Microsoft's Linux ad 'misleading'
The ASA said different hardware was used in
the claims
Microsoft has been
reprimanded over misleading advertising by the Advertising Standards Authority
(ASA).
The UK watchdog upheld complaints about a magazine advert which claimed that the
open-source operating system Linux was more expensive than
Windows.
Referring to research, it read:
"Linux was found to be over 10 times more expensive than Windows Server
2003".
The ASA concluded that the
comparison was misleading because the operating systems ran on different
hardware.
Hardware
differences
Microsoft had said the Get the Facts ad
campaign was intended to compare competing file-serving set-ups that met the
same needs and were intended for the same
purposes.
According to the software
giant, a field test by independent analysts showed that Linux could be 10 times
more expensive than Windows.
A graph
used in the advert compared the cost in US dollars per megabit per second of a
Linux image running on two z900 mainframe CPUs, with a Windows Server 2003 image
running on two 900 MHz Intel Xeon CPUs.
But the ASA ruling said the hardware chosen for Linux was more expensive than it
needed to be and could have influenced the outcome of the
analysis.
Microsoft has been asked to
change the advert.
Linux is an
open-source operating system, which means it is essentially
"free".
But many software companies use
elements of it as the basis for programs they make commercially
available.
Posted: Sat
- August 28, 2004 at 12:04 AM