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Home > Spotlight

Microsoft loses EU Appeal
Microsoft comes under anti-trust fire, yet again
Thursday, September 27, 2007
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The European Union might have just done what the US could not, humbled the Giant from Redmond. In a landmark judgment on September 17, 2007, the European Court of First Instance upheld the decision of the European Commission that had imposed a fine of Euro 497 mn ($690m) on Microsoft.

A probe concluded in 2004 by the European Commission had found Microsoft guilty of freezing out rivals in server software and products such as media players. As part of that, Microsoft had been ordered to offer a version of its Windows operating system without Microsoft's own media player, and also told to give rivals more information about how its OS, Windows works.

Microsoft had appealed against the judgment, terming it unfair. Microsoft had argued that adhering to the ruling would hurt its business. According to the company, the European Commission is forcing the firm to give up valuable trade secrets, a move that would handicap its future and hurt innovation in general.

The ruling upheld that 2004 order, saying it was "beyond dispute" that Microsoft had coerced customers to buy its Media Player software along with the operating system. In fact, last year, Microsoft was told to pay daily fines adding up to Euro 280.5 mn over a six-month period, after it failed to adhere to the 2004 decision.

It was in 2000 that a US Federal judge ruled that Microsoft had abused its market dominance and should be broken up. But somehow the thing fizzled out, as on Microsofts appeal much of the original ruling and sentence were thrown out (though it was still found guilty of monopolistic behavior). Will the latest decision impact the company, or dissipate like the earlier ruling. Microsoft has two months to appeal at the European Court of Justice.

The judgment has the potential of opening the Pandoras box, as based on the ruling a lot many companies could come under the scanner. Sometime back, Apple had faced fire in French courts over iTunes DRM. The very complaints lodged against Microsoft could be easily used against the Google and Apple. But for now, Microsoft is surely numbed.

Shashwat DC
shashwatc@cybermedia.co.in

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