‘Treasure your freedoms’
p2pnet.net News View:- AMD is suing Intel, claiming the latter forced major vendors into Intel-exclusive deals, established discriminatory and retroactive incentives to deny customers the freedom of buying AMD processors in significant volumes, and threatened retaliation against customers introducing AMD platforms
Rob Enderle says lockouts prevent innovation,
Read on >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Protect Your Freedoms in Face of Power Misuse
By Rob Enderle – TechNewsWorld
Lockouts prevent innovation which is critical to the long-term health of an industry; if you have to use intimidation and threats to get the behavior you want you are generally on the wrong side; children should be off limits to threats regardless of cause; and freedom of speech is our most important freedom.
A status report for your boss. Answers for your client. Information you need – now! Is your search engine up to the challenge? Or is bad search leaving you hanging? Get a grip! Download Verity Ultraseek for free. Scale to new heights with search that uncovers relevant information.
On this day in the United States we celebrate our independence from what was reported to be a very oppressive government. Of course, since the victors get to tell the story and it all happened even before my time, I have little doubt there was another side. History may seem black and white, but I know the history I have lived through seldom was.
Considering that it’s Independence Day, I think it important to use this opportunity to talk about protecting our freedoms and why they are important. We have a number of recent events that make excellent examples.
AMD vs Intel
AMD, last week, sued Intel in both the U.S. and Japan for unfair trade practices. While this does not mean that Intel is guilty – there still needs to be a trial – the recent findings of the Japanese government indicating Intel acted illegally would suggest that AMD has a case.
Without discussing the case itself which has, and will, continue to be dissected by others, it is important to understand just what the damage to you would be if AMD’s allegations turn out to be true.
In this instance it is about freedom of choice, and when a company reaches a level of controlling dominance it generally is not only bad for you the consumer, it isn’t particularly good for the company, either. Over the last three decades I’ve been intimate with the IBM anti-trust action and the Microsoft anti-trust action, and I have no doubt I’ll be intimate with this action.
IBM’s case is likely the most relevant. If IBM hadn’t been weakened we probably wouldn’t have personal computers, PC video games, Apple, Microsoft, or an independent AMD or Intel. It wasn’t IBM’s power that was the problem — a monopoly is actually more efficient and many in the IT industry still remember fondly what it was like when you could simply depend on Big Blue. The problem was that IBM misused that power and restricted innovation.
Today the PC market is stagnating. Desktop computers are very similar to what they were in the 80s, the notable exceptions are from companies like Wyse based on VIA technology, companies like OQO based on Transmeta technology, Apple’s Mac Mini based on IBM/Apple technology and AMD/Microsoft’s Personal Internet Communicator.
As a vendor becomes more dominant it generally, and increasingly, focuses on maintaining the status quo and makes it very difficult to introduce new technology. The end result is a stagnant market and, if nothing else, we have certainly seen that over the last several years.
Whether Intel’s actions turn out to be real or imagined, OEMs have been afraid to take risks. The revolutionary IBM all-in-one X series, Compaq iPaq desktop, and Toshiba Latest News about Toshiba Equium (which had an upgradeable motherboard) have all passed in favor of far less innovative successors. What this shows is that when any vendor misuses its dominant power, you, the buyer, are denied choice — one of our most important freedoms.
P2P vs the Media Industry
Last week saw the Supreme Court rule that it remains illegal to commit certain overt acts and to reaffirm your fair use rights. I’m of the belief that someone needs to step on the media industry hard before they destroy our freedoms and their market. In the judgment it is clear that many of the judges don’t agree that music sharing has damaged the industry as badly as claimed and may actually benefit it in some ways. They clearly believe, and I certainly concur, that stealing music is a bad thing. But they don’t agree, and I concur with this as well, that the media industry should own all related technology.
It appears the court is smart enough to realize this isn’t really a fight about stealing music as much as it is a fight for control, and at least for now, they are actively supporting your rights. Not that this does you much good long-term as the media industry is still hell-bent on convincing Congress to give them the control they want. It remains up to us to remind Congress they work for us and not the media distributors.
