The deal

Published: 14 May 2004 y., Friday
Lawyers who persuaded Microsoft to settle their class-action lawsuit accusing the company of price-fixing are asking for $258 million in legal fees, the largest amount ever in an antitrust case. At a hearing Wednesday where a decision was expected, San Francisco County Superior Court Judge Paul Alvarado said he would rule as soon as practically possible. The judge, without hearing arguments, said he was "not prepared" to say "what I'm going to do." The lawyers' bill comes as attorney fees are being examined critically by the American Bar Association and lawmakers across the country. It amounts to about $3,000 an hour for one lawyer, more than $2,000 an hour each for 34 other attorneys and $1,000 an hour for administrative work. Microsoft agreed to the settlement — allocating $1.1 billion for California consumers — after a small San Francisco law firm sued in state court alleging the company inflated prices by monopolizing the pre-installed software market from 1995 to 2001. But Microsoft could end up spending much less. The deal enables anyone who bought a computer in California to get vouchers worth $5 to $29 per Microsoft product, but only a small fraction of the millions eligible have applied for the money. Two-thirds of the unused settlement, however, is earmarked for poor California schools.
Šaltinis: usatoday.com
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

China Shoots Down VeriSign's Web Domain System

The Chinese government has reportedly mandated that only nine domestic firms may assign Chinese-language Internet addresses. more »

German President Rau: Political Education Over the Internet

According to the German president Johannes Rau, political education must now also take place using new media, and above all through the Internet, with its opportunities for interactive communication. more »

Pentium 4 computers arrive Monday

Computers containing the Pentium 4 went on sale Monday. more »

Yahoo launches video shopping site

Yahoo launched a video shopping site this morning called ShoppingVision, expanding its broadband offerings to further target home users. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Carnivore Can Catch It All

The FBI's controversial e-mail surveillance tool, known as Carnivore, can retrieve all communications that go through an Internet service more »

Intel's new Celerons to further cement budget PC market

Intel is releasing two new Celeron processors for sub-$1,000 PCs, a market that is virtually an Intel colony. more »

Gates defends PC in Comdex speech

With no major software debuts imminent, Microsoft chairman Bill Gates used his state-of-the-computing-world address more »

Netscape 6 goes live to the world

Open-source browser is first for brand under AOL more »

Only one proposed domain — “geo” — won praise

Internet’s technical manager Icann narrows field of address suffixes more »