The key facts

Published: 15 September 1999 y., Wednesday
Lawyers for the government and Microsoft Corp. restated their arguments in a final, voluminous stack of legal briefs that they submitted to the federal judge hearing the antitrust case against the company.As expected, each side_s documents--intended to summarize the key facts they believe they proved during the six-month trial--took sharply divergent views of the eight-month trial, at which final evidence was presented in June. Closing arguments begin later this month. The government argued that Microsoft has engaged in a series of anti-competitive practices to monopolize the market for personal computer operating systems with its Windows software, and that it improperly used its market clout to try to dominate other parts of the software industry."Microsoft used sufficient measures to thwart potential threats to its operating system monopoly," the government wrote. "Unwilling to compete on the merits, Microsoft routinely trampled on consumer interests in the process." Microsoft maintained that the evidence introduced by the government is not sufficient to prove an antitrust violation. It also contended it does not have a monopoly with Windows, and, as such, cannot have broken antitrust laws. Microsoft urged the judge to take "judicial notice" of numerous recent developments that the company contends pose a threat to the dominance of Windows, including the financial success of Red Hat Inc., which makes a rival operating system called Linux. Red Hat_s shares, offered to the public at $14 last month, closed at $119.75 yesterday. Government lawyers, Microsoft wrote, "fail to proffer evidence supporting essential elements of their claims and attempt to brand as "anti-competitive" normal competitive behavior that has plainly benefited consumers." Both sides filed similar summaries last month. Yesterday_s filings were meant to respond to points made in opponents_ documents.
Šaltinis: Washington Post
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

Hackers Limit Disruption To Small Internet Sites

A battle among hackers erupted on the Internet yesterday as some factions disrupted a loosely coordinated effort among other groups trying to vandalize Web sites around the world more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Denmark stops import of IT specialists outside normal rules

It will no longer be possible for Danish companies to automatically employ foreign IT specialists as an exception to the ordinary strict rules on residence permits more »

Over 200m European internet users by 2004, survey

Europe's online population reached 184m by the end of 2002 and will surge beyond 200m by the end of 2004 more »

IDC: OVER ONE MILLION INTERNET USERS IN CROATIA BY END OF 2003

It is possible to expect that by the end of this year there will be over one million Internet users in Croatia more »

Microsoft Enters Identity Management Fray

Microsoft rivals have been staking out a claim to the identity management space -- a critical component of Web services more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

ICANN comes to terms with country domains

Internet overseeing organisation ICANN has backed down in its battle with the rest of the world more »

The new banking software

Deutsche Bank S.p.A Italy Augments Service and Profitability via ACI's BASE24-es Software more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »