Toyo, by the way, please interpret these last few posts as being somewhat frustrated.
You are an A-Okay Quaker if you are honest in real life as you seem to be in Quake, you are quite a guy.
... but at the same time, because people respect you they also value your opinion. And you offered an opinion on topic that is serious, at least to many, and your opinion was VALUED by certain individuals that read your post.
There in lies my gripe. A respected individual chipping in their 2 cents on a topic without really knowing what the topic is, and as a result, others believe it.
Microsoft, and they are not quite alone, is trying to muck up things even further for their own gain and this time using "cover" of being part of a council (so they could have a lawyer say in court they didn't do this all by themselves).
Microsoft perceives Open Source as enemy #1. The best way to try to destroy open source is by placing Microsoft in a position where they can "approve" applications by other companies.
This means several things ... first .... Microsoft would have 100% market awareness, be able to review competitors products, selectively not approve or throw red tape towards competitors products
Example: "Gee, sorry Adobe, your code doesn't provide for security #1015 protocol when the app is loading a multi-user document imported from Mac OS if the document contains transparent GIFs while disk cache is turned off ... you need to go back and fix that and resubmit your application for TCPA approval again in another 6 months and have independent testing by the testing board that this is fixed."
This TCPA is very, very bad news ... I suspect it will snuff out a lot of non-large business application development if it is successful in the way Microsoft wants it to be.
Remember, Microsoft sabotaged Java on Windows computers to try to derail Java.
So when Microsoft is talking about illegal file trading and virus protection and secure documents, they have ulterior motives in mind. Those goals could be achieved WITHOUT their TCPA scheme.
Their goal is NOT fixing those problems, but rather trying to really lock down everyone to their operating system. Remember the DCMA says that basically outlaws reverse engineering to violate a copyright, meaning that if Microsoft comes up with some super-clusterfuck of a secure file format for SQL server or Word, big companies will never be able to deconvert from Microsoft products.
This TCPA is horrible, horrible, horrible. There is so much more wrong with it than what I have even said. This is the tip of the iceberg. It sucks.
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