Quantcast
PCWorld.com is upgrading some back-end systems. Some site features, such as user registration, may be temporarily unavailable.

Microsoft Still Hopes to Settle With EU

Even though its appeal is ongoing, the software giant hopes to make a deal.

Scarlet Pruitt, IDG News Service

  • 0 Yes
  • 0 No

Microsoft still hopes to settle with the European Commission over the sanctions ordered against it to correct its anticompetitive behavior, even as its appeal of the case winds its way through the legal channels, a senior company executive says.

"We definitely want to settle. We just said it in court and I'll say it again," Jean-Philippe Courtois, Microsoft's chief executive officer for Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA), said at the Etre technology conference in Cannes.

The Commission ruled last March that Microsoft had abused its dominance in the PC operating systems market to gain an advantage in related markets, such as that for media players.

It ordered the company to pay a fine of more than $600 million, and offer a version of its operating system without the Windows Media Player (WMP). It also ordered it to reveal enough Windows code to allow rivals to build competing server software that works well with Windows.

Under Appeal

The Redmond, Washington, software maker is trying to get those behavioral remedies suspended pending its appeal. The request for a suspension is being considered by the European Union's Court of First Instance, which held a two-day hearing on the matter September 30 and October 1.

"We agreed on a settlement initially, but the Commission felt that it had to set a precedent," Courtois said. The sanctions set a worrisome precedent because they will affect companies' ability to innovate, he argued.

"At the core of the issue is innovation. We want to be able to innovate, to make a plan and to act on it," said Courtois, who oversees Microsoft's business in some 60 countries.

The record fine, which Microsoft has paid and is being held in a special account until the case concludes, and the unbundling of WMP, were not of real concern for the company, he said.

  • Recommend this story?
  • 0 Yes
    0 No
  • Great year-end deals
    for small business!
  • Get 24/7 live remote AT&T Tech Support 360* service along with select Lenovo* PCs (with Intel® Core™ 2 Duo processors) and save up to 200!

    Learn more

  • HP EliteBook* 6930p Notebook with Intel® vPro™ technology and a free HP Basic Docking Station - $641 instant savings!

    Learn more

Dell Laptop Deals

People who read this also read:

Sponsored Links