Microsoft holds ‘Thought Thieves’ short film competition focusing on intellectual property theft

Microsoft is holding a short film competiton they are calling, “Thought Thieves.” From Microsoft’s web page:

Thought Thieves is about people stealing and profiting from your creation or innovation. Think about it: how would you feel if you saw your hard work being passed off as the property of someone else? What would you do?

We want to know!

Send us your short film on intellectual property theft by 1st July 2005 for your chance to win £2,000 worth of film and video equipment vouchers. And finalists will be invited to attend a special screening of their films and presentation ceremony in London.

More info here.

MacDailyNews Take: How would you feel if you saw your hard work being passed off as the property of someone else? Forget the film contest, why doesn’t Bill Gates just ask Steve Jobs? The first person to enter a screenshot of Apple’s Mac System 7 (circa 1990) desktop flipping horizontally and vertically, then morphing into Windows 95 should get an Oscar.

This is an interesting article: “Microsoft, Apple and Xerox – The History of the Graphical User Interface,” by David K. Every.

Related MacDailyNews articles:
Ars Technica: Apple Computer ‘the most important of the graphical user interface pioneers’ – May 05, 2005
eWEEK Editor Coursey: Longhorn so far ‘looks shockingly like a Macintosh’ – April 25, 2005
Due in late 2006, many of Windows Longhorn’s features have been in Mac OS X since 2001 – April 25, 2005
Apple CEO Steve Jobs on Microsoft’s Longhorn: ‘They are shamelessly copying us’ – April 21, 2005
Microsoft’s Windows Longhorn will bear more than just a passing resemblance to Apple’s Mac OS X – April 15, 2005
Apple’s Schiller: Mac OS X Tiger ‘has created even more distance between us and Microsoft’ – April 13, 2005
Analyst: Tiger proves ‘Apple is light years ahead of Microsoft in developing PC operating systems’ – April 12, 2005
Silicon Valley: Apple CEO Steve Jobs previews ‘Longhorn’ – June 29, 2004
PC Magazine: Microsoft ‘Longhorn’ preview shows ‘an Apple look’ – May 06, 2004
Microsoft concerned that Longhorn’s look and feel will be copied if revealed too soon – August 25, 2003
Windows ‘Longhorn’ to add translucent windows that ripple and shrink by 2005 – May 19, 2003

45 Comments

  1. “Think about it: how would you feel if you saw your hard work being passed off as the property of someone else? What would you do? We want to know! “

    Unbelievable gall all right.

    Actually I suppose they WOULDN’T know. Can’t think of too many MS-original ideas that have been pilfered (or even worth pilfering).

  2. like they would even let someone screen an animation in favor of apple. I don’t get m$, i never did. Someone should just make a 5min interview with Andersson/Netscape founder…let him tell what he thinks about intellectual theft. The GUI story is just one outof an embarrassing lot.

  3. if software “pirates” are really “thought thieves” then does this make the BSA, RIAA, MPAA etc the “thought police”?

    just curious.

    MW: “anti” – heh

  4. KA,

    Bzzzzt! Try again. Konfabulator was far from an original idea – Apple did it first:
    http://daringfireball.net/2004/07/konfab_confab

    Innovations introduced or popularized by Apple with the original Macintosh:
    A graphical user interface, icons, a desktop, etc.
    • The use of a mouse or other pointing device in personal computing
    • The “double click” and “click-and-drag” behaviors to perform actions with a pointing device
    • WYSIWYG (“what you see is what you get”) text and graphics editing
    • Long file names, with whitespace and no file extension
    • The 3.5″ hard-shelled floppy disk as a standard feature
    • Audio as a standard feature, including a built-in audio-quality speaker
    • Aesthetic and ergonomic industrial “All in One” design that reduced clutter
    • Separation of a program’s code from its resources to allow localization, etc.

