The testimony of Napster chief exec Hank Barry
News (The following is the full testimony of Napster chief executive Hank Barry before the Senate Judiciary Committee): Good morning and thank you for inviting me to appear before you today. I am Hank Barry, chief executive officer of Napster, and I...
[July 12, 2000, 9:56]
Microsoft reveals antitrust testimony
News A deposition is sworn oral testimony generally available only to the parties directly involved in a lawsuit. Each side has about 100 hours to present their witnesses, with some analysts estimating testimony could go on for as many as eight weeks.
[March 5, 2002, 8:53]
US Report: Microsoft asks court to keep pre-trial testimony closed
News Microsoft told a federal appeals court Monday that it must close to the public pretrial testimony in the government's antitrust case against it or risk creating a "media circus" that will only hamper its efforts to prepare for trial next month.
[August 19, 1998, 7:18]
US Report: Judge persuaded by MS testimony in DoJ trial
News On Thursday, Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson followed up on that assertion.A goodly part of the cross examination [by Microsoft] had to do with evidence that what Microsoft did was grasp the significance of the work you were doing and run with it...
[December 11, 1998, 9:14]
Microsoft on Trial: DOJ testimony centres on browser integration
News The government used testimony from its technical witness, Glenn Weadock, as well as segments of videotaped depositions from major PC makers and Boeing Co.to illustrate the impact the integration has had on the marketplace and customer purchasing...
[November 18, 1998, 5:53]
Microsoft on Trial: Judge quizzes MS witness over testimony
News Schmalensee attacked testimony by previous government witnesses who claimed Microsoft's 95 percent share of PC operating system sales means other operating systems cannot attract enough software developers to compete effectively.
[January 22, 1999, 10:25]
Microsoft on Trial: judge releases testimony to public
News Though Jackson made a similar ruling in August 1998, press and spectators could not be present for the testimony then, because Microsoft had appealed the ruling to a higher court. In addition, they may request videotapes of any or all of the...
[April 9, 1999, 15:15]
News Burst: Microsoft winds up testimony
News Richard Schmalensee, dean of MIT's Sloan School of Management, testified that several technologies were threats to Microsoft's dominance in the operating systems market including Sun's Java, products that might come out of an alliance between AOL...
[June 23, 1999, 16:03]
Oracle rests its case
News After calling a professor of economics as its final witness, Oracle rested its case Thursday, ending testimony in its antitrust battle with the US Justice Department. The final day of testimony -- with closing arguments set for 20 July -- included...
[July 2, 2004, 15:05]
Ballmer leads new Microsoft witness list
News Microsoft chopped eight people off its witness list on Monday, potentially speeding the close of testimony in its remedy proceeding. Short submitted written testimony, followed by the states' cross-examination on Monday afternoon.
[April 30, 2002, 13:45]
Microsoft on Trial: MS 'crossed the line' says economist
News In 100 pages of written testimony released Tuesday morning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Professor Franklin Fisher told federal Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson that Microsoft has maintained a 95-percent market share of PC operating systems...
[January 6, 1999, 11:57]
US Report: The Net braces itself for Clinton Video
News President Clinton's videotaped grand jury testimony about his affair with Monica Lewinsky will make its way onto the Internet at the same time as it hits television, 6 a.m. But on Friday, as providers of Internet multimedia prepared for a large...
[September 21, 1998, 12:05]
Oracle judge grappling with market definition
News After the first week of testimony, a federal judge overseeing the Justice Department's case to block Oracle's hostile bid for PeopleSoft was still grappling with the key issue of market definition. On Wednesday, the Justice Department used...
[June 11, 2004, 9:40]
Microsoft .Net goes back to the drawing board
News Testimony this week from one of Microsoft's top executives has shed light on the software giant's shifting Web services plans and internal power struggles over competing ideas. During cross-examination of his testimony Tuesday, Jim Allchin...
[May 13, 2002, 9:25]
Houck: DoJ will beat Microsoft
News One of the senior attorneys who battled Microsoft in court during 77 days of testimony says the government should prevail in the landmark antitrust case, but he allowed that it might not be a slam dunk.
[October 4, 1999, 9:20]
Microsoft on Trial: We're right, they're wrong - MS
News As lawyers for the government have begun playing excerpts of videotaped testimony gathered this past summer from executives with a number of Microsoft competitors, Microsoft's lawyers are forced to rebut remarks from officials not physically...
[December 17, 1998, 14:30]
US Report: Another court hearing for Microsoft
News At the hearing, the committee, Microsoft executives and others will hear testimony directly from independent software vendors, who will claim to have been hurt in the marketplace by Microsoft's alleged exclusionary tactics, sources said.
[July 10, 1998, 13:33]
US Report: Web video goes prime time -- sort of
News Web sites offering live video of President Clinton's grand jury testimony on the Internet Monday morning got the deluge of visitors they wanted, accompanied by hundreds of thousands of video software downloads and as much hype in the media as they...
[September 22, 1998, 10:11]
Microsoft sparks new video row
News In written testimony released to the public Monday, Microsoft vice president Cameron Myhrvold argued that his company's actions in the Internet software market had benefited consumers rather than harmed them, as the government suit filed against...
[February 10, 1999, 10:39]
HP's Dunn says she was not probe supervisor
News Former HP chairman Patricia Dunn said in congressional testimony released on Wednesday that she relied on executives at the company to advise her on the leak probe and did not consider herself the project's "supervisor".
[September 28, 2006, 9:00]



