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European Union widens anti-trust case against Microsoft
By Mike Ingram
9 August 2000
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American software giant Microsoft faces anti-trust action by
the European Union (EU) following a complaint by Sun Microsystems
that the company engaged in discriminatory licensing and refused
to supply essential information on its Windows operating system.
The latest case is the third action brought against Microsoft
in Europe. It follows investigations in February, when it was
alleged that Microsoft abused its dominant share in desktop computer
operating systems with the launch of its Windows 2000 software
in the server market. That action was taken on the European Commission's
own initiative, but was supported by Microsoft's rivals who presented
evidence.
An earlier investigation of Microsoft was begun when the French
software wholesaler, Micro Leader Business, complained that Microsoft
had effectively entered into a cartel with its distributors in
order to inflate prices in France by barring imports of its software.
Micro Leader Business had been importing the Windows operating
system and applications from Microsoft's Canadian business unit,
but said the company had blocked the imports on the grounds that
they violated Microsoft copyrights.
The European Commission rejected the Micro Leader Business
complaint, but the appeals court said the company had demonstrated
sufficient evidence of an attempt by Microsoft to block imports.
The Commission is required to reopen the case and ask Microsoft
for a response.
The issue of copyright is also central to the latest case.
EU competition minister Mario Monti said he had sent a statement
of objections to Microsoft after receiving a complaint from
Sun Microsystems in 1998. Sun alleged that Microsoft breached
EU antitrust rules through discriminatory licensing and refusals
to supply essential information about its Windows operating system.
Microsoft claims that information relating to the inner workings
of its software is intellectual property and protected by international
copyright laws. Microsoft's legal director John Frank said Sun
Microsystems' complaint is based on its desire to gain access
to our technical trade secrets. We don't believe that the law
requires Microsoft, or any other company, to share its secrets
with direct competitors.
The EU case comes in the midst of action taken by the US Justice
department, which in June ordered the break up of Microsoft into
two companies - one controlling the operating system and another
the business software Microsoft Office and the Internet Explorer
browser and related products. That case is currently going through
the appeal process in the American courts. The issues involved
in both cases are similar and relate to the intensifying conflict
within the computing and technology markets internationally.
Evidence presented in the US case clearly shows how Microsoft
engaged in practices designed to subvert emerging technologies
that threatened the dominance of the desktop computer and through
that the Windows operating system. The accuracy of this allegation
is widely accepted in the industry in relation to both the Netscape
web browser (now owned by America Online) and the Java programming
language (developed by Sun Microsystems).
Experts also warned that Microsoft was intent on continuing
the same policy with regard to the Internet and network computing,
with the launch of the Windows 2000 operating system. These areas
are now also under close scrutiny in the US.
What can appear simply as a conflict between rival software
companies has far deeper implications. Certainly, Microsoft rivals
such as Sun Microsystems and Netscape are motivated by a desire
to increase their own place in the lucrative software market and
gain a slice of the $23 billion annual revenues of Microsoft.
Were they in the position of Microsoft today there is no indication
that they would conduct themselves in a different manner.
At its centre however, the Microsoft case reveals a fundamental
conflict between the emergence of new technology and the capitalist
market. Increasingly, the unrivalled dominance of Microsoft has
had a stifling effect upon technology. As computing moves away
from the desktop and into the sphere of the Internet, Microsoft
finds itself in a similar position to that of International Business
Machines (IBM) in the early 1980s.
IBM was at that time the largest supplier of mainframe computer
systems. These were powerful machines that were accessed from
terminals over a network. The emergence of the desktop computer
directly threatened IBM's market and the company initially did
everything it could to prevent this. Like Microsoft today, IBM
found itself the subject of an antitrust case that resulted in
the eventual introduction of radical changes to its business practices.
Though these vastly reduced its market share, they saved the company
from being broken up.
With the emergence of the Internet as a mass medium in the
1990s, the concept of network computing became increasingly desirable
over self-contained personal computers requiring ever-larger amounts
of memory and processing power. The first wave of so-called network
computers made no significant headway. While there were certain
objective barriers to thissuch as slow connections to the
Interneta significant role was played by Microsoft in opposing
the development of cross-platform software that would run on any
computer, using any operating system.
The speed with which computer-related technology is developing
requires greater flexibility than ever before. With the emergence
of broadband technologies allowing high-speed access to the Internet,
the network computer becomes a very real prospect. Moreover, the
emergence of the so-called mobile Internet means that electronic
commerce will increasingly shift away from the traditional desktop
computer to devices such as mobile phones and hand-held devices.
The move by the US government to break up Microsoft is an expression
of the growing concern that the unchallenged monopoly exercised
by the software giant increasingly threatens the dominance of
US capitalism in these emerging markets.
In bringing forward their own anti-trust case, the European
Union is making clear that it will not accept the continued dominance
of Microsoft and will take aggressive measures to secure the success
of European-based rivals.
See Also:
US Judge orders break-up of
Microsoft
[9 June 2000]
A glimpse behind the veil
of business secrets
Microsoft lawsuit reveals predatory corporate practices
[23 May 2000]
The Microsoft lawsuit, software
development and the capitalist market
[2 May 2000]
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