    Innovations introduced or popularized with later Macintosh models or software:
    • The PostScript laser printer
    • Desktop publishing
    • User programmability through HyperCard and AppleScript
    • The SCSI interface (Mac Plus, 1986)
    • Audio input/output as a standard feature (Mac IIsi & Mac LC, 1990)
    • A CD-ROM drive as a standard feature (IIvx 900, 1992)
    • A single desktop environment that may span multiple monitors
    • Ethernet support as standard feature (Quadra 700 & 900, 1991)
    • A modern RISC-based architecture in the form of the PowerPC processor, developed jointly by Apple, IBM and Motorola (Power Macintosh 6100, 1994)
    • FireWire, also known as IEEE 1394, an Apple-developed standard also promoted by Sony under the name iLink (Blue and White G3, 1999)
    • The abandonment of the floppy disk (original iMac, 1998)
    • The first notable coloration of computer hardware, rebeling agaisnt the standard beige and gray shades that computers had used (including previous Macs), (original iMac, 1998)
    • The first commercially available computer to rely primarily on USB for peripheral connection (original iMac, 1998)
    • The first affordable DVD-R drive (“SuperDrive”, Power Mac G4, 2001)
    • Flat-panel displays as a standard feature on a desktop (Twentieth Anniversary Macintosh, 1997)
    • First notebook computers with built-in pointing devices and rear-mounted keyboards (PowerBook 100 series, 1991)
    • First notebook computer with dock/port replicator (PowerBook Duo, 1992)
    • IEEE 802.11b and IEEE 802.11g wireless networking, branded AirPort and AirPort Extreme (also monikered as Wi-Fi), by Apple (original iBook, 1999, PowerBook G4, 2003, respectively)
    • First wireless base station to have audio delivered to a stereo system or entertainment center using Wi-Fi (AirPort Express Base Station, 2004)
    • First full-size notebook computer with widescreen display (PowerBook G4, 2001)
    • First notebook computer with a 17-inch display (PowerBook G4, 2003)
    • First notebook computer to have backlit optic fiber keyboard. Built-in light sensors automatically adjust keyboard illumination and display brightness based on available ambient light. (PowerBook G4, 2003)
    • First 30-inch Display (June 2004)
    • First notebook computer to support the dual-link DVI standard required to run the 30″ display (PowerBook G4, 2005)

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_Macintosh

  5. I don’t think we can harp on any software company for “stealing” GUI ideas and stuff like that… ever notice how some movies seem like total rip offs of eachother? It is stupid, but not illegal.

    Don’t yell at Microsoft for making their OS “look” like macintosh, yell at Microsoft for making their OS half-assed.

  6. “Think about it: how would you feel if you saw your hard work being passed off as the property of someone else? What would you do?” …

    Because we have NO IDEA how that would feel and we’re kinda curious.

  7. from the entry form:

    “Should I be selected as a finalist in this competition, I confirm the following:

    7. I will formally licence on terms acceptable to Microsoft, all intellectual property rights
    in my film and agree to waive all moral rights in relation to my film if requested to do
    so.”

    In addition to the absurdity already discussed, Microsoft reserves the right to take complete ownership of your short film on intellectual property theft.

  8. Ah, Microsoft is holding a competition on someone making a documentary about Microsoft and its past, present and future business strategy ” width=”19″ height=”19″ alt=”tongue laugh” style=”border:0;” />

  9. Almost as ironic as the former head of the RIAA complaining about how Apple DRM has her “locked into” the iTMS.

    Microsoft should host seminars on stealing intellectual property.

    Magic word: thats, as in “Thats the most ridiculous idea I have heard in a long time”

  10. 2000 Pounds in vouchers. Typical M$. Can never relinquish any cash.

    Thanks for the MacKido link. I don’t visit often – except to post one of his links. And I guess he’s too busy to move all his content to iGeek. Oh, well.

  11. Someone with a lot more talent than I has to do one on the history of Microsoft.

    Not only the stealing of the Apple GUI. But all of the intellectual property theft lawsuits that MS has lost or desparately settled through the years.

    MDN, this is your ticket to all time fame. Someone’s go to do it, and do it right. The major media will pick it up like there is no tomorrow.

    Sure, it would be a lot of work. The research piece is all there on web. Microsoft can’t hide from their past. Someone just has to make it a funny/visually appealing/great music.

    Come on MDN and this awesome community. Someone with skills and talent gotta make this happen.

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