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World War Three Point Zero

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1 Review
Broadway Books, May 1, 2002 - Law - 444 pages
The Internet Revolution, like all great industrial changes, has made the world's elephantine media companies tremble that their competitors-whether small and nimble mice or fellow elephants-will get to new terrain first and seize its commanding heights. In a climate in which fear and insecurity are considered healthy emotions, corporate violence becomes commonplace. In the blink of an eye-or the time it has taken slogans such as "The Internet changes everything" to go from hyperbole to banality-"creative destruction" has wracked the global economy on an epic scale.

No one has been more powerful or felt more fear or reacted more violently than Bill Gates and Microsoft. Afraid that any number of competitors might outflank them-whether Netscape or Sony or AOL Time Warner or Sun or AT&T or Linux-based companies that champion the open-source movement or some college student hacking in his dorm room-Microsoft has waged holy war on all foes, leveraging its imposing strengths.

In World War 3.0, Ken Auletta chronicles this fierce conflict from the vantage of its most important theater of operations: the devastating second front opened up against Bill Gates's empire by the United States government. The book's narrative spine is United States v. Microsoft, the government's massive civil suit against Microsoft for allegedly stifling competition and innovation on a broad scale. With his superb writerly gifts and extraordinary access to all the principal parties, Ken Auletta crafts this landmark confrontation into a tight, character- and incident-filled courtroom drama featuring the best legal minds of our time, including David Boies and Judge Richard Posner. And with the wisdom gleaned from covering the converging media, software, and communications industries for The New Yorker for the better part of a decade, Auletta uses this pivotal battle to shape a magisterial reckoning with the larger war and the agendas, personalities, and prospects of its many combatants.

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Review: World War 3.0: Microsoft Vs. the US Government, and the Battle to Rule the Digital Age

User Review  - Dwayne Ackley - Goodreads

Fantastic Book about Microsoft, it's competitors and the governments Anti-trust case in the late 90's, a case that changed Microsoft and the computer industry completely. David Boies is the hero of ... Read full review

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Contents

The Prosecutors i
1
Hard Core
26
The First Pitch
35
Copyright

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Andy Grove: The Life and Times of an American Business Icon

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1 Rise of the American Corporation Office: 375C Robinson B History ...
Ken Auletta, World War 3.0: Microsoft Vs. the us Government, and the. Battle to Rule the Digital Age. FIRST DRAFT DUE. Wednesday,. November 27 ...
www.archiva.net/ Resources/ HIST%20615-Fall-02.pdf

About the author (2002)

Ken Auletta has been the "Annals of Communication" columnist for the New Yorker since 1992. He is the author of three national bestsellers, Greed and Glory on Wall Street, Three Blind Mice, and The Highwaymen. In 1974, he was the chief political correspondent for the New York Post. Following that, he was a staff writer and weekly columnist for The Village Voice, and then contributing editor at New York magazine. He started writing pieces for the New Yorker in 1977. He grew up on Coney Island and now lives in New York City with his wife and daughter.

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