Company Files Motion to Stop IE Distribution 580
RobHornick writes "According to CNET News, Eolas Technologies, a company that's already won a patent infringement judgement against Microsoft regarding Internet Explorer, has filed a motion to stop Microsoft from distributing its IE software until they remove Eolas' patented technology for running plug-ins, or pay up for a license."
Famous last words: (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Famous last words: (Score:5, Insightful)
I, for one, (haha! not going to say it!) despise Flash and similar plugins, but this is one of many patent lawsuits that could dramatically alter the landscape of the software development community as a whole.
Eolas doesn't mind other software (Score:3, Informative)
Is this unfair, well I suppose it could be seen that way, but MS have been trying to drive browser standards in their own direction.
Re:Eolas doesn't mind other software (Score:4, Interesting)
For now... What happens when a few years down the road, the guy running Eolas decides he wants a new jet or yacht? Maybe he just wants to see how much he can get his net worth up to. Who knows what he's planning or thinking.
He's already shown his stance on IP patents, I have no doubts that suing other browser companies is not that far off, regardless of what he says.
Ummm, MINOR point (Score:3, Informative)
Eolas is privately owned. No shareholders.
Re:Eolas doesn't mind other software (Score:3)
mmmmm... No.
IE finally is starting to support CSS in IE 6, but still fails miserably in several places, like in fixed positioning and absolute positioning of background elements. There is a whole plethora of CSS rules that IE violates. It doesn't do ANY generated content, either. It doesn't even do width: and height: appropriately.
Extensions aren't a problem. What is a problem is
* extensions which modify standard behavior
* lack of standards compatibilit
Re:Famous last words: (Score:4, Informative)
Don't worry, Microsoft will punish Eolas for uttering those words, just as they punished NVidia for those same words.
Schwab
Re:Famous last words: (Score:3, Interesting)
By freezing NVidia out of the DirectX-9 design talks, and working actively with ATI to optimize DX9 and the Radeon products toward each other. They also deliberately cobbled up DX9 standards to be incompatible with what NVidia was known to have on the drawing board. The most obvious example is DX9's use of 24-bit floats. There was no reason to define a wonky 3-byte quantity, except to be incompatible with NVidia's 16- and 32-bit floats. There are several other examples; ju
Start Reading... (Score:5, Informative)
First off Eolas has filed the same patent three times (been rejected) and has been narrowing it down.
Basically the patent states:
Any inlining function that renders on the client that gets information from another server. However javascript is not affected, but activex and other plugins are, but the question is the img tag linking to another webpage affected? I know a few places will not allow their sites to have img tags to point to a different server.
This is a stupid patent and should be thrown out. And in fact if we wanted to get into the nitty/gritty details Microsoft could sit there and attack StarOffice/OpenOffice with some of their patents and copyright information and get them out of business.
Re:Famous last words: (Score:4, Funny)
I mean, how hard could it be for them to un-bundle one little app?
What MS are going to do about it - link (Score:3, Informative)
You can download a stand-alone version of IE (not a full replacement) so you can see differences between existing code and what it will be like.
Basically, its welcome to popup hell by default, but you can (this is good) block them all - pages with 'active content' will appear in a little symbol in the status bar (like the padlock). Click it to get the content.
This doesn't apply to conten
Well... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Well... (Score:5, Informative)
Eolas would still permit Microsoft to distribute IE as is, as long as it's being used in conjunction with an application provider or a corporate intranet that has an Eolas plug-in license.
Maybe they can send cease and desist letters to MS' corporate clients now.
On a more serious note, MS was not able to present their prior art case in front of the judge to invalidate the patent. They have appealed and hopefully will get that opportunity. They are also on the right track with Viola browser as prior art. If you read Viola's author's recount [berkeley.edu]:
In April 1992, I made a released of the viola browser. By December 1992, I had embedded objects working in the Viola browser. We at O'Reilly and Associates gave demos to various people here and there. The best documented demo was in May of 1993 -- We gave a demo and code to SUN Microsystems, of the viola browser showing an interactive three dimensional plotting object (mathmatical equation or 3D models) embedded inside a web page. I started releasing this code around fall of 1993 and early 1994. Eolas filed the patent in November 1994.
