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March 12th, 2008

Skepticism and Mary Jo Foley

Posted by John Carroll @ 9:44 am

Categories: Antitrust, Economic Policy, Microsoft

Tags: Microsoft Corp., Skepticism, Corporate Law, Quality, Security, Business Operations, John Carroll

Mary Jo Foley recently wrote a piece explaining why her Microsoft skepticism is warranted given the “suspicious coincidence” that these moves toward “transparency, standards and interoperability” fell so close to important signposts in Microsoft’s tangled road through the legal and regulatory minefield. The much ballyooed interoperability announcement took place close to debates over “fast track” ratification of OOXML by the ISO, and days before the imposition of a $1.35 billion fine by the EC for past antitrust malfeasance. Microsoft’s decision to support “super standards” mode in IE by default seems less of a beneficent move when one notes the vigor of Microsoft past defense of their previous stance, and that Opera has filed complaints with the EC on exactly that subject.

I can’t really disagree with her justifications. It’s fairly clear that there are executives who are not convinced of the merits of being open, and that what brings them over the line (or else makes their opponents arguments stronger) is the “stick” wielded by antitrust authorities. Further, Microsoft has a typical big company inability to come clean about real motivations, a fact I lamented in a past post on the subject of the fine.

Speaking about Microsoft as a single entity, however - a company with 75,000 employees scattered around the world - is a bit like talking about “Europe.” Though there are certain cultural overlaps that stretch throughout the area (products often span borders in the unifed marketplace that is Europe, though less so than in single-market United States), Germans, Spanish, French, Poles, Czechs, Irish, Italians and Greeks have extremely different approaches to government, social mores and culture.

In the case of Microsoft, I know that there are lots of people who believe in the power of open systems. They understand that Microsoft’s success has everything to do with the fact that Microsoft created a PLATFORM that was easy for third parties to adapt and customize. If you understand the centrality of “platform” to Microsoft’s business and the resulting dependence on the good will of developers, it’s hard to look at attempts at closed protocols or systems under a Microsoft label with anything but disdain.

People who think these things exist in large numbers within Microsoft (it isn’t just me, in other words). It is hard, however, to ignore the fact that there are a rather important bunch who don’t believe or understand that, and who are (or were) in a position of power to prevent attempts to move further down that path.

It’s hard to stop a river flowing through cracks in the dam once it has started, however. In the same vein, all the announcements and initiatives, added up, have resulted in a company that is radically different than it was in the mid-90s. The wild card, to my mind, is Ray Ozzie. He’s not a person who speaks a lot in public, and given that, it’s harder to discern where his true opinions lie.

I do find it interesting, however, that the area where Ozzie has most found his voice is on the subject of ”transparency, standards and interoperability.” This is the man whose “official” role is “Chief Software Architect,” the role vacated recently by Bill Gates - the source of Microsoft’s original orientation around platforms and APIs.  I don’t think that is coincidental.

So, Mary Jo, feel free to be skeptical (not that I had to tell you that). Skepticism is warranted, as you have rightly explained.  In fact, from a self-interest standpoint (mine, not yours), it serves a useful purpose. It forces Microsoft and its executives to think more seriously about whether they really believe the principles they are espousing, and gives ammunition to open systems proponents who wish to defend those principles over the long term.

Do try to recognize, however, that Microsoft is not “the borg.” Big changes can take place when founders retire, and that is set to happen with Bill Gates “retirement” this May. Given the amount of support I see internally for open systems, I have every reason to believe the shift is real.

John CarrollJohn Carroll has delivered his opinion on ZDNet since the last millennium. Since May 2008, he is no longer a Microsoft employee. He is currently working at a unified messaging-related startup. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 52 Talkback(s)
I noticed that too
They fell all on their own. (Read the rest)
Posted by: Ole Man Posted on: 03/14/08 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
That does it  Yagotta B. Kidding | 03/12/08
Not likely  John L. Ries | 03/12/08
RE: Skepticism and Mary Jo Foley  Hemlock Stones | 03/12/08
Ditto!  Ole Man | 03/12/08
Linux (or more accurately GNU) is viral...  Roque Mocan | 03/12/08
Better to use Microsoft  Ole Man | 03/12/08
Leave him ignorantly feeding the greedy Ole Man  fr0thy@... | 03/12/08
I wasn't making an attack on Linux, GNU, just stating a fact  Roque Mocan | 03/13/08
So is MS, so is "currently implemented" capitalism  fr0thy@... | 03/12/08
They've shot their bolt 100 times  fr0thy@... | 03/12/08
Skepticism and Mary Jo Foley Bashing MS  No_Ax_to_Grind | 03/12/08
Props  Harry Bardal | 03/12/08
Skepticism and Change  Harry Bardal | 03/12/08
The odd oversight  John CarrollZDNet Moderator | 03/12/08
An open market  Mikael_z | 03/12/08
Fake Choice  Harry Bardal | 03/12/08
Re: Choice  John CarrollZDNet Moderator | 03/13/08
Microsoft forced their naive customers to stay  Mikael_z | 03/13/08
Markets  Harry Bardal | 03/14/08
I beg to differ  John L. Ries | 03/12/08
Differing with Harry...  John L. Ries | 03/12/08
Mixed Messages  Harry Bardal | 03/12/08
I agree  Mikael_z | 03/12/08
MS should retain current buisness practices  dfolk | 03/12/08
How is...  John CarrollZDNet Moderator | 03/12/08
A primer  dfolk | 03/12/08
Yes,  John CarrollZDNet Moderator | 03/12/08
And all the other anti trust convictions?  dfolk | 03/12/08
But the appearance of bias...  John CarrollZDNet Moderator | 03/12/08
Also inaccurate Mr. Carroll  dfolk | 03/12/08
but John ... ok the market need standard right  Quebec-french | 03/12/08
Damn!!  Confused by religion | 03/12/08
Actually  dfolk | 03/12/08
Originally, MS approved of Jackson  MacCanuck | 03/13/08
What? Like kerberos?  zkiwi | 03/12/08
you right but even with all your truth  Quebec-french | 03/12/08
We Need To Have Some Perspective  P. Douglas | 03/12/08
I am the last person  John CarrollZDNet Moderator | 03/12/08
As I see it, nothing much has really changed  P. Douglas | 03/12/08
I am not saying  John CarrollZDNet Moderator | 03/12/08
Re: I am not saying  P. Douglas | 03/12/08
Revisionism alert!  zkiwi | 03/12/08
Nor can you  John CarrollZDNet Moderator | 03/13/08
Bullsiht  fr0thy@... | 03/12/08
Please try  John CarrollZDNet Moderator | 03/13/08
re: Bullsiht  M.R. Kennedy | 03/13/08
Developers! Developers! Developers!  woot@... | 03/12/08
Yes  John CarrollZDNet Moderator | 03/13/08
Microsoft wouldn't pay you to blog on their sites!  woot@... | 03/13/08
No  John CarrollZDNet Moderator | 03/13/08
Not Steve Ballmer  John L. Ries | 03/13/08
I noticed that too  Ole Man | 03/14/08

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