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November 05, 2001

An Analysis and Opinion of the Microsoft Antitrust Settlement

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As I reported last week, Microsoft announced Friday that it had reached a settlement with the US government in its 3-year antitrust case. If the judge overseeing the case approves it, the settlement will have sweeping ramifications in the computer industry and beyond. But the big question is whether the settlement effectively punishes Microsoft for its illegal activities and prevents it from continuing such activities in the future. I think the settlement fails miserably on the first of these two qualifications, although it appears to satisfy the second. But, as with Microsoft's 1995 consent decree, the text of this settlement--the so-called Final Judgment--contains language that gives the company some wiggle room in the future. The settlement is a travesty of justice that leaves an illegal monopoly in a position of power, enabling Microsoft to continue harming competitors, partners, and even customers.
 
Before I review the settlement, however, I'd like to present some background information. As a technical reporter who has covered Microsoft professionally for more than half a decade, I've had a difficult time understanding the company. Microsoft is full of intelligent, enthusiastic, and driven people, many of whom literally believe that they can change the world through the company's products. It's a paradox to me that the people who make up Microsoft are responsible for one of the most predatory entities that has ever entered the world economy. Furthermore, Microsoft is responsible for some of the most unreliable and buggy technology ever foisted on consumers, and Microsoft has prevented other companies with more elegant technology from being successful again and again over the course of its 25-year history.

Some of its products--Windows 2000 and Windows XP, for example--are world-class, however. It's difficult to reconcile the actions of the predatory corporate giant with the people I know at Microsoft and the occasionally excellent products the company makes.

In the end, of course, it doesn't matter how any of us feel about the company. The historical record will show that the courts found Microsoft guilty of illegally gaining and maintaining a monopoly for PC OSs. The government presented a lot of evidence in court to bolster this argument, and I'd add that far more evidence is available to back it up even further. A fact's a fact: Microsoft dominates the industry.

After an initial round of appeals, Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly directed Microsoft and its foes in the Department of Justice (DOJ) to fashion a settlement. If a settlement wasn't reached by last Friday, she said, Microsoft would face the music in court next spring. And Kollar-Kotelly warned Microsoft that her own judgment wouldn't be particularly kind to the company. Other than a Microsoft breakup, which the government had previously ruled out, Kollar-Kotelly told the company to expect the strictest possible remedy.

Microsoft and the government met and held meetings around the clock but were unable to reach an agreement. So the court appointed a mediator, who worked with the two sides to establish an acceptable settlement. Last Friday, the two groups presented this settlement to Kollar-Kotelly, who will wait to accept the deal until she receives input from the US states that are also allied against Microsoft. In the meantime, Microsoft and its competitors weighed in on the terms of the deal.

"While the settlement goes further than we might have wanted, we believe that settling this case now is the right thing to do to help the industry, and the economy, to move forward," said Microsoft Chairman and Chief Software Architect Bill Gates. "We recognize that the success of our products has created concerns. This settlement addresses those concerns in a fair and reasonable manner, while still enabling Microsoft to continue innovating and pushing technology forward."

Others weren't so sure. "This [settlement] is a reward, not a remedy," said RealNetworks General Counsel Kelly Jo MacArthur in a statement. "This agreement allows a declared illegal monopolist to determine, at its sole discretion, what goes into the monopoly [OS] in the future."

So where's the truth in all this? You have to look closely at the settlement to find out. Like most legal documents, the proposed final settlement is chock-full of obtuse language, extended background information, and even a glossary that defines relevant technical terms. The important parts, however, concern how the settlement will curtail Microsoft's predatory conduct.

First, Microsoft can't retaliate against its own partners--PC makers, in this case--if any of these companies decides to promote, use, or sell non-Microsoft software or sell PCs that dual-boot Windows and a competing OS. This agreement comes too late to save tiny Be Inc., which had sought to install its Be OS in dual-boot scenarios with PC makers; because of their restrictive Windows contracts, the major PC makers didn't sign on, and Palm, which recently bought Be Inc., has no plans to continue development of the Be OS. It's also too late to save Netscape, which AOL swallowed up after Netscape was unable to compete with Microsoft's bundled Internet Explorer (IE) product.

Microsoft must offer all PC makers a uniform price for Windows and not reward noncompetitive partners (e.g., Dell) with better deals while punishing other companies (e.g., IBM) with higher prices, as the company has in the past. However, Microsoft is free to offer volume discounts based solely on sales. This part of the agreement is fair but does nothing to compensate the companies that Microsoft's favoritism damaged in the past. During the original trial, for example, IBM stated on record that it lost millions of dollars because of Microsoft's refusal to supply a Windows 95 license in a timely manner because IBM sold Lotus products that competed with Microsoft Office.

The settlement agreement lets PC makers modify Windows display icons, Start Menu entries, and other onscreen elements for products that compete with the bundled products Microsoft supplies in Windows. For example, PC makers can now replace Windows Media Player (WMP) icons with RealNetworks RealPlayer or Apple QuickTime icons. The caveat is that such replacements must not harm the UI's operation, which leads me to believe that in the future Microsoft will integrate product bundlings even more tightly into Windows than they are today. In the meantime, Netscape, RealNetworks, Apple, and many other companies have felt the sting of Microsoft's product-bundling strategy as their products have fallen in use: It's easier to use a program that's built in than it is to download an alternative from the Internet. For many competitors, this change comes too late.

Sometime during the next year, Microsoft will release new documentation to PC makers and other partners that clearly explains how to better integrate third-party products with Windows. In the past, Microsoft withheld this crucial information from companies that threatened its core platforms. In addition, Microsoft will release the information programmers need to access all client and server protocols and interfaces in Windows so that third-party applications and services can better integrate with Windows. A major facet of Sun Microsystems' complaint against Microsoft--a complaint that touched off Microsoft's European antitrust investigation, incidentally--regarded the withholding of such information. Again, this action comes too late to help the companies that struggled against the many bundled products and services in Windows.

I'll present the next condition in the exact wording of the Final Judgment; pay attention to the word "except," because the repeated use of this word in this document buys Microsoft room to bargain in the future: "Microsoft shall not enter into any agreement relating to a Windows Operating System Product that conditions the grant of any Consideration on an ISV's refraining from developing, using, distributing, or promoting any software that competes with Microsoft Platform Software or any software that runs on any software that competes with Microsoft Platform Software, except that Microsoft may enter into agreements that place limitations on an ISV's development, use, distribution or promotion of any such software if those limitations are reasonably necessary to and of reasonable scope and duration in relation to a bona fide contractual obligation of the ISV to use, distribute or promote any Microsoft software, or to develop software for, or in conjunction with, Microsoft." Yikes. You can imagine the contractual language wrangling that will accompany any future deals of this nature. The wiggle room is obvious.

Some interesting changes are also ahead for end users. Sometime during the next year, Microsoft will ship a downloadable update for XP (but not, notably, for any Windows 9x product) that will let both users and PC makers enable or remove access to IE, MSN Explorer, Outlook Express, Windows Messenger, WMP, and other related technologies by using a desktop icon, a Start Menu entry, or the Add or Remove Programs applet. In addition, end users and PC makers can designate competing products as replacements for Microsoft's bundled products. So, for example, you might designate Netscape or AOL as the default Web browser and RealPlayer as the media player. This language does nothing to reverse the years of Windows product bundling and the irreversible damage that bundling caused to competition.

Because of Microsoft's less-than-honorable approach to complying with its 1995 consent decree, the Final Judgment also includes a section about compliance, which specifies how Microsoft will be forced to stay in line going forward. For the next 5 years, a three-person Technical Committee (TC) will monitor Microsoft to ensure that the company complies with the terms of the settlement. Again, this action is acceptable for future behavior, but it does nothing to address the previous behavior that resulted in Microsoft's market dominance.

And if it's not obvious by now, the major failing of this settlement is that it doesn't punish Microsoft for breaking the law but instead prevents the company from continuing the behavior that got it into trouble. The list of prohibited conduct spells out, in very general terms, exactly what the company did wrong in the past. But preventing similar crimes in the future isn't "justice." Imagine a court letting a convicted thief keep the items he stole if only he promises never to steal again. That's the "justice" this settlement foists on the people of America and the world. True justice addresses the people the crime hurts--in this case, Microsoft's competitors, partners, and users--and punishes those who commit the crime. This settlement lets Microsoft retain its illegally gained market power, along with most of the advantages that come along with that dominance.

RealNetworks' MacArthur is right. This agreement isn't a remedy--it's a reward.

End of Article



Reader Comments
I agree, it sounds like little more than a wrist-slap to me.

However - now Microsoft must face the Court of Public (and Corporate) Opinion, where the verdict is still uncertain. I have a feeling that the next twelve months will be the making or breaking of Microsoft...

Alan Ralph November 05, 2001


Please... I don't thinks this is a slap on the wrist. Microsoft has not broken any laws. I think if they stay in the courts they would eventually win this case. Judge Jackson is an idiot so I personally think his judgement would eventually have been overturned.

