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Microsoft Hit With 280m Euro Fine

Craig Mason writes "The BBC Reports that "Microsoft has been fined 280.5m euros ($357m; £194m) by the European Commission for failing to comply with an anti-competition ruling. The software giant was hit by the fine following a long-running dispute between the US firm and EU regulators. The move follows a landmark EU ruling in 2004, which ordered Microsoft to provide rivals with information about its Windows operating system. EU regulators also warned Microsoft it could face new fines of 3m euros a day.""

3 of 527 comments (clear)

  1. Re:WOW! but.... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's still less than they ended up paying Eolas for patent infringement, however.

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    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  2. Re:2 days by Tx · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Paying the fine doesn't release them from having to comply with the ruling. They now have to pay the fine and comply with the ruling, otherwise further fines or sanctions are possible.

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    Oh no... it's the future.
  3. Reality check by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    So many stupid/nonsense answers. Reality is

    1) Yes, the EU can enforce the money. If MS doesn't pay, EU can hit them with sanctions (what do you think, how big is the EU part of MS revenue pool. Right, pretty relevant) and finally seize their physical assets. (Guess what, MS exists outside the US)

    2) MS has no threatening potential against the EU. What should they do: Increase prices? --> antitrust case! Threaten to pull out? --> They would cut their own profits significantly. EU could immediately legalize copies from the US (they wouldn't, but let's say Win/Office is declared important for national security or something...)

    3) The US government will not put pressure on the EU here. Yes, they may protest, yes, they may have some impact, but come on guys. Where not talking about some small banana republic. Also look at the history of the EU anti-trust comission. Remember the GE/Honeywell-merger?

    4) Yes, the fine does matter. 280m is a lot of money also for MS, from end of July on it will be 3m/day=~1b/year=~8% of EBIT (probably increasing over time). Yes, that DOES matter. What will financial markets think of that, what will that do to stock options of MS managers?

    Summary: MS will pay, MS will obey and try to comply (they already started, just too slow...) with the ruling, MS will of course continue to use all means of lobbying (which is their good right).

    Now the more interesting question is, if they have a chance with their appeal before the European Court of Justice, which doesn't look too bad for them...