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Microsoft Hands Over Docs To EU

hankwang writes "Reuters reports that Microsoft has handed over technical documents to the EU in order to enable the competition to make interoperable software. So far, the EU has imposed fines of €497 M and €280 M onto Microsoft for abuse of its monopoly. The deadline for this documentation was today. According to Microsoft, the documentation is over 8500 pages."

5 of 265 comments (clear)

  1. Error in TFB by hcdejong · · Score: 5, Informative

    fines of E497 and E280 is off by 6 orders of magnitude. Should be E497M and E280M.

  2. Re:Nobody To Cheer For by Noryungi · · Score: 5, Informative

    *sigh*

    You obviously have no idea what you are talking about. The EU has judged Microsoft to be abusing a monopoly position in the global european market. That's a big no-no for the EU Commission, since the whole "European" idea is based on free circulation of goods, people and financial instruments. In other words, the EU is against monopolies and large companies locking customers in their line of products and services. Is that so hard to understand?

    To counter-balance this monopoly position, the EU has asked Microsoft to supply its competitors -- including many European companies -- with the necessary documentation. That documentation was required to open Microsoft files (.WMV, for instance) and communicate with machines running Windows system (SMB protocol). Microsoft refused and was fined a lot of money. Microsoft said it was going to comply, then delivered the required documentation. End of story.

    As far as I know, havin inter-operability between Microsoft products and competitors is a Good Thing(tm). You can thank the EU for that.

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    The right to offend is far more important than the right not to be offended. (Rowan Atkinson)
  3. Re:8500 pages by stupid_is · · Score: 4, Informative
    No. Apparently they need €862Bn for the next 6 years (about €135Bn per year). They'd need to get this level of fine revenue every day to achieve this (or at least just under €400M per day). :-)

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    -- Intelligence is soluble in alcohol
  4. Re:Nobody To Cheer For by Cylix · · Score: 4, Informative

    The rules are different when you are a monopoly.

    Everyone seems to forget that they were found to be a Monopoly in both EU and US.

    On the European side, they were found to be illegally abusing their monopolistic powers.

    On the US side, basically a few people sued them and nothing really big came from it. (Of course this is the summary and you can go read all the archives regarding this long ordeal.)

    So yes, when some raging abuse of a corporation has grown out of control... the government steps in and evens things out a little bit.

    Well, there is the unenlightened summary of why monopolies can be beaten with a stick and it's alright.

    (It's turkey day, I'll leave it to someone else to go into a discussion about the benefits of interoperability and monopolistic standards.)

    --
    "You should always go to other people's funerals; otherwise, they won't come to yours." -- Yogi Berra
  5. How to get them by Scarblac · · Score: 5, Informative

    For those of you asking how to get the documents: they're not available free of charge. Microsoft has handed over documents for checking, and has explained how it wants to license them.

    The EU is going to decide three things: whether the documents satisfy their requirements, whether the price is reasonable (based on Microsoft's original contribution instead of their monopoly position), and whether the proposed license is reasonable.

    If they decide this will do, then Microsoft has to make the documentation available for people wanting to buy it under those license terms for that price; if they decide against, then Microsoft still hasn't complied and will get more fines.

    It never was about documentation available without strings attached, that would be too unreasonable.

    See the Washington Post: The Commission's decision, it recalled, required Microsoft to "disclose and license complete and accurate interface documentation [...] and Microsoft could face further fines if the Commission finds that the price was based on Microsoft's exercise of monopoly power, rather than on the originality of its product.

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