The 'bad stuff' from an OSS point of view is, generally, longer ago than that.
- "Embrace, Extend, Extinguish": 1995
- US vs. Microsoft Corp: 1998
- Halloween Documents: 1998
Scraping under the 15 year bar:
- Microsoft vs Sun settlements: 2001-2002
- Ballmer "Linux is a Cancer": 2001
SCO vs IBM was 2003, so I guess fits into the '10-15' ballpark, but I think "over the last 10-15 years" makes it seem more continuous than the evidence suggests. If you were to describe Microsoft's behavior over the last 10-15 years with respect to open source software, I think a fair assessment would be "improving".
I'm not, honestly, trying to be an apologist for this stuff - it was, clearly, Microsoft policy for a long time to deliberately and pretty unscrupulously undermine Linux and Java and open source adoption. It doesn't appear to be policy to compete unfairly any more, and in some cases MS is producing technologies which support usage of non-MS-originated open and open source technologies. Can we begin to move on a little?
The OOXML "standardization" is more recent. So is Silverlight.
In the end I'm always puzzled when people talk about Microsoft or Apple as if it was one dude who ran over your cat in the early 2000s.
It's a vast corporation, whose attitude towards opensource has improved, at least in the cloud and .NET environment (though I've read people comparing Microsoft to Red Hat and Joyent, which is clearly way off).
For instance, the issue I find most egregious is selling Windows phones with a restricted bootloader, just like Apple does.
Why? Why should we forget that the entire company (currently) is funded by the crimes of the past?
Are they a person who made mistakes when young and now deserves a second chance?
I'm not anti-capitalistic but I'd never deal with, for example, a consultancy that cheated me in the past even if they had all new consultants and managers - some things just don't change. And even if... they might have turned over a new leaf but do they deserve another try and are you obligated to give it to them? Wouldn't it be better for everyone to offer the opportunity to a potentially honest competitor?
As long as people are willing to forgive companies, companies are prepared to bilk them.
And if people never offer forgiveness, then there's no incentive for them to improve. I guess you're just hoping that if you ignore them they'll go away?
The 'bad stuff' from an OSS point of view is, generally, longer ago than that.
- "Embrace, Extend, Extinguish": 1995 - US vs. Microsoft Corp: 1998 - Halloween Documents: 1998
Scraping under the 15 year bar:
- Microsoft vs Sun settlements: 2001-2002 - Ballmer "Linux is a Cancer": 2001
SCO vs IBM was 2003, so I guess fits into the '10-15' ballpark, but I think "over the last 10-15 years" makes it seem more continuous than the evidence suggests. If you were to describe Microsoft's behavior over the last 10-15 years with respect to open source software, I think a fair assessment would be "improving".
I'm not, honestly, trying to be an apologist for this stuff - it was, clearly, Microsoft policy for a long time to deliberately and pretty unscrupulously undermine Linux and Java and open source adoption. It doesn't appear to be policy to compete unfairly any more, and in some cases MS is producing technologies which support usage of non-MS-originated open and open source technologies. Can we begin to move on a little?