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#1 |
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Forum King
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Opera files Antitrust lawsuit against Microsoft and IE in EU
http://www.opera.com/pressreleases/en/2007/12/13/
----------------------------------------------------- Opera Software ASA, the only company that can put the Web on any device, filed a complaint with the European Commission yesterday which is aimed at giving consumers a genuine choice of Web browsers. The complaint describes how Microsoft is abusing its dominant position by tying its browser, Internet Explorer, to the Windows operating system and by hindering interoperability by not following accepted Web standards. Opera has requested the Commission to take the necessary actions to compel Microsoft to give consumers a real choice and to support open Web standards in Internet Explorer. "We are filing this complaint on behalf of all consumers who are tired of having a monopolist make choices for them," said Jon von Tetzchner, CEO of Opera. "In addition to promoting the free choice of individual consumers, we are a champion of open Web standards and cross-platform innovation. We cannot rest until we've brought fair and equitable options to consumers worldwide." Opera requests the Commission to implement two remedies to Microsoft’s abusive actions. First, it requests the Commission to obligate Microsoft to unbundle Internet Explorer from Windows and/or carry alternative browsers pre-installed on the desktop. Second, it asks the European Commission to require Microsoft to follow fundamental and open Web standards accepted by the Web-authoring communities. The complaint calls on Microsoft to adhere to its own public pronouncements to support these standards, instead of stifling them with its notorious "Embrace, Extend and Extinguish" strategy. Microsoft's unilateral control over standards in some markets creates a de facto standard that is more costly to support, harder to maintain, and technologically inferior and that can even expose users to security risks. "Our complaint is necessary to get Microsoft to amend its practices," said Jason Hoida, Deputy General Counsel, Opera."The European Court of First Instance confirmed in September that Microsoft has illegally tied Windows Media Player to Windows. We are simply asking the Commission to apply these same, clear principles to the Internet Explorer tie, a tie that has even more profound effects on consumers and innovation. We are confident that the Commission understands the significance of the Internet Explorer tie and will take the necessary actions to restore competition and consumer choice in the browser market." Opera has long held the position of innovator in the Web browser market, having introduced and pioneered features like tabbed browsing, Speed Dial, integrated search bar, mouse gestures, Opera Link™ and many others. Absent Microsoft’s abuse, Microsoft would have been forced to compete on a level playing field with Opera and other browsers. Instead of innovating, Microsoft has locked consumers to its own browser and only recently begun to offer some of the innovative features that other browsers have offered for years. Both of Opera’s requested remedies are intended to give consumers greater freedom and flexibility while at the same time ensuring that the Web further develops into a platform for innovation. Opera believes that the remedies will help promote consumer rights worldwide and force Microsoft to begin competing with Opera and others on the merits of its browser. ------------------------------------------------------------- I wonder how far it will get in the EU since it obviously had little effect here in the US. |
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#2 |
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Forum King
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It's kind of a baseless claim, really. There's not a hell of a lot of abuse going on.
The EU does like to spank Microsoft for largely-inscrutable reasons though, so this may well progress. |
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#3 |
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Forum King
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There is a lot of buzz today.
- An invited expert of the CSS working group is calling on the disbandment and reconstruction of the group without browser vendors as members(such as Opera's CTO), And the creation of a Technical Group that will act as a go between to browser vendors and the new CSS working group. http://www.stuffandnonsense.co.uk/ma...working_group/ - A Mozilla Dev disagrees with the action since the complaint came when Microsoft is actively working on its browser now. (Calls it: Bad Timing) http://meyerweb.com/eric/thoughts/20...13/bad-timing/ - CNET says that Microsoft responded that it won't unbundle IE.(sounds familiar) http://www.news.com/Microsoft-strike...-0-5&subj=news And web devs are pretty much across the board on this one. (obviously) An Opera employee set up a FAQ on the questions about Opera's complaint. http://my.opera.com/haavard/blog/show.dml/1582238 (Small Note, it should be "Complaint" in the title instead of "Lawsuit") Last edited by Omega X; 14th December 2007 at 20:56. |
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#4 | ||
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#5 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
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Has change really started happening? Mozilla, too, seems to think that this is not the case:
http://weblogs.mozillazine.org/roadm...is_wilson.html https://mail.mozilla.org/pipermail/e...er/001309.html (These URLs point to posts by Mozilla showing everyone how Microsoft is doing everything possible to undermine the new EcmaScript standard in order to push Silverlight/C# instead.) As for excluding browser vendors from the CSS working group? That's silly, and besides, it has got nothing to do with this debate. That guy is just piggybacking off of the Opera story. |
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#6 |
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The ECMAScript standard update is being pushed mostly by Mozilla, not as a push for standards in general but as a push to standardise on their new standard. I doubt it's particularly useful.
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#7 | |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
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Don't fall for Microsoft's FUD against ES4. Their PC machinery is at full force here, and has fooled a lot of people. |
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#8 |
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I've not even been paying attention to the Microsoft angle, it's just that the stakeholders are Mozilla (since they're the originators) and Adobe (since it's part of their Flash/Flex/Air/whatever framework). It's not like the .NET Framework is nonstandard (C# and CLR are published standards, and the dynamic languages for Silverlight are Python, Ruby, et al).
The problem that strikes me is that ES4 is extremely unlikely to be any more successful than Javascript is now, and without Microsoft fully on board (which they look unlikely to get) it'll just end up being the same story once again. It doesn't provide a huge deal, beyond (massive) convenience compared to the JS frameworks out there now; things like Flex, JavaFX, and Silverlight (all based on standard languages at least) are actually pushing forward the "rich internet" platform. I'll read those links though, thanks. Since you're a new user URLs in your posts don't show up so here they are for clickability for everyone: http://weblogs.mozillazine.org/roadm...is_wilson.html https://mail.mozilla.org/pipermail/e...er/001309.html |
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#13 | ||||
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I've no doubt that ES4 will be useful for Flex (and I certainly don't oppose its development), I'm just really not sure how much further down this road we can go with the web and so on. Microsoft's position seems to be that the web, as it stands, doesn't need an extra ton of stuff bolted onto a framework. Given how well the "standardisation" of the language's implementation in browsers has gone in the past (and it's not just Microsoft who are poor at this, not by a long shot) I'm not sure a strict superset is going to do anything but cause more troubles with ambiguity. And as I discussed before, the Microsoft technologies which are equivalent to ECMAScript are open standards (see also Python, Ruby, etc.). Quote:
I quite like the proposals but browser implementations are pretty haphazard already and this doesn't seem as thought it's going to make it better. The proposals don't seem to address the problems of the language as they are faced in the browser context. |
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Which they are not, incidentally. Quote:
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#16 |
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I was quite drunk when I wrote the above so if it needs clarification just ask.
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#18 |
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Opera is pushing it as well because they have a strong stake on appearing to be fully standards-compliant, and they need to show their system making steady progress. They're big on standards and that's good for everyone.
![]() My position, though, is that Microsoft's points are pretty valid, and not particularly unreasonable. If they're trying to undermine development it seems more likely, to my mind, that they're doing it simply because they don't feel like implementing the whole new standard. |
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#19 | |
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Join Date: Dec 2007
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Quote:
my.opera.com/haavard/blog/2007/12/18/microsoft-sabotaging-css-too
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#20 |
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Forum King
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Thanks BongiX.
Wow, its looking uglier every day. On a side note, In that very same mailing list part underneath L. David Baron's comment is a post from Ian Hickson that talks about somekind of pseudo DRM scheme that Microsoft proposed for Fonts. Last edited by Omega X; 18th December 2007 at 20:06. |
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#21 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
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Is it the one quoted in the blog post?
lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-style/2007Dec/0084.html |
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#22 |
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Forum King
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Yep, that's the one.
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#23 |
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The CSS thing seems more serious, it'll be interesting to see how that pans out (since at the moment we only really have some rumours and whatnot).
The fonts thing sounds like legal people talking to computer people and everyone ending up very confused. |
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#24 | |
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Join Date: Dec 2007
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@zootm
In this one he talks about "protecting Microsoft": lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-style/2007Dec/0094.html Quote:
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#25 |
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Well effectively that just means that the MS people are made to follow strict rules by their legal department; in that sort of atmosphere it becomes difficult to do many things that involve interacting with other groups usefully. It's a shame.
I'm in a similar situation myself; I'm currently not sure how much I can talk about the work I do at my job (so I tend not to talk about it at all), and more seriously I'm worried about how much stuff I can do outside of work and then release publically. I need to re-read my contract. Legal stuff seems, to me, to muddy the waters in this industry though. |
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#26 |
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Forum King
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Things seem to be moving forward with IE8.
http://blogs.msdn.com/ie/archive/200...milestone.aspx They claim that the changes went in before Opera filed its complaint. But its still a convenient post at a time when Opera complained about the lack of standards in IE. |
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#27 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
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Acid2 only tests a small subset of various standards, though, so it remains to be seen what the final thing will do...
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#28 |
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Forum King
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Acid2 actually tests a bunch of things that aren't even standards. And some deliberately-broken stuff. If you conform to it you're pretty much golden for a great proportion of things, though.
I don't think Microsoft have intentionally avoided standards in a while. When they were developing IE7 they explained the limitations of their new standards compliance, since at that point they had more important priorities in the development, and had a strong incentive to retain backwards-compatibility in a bunch of stuff. It'll be interesting to see if IE8 is the release they were hinting they'd fix all the standards problems in, and how they've managed to reconcile that with backwards-compatibility. |
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