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Microsoft Government News

Microsoft Cancels EU Antitrust Hearing 203

bahstid writes "The NY Times reports that Microsoft and the European Commission have canceled the only hearing planned in an antitrust investigation into the company's tying of Internet Explorer into Windows because of a dispute over the attendance of European regulators serving as advisers. As a result, the commission will reach its decision and levy a fine based on written statements from Microsoft and its adversaries. Microsoft decided against the opportunity to give oral evidence in the case after it was unable to persuade the commission to move the meeting, scheduled for June 3rd through 5th, so that it did not conflict with a global antitrust conference in Zurich that draws European antitrust regulators."
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Microsoft Cancels EU Antitrust Hearing

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  • by Daengbo ( 523424 ) <daengbo@OOOgmail.com minus threevowels> on Saturday May 23, 2009 @04:18AM (#28064933) Homepage Journal

    MS requested the opportunity to present oral arguments, the EU scheduled the meeting, MS felt that, although all the required attendees could make it, the date conflicted with another large event, leaving MS without a chance to orally lobby some of those on the sidelines.

    MS said that they're not attending, and the EU cancelled it. Basically that means that it's over and that MS is going to lose.

    Get your checkbook out, Ballmer!

    • by rtfa-troll ( 1340807 ) on Saturday May 23, 2009 @05:01AM (#28065115)

      leaving MS without a chance to orally lobby

      Mod parent insightful. If you steal a car and try to "lobby" the police, trust me you won't get a "fair hearing". That Microsoft goes around breaking the law and then expects to be able to get politicians to help them avoid their penalties is shocking. They are clearly unrepentant in any way and I wish the European courts would get it together to increase their penalties massively to send a clear message that such corruption should not be tolerated. Remember Microsofts crimes are not victimless. There were pensioners who invested in Netscape. There were people who would have been able to pay their medical bills with their Novell money. All the extra money in the Microsoft tax could have been paying for better Linux development. Your taxes could be paying for better bridges instead of a new office install.

    • ...orally lobby...

      I'm sorry, what?

  • by BadAnalogyGuy ( 945258 ) <BadAnalogyGuy@gmail.com> on Saturday May 23, 2009 @04:24AM (#28064963)

    When I was younger and lived on Nauru, we used to go climb the mountain. There is a big mountain on Nauru. Well, not so much a mountain as a crater. But the crater is filled with guano, so it's not truly either a crater or a mountain.

    Anyway, we used to climb the mountain after school. Once I found a dead body in the brush. When I called my father over, he simply told me to go home. Later that evening, my father called the police and there was a big hullabaloo over the dead body. I remember eating dinner that night after the police had left and I asked my mom why she was crying. She told me that they would have to hold my father in detention until more evidence could be gathered.

    My father died in that Nauruan jail cell.

    The first is that Microsoft knows that it is so guilty that nothing they say or do at this point will make their penalty smaller.

    The second is that Microsoft has simply given up any hope of getting a fair hearing because the EC has already made up its mind.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by TheLink ( 130905 )

      Big mountain? But Nauru's only 21 square km (less than the area of a 5 km x 5 km square).

      http://www.sprol.com/2005/08/nauru/ [sprol.com]

  • by Late Adopter ( 1492849 ) on Saturday May 23, 2009 @04:35AM (#28065013)
    It's certainly not the first time anyone's skipped work to go to a con.
  • by weirdcrashingnoises ( 1151951 ) on Saturday May 23, 2009 @04:54AM (#28065079) Journal

    got this from one of the related links at the bottom of TFA:

    According to the person, Microsoft will argue that Internet browsing is inseparable from the Windows operating system. Microsoft will also emphasize that consumers can download and use any competing browser with Windows, and that Internet Explorer's share of the browser market has been falling steadily.

    so thats part of their argument? "You see, we're loosing, so that means it's ok for us to cheat!"

    here is the article (May 8th) [nytimes.com]

    • so thats part of their argument? "You see, we're loosing, so that means it's ok for us to cheat!"

      Loosing? Is that like releasing?

      An argument is that bundling IE gives it an unfair advantage. But the real reason Microsoft was going to be prohibited from distributing the browser with the OS is that they already used their unfair advantage to push IE. Forcing them to unbundle the browser is retarded, but punitive measures were the best thing the EU could imagine, so that's what they came up with. Microsoft is clearly going to argue that the unfair advantage didn't exist since IE's market share is dropping

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by hkmwbz ( 531650 )

        Forcing them to unbundle the browser is retarded, but punitive measures were the best thing the EU could imagine, so that's what they came up with.

        What, the verdict has already been announced? The EU has already decded that IE must be unbundled? News to me.

        Microsoft is clearly going to argue that the unfair advantage didn't exist since IE's market share is dropping anyway.

        Does that change Microsoft's past illegal actions? If you rob a bank and the bank makes enough money to make up for the loss, does that

      • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

        Which is exactly why its a perfect legal remedy. Microsoft competed unfairly in many ways but one of the major identified ones was bundling a browser. They used this to among other things cement their desktop and web client monopoly. Since the harm is their having an monopoly damaging their ability to compete is a good retribution.

        Microsoft should be barred from inclining software that renders HTML. That would force their users to bring their own browser. It was force developers to bring their own libr

        • Microsoft should be barred from inclining software that renders HTML.

          A much better answer would be to invent a number of dollars (or whatever currency) they have unfairly gotten as a result of their illegal actions, and just fine them that much. When they ship product, confiscate it. When they do not pay, incarcerate their officers (at least those who work in your country.) Declare dominion over their copyrights within your borders. Do whatever it takes to reverse their gains. Because unbundling an HTML renderer from Windows would harm users and still not address the issue o

    • by Shihar ( 153932 )

      Monopoly laws are a little odd. Whether or not you are violating the law depends upon your size and how much of the market you eat up. If Ubuntu wants to bundle a browser, they are not going to get pinged for it because they own 2% of the market. It isn't illegal unless you are big.

      The whole point of this style of law isn't to punish companies for illegal activities. The activities are not clearly legal or illegal. The point is to keep companies from being a monopoly and nothing else.

      The reason why no

  • by Rik Sweeney ( 471717 ) on Saturday May 23, 2009 @04:57AM (#28065095) Homepage

    Judge: Why didn't you attend your DUI?
    Me: Oh, I cancelled it, didn't you get the email?
    Judge: I didn't get a chance to check my email this morning, when can you attend another hearing?
    Me: I don't have time I'm afraid, it's all explained in the email though
    Judge: OK then, drive safe now!
    Me: Thanks!

  • by dominux ( 731134 ) on Saturday May 23, 2009 @11:13AM (#28067341) Homepage
    Microsoft are spinning this. They say that nobody senior was available, that is nonsense. The EU were sending Neelie Kroes, who is European Commissioner for Competition and about as senior as could possibly be. Microsoft got scared and ran away doing damage limitation PR on the way out.
    • Not even Kroes is required to attend. You just have a hearing officer. They listen to the arguments and write a report. The room will be packed with the people who do the work. But if they don't want a hearing, fine. Maybe Nellie Kroes can then go to Switzerland to the baseless competition politician meeting to get lobbied by Microsoft jerks there.

      You cannot bargain with an antitrust authority.

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