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The Sound of One Hand Clapping©


A rchive Date
[ 11-06-2000 ]
Category
[ International Relations ]
sub-Categoy
[ Microsoft ]

      [Judge comes down hard on Microsoft
      By Charles Cooper, ZDNet News
      November 5, 1999 7:13 PM ET

      Microsoft Corp. wielded monopoly power to stifle competition and stifled innovation, the judge in the company's landmark antitrust case ruled Friday. The findings of fact by U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson were greeted by the Justice Department, which called the ruling a "tremendous victory."

      In a 207-page critique of the software company's business practices, Jackson said Microsoft had used its position to harm consumers and rivals. Jackson determined that Microsoft continues to enjoy an "extremely large and stable" portion of the market for software operating systems, handing the government a smashing victory.

      "This is a tremendous victory for America's consumers," said antitrust chief Joel Klein.

      "Three main facts indicate that Microsoft enjoys monopoly power,'' Jackson said in his findings, citing the company's large and stable market share, the high barriers to market entry, and the lack of a commercially viable alternative to the Windows operating system.

      Microsoft to respond
      Shares of Microsoft were down sharply in after-hours trading as investors reacted to the news.

      In the run-up to this day, there was speculation that a one-sided ruling might provide a spur to the two sides to reach an out-of-court settlement. Microsoft, which plans a press conference later this evening, declined to discuss that possibility. But a spokesman seemed to leave open the door to further discussions with the government.

      "We will continue to look for ways to resolve these issues in a fair and responsible manner," said spokesman Rick Miller. "While we disagree with many of these findings, we're still confident that the law supports us on these points and that the American legal system will ultimately rule that Microsoft's actions were fair, legal and good for consumers," he added.

      Gates reacts
      In a statement, Microsoft CEO Bill Gates also left open the possibility of settlement, saying the company hoped to find a way to resolve the case in a way that was "fair to Microsoft, fair to the government and most of all fair to consumers."

      However, Klein, flanked by Attorney General Janet Reno and Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, declined to speculate about future remedies or the chances of reaching an out-of-court compromise.

      During the course of the 76-day trial, the judge reacted skeptically to Microsoft's claim that it was not a monopoly. Indeed, in his ruling Friday, Jackson said the company was so dominant in the market for Intel-based operating systems "that if it wished to exercise this power solely in terms of price, it could charge a price for Windows substantially above that which could be charged in a competitive market."

      Microsoft's lawyers and expert witnesses had challenged that description during the trial. In direct testimony and depositions, they pointed to the growing emergence of old and new rivals to Microsoft's power, such as Linux and a newly powerful America Online Inc.

      But in his decision, Jackson determined that Microsoft was so dominant that it could sell its OS for below market prices.

      "Moreover, it could do so for a significant period of time without losing an unacceptable amount of business to competitors," Jackson wrote. "In other words, Microsoft enjoys monopoly power in the relevant market."

      Consumers harmed
      The findings of fact could be especially troublesome for Microsoft because Jackson also concluded that many of the company's actions had harmed consumers in ways that he said are immediate and easily discernible.

      "They have also caused less direct but nevertheless serious and far-reaching consumer harm by distorting competition," according to Jackson.
      Reached by telephone, one of the two lead prosecutors in the case, Stephen Houck, said the judge's decision was a slam-dunk for the government.

      "It's everything I possibly could have hoped for," he said. "It's a closely reasoned decision that on no uncertain terms portrays Microsoft as an abusive monopoly."

      Houck, who returned to private practice after participating in the final round of verbal presentations by the two sides earlier this fall, said he detected a change of tone in reading Microsoft's initial statements following the ruling.

      "Gates sounds more conciliatory than in the past," he said.

      However, Houck was uncertain whether the weight of the ruling would provide an extra incentive to Microsoft to settle.

      "In the past, what Microsoft has proposed has not been sufficient to allay the concerns we had," he said.


      World Fact Book (CIA]


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