Now, as you probably know, Michael Doyle (Eolas's CEO and sole formal employee as I understand it), wrote to the net about his technology and eventually intent to patent this. So of course people (including me) wrote back informing him of prior arts. I'm not a lawyer but as I understand it one is supposed to disclose to the PTO any relevant prior art for the PTO examiner to assess. Doyle and I exchange letters, and I told him about this embedded capability in Viola, gave him a paper on viola, which contains pointers leading to more information including even the viola browser source code. Doyle ends up mentioning the browsers Cello and Mosaic, but interestingly not Viola! Now, Viola came before both Cello and Mosaic, and non of those two other browsers had any kind of embedded interactive capability at the core of the discussions.
And he also talks about how he was not allowed to demonstrate his technology (created before Eolas patent was filed) to the jury:
I was not allowed to demonstrate Viola to the jury. It was explained to me that the judge had decided that my demonstration, of the Viola browser from May 1993 showing interactive objects embedded in a web page, would have been too "prejudicial" against Eolas. I was also not allowed to tell the jury that Doyle knew about Viola. This I suppose is understandable but still puzzles me a little and leads to unfortunate effects, as I imagine the Jury ought to know these things.
As you can see, once MS gets a chance to demonstrate these facts, like they should be able to, Eolas can go back to sucking on their thumbs again.
That silly (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:That silly (Score:5, Informative)
-Erwos
Re:That silly (Score:4, Informative)
-Erwos
Re:That silly (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:That silly (Score:3, Informative)
Step forward a couple of years, and it's remotely possible I'd say Yes. (1985 was the year the Amiga was released.)
Schwab
Re:That silly (Score:5, Informative)
Think about the technology from 1983, would you use that over the current technology?
Well, RSA and LZW were both patented in 1983, and they are widely in use today.
Re:That silly (Score:3)
Well... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:That silly (Score:5, Insightful)
On the other side this can be used by Microsoft to finally close up the browser to anybody else. Most likely what used to be plugins (Flash, Shockwave, Quicktime, Java) will be incorporated in the browser, so Microsoft will have the final word (and license fee) for including any content provider in their code base.
Re:That silly (Score:5, Insightful)
Bill Gates has said in interviews even before their recent legal trouble that software patents were crippling the industry and that if things had been like this back when they were starting up, MS wouldn't have had a prayer.
Re:That silly (Score:5, Informative)
Microsoft used patents to kill ASF support in VirtualDub. See here [advogato.org].
Re:That silly (Score:3, Interesting)
Oh no!!! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Oh no!!! (Score:2)
We all know much of the USPTO is a terrible scam anyhow. Perhaps this will fire some needed lightning of the gods to folks that need it.
Re:Oh no!!! (Score:2)
Still, I feel like I have to side with Microsoft on this one. They may be evil, but software patents are even worse. This might be a loss for MS but the recent SCO debacle has shown that it is a double edged sword. Remember that MS can afford more IP lawyers than the open source community...
Re:Oh no!!! (Score:2)
Seeing as how there's nothing preventing this action from being taken against Mozilla or Opera, I'd side with MS on this one.
Re:Oh no!!! (Score:2, Interesting)
After all, while a software patent victory might hurt Micro$oft and IE, a victory for Micro$osft would do little or no damage to software patents.
Therefore, the most can be accomplished in this case by software patents "winning".
Seriously, guys... (Score:5, Insightful)
But please realize that this patent bullshit has gone a little too far. Microsoft has already promised to patch IE to remove the offending patent work--isn't that enough? What we are all witnessing is the tyranny of the patent system as we know it. Just because it negatively affects Microsoft for once doesn't mean that it's good in any way.
Let's do what we can to get this mess straightened out once and for all for the good of the economy and innovation. Let's not rejoice in this unfair punishment.
Re:Seriously, guys... (Score:4, Insightful)
MS plays the patent game all the time its kind of nice to see it reversed.
James
PS, That does not mean I think this kind of crap is patentable, just if the game is played this way
Re:Seriously, guys... (Score:5, Insightful)
Somehow I doubt it.
Re:don't you think it's kidn of sick that (Score:3, Funny)
Somehow this doesn't make me feel any better.
Re:Seriously, guys... (Score:5, Insightful)
And I am glad that Eolas is doing this to Microsoft and the most widely used browser, Internet Exploder.
The more people know how screwed up software patents are, the better chance there will be that something will actually be done to stop the stupidity.
Unfortunately... (Score:4, Insightful)
Even if Microsoft loses billions of dollars on this case, they will not want patents to go away. They may want "reform" of the system, where reform is custom tailors to uphold Microsoft's patents, but invalidate everyone elses. Never will Microsoft say, "You know, maybe we shouldn't have a patent on typing notification over IM." To truly want reform, they will have to call for an end to all patent abuses, especially their own.
Microsoft will forever be too proud to let this happen. This is the same company that still denies being a monopoly, let alone abusing their monopoly position, even after both have been settled in the court of law!
Re:Unfortunately... (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't see a problem with that. The rules right now allow silly patents. If you want to be in business, you have to file silly patents, otherwise, you can't compete.
At the same time, many companies realize that filing silly patents is a big drain on their time and resources and will never give them any revenue. So, they would like to stop doing it. But they only can stop doing it if everybody else does, and that's why they participate in efforts to reform the patent system.
That shouldn't stop you or me or anybody else from holding Bezos's feet to the fire (e.g., by buying at places other than Amazon) over filing silly patents: that is just additional pressure to get them (i.e., the people with money and power) to work towards changing the system.
Re:Seriously, guys... (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, and everyone knows Microsoft has a spotless record on keeping promises.
Re:Seriously, guys... (Score:2, Insightful)
Are you kidding me? Microsoft is a company that is known to both raid companies through the BSA that *MAY* be out of compliance with the # of licenses installed. I'm sure if a company that was found to be out of compliance said, Ok I promise to remove Windows and migrate to Linux, they'd have a field day in courts over licensing issues. Fuck that man, in regards to this they need to pay up or stop distrib
Re:Seriously, guys... (Score:5, Informative)
I haven't read much about this case, but i have seen two key facts. One is that MS was given the opportunity to license the technology ten years ago and they did not. The second is that the case of prior art presented by MS was a process that was developed contemporaneously with the process under question. It is not clear that one predates the other, and the other process was not patented. There are many examples of simultaneous developments throughout history, and the person who get the credit is often random. Therefore the judge reasonable ruled that no prior art could be specified.
The other two adjoining issues is that MS firmly believes in IP and in particular patents. It would be hypocritical to allow them to hold onto those beliefs only when it is convenient for them. That is what we call inappropriate consequences and is like a bully complaining that a kid who he has been beating up every day for the past year is now aiming a gun at his head. The second is that the browser/plug in model is part of the OS, a situation unique to MS.
I certainly hope that this mess will make the PHB realize that patenting these things is bad. I think at this point they see it as a game. Who can rack up the most frivolous patents, similar to who can screw the most secretaries, or have the youngest spouse. But it has serious consequences. Under the current rules, Eolas Technologies may have the power to stop the distribution of Windows, and god knows what else. That is scary.
Re:Seriously, guys... (Score:4, Insightful)
I certainly hope that this mess will make the PHB realize that patenting these things is bad
The PHBs will realize it all right, if they don't already. But unfortunately, the result will not be what you want (an end to stupid software patents). It will be even more stupid software patents. The PHBs will see this, and think to themselves, "Oh god, if Microsoft could get screwed by one of these, we could too. We better patent everything we can think of!"
analogy (Score:3, Insightful)
Isn't it enough for the bank robber to put the money back?
A: No, he still stole something. He needs to pay for the crime by doing the time. In this case, MS has been found guilty of infringing, and now Eolas is saying "ok, now stop distributing entirely or start paying royalties". Sounds 100%, completely, totally fair to me.
Reaping what you sow (Score:5, Insightful)
As I recall, there was speculation that the plantiff was so pissed off that they might refuse to grant MS a license *at any cost.* Think about the anger required to turn your back on a billion dollars or so, to hurt the other guy as badly as he tried to hurt you.
In that context, of course the plantiff will demand that MS live with the consequences of the ruling *today*. Not in their "next release" (which may be years off), not even "tomorrow." Today. If that means that MS has to contact Dell and Compaq and HP and the rest and tell them that they have to cease all sales of Windows boxes because "MSIE is now fully integrated into the operating system," so be it. Microsoft made this bed by its own bad acts.
N.B., I'm not saying that I agree with this retaliatory attitude. But at the same time the problem with brutally suppressing your critics is that you force the one who finally beats you to be even meaner and nastier than you. Gates and Ballmer and the rest had to know this.
If MS has to pay for licensing... (Score:4)
Re:If MS has to pay for licensing... (Score:2)
Re:If MS has to pay for licensing... (Score:2, Insightful)
Between a rock and a hard place (Score:4, Funny)
Booo! We hate software patents!
Master wouldn't betray us, would he? What are we to think?
Re:Between a rock and a hard place (Score:2)
"Life sucks." ?
Gee and all this time... (Score:2, Funny)
Halting IE shipments... (Score:4, Insightful)
So does this mean... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:So does this mean... (Score:2)
James
Re:So does this mean... (Score:3, Insightful)
Yepp. IMHO that's the ironic part of it. The Eolas guy sure has a sense of humour. See, now their argument from the antitrust case that IE is part of the OS comes back to bite them. Now if Ashcroft were an attorney general instead of a religious fanatic, he'd be watching this very closely - because if MS starts selling windows without IE, a buckload of shit could come down on them for contempt of court, lying under oath, etc. pp.
Not that it'd happen
From Das Article (Score:5, Informative)
Microsoft mentioned one piece of prior art in particular, the Viola browser, invented by Perry Pei-Yuan Wei, an artist, software engineer and then a student at the University of California at Berkeley. That browser dates back to 1991 and its plug-in capabilities to 1992, nearly two years before Eolas filed for its patent.
Once again, prior art popping up. So, this whole thing will probably get turned on its head after about 3 more years of litigation.
Sigh.
Re:From Das Article (Score:2)
just my 0.02c
Re:From Das Article (Score:2)
you're thinking of trademarks. patents are enforcable until they expire.
Re:From Das Article (Score:2)
I just hope it lasts long enough to get the PTO's poor application processing some air time.
Re:From Das Article (Score:3, Informative)
Browser/OS integration (Score:3, Interesting)
And since Microsoft has said that it's not possible to separate the browser from the OS, that would mean...
Re:Browser/OS integration (Score:4, Informative)
Most people would loose access to embedded Flash (more than anything else---it's the most widely deployed plugin) and the web would go on.
This patent does not threaten Windows per se in that way.
However, significant numbers of corporates would also loose access to their in-house ActiveX components, and they would not be happy.
I suspect that's why MS has proposed the workaround it has---existing sites would work with an extra dialog box and click. They probably don't expect everybody to recode with the funky JavaScript to provide a seamless experience. However, they will suggest to the corporates that they CAN recode their intranets---and that even if they don't, at least the apps will still work (at the cost of an extra dialog box and click).
The main victim of this patent is Browser+ActiveX, which happens to be affect Windows a lot, and everything else not very much.
or even.... (Score:5, Interesting)
or reach a multi-million $$$ out of court settlement like that reached with Be inc over alleged misuse of monolopy - the type of settlement in which the details are hidden from public scrutiny.
Wonder what the world would be like if Microsoft were forced to not distribute IE? Not that it'll ever happen.
Will not be bought out (Score:2)
Happy Days Are Here Again (Score:5, Funny)
Gentlemen, the tech employment slump is now over!
Please raise your hourly rates by $10.
$20 if you do Java Server pages, a bad idea whose time has come (disclaimer: I do JSPs).
Time to dig out those hookers' business cards!
(And the office foosball table suppliers' cards too!)
Re:Happy Days Are Here Again (Score:2)
Re:Happy Days Are Here Again (Score:2)
$521 Million... (Score:2, Interesting)
But to then pay licensing fees on top of that? It's a little absurd, and just makes Eolas look like opportunists.
