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<rss version="2.0"><channel><title>Technology Liberation Front - Latest Comments in European Union: Reduced Innovation Edition</title><link>http://tlf.disqus.com/</link><description>The Technology Liberation Front is the tech policy blog dedicated to keeping politicians' hands off the 'net and everything else related to technology.</description><language>en</language><lastBuildDate>Sun, 19 Jun 2005 09:20:55 -0000</lastBuildDate><item><title>Re: European Union: Reduced Innovation Edition</title><link>http://techliberation.com/2005/06/16/european-union-reduced-innovation-edition/#comment-1443589</link><description>Failure of a remedy doesn't quite "lay bare the absurdity of Microsoft's antitrust critics."  What it does is demonstrate the impotence of simple remediation to a broken market.  The problem with the antitrust case has always been that it tackles symptoms after they emerge, while ignoring the underlying problem inherent in the IP rights that we grant to software companies.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;In a competitive operating systems market, vendors would integrate new functionality at their own risk.  Technically smooth integrations that made consumers happy would win market share away from competitorsÃÂ¢Ã¢?Â¬Ã¢?Âwho would then have to integrate the new functionality as well or wither to insignificance.  Technically premature integrations would annoy consumers, degrade OS performance and system stability, and drive market share away from the integrator.  The market mechanism would either reinforce or negate the underlying engineering decision.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The antitrust argument has long been that the structure of the operating systems market skews incentives.  Consumers cannot punish Microsoft for engineering missteps stemming from premature integration (or, as I have argued, for replacing engineers with marketers as the key decision-makers in product development).  Microsoft, on the other hand, retains the standard incentives to make life difficult for its competitors.  In this environment, it would be irrational for Microsoft to do anything other than integrate prematurelyÃÂ¢Ã¢?Â¬Ã¢?Âthereby curtailing innovation and competition.  There is no evidence that Microsoft is an irrational corporation.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;But the key to Microsoft's rationality lies in its ability to leverage the IP rights that we gave it.  Largely due to a lack of analytic thought, we have arrived at a situation where a typical commercial software product bundles: (i) patented algorithms and (ii) trademarked logos and icons into (iii) copyrighted source code subsequently both (iv) maintained as a trade secret and (v) compiled into copyrighted object code, then circulated subject to (vi) a shrink-wrapped license.  That combination of legal protections makes software among the most heavily regulated products on the marketÃÂ¢Ã¢?Â¬Ã¢?Âand almost entirely with stealth regulations whose regulatory nature many people miss (or deny).  It is precisely the courts' willingness to enforce these regs, though, that enables both Microsoft's basic business model and the activities about which its antitrust critics complain.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The proper legal remedies (at least under U.S. law) for a company that leverages its patents or copyrights to harm markets that those IP rights don't cover lie in IP law, not in antitrust law: they are known as "patent misuse" or "copyright misuse."  Under a misuse remedy, the courts simply announce that they will not enforce IP rights that their holder has misused unless and until the effects of that misuse have been purged.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;As long as Microsoft's critics continue to push after-the-fact antitrust remedies to solve what is really a problem in IP policy, many of their remedies will have minimal effectÃÂ¢Ã¢?Â¬Ã¢?Âand make them look foolish.  Behavioral remedies (e.g., decoupling) can matter at the margin; structural remedies will be hard to implement.  Neither addresses the fundamental problem.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;If we really want to see a vibrant free market in software that motivates broad-based innovation, we're going to have to face the underlying problem: our approach to IP rights in software is strangling us.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I develop this argument in greater detail in:&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Bruce Abramson, Digital Phoenix: Why the Information Economy Collapsed and How it Will Rise Again (MIT Press, 2005).</description><dc:creator xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/">Bruce Abramson</dc:creator><pubDate>Sun, 19 Jun 2005 09:20:55 -0000</pubDate></item><item><title>Re: European Union: Reduced Innovation Edition</title><link>http://techliberation.com/2005/06/16/european-union-reduced-innovation-edition/#comment-1443588</link><description>If Gates had just bought a few politicians from the git go, this all would never have happened. Politicians do not like businessfolk who consider themselves above the fray.</description><dc:creator xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/">Walter_E_Wallis</dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 17 Jun 2005 12:40:20 -0000</pubDate></item><item><title>Re: European Union: Reduced Innovation Edition</title><link>http://techliberation.com/2005/06/16/european-union-reduced-innovation-edition/#comment-1443587</link><description>Web sites that don't work in Firefox make the baby Jebus cry.</description><dc:creator xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/">Andy</dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 17 Jun 2005 12:03:33 -0000</pubDate></item></channel></rss>