Community: Leaked MS Memo: The Danger of Sharing
Jul 25, 2004,
by Thad Phetteplace

   The following internal memo has leaked from the highest levels of 
   Microsoft and found its way to my desk. Sorry, I can't reveal my 
   sources, but I am sharing it so we can all reach a better 
   understanding of Microsoft's thinking regarding free and open source 
   software. Enjoy. ;)

Title: The Danger of Sharing
Author: An Anonymous Microsoft Executive
Date: November 18, 2003

A dangerous plague is sweeping the land... a plague of sharing. It hides 
under the the seductive name of 'Free Software' or sometimes 'Open 
Source', but underneath it is just plain and simple sharing. I've warned 
the world of this threat on many occasions, but I've discovered my 
warnings were not broad enough. You see, this evil called sharing is not 
limited to just software.

You can find signs of it everywhere, along with the economic ruin that 
follows it. Why just the other day I discovered this place called a 'soup 
kitchen'. It was providing meals... for free! Just imagine the damage that 
would be inflicted on the restaurant industry if this soup kitchen thing 
catches on. The effects could already be seen in that neighborhood; all 
the other people in the soup line seemed very poor, and there was not a 
five star restaurant to be found anywhere nearby. I've even seen evidence 
of this sharing epidemic among our own employees. Just the other day one 
of the interns brought in muffins and gave them away, you guessed it, for 
free! Perhaps it would not have been so bad if she had actually purchased 
them from a bakery, but she actually admitted to baking them herself. She 
said she enjoyed doing it and was happy to give them away so other people 
could enjoy them to!

Can you imagine the impact on the bakery industry if this sort of thing 
catches on! But it doesn't stop there. She went on to thank several of her 
coworkers for helping her move into her new apartment. Yes, you heard 
correctly, people actually helped her move, FOR FREE. Image all the work 
lost to moving companies from this sort of activity.

Perhaps giving away free muffins seems like no big deal to you. After all, 
the damage that one person can do is limited to the number of muffins that 
one person can bake. The cost of production puts a cap on the amount of 
destructive sharing this person can do. But when we enter the realm of 
software and other forms of intangible 'intellectual property', the cost 
of production quickly bottoms out. After the first one, the rest are 
essentially free!

In a free software world, there is no room for Microsoft's 85 to 90 
percent profit margin on Windows and Office. The company might be forced 
to survive on the thin 5 to 9 percent margins that most of the technology 
industry suffers with. Even worse, it might have to rely on other sources 
of revenue, like support services.

Imagine the impact to the economy if all that money currently being 
funneled to Microsoft software was instead left in the hands of our 
customers. Imagine all the ways in which those companies and home user 
might squander that money. I realize some of you out there will try and 
argue that spreading money around is better for the economy than 
concentrating it in one place, but that argument only holds water if 
someone besides Microsoft is capable of innovation, and we all know how 
silly that idea is.

In conclusion, we must all do our part to stop this plague of sharing. 
Just as surely as mechanized looms threatened the weaving industry of the 
early 19th century, the cooperative development methods of the so called 
free and open source software movements threaten our current proprietary 
software industry. The sharing must be stopped.

Sincerely,
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

-- 
Pro-Life Philippines website -- http://www.prolife.org.ph
--[Manny [EMAIL PROTECTED]
      Member: Philippine League for Democratic Telecommunications
                      "Affordable Access for All"
--[Open Minds Philippines]--------------------[openminds.linux.org.ph]--


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