Login, change your address, subscribe to new or manage current magazines or e-newsletter subscriptions
Computerworld Publication PageNetworkWorld Publication PageCIO Canada Publication PageITJobUniverse.ca
- The Information, Communication and Technology (ICT) Job Board
Advanced Search
Knowledge Centres
Content Types
Featured White Papers
Gartner Research Note "Boost SharePoint Performance with an Application Delivery Network"Gartner Research Note "Boost SharePoint Performance with an Application Delivery Network" read more
From fear to value: CIO strategies for propelling business through the economic crisisFrom fear to value: CIO strategies for propelling business through the economic crisis read more
Reaping the rewards of your service-oriented architecture infrastructureReaping the rewards of your service-oriented architecture infrastructure read more
Yuk it Up
Featured White Papers
Download the Network Barometer Report, which aggregates findings from secure network infrastructure assessments conducted for more than 150 organisations around the world. It provides some surprising stats on the state of network (un)readiness prevalent today; the reasons why organisations are failing at remediating known vulnerabilities; recommendations on assessing your own infrastructure, and on ways to improve your state of readiness to support the business; and more.
Early-generation server load-balancing technology has proven to be an invaluable asset, especially for organizations hosting widely utilized Web applications. But business requirements evolve, as do the processes and technologies used to fulfill them. The many changes and trends that have taken hold since SLBs were first introduced expose the need for enterprises to step up from a simple load-balancing solution to a more comprehensive application delivery solution . This paper is intended to serve as a guide for organizations looking to replace their early-generation SLBs, providing details on the top eight criteria to use during an evaluation process.
Featured Spotlight
Keep up on who's hiring, who's downsizing and how the government is helping. News, job opportunities, recruiters and employment lawyers are all available.
Sign-Up for
Enterprise Infrastructure
eNewsletter Delivered Weekly
Click here
Page 1 of 1

Digg it Twitter

Microsoft stays put as EC deadline passes

Microsoft Corp. launched a last-ditch attempt to stave off the threat of million-dollar-a-day fines on Wednesday when it submitted its formal response to European Commission charges that it is failing to comply with an antitrust ruling.

In a statement accompanying the submission, the company said that it had fully complied with the Commission's demands to ensure interoperability with its server software and accused the Commission of disregarding "critical evidence" in the case.

The company submitted its formal response, a 75-page document, to the Commission's complaints, known as an S.O. (statement of objections). In a statement, Microsoft said that "hundreds of Microsoft employees and contractors have worked for more than 30,000 hours to create over 12,000 pages of detailed technical documents that are available for license today."

It added that the company had also filed two reports by software system engineering professors who examined the technical documentation. Those experts concluded that the interoperability information provided by Microsoft met "current industry standards" and that the company had provided "complete and accurate information," according to the statement.

The Commission did not immediately issue a comment on Microsoft's response.

The Commission, the European Union's antitrust authority, gave Microsoft until Wednesday to make a convincing case that it was complying with the 2004 ruling, which among other things ordered the company to ensure the interoperability of its server software with competitors. Based on information sent by the company last December, an independent trustee, computer professor Neil Barrett, said that the documentation Microsoft had provided was "useless."

The company's offer to grant access to the source code for the communications protocols for the server software has also received a lukewarm response by the Commission, which argues it does not help rivals develop products that can interoperate with Microsoft's.

Microsoft faces daily fines up to €2 million (US$2.4 million) if the Commission decides that the company has not complied with its ruling although the actual figure would likely be less than half that.

In its filing to the Commission, Microsoft also complained that the authority had failed to consider key information it had submitted and had "denied Microsoft due process in defending itself."

Microsoft said that the Commission waited "many months" before informing the company that changes were necessary to the technical documentation. The company was only given a few weeks to make "extensive revisions," the statement said. It also added that, when the Commission issued its formal statement of objections on Dec. 21, it had not read the most recent version of the documents, which the company sent Dec. 15.

The Commission will decide in the third quarter if Microsoft's response proves that it is complying, since the company requested formal hearings to present its arguments.

The Commission needs time to consider the formal response and hearings, which are expected to take place in four to six weeks, and discuss its findings with a committee of E.U. member states' competition experts.

Open-source software developers dismissed Microsoft's move, calling it a "parody of compliance." A statement by Carlo Piana, a lawyer who represents the Free Software Foundation Europe and Samba Team, said "Microsoft are not complying, they are offering pointless documents that will have the only effect to further tie competitors' hand with futile, unreasonable and discriminatory conditions."

Piana also dismissed the company's offer to grant access to the source code. The company was only allowing developers to see the code as a reference, without licensing it. "Free software is going to stay miles away from it," he said.

Companies that support the Commission's case said they hoped that Microsoft had finally decided to comply with the ruling. Making full server interoperability information available on fair terms for proprietary software developers and the open-source community was "the only way to ensure full and fair competition in the European server software market," said Simon Awde, chairman of the European Committee for Interoperable Systems (ECIS). ECIS represents companies including IBM Corp., Oracle Corp., Red Hat Inc. and Sun Microsystems Inc.

Page 1 of 1
Send to a Friend  Rate This Page  Print This PageAdd a new comment
Bookmark this article on:
del.icio.us| Digg it| Furl| Google| Technorati| StumbleIt| Yahoo!

Have something to say about this article? Add a new comment

If you find a comment inappropriate, You can notify the moderator by clicking the Report an innapropriate comment icon.
ADD A COMMENT
Name:*Your email address will not appear online and will be used only in the event that the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comment.
City:
Email:
Title:*
Comment:*
* required fields



Related Content
Articles

Events

Book Reviews

Featured Content
Improving business through smart energy and environment policy
Businesses and public entities today face increasing pressure to develop policies that are both good for the planet and good for business. A framework developed by IBM offers businesses and other organizations a comprehensive approach to energy and environmental issues. The framework helps identify and prioritize environmental efforts by breaking down problems and opportunities into seven distinct business areas, which can then be segmented into manageable projects.
E-mail a Friend