Mark my word, if the states continue the crap they will end up just losing more money because MS broke no laws.

Sam November 05, 2001


Well, Paul, now we know how you really feel about Microsoft. Of course, this begs the question. Why write about a company and its products in a magazine devoted to it and its enthusiasts when you think so little of it and want it to be punished? Perhaps, Linux Today would better suit you. There, Microsoft diatribes abound. You should feel right at home.
Meanwhile, the DOJ vs. Microsoft trial was, in my opinion, a travesty of justice foisted upon the American people by its competitors. Those same competitors, who have every resource available to them, can hardly be said to have given us the Holy Grail of computing in the last three years. To the contrary, everyone of them has done little to further computer science. Now, with this trial in the dust bin of history, they will now have to compete. However, I wouldn't bet money on them. Microsoft will produce better products at lower prices like it has always done and crush the competition. There is nothing anti-competitive about that. And the benefits to the consumer, as in the past, will prove to be enormous.
Thank you.

Jae Hawksworth November 05, 2001


Paul, are you feeling okay? Are you actually admitting that Microsoft is an illegal monopoly and makes crap products?

For once, I completely agree with you. This 'remedy' has more holes in it than Outlook Express. It doesn't even attempt to punish Microsoft, just prevent them from doing the same thing again (and it does that badly). I would expect fines, compensation and public apologies to be in any settlement but there isn't any.

Although the deal says that Microsoft can't discriminate against PC manufacturers if they choose to go with rival software, it only lasts for five years. So after five years, what's to stop them saying, "Well, Dell, you were good and stayed with MS software, you can have Windows cheap. But IBM, you went with rival software. We couldn't do anything about that then but now we're going to double your Windows prices."?

You say, "Imagine a convicted thief allowed to keep the items he stole, if only he promises never to steal again". Well, it's worse than that. The thief only has to promise not to steal for five years. And even if he does, all that happens is that he's not allowed to steal for another two.

This deal doesn't level the playing field. Not even close. All it does is slightly restrict Microsoft's huge (and illegally gained and maintained) advantage for five years. They'll still be way in front of anyone else in terms of their dominance and ability to leaverage their monopoly.

Paul - I'd be interested to know, what would be your ideal solution?

Alex November 05, 2001


Paul: You miss the point. A settlement is not a remedy. It's an agreement. A compromise. If they don't settle you should expect this case still alive at least 2003. By that time Windows XP will have sold millions of copies and MS dominance will be greater. Both parts have to make concessions. MS has it. The Doj has it. Game over.

Charles November 05, 2001


I think your analysis fails to convey the complicated nature of anti-trust in general and this case in particular. To compare this to a common theif distorts more than it clarifies. What Microsoft did only becomes criminal when and if they become a monopoly - a gray line which was never official until the Court's ruling, and of course subject to review after that.
In addition, this case was not for Microsoft's competitors- at least it should not have been. This case was supposed to benefit consumers. Which also brings us to the complicated nature of this antiTrust situation. Since the Sherman law was written there have been many analysis done of the situation, and the thoughts on it are divergent as to how it should work. There are certain kinds of monopolies that are obvious- utility companies, telephone lines, and things that are decreed by gov't. With everything else, it is much more complicated.
One of the interesting things about this case was that it should have focused on the network effect - the effect that a product becomes more valuable when other people use it naturally leading to 'monopolies' or at least preponderance of market share. Unfortunately it was not addressed.
A better analogy for this situation would be a company that enhanced cars- Imagine that they converted 2-wheel drive cars to 4-wheel drive, and also converted regular cars to convertibles. Also imagine that they did it for cars made by a company that owned close to %90 of the market (unrealistic now, but I am sure this was not unrealistic80 years ago). If that car company started to offer models with 4 wheel drive and convertibles, what should the government do about it?

theCoach November 05, 2001


The court of public opinion has long ago made up its mind. That is why, except for comments from typically cranky and anti Microsoft IT personnel, you never hear about results from any wide-ranging poll of true, average PC users.

The reason is because it would not bode well for those trying to destroy a valuable American resource. These ridiculous trustbusters already know that most average PC users have no real beef against MS, that they have found that MS software does the job just fine, that they like having more features at their fingertips, and that most people view this antitrust case as what it really is: purely anti-business and anti-consumer as inflicted on a successful company by Clinton and his cronies.

The only outcry through all this has been from the same incompetent tech companies unwilling to compete. There has been none of that with any great significance from the public at large because to them, it is a non-issue. If anything proves that consumers have not been hurt, it is that complete and utter lack of any real consumer outcry.

I say, when the 18 state DAs get off their high horses and realize what money-wasting fools they are, then maybe we can move forward with the settlement and get on with serious business. But I have little faith in lawyers and no doubt they will drag this out on behalf of their multi-millionaire corporate clients with little consideration for the economy or the consumer.

Larry November 05, 2001


This is my first time posting to this site.

I think that this is a very interesting article, where the author shows integrity in journalism, based on the number of years and close look that he had had.

Some people though, ignore, or simple do not know of the past, companies like Stacker, Borland, Lattice, Spyglass, Netscape, 3Com, FoxPro(?), among others, that at a given time have been affected by MS monopolistic tactics.

If you know the past, you cannot ignore it, regardless whether you like their products, the company success, the company determination and its people.

Personally, I cannot lie to myself and say that Internet Explorer has always been the best web browser and it became the most popular because it was best, no, cannot lie.
I know, because I was there, Netscape was the best web browser, when MS did not even have a plan for the internet and was trying to get the consumers into a private MSN.

It was not until, version 4 that it became comparable to Netscape. In the process, they used Spyglass technology and told them that they were going to pay them a royalty for the sale of IE, but guess what, they gave it for free so Spyglass did not get anything until they sued.

Their behavior cannot be ignored.

Actually, it can be done. I used to ignore it since I supported them and indirectly promoted their products.

Back in 1998, I used to laugh and say wow, they are really smart, see what they did to Netscape, and others and they can get away with it.
I also thought that business was separate from politics and that the goverment should not do anything.

I have recently changed my opinion, I still think that NT is a good OS, and that W2000 is even better.

However, I do not like the practices of the company, and have decided to look into other OSs (Linux).
In any case, I learned UNIX in late 80's and on PC Borland tools were the best and later the first releases the Windows were still toys, so it is an easy transition for me.


Even though I am not a lawyer, I would like to include here a link to the USDOJ web site.
Antitrust Division Manual:
http://www.usdoj.gov/atr/foia/divisionmanual/ch2.htm

Check where it says: "Monopolizing trade a felony; penalty"

I prefer to think that the leveling of the Free Market will happen by natural forces, the IT people, then the consumers, will know that they have more choices and that we are free to go anywhere.
Then when this change happens, nobody could say that it happened because the goverment forced it ...

Actually, this change has already started.

-TSK

TSK November 05, 2001


Wow! The Astroturf is really flying in the wake of this article. Almost up to the standard of ZDNet's Talkback forums.

To those who are STILL crying out that 'Microsoft has done no wrong' and that it's all a DIABOLICAL CONSPIRACY to punish Bill Gates, don't forget to keep flapping your arms, or you'll be falling out of Cloud Cuckoo Land in no time!

As I said before, the buying public will soo weigh in with their verdict on Microsoft, and I'd bet the result ain't pretty...

Alan.

Alan Ralph November 06, 2001


>>Some people though, ignore, or simple do not know of the past, companies like Stacker, Borland, Lattice, Spyglass, Netscape, 3Com, FoxPro(?), among others, that at a given time have been affected by MS monopolistic tactics.<<

So - if someone competes and wins away market share from another company, or that company folds, the victor is monopolistic? Can I stop laughing now? Businesses go under by the droves each year. How come Arbys or other now defunct fast food chains haven't sued McDonalds or Burger King? It is business and business says that you have to compete, you don't go crying to the government and, unfortunately, most businesses won't make it past the first year. Consolidation and standardization is needed in all industries and it is no ones fault that other companies can't keep up and fall away - that is the nature of business.

>>If you know the past, you cannot ignore it, regardless whether you like their products, the company success, the company determination and its people.<<

Sure, let's now sue the victors of the VHS/Beta Wars, or CompUSA (Is there any other major PC chain around?), or Barnes & Nobels who have put many a book store/chain out of business. The point is, that is what business is and not everyone can, nor has the right, to survive. I don't feel sorry for any of the companies you mention nor do I think MS should worry about them either.

>>Personally, I cannot lie to myself and say that Internet Explorer has always been the best web browser and it became the most popular because it was best, no, cannot lie. I know, because I was there, Netscape was the best web browser, when MS did not even have a plan for the internet and was trying to get the consumers into a private MSN.<<

That is called R & D. No one expects anything, especially when caught off guard about the Internet as MS was, to be the best at the start. But they did their work and now they are the best - so what's your point? I just think anyone who bad mouths MS just doesn't like the way industries are run and develop over time. There is music and the arts for folks like you but otherwise, get you heads out of the sand and start learning about what competition is all about.

Wake up peple. