25 June 2005

If Microsoft was Michael Jackson...

They would have been found guilty and then the children involved would have had to pay him.

Bottom line. MS lost in court over antitrust issues. As a "punishment" MS has been forced to "open" its networking protocol. So MS decided they would just make the protocol license so expensive that their competitors cannot afford it.

As the article points out protocols generally are licensed for free. The reason for this is that when a company creates a protocol like this, they want as many people to use it as possible. If they charged, no one (few) would bother using it.

However if you are a monopoly you can play by different rules. People *have* to use it.

Microsoft is Profiting from Punishment

Justifications for War Begin to Unravel

Not that it will come as any surprise. Not as if it wasn't obvious.

The Downing Street Memos

"The facts revealed in these secret government documents demand a response. The American people deserve to know if they were misled into war."

What is amazing to me is that there is any pretense of a need of "determining" if the US administration spun the lead up to the war. Its completely obvious that they did. Any rational objective person (even causally) watching the news would conclude that they were full of shit from the start.

What was the *big* issue? Weapons of mass destruction?

The U.N. and U.S. intelligence sources have known for some time that Saddam Hussein has materials to produce chemical and biological weapons, but he has not accounted for them:

* 26,000 liters of anthrax—enough to kill several million people
* 38,000 liters of botulinum toxin
* 500 tons of sarin, mustard and VX nerve agents


Um, yeah.

or no wait, it was terrorist! *cough*

Wonder what happened to these people?

Answers come out eventually I guess, and, well after 4.2 million victims really.

The news is Shocking

It is shocking what is reported.

A collection of links as an introduction to my blog.

Preemptive wars

Bush + Amnesty International + absurd

Arthur Andersen

The Panama Invasion