Microsoft vs EC: The story so far

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ANALYSIS

With Microsoft's appeal against the European Commission's antitrust ruling due to start this week, ZDNet UK looks back over the last two years since the EC handed down its ground-breaking ruling.

It all started on a brisk spring day in March 2004...

Well, actually it didn't. It started more than five years earlier when the Commission started investigating whether Microsoft had violated EU competition rules by abusing its monopoly.

But on that day in March '04, the Commission hammered its stake into the ground, fining Microsoft a record-breaking €497.2m and demanding that it develop a version of Windows without Windows Media Player within 90 days and produce server interoperability documentation within 120 days.

A race against the clock?

So did Microsoft rush off to comply with the judgement. Mmm, not quite. Following the lead of the plucky Oliver Twist in the movie of the same name, it asked the Court of First Instance, "please sir, can I have some more [time]?". Unlike the master of the workhouse, the Court of First Instance was more generous and temporarily suspended the order requiring Microsoft to start offering Windows without a media player.

Microsoft also got busy writing documents that protested its innocence, and started paying off its rivals.  In April, it released a position paper accusing the Commission of creating a new law that could damage all industries across the world.

"The Commission is seeking to make new law that will have an adverse impact on intellectual property rights and the ability of dominant firms to innovate," Microsoft said. "This adverse impact will not be confined to the software industry or to Europe." Overly dramatic? Microsoft given to dramatics, surely not?

Money can't buy you love, but it can buy you friends
A few large companies and organisations had worked with the European Commission in its investigation against Microsoft, including RealNetworks, Novell, Sun and the Computer & Communications Industry Association.

The first of its rivals in the antitrust case to be paid off was Sun. For the princely sum of $1.95bn (£1.1bn), Sun agreed to resolve issues with Microsoft, including antitrust and patent problems.

Later came a $536m settlement with Novell and a comparatively paltry $19.75m deal with the CCIA. RealNetworks held out the longest, but in October 2005 it caved and agreed to a whopping $760m settlement.

'Don't take away our livelihood!'

One of Microsoft's main arguments against the antitrust ruling has been that they are being asked to give away vital intellectual property to rivals. In June 2004 it filed a 100-page appeal to the Court of First Instance, asking it to annul the Commission's fine and measures.

At the time, one of Microsoft's lawyers said: "The Commission's decision undermines the innovative efforts of successful companies, imposing significant new obligations... to license their proprietary technology to competitors, and restricts companies' ability to add innovated improvement to their products."

The company even suggested that customers would be keen to switch from Windows if only they could, and that the lack of interoperable platforms was the only thing stopping them.

"It is this switching cost that has given customers the patience to stick with Windows through all our mistakes, our buggy drivers, our high TCO [total cost of ownership], our lack of a sexy vision at times, and many other difficulties […] Customers constantly evaluate other desktop platforms, [but] it would be so much work to move over that they hope we just improve Windows rather than force them to move. In short, without this exclusive franchise called the Windows API, we would have been dead a long time ago," said Microsoft general manager Aaron Contorer in an internal memo in 1997, according to an EC report on the Microsoft case.

But, I'm sure you're all holding your breath to see what happened in this epic battle. Did the EC get its way and create a happy world where every company has an equal chance of getting their media player installed on Windows, and where any company can create beautiful software that works with Windows servers?  Or, did Microsoft get its way and make sure the poor little rich kid wasn't punished for being too successful?

Talkback

This isn't news but opinion/editorial and should not be in this section of your publication.


I want to know more facts - especially how the EC seeks to design prodicts of successful IT companies. I want to know why Microsoft's competitors "cry" to regulators, and the affect that has on their shareholders. I want to see illustrated real consumer harm, not theory or opinion, as a result of the EC's five-plus year search for a problem to hamstring the giant.


This piece is journaltorialism and should be read with those glasses on.

via Facebook 24 April, 2006 19:36
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