And I especially love this line: Eolas has also calculated that Microsoft owes it about $111 million in interest on that aw
Re:$521 Million... (Score:2)
Re:$521 Million... (Score:3, Funny)
Will Cost Sites Money...Advertisers Like Flash (Score:5, Interesting)
* Do nothing and watch the complaints roll in as folks bitch about lots of pop-up warning prompts; some will even think the warning dialogue boxes are pop-up ads themselves - geez!
* Continue to accept Flash ads, but add javascript and other nonsense to make them display with little or no warning messages - fine for many sites, but some sites don't use javascript anywhere for various reaons. So what to do?
* Discontinue Flash ads (sure that makes many happy), but the loss of ad revenues will cause some sites to either use all sorts of bizarre scripting or reduce services due to lost revenues.
Not sure the solution here. For as much as I personally don't care for Flash (nothing wrong with Flash per se, but is often over used and forced upon visitors) the addition of "Press OK
One possible solution, for as much as I don't care for Micro$oft at times, is for them to either fight this guy's IP claim to the max -or- settle and not change the browser -or- a long shot, find another way to get around the guy's IP claim without the zillion "Press OK
Lastly, if anyone is aware of a work-around to smoothly displaying Flash without using Javascript, please post and/or email to me. Thanks!
Ron
One possible solution. (Score:4, Insightful)
Mind you, if MS does buy out Eolas they could cause no end of trouble for Netscape, Konqueror and Opera, since the non-MS browsers loads plugins in a very similar fashion.
Re:One possible solution. (Score:3, Informative)
It's a private company, so they can't buy them out if the owners don't want to sell. Eolas wants MS to pay the fine and then sign a license agreement. Typical Microsoft response: license revenue is what other companies give to us, so find a way to weasel out.
It is interesting that the founder wrote a book on tcl/tk [eolas.com] and another owner used to be a FBI agent.
Save the drama for your mama... (Score:3, Insightful)
Obviously it will be Billy-boy to the rescue buying-out this company for an undisclosed amount (+$500 million). Billy will sell the company to MS for tax write-offs and MS will use the patents to give Linux & Apple a good high-colonic.
Re:Save the drama for your mama... (Score:5, Interesting)
The company is going to be very hard, if not impossible to buy out. The guy directing the company has said he wants to use the lawsuit to change the landscape of the current browser situation.
Re:Save the drama for your mama... (Score:3, Insightful)
Poeple have already tried to show how ludicrous the PTO is by patenting swinging on a swing [uspto.gov] and exercising a cat [uspto.gov], but that doesn't change anything. Suing Microsoft might just persuade the rich and powerful that software patents are a bad idea.
hell.. (Score:2, Interesting)
not by much.
Wouldn't that mean (Score:2, Funny)
Software patents? (Score:5, Insightful)
I still can't believe it when I read the court case for Amazon's 1-click patent. Apparently the *expert* witness could not figure out how Amazon would be able to sell something to people with just one click... apparently he had never heard of cookies... and this was one of the biggest reasons Amazon won, because it seemed possible that this was actually a revolutionary idea.
But back to my main point, where do people draw the line for giving a software patent? I read that microsoft patented the IM feature to see when somebody is typing something back. That is dumb. But is the only thing that we are ok with somebody patenting is something that is like a compression algorithm that is so hard to understand that we say the guy must have been smarter than me that made it?
I think the patent system is ok as it is, provided we have high quality patent lawyers out there that know how to code and maybe are able to put RAM into their computer... from my perspective, the patent system seems to be more angled toward granting a patent than not granting a patent. So its quite possible that you get a patent even though the quality of the invention is pretty lame.
I think my view on software patents is this. If any software at all can be found that had the feature before being patented by some other company, then its in public domain and not patentable. The thing is, is that alot of great ideas show up in software people make for all sorts of reasons, but few people besides companies have the money to get a patent that usually costs about 10-20 grand.
I remember this cartoon from a magazine... (Score:3, Funny)
Seems to describe this situation absolutely perfectly.
