FSFE's role in the antitrust case was to ensure that free software
developers would be able to use any interoperability information
that Microsoft would be forced to publish. After 5 years of work,
the last court case was won last year. There were always doubts
about whether Microsoft could really be pinned down, but from Samba
developer Andrew Bartlet's blog, it seems
the Samba
team are now loving the interoperability information.
I didn't do much on this case. For FSFE, it was mostly Georg Greve
and Carlo Piana. This work involved filing briefs, court appearances, backing up the
good parts of the European Commission's work in the press, acting as
advisors during meetings, etc. A partial list starts halfway down our
antitrust project
page. Generally not very visible work - they're not the sort of
meetings you can blog about when you leave. From Samba, they worked
with Andrew Tridgell, Jeremy Allison, and Volker Lendecke - who were
each very capable in the court rooms.
There were other organisations involved, but FSFE played two key
roles.
First, we represented the interests
of free
software developers. Others had interests such as the ability
of their private company to compete with MS, or lowering the price
of X or Y, or fining MS, etc. These organisations were on our side, but they could have accepted a solution that excluded free software.
FSFE was there to constantly argue that free software must benefit
from the outcome, and to explain what this required.
The second key role was persistency. The case began with many
companies bringing evidence against Microsoft, but one-by-one they
made business deals with Microsoft and withdrew from the case. This
could never happen to FSFE, so FSFE was a reminder that the European
Commission would never be left alone on this case.
There are two other organisations worth mentioning. SIIA is the
only other organisation that, like FSFE, stayed in the case from
start to finish. And ECIS is worth a mention because although they
joined late, they added a lot of strength to what we were
supporting.
The antitrust case was sometimes misunderstood. The mainstream
media - with its love of simplifying topics down to numbers -
constantly reported about how much Microsoft were going to get
fined. That's a pity. The fines were never important for us.
Helping Samba and other free software projects was the important
part. Done.
Some interesting links
--

Ciarán O'Riordan,
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