be obvious: Because in order to abuse a monopoly, one first needs to obtain a monopoly.

Monopolies themselves are not illegal. But they translate into excessive power over a market and its neighbouring markets. So when a monopoly uses market-distorting practices to leverage neighbouring markets, antitrust authorities have the responsibility to curb that practice, impose effective remedies, and restore competition and innovation.

As Mitchell Baker of the Mozilla Foundation pointed out in her recent blog posting, there is little doubt among the experts involved in these issues that the Commission has done the right thing also in this case:

Last month the European Commission stated its preliminary conclusion that “Microsoft’s tying of Internet Explorer to the Windows operating system harms competition between web browsers, undermines product innovation and ultimately reduces consumer choice.”

In my mind, there is absolutely no doubt that the statement above is correct. Not the single smallest iota of doubt. I’ve been involved in building and shipping web browsers continuously since before Microsoft started developing IE, and the damage Microsoft has done to competition, innovation, and the pace of the web development itself is both glaring and ongoing. […]

The big question will now be: Which remedies will be effective to restore competition and innovation? That question is a bit more complex than it was in the previous case because the abuse is a combination of protocol manipulation and tying, so an effective remedy would also have to address both aspects.

As we have done in the previous antitrust case, FSFE is looking to work closely with the affected Free Software projects and communities to identify the best possible remedies, to support the European Commission in its technical investigation, and (if necessary) to help the European Commission uphold its decision in Court.

We therefore invite all affected projects to get in touch with us, will actively seek to involve core participants and projects, and would like to take Mitchell Baker up on her invitation to discuss the best possible remedies for Mozilla.

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Topic of 2009: Interoperability

It seems the topic of 2008 will also be the key topic of 2009. This is hardly surprising.

Interoperability is at the connecting point of innovation and standardisation, of Free Software and proprietary software, of SME’s and large enterprises, and is intrinsically connected with questions of public procurement and regulation of the market. From the perspective of a Free Software advocate, lack of interoperability is possibly the single largest obstacle to wide Free Software adoption today.

Aspects of this debate include the MS-OOXML standardisation process, the discussion about IDABC‘s European Interoperability Framework (EIF), and questions of antitrust, such as the complaint of ECIS, or the more recent complaint of Opera Software.

But not all parts of this debate are so visible. A recent workshop on “IPR in ICT standardisation” by the European Commission’s DG Enterprise has received little to no public echo. An analysis of the inherent conflicts between patents and standardisation in followup to this workshop has been published by FSFE as “Analysis on balance: Standardisation and Patents” in December 2008.

A very similar discussion is scheduled for March 23 to 27 at the UN WIPO in Geneva in its Standing Committee on the law of Patents.

Similar issues also come up in the drafting of the “European Software Strategy” by DG INFSO, alongside questions of how to promote innovation, SME’s, what position to take on Free Software and several other issues.

What is common to all these discussions is that in almost all cases will all parties to these discussions agree that Open Standards are the basis of interoperability. Unfortunately these parties often mean something else when using the term. As already outlined in an earlier blog post about “An emerging understanding of Open Standards“, it seems to be possible to get agreement on certain points for approximately 80% of the global software industry. Agreement in Europe with its strong dominance of SME’s is likely to be higher.

This understanding – and a dialogue with policy makers, business representatives, and non-profit organisations – has become the basis of an Open Standards definition that has consequently been adopted in various places, including by the Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE).

This definition of Open Standards seems a good starting point for the debates of 2009.

Posted in DG Competition, DG INFSO, European Union, Free Software Foundation Europe, IDABC, IGF, United Nations, WIPO | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Topic of 2009: Interoperability

Catching up with the backblog

As you will have noticed, FSFE had some issues with its previous blogging platform.

In theory, they should have been resolved much earlier, but as Yogi Berra correctly stated: “In theory, there is no difference between practice and theory. In practice, there is.” Personnel issues, high-priority overrides of the personal and professional kind, everything seemed determined to stop the migration. But now – thanks to the hard work of Cristian Rigamonti and Ivan Jelic, in particular – the new blogging platform of FSFE is finally online.

