MS Claims EU Antitrust Malfeasance

By Ed Oswald | Published February 15, 2006, 12:01 PM

Microsoft called the European Union on the carpet Wednesday, arguing that the EU was ignoring "critical evidence in its haste to attack the company’s compliance." The statement was part of a 75-page response to charges that the company was not complying with a 2004 European Commission antitrust decision.

The company was mandated to respond to a December statement of objections, the EU's version of a formal indictment. The company was threatened with fines of 2 million euros per day for non-compliance.

Hundreds of employees worked for 30,000 hours to create some 12,000 pages of technical documents, Microsoft said. The company has also agreed to provide 500 hours of technical support and opened up its source code to those who obtain a license to view it.

To back up its claim, a 49-page report from five computer science professors in the United Kingdom and Germany was sent along with the response.

"We believe that [the interoperability information] has provided complete and accurate information, to the extent that this can be reasonably achieved, covering protocols, dependencies and implicit knowledge," the report read.

Microsoft further accused the EU of ignoring evidence and denying the company due process in its decisions. It complained that it was only given several weeks to make requested changes to technical documents when the commission had the documents for several months.

The Redmond company also claimed that the EU did not review changes Microsoft had made to technical documents before issuing its statement of objections.

"When the Commission issued its Statement of Objections on December 21, 2005, the Commission and its experts had not even bothered to read the most recent version of those documents which Microsoft had made available on December 15, 2005," Microsoft's filing states.

As of press time, the European Commission had not responded publicly to Microsoft's filing.

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

YAWN...

When is Microsoft going to pack it in? They got where they are by cheating every other software company on earth. The bill is now due, just like the tobaccoo companies, pay it and go out of business already!!

Score: 0

|

If you're waiting for Microsoft to go out of business, you'll be waiting quite a while.

Score: 0

|

Wow, this is a lot of "he said, he did" taddling. Both sides seem to be blaming the other, and the media exploits this only further due to their source of information.

In order for both to save face, they need to resolve it very quickly.

Score: 0

|

Eeeeeeewwwwwwwwwwww.

Score: 0

|

Ever noticed... if you say EU real fast it sounds like "Ewww"?

Score: 0

|

Ever noticed...if you wrap your arm around your head and shove your fingers up your nose it hurts?

...probably why no-one does it. ;P

Score: 0

|

Europe... haha. They try so hard...

Score: 0

|

Or...

They're so very trying....

Score: 0

|

Do, or do not... there is no try.

Score: 0

|

You must unlearn what you have learned.

Seriously... All this EU stuff is beginning to confuse me. Hasn't Microsoft ALREADY complied? O.o

Score: 0

|

Sick have we become...(think we got the Star Wars Fever)

Nope, not according to the Ewwww...er, the EU:
http://www.tgdaily.com/2...crosoft_missed_deadline/

They more than complied IMO, but the socialists in the EU would disagree.

Score: 0

|

To put it mildly...

Score: 0

|

Go socialists!

Score: 0

|

gg Microsoft!

Score: 0

|

Google Chrome 4: Yes, it's fast, but is it usable?

As Betanews readers have responded to our stories about Chrome's JavaScript superiority...Does that mean we'd actually use this browser? Well...

Video: Netflix on PlayStation 3

Netflix has come to the PlayStation 3 via Blu-ray and BD-Live.

Verizon Wireless launches new Android, Chocolate, and ruggedized phones

The lower-priced Eris joins the Droid, while the Chocolate gets a touchscreen and more music playback.

Early sales figures for Windows 7 nicely high, but do we know why?

Fans of triple-digit surges in figures quoted by Betanews will love this one, as it appears Microsoft rediscovered how to pull off a software launch.

Myka announces its latest Linux-based 'net top box'

Myka's ION brings Boxee, XMBC, and much more to HDTVs.

What hath Mac wrought? A remembrance after a quarter-century

The reason there's a Macintosh today is not because of some brilliant flash of engineering genius, but because Apple had the audacity to learn from its mistakes.

Early build of Moblin 2.1 improves connectivity, but not device support

The Linux Foundation's Atom-centric OS yesterday received a major overhaul with the project release of Moblin 2.1 for netbooks and nettops.

The iPhone's China syndrome: Sales of 5,000 and climbing

There's actually a country where Apple's device is not a godsend, where sales can be measured in the dozens.

New European counterpart to FCC will ensure 'a more neutral net'

Late Thursday night, the ruling telecom administrators of the EU's member nations signed away their final authority to a new entity overseen by the EC.

Sophos study suggests Windows 7 UAC's default setting is self-defeating

Without any anti-virus installed, a Sophos test showed, User Account Control was only capable of thwarting just one malware package out of ten samples chosen.

Indiscreet tweet trips awareness of Web SSL vulnerability

A group of high-level security engineers had been making progress on thwarting a low-level threat to the Web, until somebody blurted it all out on Twitter.