Microsoft makes consumers suffer: EU court

A European court dealt a severe blow to Microsoft's competitive ambitions in Europe on Monday by siding with regulators in an antitrust case against the company.

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In its ruling, the Luxembourg-based Court of First Instance upheld European Commission claims that Microsoft abused its dominant position in the operating system market. Microsoft's allies and competitors have been closely following the case since the Commission imposed antitrust sanctions against the company in early 2004.

The court's decision is expected to have far-reaching implications for consumers, computer makers, Microsoft competitors and, perhaps most pointedly, the Commission's ability to regulate technology companies on antitrust matters, legal experts and industry observers say.

"The court ruling is...welcome for its confirmation of the Commission's decision and its underlying policy, but nevertheless, it is bittersweet," Neelie Kroes, the Commission's Competition Commissioner, said during a press conference on Monday. "Bittersweet because the court has confirmed the Commission's view that consumers are suffering at the hands of Microsoft."

Kroes added that should Microsoft comply with the Commission's order, she expects to see a "significant drop" in Microsoft's overwhelming market share.

And while she gave no estimate of how steep she expects that drop to be, Kroes noted that it would likely be more than a few percentage points as more competitors enter the market. Microsoft's Windows operating system runs on about 95 percent of the world's personal computers.

"A market share less than 95 percent is a way to measure the success (of the order)," she added. A spokesman for Kroes later clarified that a fall in market share would be a logical consequence of fairer competition.

The top antitrust regulator for the Commission also noted that it is "too early" to discuss whether there are any antitrust issues in Vista. But she added that some information may be available "not too far from now."

The 13-member court ruled that the Commission was justified in requiring Microsoft to share certain technical specifications, or protocols, with rivals so their products would work with Microsoft's Windows operating system. The Commission is also requiring Microsoft to offer an unbundled option to consumers when tying together two separate products, such as Windows and the company's Media Player software.

The court also upheld the US$613 million fine imposed by the Commission, according to documents detailing the ruling.

Monday's verdict could ultimately force Microsoft to change its business practices, at least in Europe, observers say. It could also embolden antitrust regulators to pursue Microsoft in other countries.

However, the ruling likely will have no bearing on Microsoft's business in the United States, where the company settled a long-running antitrust case in 2002.

The US Department of Justice on Monday issued a statement critical of the Commission's decision. "We are...concerned that the standard applied to unilateral conduct by the (Court of First Instance), rather than helping consumers, may have the unfortunate consequence of harming consumers by chilling innovation and discouraging competition. In the United States, the antitrust laws are enforced to protect consumers by protecting competition, not competitors," Thomas O. Barnett, assistant attorney general for the department's antitrust division, said in the statement.

Microsoft has not indicated whether it will pursue an appeal of Monday's verdict to the European Court of Justice, the highest court in Europe.

"The decision is not what we had hoped for and to say anything less would be less than candid," Brad Smith, Microsoft general counsel, said during a press conference on Monday.

While acknowledging that the court sided with the Commission on key points, the company took some solace in the fact that the court annulled the Commission's imposition of an independent trustee to monitor compliance, Smith said.

He added that Microsoft has made progress on the interoperability issues, but that more work needs to be done and will be addressed as quickly as possible.

Previously, the Commission believed the pricing Microsoft was going to charge for licensing its protocols was too steep, but the software giant responded by dropping the fee to 1 percent of revenues generated from its products, Smith noted.

"If the European Commission still believes that is still too high, we want to understand (their concerns) and quickly address it," he said.

Microsoft, however, believes it has a "complete and accurate" set of technical specifications that companies have begun to license, and Smith noted that he hopes even more licensees will sign on.

As for Media Player, Smith said Microsoft has offered an unbundled version of its Windows operating system and Media Player for more than two years, and, as a result, believes it is in full compliance with the Commission's 2004 order.

Minor victory
Microsoft took some solace in the minor win the Court awarded it over the Commission's use of a monitoring trustee, Smith said.

As a result of the ruling, Microsoft is not responsible for paying all the costs associated with the monitoring trustee. The court also reined in the power of the trustee, finding that the Commission has no authority to compel Microsoft to grant the trustee powers that the Commission is not authorised to confer on a third party.

Smith emphasised the progress Microsoft has made over the years to comply with the Commission's order and said he remains hopeful the court's order will bring further clarity to the issue.