For me that means I no longer have any excuse not to resume blogging.

Having come back from FOSDEM 2009 last night, my task list is full to the point of despair, and there are plenty of things that I wanted to write about, but never did. So you can expect that I will work on the “backblog” for the next weeks, hopefully resulting in a higher frequency of various interesting items.

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Re-enacting the parrot sketch

Calling the past months work-intensive would be something of an understatement. Fortunately my colleagues in FSFE did an excellent job of working on the same project in various countries while I was partially absent. They also managed to put out some interesting comments on the IS29500 approval. What I can say on the issue is unfortunately fairly limited by the various shrouds of secrecy over what in my personal opinion should be like any other public interest process that affects the lives of citizens.

Why are various national standardisation bodies not accountable to the public they represent in ISO? Why can the public not know what is going on? If I had a magic wand, non-accountability and intransparency would be my top two issues to fix in all of this. It could also be a good idea to get some procedural buffs from the United Nations to make things more predictable and reliable on a procedural level. Had you told me a year ago I’d be wishing for the procedural efficiency of the United Nations, disbelief would have been a likely reaction. Now the United Nations appear extremely well-functioning in comparison.

Due procedure would allow for fair dialog based on substantial considerations. In this case it would have allowed discussing technical issues and answering the most fundamental question for any specification: Is it technically sound so it can be approved without further review or modifications?

This question can be answered on technical grounds. There is no need for attempts at authoritative arguments, assertions about the quality of future editorial work, or referrals to the maintenance process. Attempts at answering that question in any of these ways indeed translate into “No, it is not.”

Of course there are also other questions that are relevant when it comes to standardisation – including the “Six questions to national standardisation bodies” that FSFE put out around July 2007. Answering some of these issues is a little less clear-cut than the technical side, but can be done in an environment where people are accountable for their actions and statements. The media could have helped a great deal at keeping that dialog honest.

As accountability and transparency are sadly lacking, the past months often seemed like a gigantic, world-wide re-enactment of Monty Python’s parrot sketch with the involvement of several multinationals and billions of EUR spent. I am pretty sure the original was more cost effective — and thanks to the wonders Gnash we all get to enjoy this classic here:

My only question is: Where is the standardisation store of ISO’s brother so I can return IS29500?


[update@20080404]

Thanks to Octavio Ruiz, this blog entry is now also available in Spanish.

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FSFE’s Sun Fire T-1000

Most of you have probably seen in FSFE’s latest newsletter that Sun kindly donated a SunFire T-1000 server to FSFE’s Fellowship.

And while not as probiotic as other recent blog entries, I think that some of you should be curious to have a look at its insides. Here is a picture of the actual machine, click on the picture to get a larger version:

But in the tradition of cool "Freedom Figher" pictures, allow me to also share the following:

"Freedom Fighter with his faithful T-1000"

Many thanks to Sun for this very nice machine.

At the upcoming SFscon in Bolzano, people will get together for a Fellowship sprint to keep this baby busy.

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An emerging understanding of Open Standards

Open Standards have been somewhat of a holy grail for some time now. Interoperability and vendor-independence, the IT industries’ equivalent of eternal life, are the prize for those who find the grail that are Open Standards. This conquest took decades, has spawned many different definitions of what people might call an Open Standard, but has also left many of the seekers with a much better understanding of what it is we really seek.

Some of the more interesting definitions are

But there are also many others. Based on practical experience, the understanding of Open Standards continued evolving in various fora, including the Dynamic Coalition on Open Standards (DCOS) at the United Nations Internet Governance Forum, where governments, industry and civil society discuss Open Standards in an open and inclusive way. There are also the recent discussions around the European Interoperability Framework, the controversy around ISO approval of MS-OOXML, the various discussions on interoperability in almost any country, the effects of lacking interoperability on procurement cost, including at WIPO, and so on.

Allow me to share with you five criteria that have emerged from dialog between stakeholders, and constitute a concise and balanced definition of what an Open Standard should be. Such a standard is

  1. subject to full public assessment and use without constraints in a manner equally available to all parties;
  2. without any components or extensions that have dependencies on formats or protocols that do not meet the definition of an Open Standard themselves;
  3. free from legal or technical clauses that limit its utilisation by any party or in any business model;
  4. managed and further developed independently of any single vendor in a process open to the equal participation of competitors and third parties;
  5. available in multiple complete implementations by competing vendors, or as a complete implementation equally available to all parties.

It is obviously impossible for a new format or protocol to meet the fifth criteria, so there will have to be a grace period for new protocols of formats until it is fully applied. There also needs to be active and continuous checking of Open Standards against this definition to prevent abuse or false labelling, but this would be true for any definition. In balance I do consider the five points presented above to be rather solid.

One of the first projects to adopt this definition is Science, Education and Learning in Freedom (SELF), including the Internet Societies in the Netherlands and Bulgaria, various Universities, some NGOs (including FSFE) and is funded by the European Union in its framework programmes.

Ideally we should all come to some common understanding of what constitutes an Open Standard. Considering that there are some parties that base their business model on lack of Open Standards and have a commercial interest in falsely declaring proprietary formats as Open Standards, that is unrealistic.

But if the majority of politics, industry and society at large came to a common understanding on the issue, that would probably be sufficient. So I hope that we’ll be able to continue this discussion further at the IGF in Rio.

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WIPO GA: Current situation, and FSFE’s statement

The good news first: The outcome of the Development Agenda discussions has been accepted by the Assembly of the Member States of WIPO, so there is now formally a Development Agenda for WIPO to discuss the substantial issues. Definitely a big step forward.

But overall the WIPO GA continues being confrontational, with the issue of WIPO Director General Idris being at the center of the conflict. It has all the elements of a proper scandal: accusations, attempted justifications, and rebuttals by the Joint Inspection Unit of the United Nations. If you want to know more, you might be interested in this IP-Watch.org article.

The other critical issue is around reduction of the fees on the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT), which are demanded by the United States and Japan as a 15% flat reduction, and which Brazil and others would like to see only as a reduction for developing countries. And of course there will be the issue of funding for the Development Agenda, among other things. All of this creates a rather complex web of interests in which the various groups are trying to negotiate an agreement.

As a result, the GA is now far behind schedule even though there are night sessions and yesterday the chair asked for a session on Saturday. So there is almost no way to speak as NGO, but thankfully the chair offered to submit statements in writing for the protocol. So here is a copy of the statement I submitted on behalf of FSFE yesterday. You can also find it online at http://fsfeurope.org/projects/wipo/statement-20070928 and there is a nice PDF Version (44k):

    Assemblies of the Member States of WIPO

    Forty-Third Series of Meetings, Geneva, 24 September – 3 October 2007

    Intervention by Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE)

    The FSFE has comments on various items on the agenda of this year’s Assemblies of the Member States. In the interest of time and on invitation of the chair, we are submitting these comments in writing for your kind consideration.

    Considerations for WIPO’s procurement decisions

    On the question of WIPO’s technical needs and systems, as discussed in multiple agenda items, FSFE submits that WIPO should follow the established principles of vendor independence, interoperability and Open Standards for all its procurement. References in this area are provided by the European Commission’s IDABC European Interoperability Framework (EIF) or the work done on the subject in other Member States.

    Experience indicates that cost related to lack of interoperability easily accounts for up to 40% of IT budgets, and is a major cost driver for all users of information technology, including public bodies. This lack of interoperability is a common result of vendor specific procurement decisions and lack of Open Standards.

    Interoperability and Open Standards are also central for the issue of sustainable storage of and perpetual access to data and information. FSFE submits that it is in direct conflict to the mandate of WIPO as a multi-stakeholder intergovernmental organisation to depend on any particular company’s products for access to its data and communication with its Member States.

