Memo details Microsoft response in EU case

Published: 1 December 2001 y., Saturday
In a 102-page memo to the EU filed earlier this month, Microsoft said its products can be used with those of rivals and denied engaging in abusive or discriminatory licensing agreements aimed at shutting competitors out of the market. Microsoft is trying to resolve the EU case at the same time a federal judge in Washington, D.C., reviews the company's proposed antitrust settlement with the U.S. government and states that sued the largest software company. The European Commission, the EU's regulatory arm, said Microsoft may have violated antitrust rules by illegally trying to extend its dominant position in personal-computer operating systems into the market for low-end server operating systems. The company's Windows operating system runs 95 percent of the world's personal computers. Server computers store and deliver information for computer networks. Low-end server systems are cheaper devices usually used for keeping files, printing and storing Internet data. Rivals say Microsoft controls as much as 60 percent of the low-end market. The company, in its response, argued that regulators shouldn't carve up the market for servers. Microsoft defended its licensing policy and bundling of its multimedia products. The EU had said Microsoft illegally ties its Media Player with Windows. Microsoft spokeswoman Tiffany Steckler declined to comment. Microsoft's competitors and customers have until Jan. 7 to file a response to Microsoft's arguments, the sources said.
Šaltinis: Bloomberg News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

HomeGrocer.com stock soars on first day of trading

Despite some concern from investors about the viability of the entire online grocery business, HomeGrocer.com Inc._s stock rose nearly 18 percent when it debuted on Wall Street on Friday. more »

A hacker attack

A hacker attack on an e-commerce marketplace site is the latest in a string of online break-ins in which credit card numbers were stolen and posted to the Web. more »

The order

Apple Gets Worldwide Injunctions Against IMac Lookalikes. more »

Dropping the ".com"

At a time when everybody wants to be a dot-com, InfoSpace is shooing away the distinction. more »

Teenager charged with computer hacking

Federal authorities arrested a 17-year-old New Hampshire high school dropout Wednesday and charged him with hacking into a California Web site. more »

A three-year initiative

Singapore To Fund Citizens_ Internet Access. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

AMD Beats Intel in Unveiling 1st Gigahertz Chip

Computer chip maker Advanced Micro Devices on Monday unveiled the first PC Processor running at a so-called ``clock speed'' of one gigahertz, beating its far larger rival Intel Corp. in achieving a long-sought milestone in the PC industry. more »

WebTV yanks email ads

Customer complaints have prompted Microsoft to halt a new WebTV practice of inserting banner ads into the email messages of subscribers of the TV-based Web service. more »

ICANN Vote Plan Draws Criticism

Permitting at-large members to vote could allow fraud, study finds. more »