Word: microsoft
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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These days, that person is looking very much like Bill Gates. A year ago, his company stood on the brink of a court-ordered breakup. Then an appeals court reversed the breakup order while keeping intact much of the lower court's anti-Microsoft rulings. Two weeks ago, the Justice Department, answering to a new President and distracted by Sept. 11, hastily inked an antitrust agreement in which the monopolist basically agreed to play nice. Now, with only minor changes to that deal, nine of the 19 original litigants, including New York, Ohio and Illinois, have found they...
...Microsoft has won, somebody forgot to tell California, Florida, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Iowa, Minnesota, Kansas, Utah, West Virginia and the District of Columbia. The rump of the prosecution is soldiering on, collecting evidence and preparing for new hearings sometime next year. Though tempted to settle, the dissenters decided they had been through too much to win so little. "We want real reform," says California attorney general Bill Lockyer. "Not a fig leaf." (California, like Massachusetts and Utah, is home to some of Microsoft's fiercest competitors...
...states are not alone. "Anyone who believes the settlement would actually free manufacturers with competing technologies is living in fantasy land," says Ken Wasch, president of the Software and Information Industry Association, an industrywide lobbying group Microsoft once belonged to. His problem is that Gates has a long history of splitting legal hairs. A 1995 consent decree bound him not to bundle free software with Windows. In 1997 Netscape complained that Microsoft was doing just that with Internet Explorer. Microsoft countered--successfully--that it wasn't a bundle: Explorer was a part of Windows itself. That one provision cost...
...deal does set up an oversight committee of three tech experts chosen jointly by Microsoft and Justice. But the trio is pretty toothless: it can't even collect evidence for potential future court cases. University of Chicago law professor Randall Picker, who describes the deal as "within the realm of reasonableness," also predicts it will trigger a whole new set of lawsuits. "I fear Microsoft's corporate culture hasn't changed," says Ohio's Montgomery, "but I'm willing to give it a chance...
...those who aren't so trusting, it will be a long, sleepless road to the courtroom. Microsoft is not inclined to give another inch on the deal. Iowa attorney general Tom Miller, leader of the rump, is girding for battle, even as his ranks are decimated. "Before it was Goliath vs. Goliath," he says. "Now it's David vs. Goliath. We don't mind being David." There will be no snoring in his office for some time to come...