Microsoft's draft licence, step by step

Daily Newsletters

Sign up to ZDNet UK's daily newsletter.

Presumably this licence refers to Windows Server 2003. What about future releases of Windows?
Microsoft says it will make WSPP documentation available in a 'timely manner'.

Oh yes? What's that then?
It doesn't say.

Are there any other surprises in there?
Yes, if Microsoft implements any content protection mechanism in the WSPP protocol (part of what it calls its System Integrity Specifications), then you must also build that into your software. You will have 120 days after Microsoft publishes these System Integrity Specifications to conform.

Content protection mechanism? What does that mean?
Microsoft says it could be anything from anti-piracy systems and antivirus technology to licence enforcement mechanisms, authentication security and intellectual property mechanisms (presumably digital rights management).

So how will Microsoft know what we've done with the WSPP anyway?
It will ask for an audit trail. You will have to keep copies of all EULAs, and other agreements such as non-disclosure agreements. Within 14 days of a request from Microsoft, you will have to provide these to a Microsoft-selected auditor.

How do I know Microsoft won't use this as an excuse to glean confidential information about my business relationships?
Microsoft says its auditor(s) will use all due care to guard confidentiality of the information.

Can I trust that?
This is Microsoft.

Good point. So anyway, is there anything else I'll have to provide?
Yes. Source code of your applications that implement the WSPP to an independent company designated by Microsoft, who will be able to compile the code and make as many copies as they like.

How do I know Microsoft won't look at the source code?
Because the company says so.

Sounds like Microsoft's version of open source is your source code opened for them?
Now you're just being cynical.

Can I trust that?
See above.

What if the audit finds anything wrong?
You'll have to pay the costs of the audit, up to $50,000.

And beyond that?
Take all commercially reasonable steps to correct that non-compliance. And then Microsoft may still take you to court.

Talkback

As usual, a one sided deal to the extreme.

via Facebook 18 March, 2005 22:02
Reply

Excellent article!!
Great digest.

via Facebook 18 March, 2005 23:27
Reply

What a stupidly one-sided view of the entire issue. Perhaps you should write comedy instead of business reporting?

via Facebook 18 March, 2005 23:35
Reply

Hi my name mitsu_pit, I'm an Alien, I came all this way, but I think I'll go home - your planet sounds horrible.

via Facebook 19 March, 2005 00:50
Reply

protocols != applications. Microsoft, in its capacity as an OS house, must freely pass out the protocols which allow applications to run on that OS. If, in its capacity as an apps house, it refuses to do so, it is in the position of being an illegal monopoly. The obvious remedy is to require MS to split into (at least) two separate companies.. One, OS & the other, Apps.
<br>
Charging a company for the privelege of writing apps to run on/with their OS is kind of like Ford charging an after market company for the privelege of making after market parts. Is that next?

via Facebook 19 March, 2005 00:57
Reply

Mr Anonymous Salesperson: Microsoft wrote that license, not ZDNet. If you feel that any part of it has been misrepresented in this article then why don't you explain precisely where and how?

via Facebook 19 March, 2005 11:13
Reply

Microsoft's behaviour is clearly outrageous. What right do their shareholders have to a return on Microsoft's intellectual property? The EU should force them to hand it over for free to the free software community. We all know that Brussels is always right. The author of this story is a brave warrior on behalf of the EU's campaign for freedom and fairness. Losers of the new Europe unite and rise up! We can succeed where the USSR failed.

via Facebook 19 March, 2005 19:51
Reply

Sarcasm or reverse psychology, Boris? I can't tell. But all the EU is asking Microsoft for is the complete API to be freely available. And having the API means that you can (finally) have an intelligent conversation with the piece of Microsoft technology that you have *already bought*. So Microsoft's share-holders *are* getting a return.

via Facebook 20 March, 2005 00:03
Reply

The article is too cynical for me to understand it as a non-native english speaker.

via Facebook 20 March, 2005 01:25
Reply

So much for objectivity in reporting..
WTF?

Microsoft is required to LICENSE their protocols, not provide charity.

Open source makes MS's protocol visible to non-licensees, which certainly wasn't intended in the original ruling..

via Facebook 21 March, 2005 18:27
Reply

So in summary, Adam S, you believe that no-one should be allowed to program on a Microsoft platform without Microsoft's explicitly licensed and fully paid-through-the-nose permission.

Hence all Windows applications must exist at Microsoft's *sufferance*, because Microsoft should be permitted to dictate whatever terms it pleases to its licensees as part of its own punishment.

You *do* realise that the EC was seeking remedies for anti-competitive business practices, right?

via Facebook 21 March, 2005 22:46
Reply

Adam S, despite what you may think, a protocol is not the source code of an application. It is a set of specifications which other developers can use to write software that interoperates with the implementing software.

So you think Microsoft should be able to charge huge royalties and dictate the terms to any operating system that wishes to talk to a Windows machine.

You have much to learn.

via Facebook 22 March, 2005 09:47
Reply

it would be an interesting exercise to calculate just what Microsoft thinks the value of these interface specifications are. Having done that, compare the figure to the cost of the entire product - methinks that the interface protocols licencing would be more expensive. If so, is Microsoft guilty of "dumping" the complete product into the EC market?

