Lileks on Microsoft and Evil
Youâll never hear me say that Microsoft is evil. Have you studied evil? Philosophically, itâs remarkably coherent and efficient. Simple. Messy, yes, but thereâs an underlying logic. Microsoft is evil? You wish.
I donât have the usual raving hatred for Microsoft that results from constant use of its products. Iâm a Mac guy. I write in Word, a decent enough word-processing program â it has 293,941 more features than I require and some baffling features I cannot shut off. Would you like me to indent this numbered series for you, sir? No. Fine, I shall indent them to the best of my ability. No, donât. I see you have typed the number two followed by a period â now you sit right back while I indent. No! Knock it off! But otherwise itâs fine. I donât use Internet Explorer, because itâs ugly as a flaming monkey butt and thinks that the Mac interface means you stick gummi icons everywhere. Plus, it has 17 toolbars, and for all I know installs back doors in my system that let Bulgarian virus writers use my machine to park code that hoovers up credit-card numbers and resells them to Burmese pimp-rings. You never know. I use Windows at work. The interface hails from 1998, because institutional upgrades are a big thing; weâll probably go straight to Longhorn. In 2009.
So Iâm not a big fan. But I will come to their defense for the anti-trust suits. Minnesota just settled a suit with the state of Minnesota, where millions of consumers were apparently forced at gunpoint to buy Windows machines. Microsoft once again promised to hand over its wallet if the kicking stopped, and agreed to remain rolled in a fetal position until the money is counted. The verdict was around eleventy trillion dollars or so. When it came to distribute the organs of the corpose the lawyers got the liver, spleen, lungs and most of the brain; the consumers got some regulatory glands, some teeth and a selection of minor toes. I think we get a certificate for ten bucks off on future Microsoft purchases. If the consumers donât claim the money, some goes back to Bill and some goes to an education fund. The trick, of course, is to get people to claim their money. Florida lead the pack: 18 % of the consumers stepped forward. Obviously they need higher participation rates, since it looks bad when you advocate on behalf of an Inflamed Public that turns out to be utterly indifferent to the supposed offense. So the state has come up with a novel means of informing citizens that Microsoft owes them money. It was buried at the end of the story in the local paper last week.
The state will subpoena local computer resellers to learn who bought PCs.
Maybe itâs just me, but: imagine the outcry if the Justice department decided it wanted a database of computer ownership in America. Who had what. Oh no you donât would be the general reaction, even if people couldnât quite explain why they didnât like the idea. It smacks of typewriter-registration laws in totalitarian states, even though we all know no one will kick down the door and demand to know where you put that 386 you bought in â92. But this is the mindset of the well-intentioned government lawyer: gee, people might not claim their rebates. How about we use the power of the state to force private businesses to turn over customer lists so we can mail informational material to computer owners? Itâs for their own good. Who could complain?
Grrr.
Posted by: Steve 2004-07-07 |