At last Microsoft is getting some serious teaching. Good for consumers.

Cheers,
Imtiaz

  <http://www.reuters.com>   *  Microsoft finally bows to EU
ruling<http://uk.reuters.com/article/email/idUKBRE00117920071022>
*  Mon Oct 22 11:55:25 UTC 2007


 By David Lawsky

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Microsoft ended three years of resistance on Monday and
finally agreed to comply with a landmark 2004 antitrust decision by the
European Commission.

The defeated software giant announced it would not appeal against a decisive
European Union court ruling two months ago that backed the Commission.

"The repercussions of these changes will start now and will continue for
years to come," Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes told a news
conference, adding that Microsoft's agreement will have "profound effects"
on the software industry.

"It is a victory for the consumer", she said.

Microsoft, which was fined nearly half a million euros in 2004 and a further
280.5 million euros (195.5 million pounds) in 2006 for non-compliance, faced
the prospect of steep new fines if it did not accommodate the Commission.

"As from today Microsoft has established compliance, no doubt about that,"
Kroes said. "There is no reason to impose further penalties on Microsoft as
of this day."

But she left open the possibility it could yet face fines for its lack of
compliance between 2006 and now.

Among other reversals, Microsoft will make available to so-called "open
source" software developers information they need to make their programmes
work smoothly with Microsoft's Windows operating system for personal
computers.

Microsoft has also sliced high royalties for that interoperability
information, the Commission said.

Microsoft suffered a major defeat in September when the Court of First
Instance in Luxembourg, the EU's number two court, upheld the 2004 ruling
that the world's largest software maker abused its dominant market position
to crush rivals.

It backed the Commission on all major points.

Among other things, the court upheld the Commission's finding that Microsoft
failed to give rivals enough information so their work group server software
would work as smoothly with Microsoft's desktop computers as Microsoft's own
software.

Work group server software is used in small office groups for signing on,
file management and printing.

The Commission said Microsoft had made substantial changes to its royalty
programme in three ways.

First, open source software developers will be able to access and use the
interoperability information. Microsoft will not assert patents against
non-commercial open source software development projects.

Second, the royalties payable for this information will be reduced to a
nominal one-off payment of 10,000 euros.

Third, the royalties for a worldwide licence including patents will be
reduced from 5.95 percent to 0.4 percent, far less than the 7 percent
originally demanded by Microsoft.

Any disagreements will be settled in London's High Court.

Beyond that, Kroes said the company must comply with the decision, including
for new software.

Microsoft's new stance was signalled earlier this month, when the company
withdrew from an appeal against a South Korean antitrust ruling. It had
appealed to the Seoul High Court.

Kroes personally negotiated with Microsoft President Steve Ballmer in a
number of conversations including over a meal at a restaurant near her home
town of Rotterdam, in the Netherlands, she said.

"I paid for the dinner," she said.

(Additional reporting by Emma Davis)
  ------------------------------


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Reply via email to