Microsoft: Ready To Comply With EU Order If Appeal Fails
September 27, 2004 8:22 AM ET
Microsoft said Monday it is ready to put a stripped-down version of Windows on the market if it fails this week to persuade a judge to suspend a landmark European Union antitrust decision.
Microsoft is appealing a ruling the EU made in March that included a record $600 million fine as well as orders to hand over software code to rivals in the server market, and to change the way it packages its own Media Player software into Windows.
"We'll certainly be ready to comply," Microsoft's chief lawyer, Brad Smith, said at a news conference. He said the U.S. software giant had ``spent millions of dollars over the past few months'' to prepare a version of its ubiquitous operating system that would satisfy EU regulators.
In the past, Microsoft has said it would face difficulties implementing the Media Player order, arguing that the software for playing digital audio and video was integral to other functions of the operating system, such as the "help" system.
The European Commission ordered it to offer a version of Windows without the Media Player to allow rival makers like RealNetworks Inc. a better shot at landing on consumers' desktops.
The two sides will face off Thursday and Friday before the president of the Luxembourg-based European Court of First Instance, Bo Vesterdorf, who will decide whether to freeze the EU's punishment pending a final decision on the appeal, which could take several years.
Smith said Microsoft also submitted detailed information to the court on the patents, copyrights and trade secrets it believes would be violated by the EU order to license its communication protocols, which allow servers to share information. Vesterdorf had asked for the information.
Copyright © 2004 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.
|
|
10 Challenges That HP Wants Partners To Tackle Right Now CRN speaks with HP's business unit chiefs to get a sense of where they'd like partners to focus in the coming year, as well as how CEO Meg Whitman is making a difference. |
|
|
VAR500: IBM Strikes Deal With Ukraine Bank; HP Bolsters Health-Care Practice CRN VAR500 solution providers win health-care contracts, work on European banking solution, create a platform for microlending, sharing info on cloud computing and more. |
|
|
Five Companies That Dropped The Ball This Week For the week ending Feb. 3, CRN looks at five companies that were either asleep at the wheel or just didn't make good decisions. |
- Microsoft's Antitrust Case Ends In U.S As Appeals Process Begins In Europe
- Hollywood Players Still Wary Of Microsoft
- Microsoft Credibility Questioned Over Longhorn
- Cognizant Sales Soar, Exec Promotions Follow
- VAR500 Company EPAM Systems: IPO Update
- Microsoft Taps Cisco Exec To Manage Public Sector Business
- Microsoft Sets Feb. 29 For Windows 8 Consumer Preview Release