The artists aren’t really even the ones who are driving this; it is the current distribution companies who are scared half to death that the market is beginning to look at them like they’re horse buggies. If I can and am willing to pay for first-run, high-definition movies to watch in my home or digital music, why can’t I? When movie theaters came in they did displace a large number of traditional theaters, though I think we would find that even in that case there are actually more live plays now than there were at the turn of the century thanks to population growth.
People are increasingly playing games and exploring the Internet rather than watching TV. Why would the industry want to prevent or limit this emerging channel if they truly had the artists’ best interest at heart? It is because the existing channel is where they make their money and the Internet is showing a huge potential for making them obsolete.
Where the RIAA, in particular, lost me was when they started going after 12-year-old kids in what was clearly a strategy designed to terrorize parents and schools into compliance. I personally think we have way too much fear surrounding children right now and certainly don’t feel any industry, for any reason, should be allowed to target children. That is just so incredibly wrong. I am disgusted for us as a race that we allow this behavior. We clearly should be free to protect our children as the world’s most dear and important asset.
Open Source
What annoys me the most about open source Latest News about open source is the incredibly disingenuous nature of many of its supporters. Open source is supposedly about freedom – but for a very scary and vocal part of the initiative there couldn’t be anything further from the truth. Some nuts have crossed the line from insuring freedom of choice to insuring their own choice dominates and they use a variety of horribly intimidating and threatening methods ranging from denial of service attacks to threats of physical violence to get their way.
A recent example comes from a note I received from an ex-Linux advocate who, after pointing out on Groklaw that he thought there might be some merit to SCO’s position, received a detailed note telling him to change his position or his daughter would be kidnapped. Yes, kidnapped.
While I’d previously seen careers and lives threatened, this was the first time I’d seen a case where someone actually threatened a child. After publishing this note in a column I received a note from a reader who compared the open-source initiative to the French Revolution wherein an action that was supposed to increase freedom resulted in a situation where freedoms were actually eliminated. The French Revolution is hardly the only example in history.
This latest writer argued that this is a human failing in that we seem to constantly replace something that we think is bad with something that turns out to be a lot worse to insure our "brave new world" is assured. In the end it is often all about power and how absolute power does corrupt absolutely.
All of this comes down to the misuse of power. Each example is worse than the one that precedes it, and all of them are both bad and avoidable. There are a few thoughts I’d like you to take away from this: Lockouts prevent innovation which is critical to the long-term health of an industry; if you have to use intimidation and threats to get the behavior you want you are generally on the wrong side; children should be off limits to threats regardless of cause; and freedom of speech is our most important freedom and therefore needs to be the most aggressively protected.
Today of all days, regardless of where you live, treasure you freedoms and your children because they are too easily lost, and once lost, the cost to regain them is incredibly dear.
Reproduced with permission of TechNewsWorld and ECT News Network. (c) 2005 ECT News Network. All Rights Reserved.
=============
Something you think we should know? tips[at]p2pnet.net
See:-
suing Intel – Intel sued by AMD, p2pnet, June 28, 2005






July 4th, 2005 at 6:14 pm
AMD-Intel is a good example of multi-headed monopoly, why don’t we have quantum computers for instance ?
I repeat CAPITALISM IS A MONOPOLY and it’ll end looking like Soviet Union !
July 4th, 2005 at 7:18 pm
I was all with you and about children too. We must lead by example and in that vein I say do not take ONE Linux nutball jerk as the spokes person for Free Open Software. We could show about 10 over the top die hard Windows extreamists for every one Linux extreamist. The bad apples don’t count. Don’t let the free speech nature of the Internet get you down about Openess and change in software.
Freedom indeed is on the choping block and we need to come down on the big wig RIAA and Microsoft monopolistic behavior now. Mostly where they have effectively bought and paid for laws to their advantage. That’s a big deal. That’s true coruption and the people at large lose.
Don’t expect people on the payroll to agree with me.
