Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sat 18th Aug 2007 20:13 UTC
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Member since:
2006-07-04
"I'm sorry you believe criminal law has to do with good and evil. It doesn't. Personally, I consider greed and monopoly action to be immoral (evil for me), but that wouldn't make it criminal even if everyone agreed with me. "
). It *might* harm the marketplace, but it's not a "sin".
The entire economy is based on it. It's why capitalism succeeds and communism fails. Charity and philanthropy are clearly virtues worth having, but greed is required to survive. Everyone has both greed and charity in him. And Microsoft is no more "greedy" than any of its competitors are (though they may be more charitable).
Maybe my comment was too general. I don't believe that criminal violations are the only evil acts. But nor do I believe that all illegalities are immoral.
In particular, antitrust law is not about morality, it's about trying to maintain a vibrant marketplace, for the purpose of benefiting consumers (not competitors), period. That's it. Nobody is going to "hell" for bundling a browser with an OS. (Nobody is going to jail for it either, for that matter.) I can't think of any of the 10 Commandments that such an action violates (and I can list them, unlike those that want them taught in schools and displayed in court houses
Now, I don't know what you mean by "monopoly action", but "greed" is indeed one of the seven deadly sins. But name me a corporation that isn't greedy. I hate to quote Gorden Gecko, but "greed is good".
When I think of an "evil" corporation, I think of the likes of Enron, IG Farben, WorldCom, polluters, child labor exploiters, etc. Those are examples of truly "evil" corporations, not Microsoft.
Now, I could raise questions as to whether a company making billions on the backs of a free labor force is "evil" or not, but I won't go there (right now, anyway).
Edited 2007-08-21 06:42