"We have been working hard over the last few years to address these issues," Smith said. "Everyone agrees, for example, that the version of Windows that we offer in Europe today is in compliance with the Commission's 2004 decision."

Nonetheless, the court chided Microsoft on its behaviour regarding interoperability issues.

"The court considers that the Commission was correct to conclude that the work group server operating systems of Microsoft's competitors must be able to interoperate with Windows domain architecture on an equal footing with Windows operating systems if they are to be capable of being marketed viably...the absence of such interoperability has the effect of reinforcing Microsoft's competitive position on the market and creates a risk that competition will be eliminated," the court said in its ruling.

Microsoft and the Commission had particularly contentious disagreements over the issue of interoperability, with Microsoft and the Commission clashing on the extent to which the company's technical information should be shared with rivals.

"The court rejects Microsoft's claims that the degree of interoperability required by the Commission is intended in reality to enable competing work group server operating systems to function in every respect like a Windows system and, accordingly, to enable Microsoft's competitors to clone or reproduce its products," the court said.

A number of Microsoft competitors have previously weighed in on the interoperability issue in complaints to the Commission. These include the European Committee for Interoperable Systems (ECIS), a nonprofit trade association that includes as members Adobe, IBM, Oracle, RealNetworks, Red Hat and Sun Microsystems.

"This landmark judgment sets a clear standard for Microsoft's future conduct and empowers the European Commission to impose it in the European market when necessary," said Thomas Vinje, a spokesman and legal counsel for ECIS.

Linux distributor Red Hat also voiced its support for the court's decision.

"In our business, interoperability information is critically important and cannot simply be withheld to exclude all competition...we were pleased with the overall decision and look forward to examining the decision in greater detail," Matthew Szulik, Red Hat chief executive, said in a statement.

Similar views were expressed by the Software and Information Industry Association (SIIA).

"After one of the most thorough investigations in the history of competition law, spanning over seven years, the Commission has taken a steady and decisive course," Ken Wasch, SIIA president, said in a statement. "We applaud the leadership and persistence of the European Commission."

But another trade group, the Computing Technology Industry Association (CompTIA), which includes Microsoft as a member, expressed disappointment in the ruling, labelling it a blow to "free enterprise in Europe."

In addition to the interoperability issue, the court sided with the Commission on the bundling of separate software products, citing three areas that affected its decision.

One was the company in question must have a dominant position in the market for the tying product, such as the Windows operating system; two, the tying product and tied product -- in this case Windows and Windows Media Player -- must be two separate products; and three, consumers don't have a choice to obtain the tying product without the tied product.

"The court considers that the factors on which the Commission based its conclusion that there was abusive tying are correct and consistent with community law."

RealNetworks, which makes the RealPlayer media player, had raised such an issue in the past, eventually reaching a US$460 million settlement to address antitrust claims with Microsoft in 2005. Microsoft also agreed to pay RealNetworks US$310 million to support RealNetworks' movie and game business.

In recent years, the software giant has been paying multimillion-dollar settlements to its rivals to address previous antitrust litigation. Microsoft also paid longtime archrival Sun Microsystems US$700 million to settle antitrust disputes with the company over interoperability issues and another US$900 million over patent issues.

Legal experts previously weighed in on what a favourable court ruling would do for the Commission. Some legal experts said that with a favourable court ruling in the Microsoft case, the Commission would likely remain on its current aggressive track in pursuing antitrust cases, whereas an unfavourable one would have likely "taken the wind out of its sails."

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Talkback 8 comments

    This can do nothing but good Anonymous -- 18/09/07

    Finally someone has the guts to treat microsoft the same way microsoft treats its customers.

    I hope this gets the ball rolling and the rest of the world joins in the war against microsoft terrorism.

    Micro$oft's fine Jon Biddell -- 18/09/07 (in reply to #320086334)

    When you think logically and dispassionately about it, what have Micro$oft really done wrong ? They have developed an OS that they didn't *force* people to buy - not like they held a gun to your head. You knew the "rule" when you bought it, and now you want to change them ?

    Granted, they have done some pretty nasty things to competitors over the years, like buying them out and then squashing their businesses, but that's the way life is.

    Personally, I don't use M$ products unless I have to - and except for work *I don't have to !!* - as there are plenty of functional and cheap alternatives.

    Micro$soft is not a software company, they are a marketing company, and a damn good one at that.

    And next to conform is ... Anonymous -- 20/09/07 (in reply to #320086334)

    And what about Apple, I want to put "MY" browser of choice on my iPhone.
    Or put my media player of choice.

    I want open access to the chip in my credit card(and others through the same api) ... tell me how cad owners. And the secrets of the encoding ...
    Do you want this new playing field?

    Jiminy Cricket, calm down Anonymous -- 22/09/07 (in reply to #320086334)

    Microsoft terrorism? Wow. Keep your pants on buddy. Perhaps find a girlfriend.

    I'm calm Anonymous -- 23/09/07 (in reply to #320086591)

    But I dont want skynet to become aware. Do you?

    Besides, do your research and you will find out how they terrorise the industry. It is my friend, simply unacceptable.

    Isn't it just SO American Anonymous -- 01/10/07

    Isn't it just so American that the DoJ - the US legal authority charged with ensuring *compliance* - is actually *defending* a convicted monopolist (convicted *by* the DoJ and multiple other authorities around the world)?

    Conservative politics in the US are beneath contempt to most external observers. And let's make no mistake about this, politics is what this is, not law. Lest we forget, this is the same DoJ whose politically appointed head resigned recently in disgrace after pressure from both sides of Congress for being partisan and forgetting about the separation of powers.

    Some Microsoft-sympathetic US media outlets have been publishing stories about the great divide between the EU and US jurisprudence in relation to market regulation. But they seem to forget two major points:

    Firstly the DoJ won their case against Microsoft convincingly, even overwhelmingly. Microsoft had even resorted to contemptuous tricks and tactics that outraged the various judges on more than one occasion, including: offering manifestly fake video evidence; a variety of damning e-mail evidence which contradicted claims made under oath; and computer experts were - with minimal effort - able to prove some of their other claims (e.g.: Internet Explorer was inseparable from the OS) patently false, etc..

    Secondly, after having even convinced the judge in the first round that a break-up of Microsoft was the only viable remedy, the DoJ was poised to secure an emphatic alternative penalty against Microsoft in the court of appeals, when there was a change of government in the US. George W. Bush came to power, and there was a sudden - and otherwise inexplicably diametric - change of tack by the DoJ, coinciding with the nomination of a new political appointee by the White House. Consequently, a large number of non-political DoJ staff resigned in protest.

    As such, there may not be such a big difference between the substantive jurisprudence of the two camps across the Atlantic; instead there may only be a discrepancy between the politics of the White House and the jurisprudence of the EU. But this is not surprising in the least; given the mounting evidence from WMDs, through voting irregularities - electronic and otherwise - to warrantless wiretapping, it seems that the law / truth and the White House don't always mix. Moreover, with the current state of affairs, i.e.: with the DoJ having been relegated to mouthpiece of the White House, there may be little jurisprudence left in the US camp at all; that is the only conclusion I can draw when the DoJ is defending a monopolist it convicted.

    Microsoft is dominant? Big deal Brad -- 03/10/07

    Time for the Microsoft haters to get outdoors more often. Microsoft didn't make themselves big - their punters made them big.

    The EU and the US Dept of Injustice are simply proving how moronic monopolist bureaucracies can be. If you don't like Microsoft's position then don't use their software. Instead be a Linux kiddie and use under-developed Linux kiddie apps. Do what suits you and leave the rest of the world to their own devices.

    I agree with some of Jon Biddell's comments:

    "When you think logically and dispassionately about it, what have Micro$oft really done wrong ? They have developed an OS that they didn't *force* people to buy - not like they held a gun to your head. You knew the "rule" when you bought it, and now you want to change them ?"

    Yep, what people do in their own back yard is their business. One has a choice of Windows, Linux, Apple and others.

    "Granted, they have done some pretty nasty things to competitors over the years, like buying them out and then squashing their businesses, but that's the way life is."

    Very true and this comes to the root of real competition - where you can not only match your adversiaries but beat them. As Jon said, that's life.

    thats one position Anonymous -- 08/10/07 (in reply to #320087131)

    Thats one position, and then you can analyze the way that MS have got where they are. Read the whole story, and you may understand reasons behind peoples objection to this company, including the EU who have objected to the way that MS conduct themselves . The list is very long and includes many unethical practices to muscle, cheat and lie themselves into total exclusion of competition. MS doing nothing wrong, thats life? Please, Brad. Thats very sad.

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