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Trivia: Trimmed Jan Sloot speculation; replaced with link to Jan Sloot and conspiracy theory
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* [[Sun]] CEO [[Scott McNealy]] makes a [[Cameo appearance|cameo]] appearance.
* [[Sun]] CEO [[Scott McNealy]] makes a [[Cameo appearance|cameo]] appearance.
* [[Miguel de Icaza]] makes a [[Cameo appearance|cameo]] appearence. Behind the scenes, Miguel assisted in designing the computer screenshots (in [[GNOME]]) used in the movie.
* [[Miguel de Icaza]] makes a [[Cameo appearance|cameo]] appearence. Behind the scenes, Miguel assisted in designing the computer screenshots (in [[GNOME]]) used in the movie.
* Some see similaries between the plot of the film and the [[conspiracy theories]] involving the death of Dutch software developer [[Jan Sloot]].
The movie is made to act as a warning, people coding software innovations can become in danger in certain situations. For example the maker of Jan Sloot Digital Encoding System died one day before he would sign the contract with a big company.
The movie is a warning from history.


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 06:33, 18 September 2005

Antitrust is a 2001 film directed by Peter Howitt and written by Howard Franklin. The cast included Ryan Phillippe, Rachael Leigh Cook, Claire Forlani, Tim Robbins, Douglas McFerran, Richard Roundtree, Tygh Runyan, and Yee Jee Tso.

The film is a thriller portraying young idealistic programmers working at startup companies and a big closed source company (NURV) which offers money, a playful working environment and creative opportunites to talented programmers if they are willing to work for them. The charismatic CEO of NURV seems at first to be good natured, but eventually the hero of the story starts to unravel the terrible hidden truth of NURV's operation.

Trivia