Open Source Firm Files Microsoft Complaint 26
Rob writes "Computer Business Review is reporting that Australian Linux and open source consultancy
Cybersource Pty has filed a complaint with the Australian Competition and Consumer
Commission calling on it to force PC vendors to offer hardware without Microsoft Corp's
Windows operating system. The company has estimated that the cost to Australian consumers
of Microsoft's monopoly position is at least AUS 200m ($151m) a year, although that
calculation is based on an assumption that Windows and Office account for 50% of the
company's AUS 1bn ($759m) annual Australian revenue, and
that its 80% profit margin for those products should be more like 10%."
Even I got Windows Preinstalled (Score:1)
Re:Even I got Windows Preinstalled (Score:2)
Price ? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Price ? (Score:2)
If MS are giving these companies incentives to stifle the opposition it needs addressed
OSS is about choice and freedom , forcing companies to offer alternatives is removing their choice.
If people want OSS on their PC or no software at all (and i know for a fact there is a lot of people who do) then there is a market open and waiti
Re:Price ? (Score:1)
Full service 'system vendors' don't have to, and it would actually cost them more in support costs, to bundle an OS that they don't have staff expertise in.
Re:Price ? (Score:2)
I think this could be investigated, but it seems to m
Re:Price ? (Score:1)
The only way that I've heard of them masking that sort of behavior is in terms of bulk pricing arrangements. So if you sell a million boxes with pre-installed Windows, we'll give you a discount on each copy. Supposedly, and I can't remember where I read it or if it was true, MS would offer a greater discount to vendors that only provided MS than t
Libertys (Score:4, Insightful)
That is the decision of company.
I find it as silly as forcing restaurants to provide a vegetarian alternative (I am a vegetarian btw). If these companies can see profit in doing it they will , or they don't they will lose business , Simple as that.
What the government should focus on however is making sure that Microsoft are not using exclusivity deals that would harm the company if they did sell computers without MS windows .
This is key in a free market , making sure its fair.
make sure large companies are not abusing their power, do Not in forcing smaller companies to stock what is deemed acceptable and to hell with their profits .
I do not want to buy a system with MS windows and I will choose a vendor who sells systems without it , I don't want to force a vendor into my way of thinking though .
Re:Libertys (Score:1)
Key examples of what they do is forcing the major telco not to undercut competitors because it has wholesale ownership of the infrastructure. This theory could easily be applied to not letting people get a pc without windows on it.
Re:Libertys (Score:2)
Re:Libertys (Score:3, Insightful)
This is what i have a problem with , what they should be doing is calling on the ACCC to force Microsoft to stop using exclusivity deals and the like.This is a clear case of antitrust .
If companies wish to not sell systems without OSs then that
Re:Libertys (Score:2)
No, this is more like a meat company saying that every meal you buy in a restaurant must include their meat.
And if you want to sell vegetarian meals too, then
Re:Libertys (Score:1)
Re:Libertys (Score:3, Interesting)
If these companies can see profit in doing it they will , or they don't they will lose business
The point at which it is appropriate for a government to step in is when all the companies can happily tell the unhappy people to go fuck themselves because there's no alternative.
Try buying a laptop without paying Microsoft. How will the companies "lose business" when going to a competitor doesn't solve the problem? There's no alternative because the laptop market is so dominated by the big firms that ni
Re:Libertys (Score:3, Interesting)
My point is that i do not think these vendors should be the target of the lawsuit , Microsoft should be the target for using aggressive tactics to ensure exclusivity . If you stop microsoft from doing this then the vendors of the PC has a choice to offer the system with or without the OS
Right now they are forced by a large gorilla to have all their products come with their OS , if we enact legislation like this they are forced to offer a system with or without it.
If we stop MS
This is just wrong! (Score:1)
This seems abusive to me, because besides forcing the customer to buy the software of the vendor's choice, it also does not give the option for the customer to install the software with another vendor (or himself, if he wants)
The vendors must have a price for just the hardware, and IF the customer says he wants the software, the vendor sells the software separately.
Of course the ve
Wrong Target... (Score:2)
Re:Wrong Target... (Score:2)
Forcing the manufactures to offer the computers without an OS would lead Microsoft to drop the pressure. PC manufactures already offer choices between XP Pro, Media Center and Home Editions, so a no OS choice isn't going to burden them.
Government controlling businesses? (Score:2)
Sounds quite communist to me.
Re:Government controlling businesses? (Score:2)
It's not about the right not to stock something, it's about the right not to buy something. Product bundling
Can someone please explain? (Score:2)
Me, like everyone I know (and many I don't), just go to the store's websites, browses for parts, adds up the prices and give that to the store. You only pay for an operating system if you chose to add it to the list. Unless the price for the OS is somehow laden on the computer parts, we don't pay for it. (Also we usually get a 5-10% discount by bargaining, b
Re:Can someone please explain? (Score:1)
But my father and I, we always buy the parts separately from store websites as well.
Re:Can someone please explain? (Score:2)
I don't think this form of sale is even available here.
If anything, it's just predefined custom builds, but you can deviate from them.
Re:Can someone please explain? (Score:1)
Re:Can someone please explain? (Score:2)
By "here" you don't mean Australia do you? Are you saying you've NEVER seen a Dick Smith or Harvey Norman catalog? You've never worked at/visited an office/school full of Compaqs, HPs, Dells etc?