Microsoft could face more fines, warns EU

European antitrust regulators on Thursday issued a formal warning to Microsoft, threatening further penalties against the software giant over its pricing of protocol licenses.

The European Commission alleges that Microsoft has failed to adhere to the EC's historic 2004 order, which in part calls for the software giant to share interoperability information with its rivals, at "reasonable and nondiscriminatory" terms, so that their products would work with Microsoft's operating system.

"Microsoft has agreed that the main basis for pricing should be whether its protocols are innovative," Neelie Kroes, European Commissioner for Competition, said in a statement. "The Commission's current view is that there is no significant innovation in these protocols. I am, therefore, again obliged to take formal measures to ensure that Microsoft complies with its obligations."

Microsoft will have four weeks to respond to the Commission's allegations that its pricing is unreasonable because of a lack of innovation. Should the Commission find Microsoft's response lacking, it could initiate daily fines until the software maker comes into compliance with the March 2004 order.

The Commission's monitoring trustee, Neil Barrett, noted: "All of the described features were considered either to have been Microsoft implementations of prior developments by others, or to have been anticipated by prior developments and to be immediately obvious minor extensions to that prior work."

Microsoft, however, contends the technology in question is innovative.

"Other government agencies in the US and Europe have awarded 36 patents for these protocols and another 37 patents are pending," said Brad Smith, Microsoft's general counsel, during a press conference. "These agencies have concluded that that there is substantial innovation."

Microsoft also contends that innovation was only part of the pricing principles it and the Commission agreed to in June 2005.

The two-tier pricing principles call for either a "no patent agreement" or an "all IP agreement."

The Commission's monitoring trustee considers four issues when reviewing the pricing principals, Smith said. One is the extent to which the protocols are based on Microsoft's own creation. Secondly, innovation is examined, as is comparable pricing and the equivalent of an "other" category, said Smith, who added that the Commission appears to have concentrated on only one of the four.

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Talkback 5 comments

    The world has changed Anonymous -- 02/03/07

    The world seems to be changing and has woken up to Microsofts tactics. If Microsoft wishes to keep its credibility it needs to wake up to the times. To try to stay on top by unfairly blocking competition is a old '90's tactic which only works on uninformed consumers otherwise this decade will be without doubt the fall of a giant.

    Debacle Anonymous -- 02/03/07 (in reply to #320075608)

    ...but then again it could just be a complete waste of time and money - the public's money of course, but then the EC exists to waste the public's money.

    Just look at the media player debacle that had zero effect. MS were forced to make a product available by the EC that nobody actually wanted. Shame the EC didn't ask the consumers before worrying what was best for them.

    you might be right Anonymous -- 02/03/07 (in reply to #320075615)

    Short of being true to word and enforcing the decision, such as pulling the product off the market or placing an 'antitrust' tax on their products it will be a long and fruitless.

    Business as usual Anonymous -- 02/03/07

    Microsoft has shown a willingness to suffer losing court cases, paying large fines, and then continuing it's anti-competitive behaviour.

    It looks like they treat fines as just a "cost of doing business", and well-worth it if it keeps competitors at a disadvantage while the court cases drags on -- and probably afterwoods too.

    It will take _serious_ fines (e.g. 50% of income) and/or _serious_ sanctions (monopoly products given to all users for free) before they change their mind.

    Certainly right Anonymous -- 05/03/07 (in reply to #320075619)

    You are absolutely right. I have a theory that MS also privately finances "pirates" to "crack" each version of Windows, so that people continue using it, instead of considering "free" versions of other Operating Systems.

    At least the EC is more likely to back it up than the US government. The DOJ antitrust suit has done nothing to curb microsoft's anticompetitive, agressive and predatory behaviour. And they want alter patent law to stop MS bombarding everyone with a paper trail too big for most to bother with

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