PDA

View Full Version : MS has free software removed from U.N. paper



BWF89
November 25th, 2005, 11:02 PM
References to free software and Linux were removed from a UN document after Microsoft claimed that such software aims to 'make it impossible to make any income on software as a commercial product'

Microsoft asked for references to free software to be removed from a document presented at last week's UN World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) conference, the software giant admitted on Friday.

The Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE) is unhappy that the document was changed and claims that even though it was on the panel discussing the document, it was not made aware of Microsoft's changes.

The document, known as the Vienna Conclusions, discusses issues around IT and creativity. The original draft of the document discussed how the free software model is changing the way people do business.

"Increasingly, revenue is generated not by selling content and digital works, as they can be freely distributed at almost no cost, but by offering services on top of them. The success of the free software model is one example," stated the original document, according to the FSFE.

But the final version of the document contains no reference to free software. "Increasingly, revenue is generated by offering services on top of contents," states the final version of the document.

Thomas Lutz, the manager of public affairs at Microsoft Austria, asked for this section to be deleted as "it contains only a one-sided perspective on the ICT industry."

"The rationale for this is, that the aim of free software is not to enable a healthy business on software but rather to make it even impossible to make any income on software as a commercial product," he added.

Lutz' comments were posted on a conference blog, but Georg Greve, the president of FSFE, who was involved in drafting that section of the document, claims that no-one on his panel was aware of the blog until last week.

Greve criticised Lutz' comments as "Microsoft propaganda".

"This is so obviously stupid and nonsensical that it seems pointless to comment on it: Just another monopolist trying to uphold their monopoly by preventing freedom of markets — which is what Free Software really aims at," he said, on his blog.

But on Friday Lutz denied that the panel was unaware of these changes and confirmed that his blog postings are accurate.

"The Vienna Conclusions document was created through a democratic feedback process as requested by the committee and stated on the committee blog. Each and every participant of the conference was invited to publish contributions, share feedback and offer changes which facilitated discussion and an open exchange of positions," he told ZDNet UK. "All of our change requests were approved by the committee."

This is not the only change to the document that Microsoft brought about. In a later section of the same document, Lutz asked that a reference to the open source operating system Linux be removed as "this is only one particular — anti-commercial — specificity of the open source landscape."

Microsoft appears to have been stepping up its fight against Linux recently, with comments about open source 'dorks' and claims that Africa does not need free software.
http://linux.slashdot.org/linux/05/11/25/1947219.shtml?tid=109&tid=106&tid=219
http://news.zdnet.co.uk/software/linuxunix/0,39020390,39238443,00.htm

mrpixels0
November 25th, 2005, 11:12 PM
figures, MS use's a ton of free software to make a profit and then they say it is not profitable in an attempt (yet again as always) to make Linux look weak and inferior all the while profiting from it.

WINFS = modified EXT 3 FS for longhorn

morons.

BWF89
November 25th, 2005, 11:18 PM
WINFS = modified EXT 3 FS for longhorn
"The codename WinFS stands for Windows Future Storage but will likely change before the technology is released. In 1992, its precursor was called the Object File System (OFS) and was planned to be a part of the Cairo operating system.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WinFS

mrpixels0
November 25th, 2005, 11:29 PM
well what can i say other than sorry, i was misinformed. thanks for the correction though. i just hope that is correct info on the wiki.

Luffield
November 26th, 2005, 12:15 AM
This action looks totally pathetic to me. What is Microsoft trying to achieve? The public awareness to FOSS is growing all the time and it will keep growing, no matter what MS tries to do about it. They are fighting a battle they can't win IMO. BTW, who are the potential readers of this paper? European policy makers?
Another thing: the way I see it, calling Linux "anti-commercial" is equivalent to calling Windows "anti-free".

migo
November 26th, 2005, 01:07 AM
figures, MS use's a ton of free software to make a profit and then they say it is not profitable in an attempt (yet again as always) to make Linux look weak and inferior all the while profiting from it.

WINFS = modified EXT 3 FS for longhorn

morons.

WinFS isn't a file system, it still runs on top of NTFS.