    FSFE therefore suggests that the Assemblies of the Member States establishes clear guidelines for WIPO’s management to ensure vendor independence, interoperability and Open Standards in all its procurement decisions.

    On a Development Agenda for WIPO

    FSFE congratulates the Member States of WIPO for their agreement to work together on a concrete set of issues to establish a Development Agenda of WIPO. We have followed this process for the past years and continue to offer our input and assistance in allowing these discussions and their implementation to come to a successful outcome.

    Pertaining to the comments on interoperability, Open Standards, and vendor-independence, we believe the same issues should also be included in the Development Agenda discussions, specifically in Cluster A, including, but not limited to, items 7, 10 and 11.

    Regarding Cluster B, in particular items 22 and 23, FSFE would like to emphasise the role of Free Software to establish and maintain an open, competitive and innovative technology industry. Free Software is often the only remaining competitor in markets that saw abuse of neighboring monopolies, and the best choice to re-establish competition.

    For reference, we would like to point out the investigation conducted since 1998 by the European Commission in this field, and the recent decision of the European Court of First Instance. The decision concerned two markets, one of which was the workgroup server market. In this market, due to massive leveraging of desktop monopoly into the market based on obstruction of interoperability, Free Software is left as the only remaining competitor, currently providing the basis for competing products by no less than four major vendors.

    Pertaining to Cluster C, FSFE would like to emphasise the importance to discuss the role of Free Software in technology transfer and capacity building, as agreed upon during the World Summit on the Information Society in Geneva, referenced in item 24. Citing section C3, 10, point e of the WSIS Plan of Action:

    "Encourage research and promote awareness among all stakeholders of the possibilities offered by different software models, and the means of their creation, including proprietary, open-source and free software, in order to increase competition, freedom of choice and affordability, and to enable all stakeholders to evaluate which solution best meets their requirements."

    Overall, FSFE considers it imperative to dedicate sufficient resources to the upcoming Development Agenda discussions within WIPO to bring this work to concrete results in a timely manner.

    On the future activities of the SCCR and SCP

    Regarding agenda item 17, the future activities of the SCCR, FSFE would like to reaffirm its support for the September 2006 Joint Statement of Certain Civil Society, Industry and Rightholders Representatives Regarding the Draft Basic Proposal for SCCR 15.

    Considering the large amount of pressing issues in the area of Copyright and related rights, including a potential treaty on Access to Knowledge, the issue of Limitations and Exceptions, and the issue of alternative Copyright-based system to incentivise creativity, such as Creative Commons and Free Software, FSFE believes the SCCR should priorise these issues over more meeting devoted to issues that are unlikely to see consensus in the next years.

    FSFE furthermore in reference to agenda item 19 believes that the SCP should analyse the effect of patenting in the area of IT standards, incorporating a perspective on potential antitrust issues, which in our experience are relevant to the full picture.

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Groklaw article: Microsoft, antitrust and innovation

[http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20070923170905803]

Microsoft, antitrust and innovation
— by Georg C. F. Greve

If one were to believe Microsoft, antitrust law is for sore losers who are too lazy to innovate, and the decision of the European Court of Justice against Microsoft was to the detriment of consumers around the world. One might even believe that any company with large enough market share would now have to fear the wrath of the European Commission and its anti-innovation bloodhounds.

At first the notion seemed ludicrous, but then more and more blogs repeated it and serious media started picking it up. Even representatives of the US government spoke out on behalf of Microsoft, to the annoyance of Neelie Kroes, the European Union’s antitrust commissioner.

When the European Court of First Instance announced its decision, the first reaction of Microsoft was to talk about compliance with the ruling and that it was only partially confirmed by the court. Then people read the decision.

There was only one modification to the Commission’s case, relating to the trustee provision. This was because the EC should not have asked an independent third party selected from a list provided by Microsoft to monitor compliance. It should have supervised this itself. In essence the Commission was told they had been too forthcoming with Microsoft. This was not a partial annulment by any means, it could rather be seen as going beyond what the Commission had decided.

