Gregory Maxwell wrote: > My understanding is that some of the relevant legal minds believe that > Microsoft's "you can disable it" concession forecloses the possibility > of a successful legal attack on this— the law may care about the > anti-competativeness of this stuff, but not so much as to care about a > $99 signing key or some minor install time hurdle. (and the fact that > fedora is willing to plan this probably justifies this position). > > It was arguably a strategic error to blow the whistle in advance and > give Microsoft time to compromise. Their first attempt was much more > likely to have created a civil cause of action as well as to have run > afoul on antitrust grounds. But I can hardly blame anyone for > trying. Hindsight 20/20 and all that. If having the option to disable the crap even if it's enabled by default is sufficient to not be anti-competitive, then they would have done just that after being sued. So I don't think letting them go the most restrictive possible way and then sueing would have been any more effective than what actually happened. Kevin Kofler -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel