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        EC Eases Scrutiny in 2004 Microsoft Antitrust Case
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
 - March 05, 2009
 
		
        The European Commission (EC) on Wednesday announced that it  is changing its full-time monitoring of Microsoft's compliance with a 2004  antitrust decision, and instead will use technical consultants for monitoring on  an "ad hoc" basis.
The 2004 antitrust case involved two anticompetitive acts  involving the Microsoft Windows operating system. The EC fined Microsoft  497 million Euros at the time, or $624 million in today's dollars. Later,  it slapped an 899  million Euros penalty ($1.3 billion) on Microsoft for noncompliance.
In the first complaint, brought by Sun Microsystems,  Microsoft was found to have engaged in uncompetitive behavior concerning the  interoperability of Windows-based PCs with non-Microsoft workgroup servers. The  second complaint concerned Microsoft's practice of including Windows Media  Player with its Windows operating system. The EC determined that such bundling  was anticompetitive behavior under European Union laws.
At the time of the judgment against Microsoft, the EC set up  a trustee -- computer science Professor Neil Barrett, who hired two technical  advisors -- in 2005 to monitor Microsoft's compliance. Microsoft had to pay for  the trustee's services. Now, the EC will just hire a consultant when needed.
"In light of changes in Microsoft's behaviour, the  increased opportunity for third parties to exercise their rights directly  before national courts and experience gained since the adoption of the 2004  Decision, the Commission no longer requires a full time monitoring trustee to  assess Microsoft's compliance," the EC stated in a press  release.
Although it may have been unrelated to Sun's complaints  before the EC about interoperability, Microsoft, in February of 2008, announced a broad initiative to  open up the documentation of its application programming interfaces for a  number of its software products, not just Windows.
The EC has been unsparing of Microsoft on the antitrust  front, and recently revisited legal ground concerning Microsoft's Web browser  distribution practices that was addressed in a November 2002 U.S. federal  court decision. Based on a complaint from Oslo, Norway-based Opera Software,  the EC rendered a "statement of objections" that Microsoft has unfairly  used its Windows operating system monopoly to gain browser market advantage over  its competitors in the European Union markets. 
Recently, some  reports have been suggesting that the latest build of Windows 7,  Microsoft's newest operating system, includes the capability of "detaching"  Internet Explorer 8 from the operating system. Whether or not that new capability  might be related to Opera Software's complaint before the EC is unclear. It's  currently difficult to entirely remove Internet Explorer from Windows Vista or  Windows XP.
Microsoft's CEO Steve Ballmer recently  described Web browsers as a "key features of operating systems."  In the 2002 U.S.  federal court case, Microsoft officials had offered the losing argument that  Internet explorer is an inseparable part of the Windows operating system.    
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.