Not Internet Exploiter, but Windows (Score:2, Interesting)
From the article... (Score:3, Funny)
Web developers face the possibility of having to significantly rewrite their pages or strip them of commonly used technologies like Macromedia's Flash.
Surely this can only be a good thing?
Who is next (Score:3, Insightful)
Problem is they are NOT the only offender.. most all browswers are in the same boat..
If they go after Konq next.. im sure there will be an outcry...
This is way out of hand, though it IS their patent, and their right to enforce it.... we cant have it both ways
Eolas the inventor (Score:4, Insightful)
A long time ago, when people were using Mosaic, the proprietor of Eolas invented the plugin technology. He showed this technology to Microsoft who poo-pooed it. Fast-forward several months and Microsoft's adds plugins in IE. Microsoft gets sued, litigation ensures while the browser wars and Y2K come and go. Whether or not you agree with software patents, there is no doubt Microsoft screwed this guy. I highly doubt the jury would have given Eolas the case if MS had not done this.
MS gets hundreds of patents per year and the only reason they don't make a big stink about it is because they can (currently) make plenty of money with out creating a huge PR stink (and possibly more monopoly litigation).
Eolas's plugin technology was first demoed in 1993 and patented in 1994. The concept of Flash / SVG and plugins in general might seem obvious after years of ubigious browser support, however it was a significant invention in the early 90's.
Microsoft takes full advantage of the patent system with aggressive patents like the typing indicator [slashdot.org] in IM, databased online polls [slashdot.org] and Microsoft's numerous other pre-emptive patents to curtail competition.
I don't believe that Microsoft/Macromedia/et al's lame fix of document.write'ing the / tag instead of having them directly on the page gets around the patent. It simply stinks of a PR move to make Eolas look bad (lookie, he's wreaking the web) while not addressing the patent.
In general I don't support software patents, but Microsoft deserves to eat dirt on this one.
Re:Eolas the inventor (Score:3, Informative)
Not quite. The technology was actually "invented" by the University of California -- Michael Doyle didn't invent a single thing. His company simply secured the rights to exclusively license this absurd patent. I'll also point out that no product has made it to market as a direct descendent of this technology -- their simply sitting on a patent, r
I claim ignornace on this one. (Score:3, Insightful)
Can't be done (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, I know it won't come to that.
Re:Can't be done (Score:5, Insightful)
I hope to god it doesn't.
Seriously.
I know we all bash M$, and we all use the dollarsign instead of an 'S', and all that stuff. But, in all seriousness: If microsoft is prevented from shipping windows, that means that dell, HP, ibm, micron, et. al. are prevented from selling comptuers with windows.
If no one can sell comptuers with windows, the tech sector in specific, and the american economy in general, is fucked. Plain and simple. Dell operates on making about half a billion a day, m ost of it from computers with windows, and most of it would not be sold if it came sans os (get off of your linux high horse for a sec and remember john q public). IBM is close to the same. When I worked at Best Buy, the comptuer department would regularly sell $30,000 worth of computer towers PER DAY, in one store. Multiply by 450 stores and you're talking 13.5 million in lost revs by one retail chain, PER DAY. And it was significantly higher starting black friday (we sold over 350k in the computer department 2 black fridays ago).
I know it's cool to make fun of and bash microsoft, and all of that, and I understand your need to do that.
But, please recognize. If no one can sell microsoft windows, then no one can sell computers with windows, and since most of the consumer sector doesn't want a computer with no OS, almost no computers will be sold, and the american economy will come to a screeching halt. We'll immediately be plunged back into the recession we're slowly starting to climb out of.
~Will
Re:Can't be done (Score:3, Interesting)
It's true that few would buy computers if they came without an OS. However, we disagree on the rest.
I personally know hundreds upon hundreds of people who buy new computers rather regularly. They range from the very high-tech (only a handful run Linux) to average consumers.
Now, there certainly are several that have plenty invested in their Windows programs, and
Re:Can't be done (Score:3, Interesting)
Wouln't that be cool?
Can't remove IE from Windows, huh? (Score:3, Insightful)
But there's little need for Active-X controls anyway, except to lock people into Microsoft. Microsoft can still ship a browser with Flash and Acrobat; they just can't force an update of it remotely.
