IWETHEY v. 0.3.0 | TODO
1,095 registered users | 0 active users | 0 LpH | Statistics
Login | Create New User
IWETHEY Banner

Welcome to IWETHEY!

New Microsoft: EU fight could last until 2009
[link|http://www.computerworld.com/governmenttopics/government/legalissues/story/0,10801,91591,00.html?from=homeheads|Microsoft: EU fight could last until 2009]

" Microsoft Corp. will appeal the fine and sanctions imposed on it by the European Commission, a process that could keep the battle rumbling until 2009, Brad Smith, the company's senior vice president and general counsel, said in a conference call shortly after the commission's decision was announced."

2009 is so far away in technology terms that it renders the EU decision absolutely meaningless.
New That's the idea.
As in the US, MS will appeal and delay and so forth until the remedy is meaningless. That's their MO.

What I don't understand is, if the bundling if Media Player with Windows is an illegal action under MS's monopoly, why is the remedy a small fine and requiring MS to offer a version of Windows without it while at the same time permitting them to continue to sell the bundled version? Shouldn't they require MS to strip MP out of Windows?

As long as Gates and the present management control MS, nothing is going to constrain MS's behavior WRT bundling. Piddly fines that can be appealed mean nothing to them. A reasonable solution, if carefully done, is to break up the company. How to do it is a difficult problem though....

Or declare Windows and Office a "public utility" or whatever the proper term is...

IMHO.

Cheers,
Scott.
New Economist says it could be ineffectual. 44kB .gif
[link|http://www.economist.com/agenda/displayStory.cfm?story_id=2535519|The Economist] story:

[image|http://www.economist.com/images/ga/2004w13/Microsoft.gif|0|Antitrust Timeline in US and EU|334|588]

But even if the EU is successful in setting a legal precedent, will it have any practical effect in the market? The requirement that Microsoft open access to its interoperability code will apply only to Windows 2000, not to the more recent Windows XP, which is being dealt with in a separate case. As for media players, even if Microsoft does offer cheaper, stripped-down versions of Windows, will PC-makers want them? Even a discount of, say, $10\ufffda substantial cut in Microsoft\ufffds average package price of around $50\ufffdwould barely make a dent in the $1,000 cost of the average PC. And European consumers might feel that they are being offered a second-class product. When offered a choice between Windows with and without Internet Explorer after the American settlement, few PC-makers went without.

Most important of all is what the ruling will mean for Microsoft's plans to conquer yet more markets. The company is believed to be integrating an internet search facility like Google (which Bill Gates greatly admires) into its new version of Windows, codenamed Longhorn. The European Commission has not specifically banned any further bundling\ufffdit says this will be dealt with on a case-by-case basis. Perhaps this week's ruling will prove strong enough to stop Microsoft from tying its products to Windows in order to storm new markets. But if the past is a guide, that seems unlikely. And with the appeal process set to last for years, it is hard to see Microsoft being swayed from its usual strategy: bundle now, litigate later.


Yup. It's not going to change MS's behavior.

Cheers,
Scott.
     European Union Issues Strict New Ruling on Microsoft - (bluke) - (8)
         I think that they'll comply but... - (ben_tilly) - (2)
             Re: I think that they'll comply but... - (jb4) - (1)
                 And Microsoft always does what they are told, right? - (ben_tilly)
         Microsoft: EU fight could last until 2009 - (bluke) - (2)
             That's the idea. - (Another Scott)
             Economist says it could be ineffectual. 44kB .gif - (Another Scott)
         This is the ruling WE should have gotten... - (jb4)
         This got prime time coverage in Australia - (dmarker)

I Palindrome I.
101 ms