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Microsoft Antitrust Trial: BSD does not run on PCs and more nonsense...

It is not every day that you get to see a European Court grand jury of thirteen judges. Given the importance of this case, such a high level of legal authority does indeed seem necessary: This may be the last test for whether antitrust is a workable tool for information technology industry.

Day two continued where day one had ended: The tie-in of Windows Media Player into Microsoft Windows. Although this is not the part of the case that the Free Software Foundation Europe and Samba Team are mainly interested in, it was a very interesting morning.

Making false statements while maintaining a straight face seems to be a necessary skill for Microsoft representatives. Not only do they keep claiming that removing the Windows Media Player would cripple Microsoft Windows so badly that the operating system would become dysfunctional, they also claimed the same was true for Apple and its Quicktime player. But my personal favorite was the claim that the BSD operating systems do not work on PCs, a blatant lie told in response to a direct question from one of the judges.

In the afternoon, Microsoft then declared that its stripped version of Windows XP without Media Player was not adopted by any OEM, a fact that surprises the unwary listener in so far as Microsoft said it could not offer such a version. But it does not surprise in so far as Microsoft charges the same price for the stripped down version that it charges for the version including the Media Player. It also claimed that all operating systems used for PCs today come with media functionality -- repeating the blatant lie that the BSD Systems do not run on normal PCs.

The day was also another lesson in the always popular game of "how to say nothing with Powerpoint slides while making it seem very important." Six rectangles, three of them surrounded by a box labelled "Windows Operating Systems" -- voila, you have proven that Windows Media Player cannot be removed. A timeline with a couple of product names by their release dates and screenshots of graphical user interfaces for media playing -- voila, you have proven that the media player is integrated into the system.

Naturally, RealNetworks was much discussed throughout the day, but since they accepted Microsofts money to withdraw from the case, they were unable to support the evidence they originally brought in. In fact: RealNetworks now sub-licenses the Microsoft Windows Media Format and therefore the incentive for any media supplier to actually encode in Real Media Format is greatly reduced. While my sympathy for a proprietary vendor and format is certainly limited, this does seem like RealNetworks has really given up on competing with Microsoft and are happily transforming themselves into a dependent sub-entity which can be used as fig-leaf by Microsoft to make a claims in court about being competitors.

Another fairly long discussion was about the US remedies, despite them having proven to be entirely ineffective. Apparently these remedies essentially boiled down to leaving the Media Player installed and only removing the startup icon -- so the player will automatically come up whenever a user clicks on a WMF stream. This is what people referred to as a "deactivated" version of the player, which could be "reactivated" by the user. Fortunately Microsoft explained to everyone present that this was not a problem, because the code is only started to play WMF streams and does not keep running afterwards. Isn't that exactly what it means to have a program installed?

According to Microsoft we do not need to worry, however, because as they said: "Windows Media Format is an open standard." Indeed, Microsoft seems to apply its own definition of "open standard", which essentially appears to boil down to "as long as it comes with a 25 page licensing agreement that gives us total control over what people and competitors do with this, it is an open standard."

But at least Microsofts experts had many nice numbers to base their statements on. Who really cares that none of these numbers had independent third-party confirmation or were somehow verifiable? Fortunately the interveners on the Commission side did a very good job at showing the gaps and manipulations done by Microsoft and its supporting parties.

The Court is now adjourned for the day, tomorrow it will continue with the interoperability case, which should be even more interesting.

Comments

Re: That is not quite how it works

I understand your argument, Georg. But wouldn't it be better to ask MS to add at least one free codec to their Media Player like Ogg Vorbis or open their WMF format instead of forcing MS to remove the Media Player?

The "Mediaplayer is integrated into the system and can't be removed" excuse

First of all, before making a statement related to my comment's subject: A nice report, I really enjoyed reading it.

Now let's get into it:

Claiming WMP is a part of Windows itself and cannot be removed could mean three things:

1. WMP code is running inside the kernel and not a loadable module (driver) - not likely at all

BAD DESIGN I (Unneeded use of kernel mode)

2. Something like Explorer.exe is using parts of WMPs code (and thus starting either WMP itself or using one of its libraries) - If that's the case Microsoft should probably be slapped for such bad application and operating system design. That could nicely be compared with linking bash against libvorbis - good idea indeed.
Anyways, if that's the case those functions could be moved outside the WMP library or WMP itself and put into an additional library ONLY containing those shared functions - problem solved - WMP ready to be removed.

BAD DESIGN II (Not using a shared lib where it would make sense)

3. And there's yet another way the problem could have arised: Someone thinking he's pretty smart simply started claiming that without thinking that others, who might have a slight clue about both program and OS internals aswell, would neither start thinking nor arguing about it.

LIE

If there's an additional possiblity, let me (us) know.

Personally I think the third one is the case. I don't think any of the first two things are true. However, if point one or point two turns out to be the problem, it might have been done intentionally.

That is not quite how it works

Ideally you would be right, but that is not quite how it works in reality. By bundling the Windows Media Player with Microsoft Windows, vendors for media streams know they can rely on finding WMF support on 90% of all desktops. Which means they are increasingly only supporting WMF and leave aside all alternatives.

This is how Microsoft -- although they themselves said their player and format was worse than RealPlayer -- have managed to go from very little to something like 77% of the streams distributed on the internet today.

Re: Microsoft Antitrust Trial: BSD does not run on PCs and more nonsense...

I just wonder why MS wants to tell us that BSD is not a operating system for PCs? At least BSD systems like FreeBSD come with some media player so they could argue like on MacOS and GNU/Linux that they come with a media player, too.
I don't know a lot about the Windows Media Player. Is it integrated into the system and can't be removed? If it's just like any other program and can be replaced i don't see why Windows shouldn't come with the Media Player?
I think the important things are that every additional program can be replaced and the interfaces are open for interoperability with other operating systems and programs.

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