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Posted in Antitrust, Bill Gates, Formats, Microsoft, Office Suites, Open XML, OpenDocument at 1:18 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz
Summary: Microsoft’s former chairman shows the company’s attitude towards accessible file formats and competition
IT is interesting enough to know that Microsoft deliberately makes its documentation deficient and unavailable (the word “undocumentation” is actually used internally), but to know who is responsible for it is even more interesting. Comes vs Microsoft Exhibit PX03104 (2000) [PDF] provides an answer which fits the pattern seen in other E-mails.
=> ↺ “undocumentation” is actually used internally | ↺ Comes vs Microsoft | Exhibit PX03104 (2000)
We’ve recently change the policy for distributing our file formats, at the request of BillG. We used to be fairly lax about giving it out to pretty much everyone who asked for it (Excel even published a book through MS Press).Our new policy (for Office2000) is that there are restrictions on use (can’t build converters, can’t be a competitor to any of the apps, etc). We required a signed license agreement in hand before we’ll send them the docs. They have to tell us who they are and what their company does, as well as their intended use. Privileged Material Redacted Once we get a copy of the signed agreement back, I sign for Microsoft, and we send them back a hard copy of the agreement via snail mail, and send them the docs via email
This should not be particularly surprising. See other Comes vs Microsoft exhibits that we covered in:
Bill Gates: “We Should Look at Even Patenting the Things That We Do Add to Help Office”Patent Manoeuvres Fight Free Software, Have Roots in Microsoft’s PastBill Gates, 1999: Giving out the Office 2000 Formats to Competitors Seems CrazyImpressed by OpenOffice, Bill Gates Schemes to Use Software Patents Against It
For the investigative, there is more in our Wiki. The full text from this latest exhibit can be found beneath. It is particularly valuable to those who study Microsoft’s reluctance to support open standards, let alone permit other office suites to inter-operate (free of charge). Based on the correspondence below, Microsoft deliberately targets possible competition and hinders access to vital data if the competition is serious. Shouldn’t the European Commission take a look? █
=> ↺ more | ↺ our Wiki
From: Marc Olson Sent: Wednesday, May 24, 2000 7:21 AM To: Norman Gilinsky Cc: Joel Frauenheim Subject: RE: Visio file formatThanks, he sent a message to the alias and I’ve been in touch with him.—-Original Message—- From: Norman Gilinsky Sent: Wednesday, May 24, 2000 7:01 AM To: Marc Olson Cc: Joel Frauenheim Subject: RE: Visio file formatJoel Frauenheim will be handling distribution of file formatNorm—-Original Message—- From: Marc Olson Sent: Monday, May 22, 2000 3:49 PM To: Norman Gilinsky Subject: FW: Visio file formatHi Norm,I don’t know how urgent this project is–is someone covering the file format distribution in Tim’s absence?Marc—-Original Message—- From: Marc Olson Sent: Monday, May 22, 2000 7:48 AM To: Tim Davenport Cc: Erich Andersen (LCA) Subject: RE: Visio file formatHi Tim,We’ve recently change the policy for distributing our file formats, at the request of BillG. We used to be fairly lax about giving it out to pretty much everyone who asked for it (Excel even published a book through MS Press).Our new policy (for Office2000) is that there are restrictions on use (can’t build converters, can’t be a competitor to any of the apps, etc). We required a signed license agreement in hand before we’ll send them the docs. They have to tell us who they are and what their company does, as well as their intended use. Privileged Material Redacted Once we get a copy of the signed agreement back, I sign for Microsoft, and we send them back a hard copy of the agreement via snail mail, and send them the docs via emailMarc>—-Original Message—- From: Tim Davenport Sent: Monday, May 15, 2000 5:14 PM To: Office File Format Request Subject: Visio file formatHello.MS-PCA 2545864 HIGHLY CONFIDENTIALAs you may know, Visio is now a Microsoft product. We recently completed the documentation of the Video file format and we want to distribute it in the same manner as the Office docs are distributed. I know that there is a page on MSDN that tells requestors to e-mail this alias and ask for the Office documentation. Do you require that they supply you with the details of what they plan to do with it? Do you make them sign any kind of agreement? Is the documentation stamped with “Microsoft Confidential”?Thanks for any information you can provide me.Tim Davenport (Timda) Program Manager VIsioMS-PCA 2545865 HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL
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