How sane is it for the FBI to raid kids because thay have bittorrent links on there little servers. If you don’t fight for these little guys then don’t complain when the FBI bashes down your door! If one is caught selling then punish them under piracy laws that have already been established.
We desperately need legal power clarification about the difference between downloading, sharing, linking etc, and between SELLING by site or mainly conterfeit hard copies (usually pretending to be from authentic sources.) We already have laws to prevent real piracy. Sharing IS NOT PIRACY!
No one stormed the doors of movie or music studios. We are talking about a data copy on a hard drive. Just like a copy onto VHS you made of your favorite movie. If something gets out in the wild, it’s too damn late. This is what we need to understand. The fact is, today, a “unathorized” release is like free advertising. How can we possiblly tell what was leaked ON PURPOSE? You can’t then arrest kids for downloading. Get real.
I hope the lawyers of the resently arrested young guys (just because they had servers) have a field day with the prosecution and set the proper presendent about these matters.
Canada has protected it’s people, why not the US. Why are big money monopolists alowed free rein? Let supply and demand work in either direction but don’t alow big company (the richest in the world) to cheat. There is NOTHING wrong with having money UNLESS you let it have you. It’s THE LOVE of money that’s the root of all kinds of evil. Greed and the love of money seems to have corupted these big wigs into power hungery monopolists; not fair playing business competition.
Ironically, that’s just what’s happening NOW. In the name of not “stealing” the big wigs are actually cheating. All the while (I’m talking about where there’s no sales, or it is piracy) NO STEALING IS INVOLVED!
It’s all about “intelectual property” which is a BS term for an idea or art work. no one is stealing a darn Monet off the wall of a museum. People are just starting to have free acess to a copy. If that slows museum attendance and thus (potentially) reduce demand and profit for museums then WELCOME TO THE 21st century! Stuff changes. Why do monopolies deserve special protection from the “law of supply and demand” they say is fair business?
What are you going to do about it? Right now, the monopolists have more money and apparently more motivation.
The misuse of our laws alone should be enough for a world wide revolution. Where are the checks and balances?
July 4th, 2005 at 9:50 pm
I would like to make a comment that all of the recent activity (US controlling the internet) just happened right before Independence Day. Why isn’t everyone asking questions and getting pissed off?
I believe that the only way they could make this announcement is just before Independence Day so that people would not pay much attention. I believe that these attacks are planned and executed on ceartain days. I am very pissed off at my country.
July 5th, 2005 at 2:22 pm
We have a kind of “Mexican standoff” going on. Yes it is wrong to threaten the kidnapping of a person’s children. This threat is propable the action of a certain “nutcase.” However, the monopolies have been using violence (police breaking down doors and coming in with guns drawn) against those who use technology to do what is legal to do with a VCR.
The monopolies are the same ones who bully kids and anyone else that they think is too weak to stand up to them. I think those who are fighting for freedom in the P.S.A. (police States of Amerika) should not stoop to the same level as the **AA’s. We need to leave the children out of it. Thanks to the Supreme Court in the P.S.A., the police have yet even more immunity to do as they please. Unfortunately for the citizens in the P.S.A., technology is the only weapon that can be used against the cartels.
Since governments and cartels can do all they want, and we can do little, we must use technology to protect ourselves. There are those who resorted to Denial of Service Attacks against S.C.O. The strong arm tactics used against filesharers, software coders, Internet server operators and others are now being turned on the persecuters. What did they think would happen? Did they actually think that they could continue bullying everybody with impunity? I personally have no propblem with this D.O.S. since S.C.O. is out to destroy my freedom to use Linux. I do draw the line at bringing kids into the fight though.
There are those Linux coders who believe that D.O.S. is wrong. I respect their opinion as well. I myself have not participated in a D.O.S. However, many Microsoft users have, and they don’t even know it. The tactice of using one monopolie’s strenghts (customer base) against another is great tactical thinking. It would be much nicer though if a court decision would not be based on the amount of money a particular side had. If there were justice in the court system, then people would use it rather than extra-legal means to achieve one ends.