Halloween documents
The Halloween documents comprise a series of confidential Microsoft memoranda on potential strategies relating to free software, open-source software, and to Linux in particular, and a series of media responses to these memoranda. Both the leaked documents and the responses were published by Eric S. Raymond in 1998.
The documents are associated with Halloween because many of them were originally leaked close to October 31 in different years.
Overview
The first Halloween document, requested by senior vice-president Jim Allchin for the attention of senior vice-president Paul Maritz and written by Microsoft program manager Vinod Valloppillil, was leaked to Eric Raymond in October 1998, who immediately published an annotated version on his web site. The document contained references to a second memorandum specifically dealing with Linux, and that document, authored by Vinod Valloppillil and Josh Cohen at Microsoft, was also obtained, annotated and published by Raymond. Microsoft has since acknowledged the documents' authenticity. Marked "Microsoft confidential", the documents identified open-source software, and in particular the Linux operating system, as a major threat to Microsoft's domination of the software industry, and suggested tactics Microsoft could use to disrupt the progress of open-source software.These documents acknowledged that free software products such as Linux were technologically competitive with some of Microsoft's products, and set out a strategy to combat them. These views contradicted Microsoft's public pronouncements on the subject.
Since the publication of the two original documents, a number of additional Microsoft memoranda on related topics have also been leaked and published.
List of documents
The documents are from a variety of sources. Only some are leaked internal memos. One is a public statement. The others are responses by Eric Raymond to various columns, news articles, and other works.Name | Author | Date | Brief description | |
I | "Open Source Software: A Development Methodology" | Vinod Valloppillil | August 1998 | A leaked internal report |
II | "Linux OS Competitive Analysis: The Next Java VM?" | Vinod Valloppillil | August 1998 | A leaked internal report |
III | Untitled statement | Aurelia van den Berg | November 1998 | Press statement from Microsoft Netherlands |
IV | "When Software Things Were Rotten" | Eric S. Raymond | December 1998 | A satire piece based on Microsoft's Ed Muth comparing open source developers to Robin Hood. |
V | "The FUD Begins" | Eric S. Raymond | March 1999 | A response by Raymond to Ed Muth's allegations that Linux has a "weak value proposition". |
VI | "The Fatal Anniversary" | Eric S. Raymond | October 1999 | A response by Raymond to studies authored by the Gartner group for Microsoft. |
VII | "Research E-Bulletin: Attitudes Towards Shared Source and Open Source Research Study" | September 2002 | A summary of the results of a Microsoft survey describing reactions to Microsoft's Shared Source Initiative. | |
VIII | "OSS and Government" | Orlando Ayala | November 2002 | Describes Microsoft's procedures for responding to notable conversions away from Microsoft software |
IX | "It Ain't Necessarily SCO" | Rob Landley and Eric S. Raymond | August 2003 | A response to the allegations made by the SCO Group in its initial filings in SCO v. IBM. |
X | "Follow The Money" | Mike Anderer | March 2004 | An e-mail from consultant Mike Anderer to SCO's Chris Sontag revealing Microsoft's channeling of million to SCO. |
XI | "Get The FUD" | Eric S. Raymond | June 2004 | A response to Microsoft's "Get the Facts" campaign |
Documents I and II
These are leaked reports for Microsoft's own use, both written by Vinod Valloppillil, a program manager at Microsoft.Document I provides a detailed introduction to the concepts behind open source software and its possible impact on Microsoft products and services. It outlines the strengths and weaknesses of open source software. Document II describes the basic architecture of the Linux system, and its relation to Unix and Windows NT.
Document I revealed that "FUD" was a traditional Microsoft marketing strategy, acknowledged and understood internally. Examples of Microsoft's FUD tactics are announcing nonexistent products or spreading rumors that competing products will crash Windows. Raymond suggests that the documents show that while Microsoft may have been dismissive of open source software in public, it privately considers it a serious competitor.
In discussing ways of competing with open source, Document I suggests that one reason that open source projects had been able to enter the server market is the market's use of standardized protocols. The document then suggests that this can be stopped by "extending these protocols and developing new protocols" and "de-commoditize protocols & applications". This policy has been internally nicknamed "embrace, extend, extinguish". Document I also suggests that open source software "is long-term credible... FUD tactics can not be used to combat it", and "Recent case studies provide very dramatic evidence... that commercial quality can be achieved / exceeded by OSS projects."
Documents I and II were filed as evidence on January 16, 2007, in the case of Comes v. Microsoft.