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Microsoft stays put as EC deadline passes

Microsoft stays put as EC deadline passes

By:  Simon Taylor  On: 15 Feb 2006 For: IDG News Service (Brussels Bureau) Creator

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.

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.










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Simon Taylor Simon Taylor is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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