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Re: [seul-edu] (FWD) Red Hat Proposes Alternative to Microsoft settlement
As a point of FWIW
I am thinking that perhaps we should all get together on
one front and start communications with schools and the
major "commercial" distributors supporting the desktop...
say Red hat SuSE Mandrake and so forth.. And have them
start lobbing communicatioons up stram to the DOJ and
Attorney's General and anyone else in the loop.
I am alreading starting a discussion with Red Hat on this
and I would like to know what comments or concerns any of
you might like to add. This being the Thanksgiving Weekend
here, I will be in my office working on it only
sporadically. I will post the text of my message here
before sending it to Red hat.
Bill
On Tuesday 20 November 2001 17:00, Roger Dingledine wrote:
> It's really a shame that Microsoft is going to get away
> with further extending its monopoly as part of its
> "punishment".
>
> Ah well,
> --Roger
>
> ----- Forwarded message from "R. A. Hettinga"
> <rah@shipwright.com> -----
>
> Date: Tue, 20 Nov 2001 16:07:00 -0800
> Sender: Law & Policy of Computer Communications
> <CYBERIA-L@LISTSERV.AOL.COM>
> From: Doug Masson <dmasson@WELL.COM>
> Subject: Red Hat Proposes Alternative to Microsoft
> settlement
>
> I thought this was a nice piece of public relations from
> Red Hat:
>
> Subject: Red Hat proposes Alternative to Microsoft
> Settlement
>
> Red Hat Proposes to Enhance Microsoft Settlement Offer By
> Providing Open Source Software to All U.S. School
> Districts RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, N.C., Nov 20, 2001
> (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Open Source leader proposes to provide
> software to every school district in the United States if
> Microsoft provides computing hardware for the 14,000
> poorest school districts
>
> Red Hat, Inc. (Nasdaq:RHAT) today proposed an alternative
> to the settlement announced today of the class-action
> lawsuit against Microsoft. Red Hat offered to provide
> open-source software to every school district in the
> United States free of charge, encouraging Microsoft to
> redirect the money it would have spent on software into
> purchasing more hardware for the 14,000 poorest school
> districts. Under the Red Hat proposal, by removing
> Microsoft's higher-priced software from the settlement
> equation, Microsoft could provide the school districts
> with many more computers--greatly extending the benefits
> Microsoft seeks to provide school districts with their
> proposed settlement.
>
> Microsoft had proposed that, in settlement of
> class-action claims of price-gouging, the company donate
> computer hardware, software and support to 14,000 poor
> school districts throughout the United States. Under the
> proposed settlement, a substantial part of the value
> provided to schools would be in the form of Microsoft
> software.
>
> The Red Hat's alternative proposal includes the
> following: -- Microsoft redirects the value of their
> proposed software donation to the purchase of additional
> hardware for the school districts. This would increase
> the number of computers available under the original
> proposal from 200,000 to more than one million, and would
> increase the number of systems per school from
> approximately 14 to at least 70. -- Red Hat, Inc. will
> provide free of charge the open-source Red Hat Linux
> operating system, office applications and associated
> capabilities to any school system in the United States.
> -- Red Hat will provide online support for the software
> through the Red Hat Network.
> -- Unlike the Microsoft proposal, which has a
> five-year time limit at which point schools would have to
> pay Microsoft to renew their licenses and upgrade the
> software, the Red Hat proposal has no time limit. Red Hat
> will provide software upgrades through the Red Hat
> Network online distribution channel.
> A Win-Win Approach
> The Red Hat proposal achieves two important goals:
> improving the quality and accessibility of computing
> education in the nation's less-privileged schools, and
> preventing the extension of Microsoft's monopoly to the
> most-vulnerable users.
>
> "While we applaud Microsoft for raising the idea of
> helping poorer schools as part of the penalty phase of
> their conviction for monopolistic practices, we do not
> think that the remedy should be a mechanism by which
> Microsoft can further extend its monopoly," said Matthew
> Szulik, CEO of Red Hat. "Through this proposal all of the
> states and all of the schools can win, and Microsoft will
> achieve even greater success for its stated goal of
> helping schools. By providing schools with a software
> choice, Red Hat will enable Microsoft to provide many
> more computers to these schools. At the same time, the
> schools can accept this offer secure in the knowledge
> that they have not rewarded a monopolist by extending the
> monopoly. It's now up to Microsoft to demonstrate that
> they are truly serious about helping our schools."
>
> General information about Red Hat's support for education
> is available at www.redhat.com/opensourcenow/.
>
>
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> --- end forwarded text