The only real effect of this would be to discourage web designers from requiring the latest version of Flash, Acrobat, etc. For general web site use, you don't need the newer features of either. And for elaborate corporate intranets, the IT department probably wants to install whatever is needed directly, not via browser autoload.
What about the UC? (Score:3, Informative)
A strike against Java and Flash (and Shockwave) (Score:5, Insightful)
This means that Flash and Java are no longer ubiquitous ways to distribute web applications and advertisements. It also kills any momentum that SVG might be building up, and reduces the use of PDF files as a means of distribution. Microsoft couldn't be happier about such an announcement.
It buys Microsoft time, by being the "good guys" legally and gaining good press, to actually write their own dynamic-web-animation system, all built in their own proprietary VB or JScript API, eliminating the need for Flash and SVG and all that entirely. And of course opening up a tremendous amount of new security holes for
They want this to happen. They want the web world to not be dependent on Java and Flash and all that stuff. And now this patent suit is giving them what they want and still making them smell like a rose when they do it...
Re:Give it up, MS! (Score:5, Insightful)
Let's not start singing Eolas' praises until we see whether they are friend or foe, they could just as easily attempt to extort $$$ from Mozilla or Netscape(AOL). This is probably the first lawsuit I had wished Microsoft came out on top.
Re:Give it up, MS! (Score:2)
Re:That may change! (Score:3, Informative)
The AOL client will play flash content even if a
They are already boning Opera, mozilla, safari (Score:5, Insightful)
no people will not switch browsers. if a browser does not come with MS and is not located in the prefered position MOST users, that is the majority of the comsumers, will not use it. Thus IE will remain a standard and websites will comply or die. Sure a few may write special versions for multiple browsers but whose going to be writing the plugins? Unless theres a market to sell plugins the flash producers of the world are going to shrink in number.
Perhaps you think I overestimate consumer laziness. Well BMG just copyprotected all of their CDs. Anyone cany defeat the copy protection by, get this, holding down the shift key when inserting the disk. BMG acknowledges this wont stop some people but believes it will thwart the majority. They have reason to believe in consumer laziness.
Re:They are already boning Opera, mozilla, safari (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, they started bundling it. Technically they started bundling IE3 with Win95 OSR2 (and possibly NT4SP4), but we forget that because it sucked and everybody just installed Netscape in those days and forgot about it. The big OEMs usually did it for you. Furthermore, there were (and still might be) many businesses that standardized on Netscape 4. Some of the bigger sites still go way out of their way to support it, etc, etc. And when broadband first came out (in my area anyway), the cable company went around installing Netscape 4 on everybody's computer.
I guess my point is that back in the day Joe user didn't know anything about browsers either. He just clicked on the big "N" instead of the big "E" to use the internet. If IE were to become a serious impediment to browsing again, I see no reason why the same sort of action wouldn't start taking place. It'd be gradual, just like the switch away from Netscape was, but it would happen. Frankly, I think that whole business about bundling IE being unfair has always been a bit of a red herring. Sure it sounds unfair, and it is a bit like cheating, but it had little to do with the move away from Netscape, and everything to do with Netscape 4 being a terrible, terrible program (and with IE being faster, more stable, and at certain points more standards-compliant).
Re:Give it up, MS! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Give it up, MS! (Score:2)
The maintainers of Mozilla/Firebird could still be responsible for the previous version which violated a patent.
Re:Give it up, MS! (Score:2)
You do realize that Firebird uses the same kind of plugins, right? So when Eolas is done with Microsoft, they could potentially come after The Mozilla Foundation?
Not the same thing at all (Score:4, Insightful)
No, there is a difference. Eolas has an actual patent, and is enforcing it according to the rules ; they got a verdict in court that says MS is infringing, and are stating their terms to bring MS into compliance.
SCO, as far as anyone can tell, is making crap up based on no sound legal theory anyone has heard of (one day it's contract dispute, next day it's copyright infringement, and apparently they think "know-how"is a form of intellectual property [sympatico.ca]) and expecting people to fork over money for a license (or, alternately, buy their stock).
Jay (=