Five years on
Five years on
Posted Oct 1, 2010 17:49 UTC (Fri) by FlorianMueller (guest, #32048)In reply to: Five years on by pboddie
Parent article: Red Hat Responds to U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Request for Guidance on Bilski
You can buy Linux computers from major vendors like Dell and HP. Someone who wants Linux can get machines without Windows. The reason they're less aggressively promoted is that there's less demand on the desktop for Linux than for Windows, but antitrust law is meant to ensure that demand and supply can drive a market as opposed to abuse distorting it.
The mainframe operating system was actually also available independently from the machine for about three decades -- the time when plug compatible mainframes were available from other manufacturers. Due to the so-called Consent Decree by the US DoJ, IBM was forced to make components available separately.
In the PC market, there's no need to force anyone because you can buy Windows separately, and you can buy every hardware component separately.
You say that the two situations (mainframe and PCs shipped with Windows) are the same. They are not the same because a case of illegal tying is characterized by customers being forced to take something they don't want in order to buy something they need from a dominant vendor. No single PC vendor is dominant, and I mentioned above that Dell, HP and others sell you what you want, without Windows if you want. By contrast, mainframe customers need z/OS to run those legacy applications worth $5 trillion (yes, trillion) and are forced to buy IBM hardware.
You complain that maybe some customers buy desktops with Windows simply because they aren't aware of the possibility of buying Linux desktops, especially since in many retail stores those have less presence. Again, that's a supply-and-demand thing. By contrast, mainframe customers know very well what they want and can't get it, due to an abuse of a dominant position in the form of illegal tying.
Regulators can't and won't intervene if it's just an awareness problem that can be solved with marketing. If the likes of Red Hat (which is the actual context of this discussion) or Ubuntu believe that end users should be made aware of the possibility of buying Linux-powered rather than Windows-powered PCs, it's their job to generate awareness. They could also do so in partnership with retail chains. If there's an unexploited or, more realistically, perhaps a bit underexploited market potential, market dynamics will result in some retailers cooperating with some vendors and seizing that opportunity. There's nothing preventing anyone from doing that in connection with Linux. Hence, there's no antitrust problem.
You ask for regulation but you have no antitrust issue. You'd like the market to be different, and I can assure you that I, too, think it's essential that customers are fully aware of Linux as an alternative and that they have easy access to it -- but the market can take care of itself in that regard, while the mainframe market shows clear symptoms of total market failure due to abuse.
