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BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) — Microsoft loses its appeal of a European
antitrust order Monday that obliges the technology giant to pay a
record $613 million fine, share communications code with rivals and
sell a copy of Windows without Media Player.
In a stinging defeat
for the world's biggest software maker, the court decision also affirms
Europe's role as the lead international regulator of dominant companies.
"In
global markets, the antitrust policy that matters is the most
restrictive one," said M.J. Moltenbray, a partner at Freshfields
Bruckhaus Deringer LLP.
The EU Court of First Instance ruled
against Microsoft Corp. on both major parts of the case, saying the
European Commission was correct in concluding that the company was
guilty of monopoly abuse in trying to use its power over desktop
computers to muscle into server software.
Microsoft Corp., based in Redmond, Wash., said it would withhold
comment on the decision and on whether it would appeal to the EU's
highest court, the European Court of Justice, until it had gone through
the 248-page ruling. It has two months to appeal.
"I don't want
to talk about what will come next," said Microsoft lawyer Brad Smith.
"We need to read the ruling before we make any decision."
But he said the company accepted that it may need to do more to comply with EU demands — without giving specifics.
"It's
not our desire and it is not our goal to have continuous arguments and
disputes. We want to move forward," he told reporters — saying he had
called the Commission earlier to congratulate them.
The court had
confirmed that regulators had "quite broad power and quite broad
discretion" over companies with large market shares, he said, citing
Google Inc., Apple Inc. and International Business Machines Corp. as
those that needed to heed the decision.
While the fine was the
largest ever assessed by EU regulators, Microsoft has plenty of
resources - it earned $14.07 billion last fiscal year.
Its shares fell 29 cents to $28.75 in morning trading Monday.
The court said regulators had clearly demonstrated that selling media software with Windows had damaged rivals.
"The
court observes that it is beyond dispute that in consequence of the
tying, consumers are unable to acquire the Windows operating system
without simultaneously acquiring Windows Media Player," it said.
"In
that regard, the court considers that neither the fact that Microsoft
does not charge a separate price for Windows Media Player nor the fact
that consumers are not obliged to use that Media Player is irrelevant."
But
it did overturn regulators' decision to appoint a monitoring trustee to
watch how Microsoft had complied with the ruling, saying the Commission
had exceeded its powers by ordering Microsoft to pay for all the costs
of the trustee.
The mood at EU headquarters was one of elation
and the court's decision was hailed as a big victory for the EU's
competition policy and for consumer rights.
"The ruling confirms
more than ever that Microsoft must comply," said EU Competition
Commissioner Neelie Kroes. "I will not tolerate continued
noncompliance."
Kroes said however that the victory did not yet
mean that software customers have more choice than they did three years
ago, when Microsoft was slapped with the original EU fine.
"The court has confirmed the Commission's view that consumers are suffering at the hands of Microsoft," she said.
She
refused to say what the implications of Monday's decision would have on
other ongoing legal fights between the EU and Microsoft.
The European Committee for Interoperable Systems called the ruling a good result.
"It's
a very good day, for it signals that there will be fair competition for
the sector," said Maurits Dolmans, a lawyer for the group.
In its
ruling, the court upheld both the Commission's argument and its order
for Microsoft to hand over information on server protocols to rivals.
Microsoft had claimed these were protected by patents and the
Commission was forcing it to give away valuable intellectual property
at little or no cost.
The court confirmed "that the necessary
degree of interoperability required by the Commission is well founded
and that there is no inconsistency between that degree of
interoperability and the remedy imposed by the Commission.
AP Business Writer Christopher S. Rugaber on Washington and Associated
Press writer Robert Wielaard in Luxembourg contributed to this report.
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