Just as a point of interest; for those that did not follow the appeal to the Court of First Instance (and why Microsoft lost). Microsoft tried to use the "intellectual Property" & "Trade Secrets" argument to protect the interface details of the API's - the judge asked why they had not been raised these arguments in the original case and summised that, as Microsoft had never exercised a licencing strategy, persued prosecution for use of or, for the reverse engineering of API's, that MS had not asigned them any real materilal value before and, as such, could not expect to do so now.

via Facebook 27 March, 2005 12:59
Reply

Looks like Bill Gates is still treating the rest of the world like idiots. Unfortunately, there are too many people willing to let him, like anonymous and others above. Talk about anticompetitive behaviour! You know, there is a better way (just look at the glorious new MacOS or even BeOS) , you just have been sucked into the MS vortex and can't operate without them now. And don't talk about the cost of changing...the cost of continuing with the MS ethos is already too high, what with Windows' continued upgrades, security flaws, patching, viruses, and built in obsolesence, it's just that people are always being told how much they need Windows, and how good it is. Good, my arse. What a pile of crap. And to think they are now finding ways to force us to pay for it? Bill Gates said a long long time ago that this was his plan: get people hooked and then figure out how to charge them for it...seems like he is only being true to his word, the devious little hitler.

hey, blue screen, my old friend... how come we keep meeting like this?

via Facebook 3 April, 2005 06:42
Reply

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your ZDNet UK account below

  • Login

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy. Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Community FAQ

Get ZDNet UK's daily newsletter

Enter your email address to sign up

ZDNet UK Live

Freebies202

Duplicate comments are not made intentionally. Its very good to know that now you are keeping check on this problem because sometimes a commenter...

9 hours ago by Freebies202 on Microsoft fixes blog comments, speeds up blogs with open source
kevinmchapman

"the very significant number of users" and "many (most) of us" - you have no evidence for these statements. It is a fact that most users are saying...

17 hours ago by kevinmchapman on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
Marg Menzies Harrison

Another grammar faux pas is the improper use of "you". When sitting down down in a restaurant, for example, I get cringe when the waitress...

19 hours ago by Marg Menzies Harrison via Facebook on 10 flagrant grammar mistakes that make you look stupid
zdnetukuser

And NOW, folks, for Canonical's next trick... Kubuntu is late. Here's a pencil. Draw your own conclusions. cf.:...

19 hours ago by zdnetukuser on Linux Minterface
Moley

@kevinmchapman. The discussion here reflects the very significant number of users who really do like the traditional menu system and who wish to...

21 hours ago by Moley on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
kevinmchapman

Er, no... It is an efficient means of finding the application/file/setting you need in one place. The icons are a simply a fallback for when you...

23 hours ago by kevinmchapman on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
TerryRK

Isn't the provision of a text based search an admission by the developers that the mass of icons approach does not work? I don't need to use a...

24 hours ago by TerryRK on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
kevinmchapman

"Unity and GNOME 3 both abandon the old text-based cascading menus in favour of a graphical icon-driven system." Point truly missed. Both use a...

1 day ago by kevinmchapman on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
TerryRK

whs001 - Thank you, I'm glad you liked the article. I absolutely agree with you on your first point. I should perhaps have made it clearer that...

1 day ago by TerryRK on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
Dennis Nilsson

If we allow corporate interest to dictate the way our government circumvents due process against foreign entities then we should accept the same...

1 day ago by Dennis Nilsson via Facebook on ACTA stumbles in Germany
GHar123

I totally dislike pirating of works, I fear that artists will be deterred from creating works if they think that they are going to get ripped off....

1 day ago by GHar123 on ACTA stumbles in Germany
JCB33

How dare film makers, artists or anybody that invests in creativity stop us pirating their works for free. I want to be able to walk into my local...

1 day ago by JCB33 on ACTA stumbles in Germany
Moley

@GrueMaster. I prefer horses for courses rather than one size fits all. I, and I suspect most other computer users, do not really wish to have...

1 day ago by Moley on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
greycynic

The product that scares me every time I have to use it is the Office 2007 version of Excel. The first bug that I found was applying the median...

1 day ago by greycynic on Ten flawed products that derail productivity
GrueMaster

Nice review and very informative. One thing I'd like to add (in reply to whs001's 1st question), the main reason to have the same interface from...

2 days ago by GrueMaster on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint

I'be been using Mint 12 since the RC came out, and I am far more happy with the Cinnamon, the Mate, and, yes (with extensions), theGnome 3...

2 days ago by via Facebook on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
bdantas

Excellent article. One small correction, though--although a fresh installation of Linux Mint 12 will, indeed, provide the user with a version of...

2 days ago by bdantas on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
Alan Ralph

In related news, the ISPs club together to get the members of the Home Affairs Select Committee (ya goofed on that part, ZDNet UK) copies of "The...

2 days ago by Alan Ralph via Facebook on MPs urge ISPs to take down terrorist material
Alan Ralph

In related news, the ISPs club together to get the members of the Home Affairs Select Committee (ya goofed on that part, ZDNet UK) copies of "The...

2 days ago by Alan Ralph via Facebook on MPs urge ISPs to take down terrorist material
Moley

For Gnome 2 die-hards, it is possible to add icons to the bottom panel (or top top panel, if you prefer) which provide the exact Gnome 2...

2 days ago by Moley on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint