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Microsoft's Bill speaks out

CNET News.com | 06.01.2005 18:03 | Globalisation | Technology

"There are fewer communists in the world today than there were. There are some new modern-day sort of communists who want to get rid of the incentive for musicians and moviemakers and software makers under various guises. They don't think that those incentives should exist".

Bill Gates

Microsoft's chairman is setting the company on a course to provide software and tools that will allow different forms of entertainment to blend. Its eyes ever set on the competition, Microsoft will continue to raise the stakes against Apple in the music industry and against Google and Yahoo in search.
Meanwhile, Microsoft Research is working on ways to reduce the cost of getting people in emerging nations hooked on the Internet. One idea: mesh networks that will let several families share connections.

Gates spoke with ZDNet UK's sister site CNET News.com on the eve of his keynote speech at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas to discuss competing with Google, Apple and the threats posed by anti-patent and pro-open source campaigners.


In recent years, there's been a lot of people clamouring to reform and restrict intellectual-property rights. What's driving this, and do you think intellectual-property laws need to be reformed?
No, I'd say that of the world's economies, there's more that believe in intellectual property today than ever. There are fewer communists in the world today than there were. There are some new modern-day sort of communists who want to get rid of the incentive for musicians and moviemakers and software makers under various guises. They don't think that those incentives should exist.

And this debate will always be there. I'd be the first to say that the patent system can always be tuned -- including the US patent system. There are some goals to cap some reform elements. But the idea that the United States has led in creating companies, creating jobs, because we've had the best intellectual-property system -- there's no doubt about that in my mind, and when people say they want to be the most competitive economy, they've got to have the incentive system. Intellectual property is the incentive system for the products of the future

reproduced from
 http://insight.zdnet.co.uk/software/windows/0,39020478,39183197,00.htm

CNET News.com
- Homepage: http://insight.zdnet.co.uk/software/windows/0,39020478,39183197,00.htm

Comments

Hide the following 6 comments

does this make me a communist?

06.01.2005 21:18

what strikes me as particularly ludicrous in those comments is the claim that without the 'incentive' of money, no musicians would be inspired to create...what rubbish, furthermore, countless bands are forming and prospering (artistically) courtesy of the shattering of 'property rights' online with the proliferation of mp3s, people are hearing music they'd never of heard of otherwise

Andrew


Reality

06.01.2005 22:08

Yes artists would still continue to create without the incentives and indeed, a lot of the recent pop crap that has been generated mass production style for sheer profit is sickening. Yet it is only human nature to want those material rewards. The potential lure of profit may have kept many an artist in the business when times were bad.

so in this sense, Mr Gates has a point :)

karic


No

06.01.2005 23:04

It does not make you a communist. It makes you smarter than the average bear.

No


crashing windows

07.01.2005 00:21

On this trade show in las Vegas his media presentation pc crashed three times; what this implies about Bill Gates might be clear, but there is more:

From slashdot:  http://games.slashdot.org/games/05/01/06/1337228.shtml?tid=109&tid=211

And the audience was eating it up? (Score:5, Insightful)
by happyemoticon (543015) on Thursday January 06, @12:37PM (#11277599)
( http://www.wavenger.com/)

Props to Conan for his good improv skills and ability to work a crowd, but doesn't it say something weird about our age that Microsoft itself can't keep its own product from going down at a major technology trade show, and that the crowd finds this acceptable, even funny? Remember, Microsoft's product is on warships [ http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/09/06/ams_goes_windows_for_warships/] these days. Would the crowd have also been yucking like a bunch of doped-up Amsterdam tourists if this had been wargames off the coast of England, and HMS Windows had given them a GPF when they tried to launch a missile? Please, boys: don't believe your own hype, and for God's sake, don't let anybody with a pulse take Ballmer seriously for a nanosecond.

 http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/09/06/ams_goes_windows_for_warships/

markv


Money shuts us up

07.01.2005 16:42

Without the incentive of money, mainstream music would be 100 times better than it is now. Only people who actually cared about music would bother making it. And internet piracy is the best thing to happen to music in 20 years.

Jonny
mail e-mail: elephorse@yahoo.co.uk
- Homepage: http://wve.blogspot.com


2nd album complex

08.01.2005 11:34

yep. the first album has something.
then the hobbits get success and drugs and girlies or boys
and the second album is shite.

unless of course you get to record in number 23 Abbey road.

Thing is Bill, electronically produced music is un-natural.
You're intefering with the song of creation.
Voices and instruments go "out of tune" and are brought "into tune",
that is a law of pythagorean harmonics
respected by Hildegard von Bingen to Bach's well tempered through Mozart
yea unto Schönberg included Stravinsky and inspired Arvö Pärt or the
popular english equivalent Taverner (the second).

Abbey road even nodded and winked at that truth with the final
search for an E major sonority in the seminal Lennon & Mc Cartney
co-authorship " i woke up today ... la la la .... now you know how many
holes it takes to fill the albert hall .... la la la"

The spontaneous talent ( I can't call it art) of a DJ or scratcher,
too shows us the human instinct to search for harmony.

Your software gives our children the ability to produce perfectly
sounding sanitised orchestras and drumbeats without *learning*
"how to tune".

It is a great dis-service to Music.
It is a great dis-service to the Muse.
And just because you feel competitive, silly billy.
You've really been getting up our noses (over in Hogworts)
for far far too long now.

Play your guitars, blow your pipes, clap your handies,
scratch your vinyl, brudders and sistahs.

And get our kids out from electronic isolation.


ipsiphi