During the hearing, Microsoft had tried to attack the case on procedural and administrative grounds, no matter how likely or unlikely. None of this stuck, because the European Commission had done its homework, and done an extraordinarily thorough, careful and balanced investigation. It also showed extraordinary patience with Microsoft’s attempts to delay.

Declaring antitrust law to be "of the devil" and to distract from the situation by pointing fingers at others was really the last available option to distract from the facts of the case.

This allegation does not hold up to examination though. Allow me to tell you why.

1st Fallacy: That the Ruling Punishes Innovation

The first fallacy was that this kind of ruling punished the innovator. Who were the innovators? Real Inc. innovated the streaming media market, and Novell was the innovator in the workgroup server market. In both cases Microsoft unfairly leveraged its desktop monopoly to drive the innovator out of the market. That is why future innovators in Silicon Valley often do not receive venture capital if they do not have defensive strategies against Microsoft or at least a co-existence strategy. Quite often that strategy is to become successful enough to become an attractive purchase for Microsoft. Not much of a reward for innovation.

One of the functions of antitrust law is to create an environment that is protective of the innovator. Microsoft has not been an innovator.

2nd Fallacy: That Google, Apple and All Successful Companies Need to Fear

The second claim, echoed widely by major media outfits, is that Google and Apple should now be worried about similar lawsuits because of their large market shares. But antitrust law is not about having large market shares. Antitrust law says nothing about offering a product and gaining monopolies. As long as there is no distortion of competition in neighboring markets, this is legitimate.

What antitrust law cares about in this context is leveraging monopolies of one market into another through abusive practices. The Commission found Microsoft employing two abusive practices: bundling and the deliberate obstruction of interoperability.

Horatio Gutierrez of Microsoft is quoted asking "If Microsoft can’t bundle an audio player with Windows, why can Nokia bundle a camera with a phone?" — the answer seems obvious.

It is questionable whether Nokia has 95% market share in mobile phones, but even if that were the case: There is currently no separate market for mobile phone add-on cameras, so there is no neighboring market to be be distorted by monopoly abuse.

If Nokia had 95% domination and if there were such a market, Nokia might find itself in conflict with antitrust authorities if it took active steps to ensure that a) all its phones always came with the camera included and there is no way to buy the phone separately; b) removal of the camera would be very difficult for a normal user and potentially end up damaging the phone; c) the phone would be built in ways to make sure cameras of other vendors would not work and it would be impossible to buy both together.

Microsoft was found doing all of the above with its media player.

Interoperability:

The second abusive practice the Commission found Microsoft guilty of is the deliberate obstruction of interoperability, generally achieved through arbitrary and willful modification of Open Standards. This makes it impossible for competitors to write interoperable software. This is to the detriment of customers, who find themselves locked into the products of one vendor, the antithesis of competition.

Microsoft is comparatively silent on this charge and for good reasons. Vendor lock-in is precisely what public administrations around the world are concerned about. It is a driving force behind the growing momentum on Open Standards, and Microsoft’s refusal to end the obstruction might not go down too well.

It might look much worse in the light of public statements that Microsoft will not even commit to standards that it has proposed itself, such as the recent Microsoft OfficeOpenXML (OOXML) format it wants approved by ISO.

The less people talk about the interoperability side of the case, the better for Microsoft. Otherwise people might connect MS-OOXML to the fact that Microsoft initiated the standardisation effort in the workgroup server area to open the market and later started obstruction of interoperability on its own standard to drive the innovator out of the market.

As long as other companies avoid these practices they will have nothing to fear from the European Commission.

Despite what Microsoft and its partners would have you believe, monopoly abuse is not good for you. It only benefits the monopolist at the expense of competition, innovation and society at large. Antitrust law was created to address this issue and to protect the interests of society.

If a monopolist tells me that antitrust law harms innovation, I have to clearly state that I am not convinced.

Neither should you be.


ADDITION: On the same subject you might be interested in the ”Logic from another planet” blog entry about previous activities of the people speaking out on behalf of the United States.

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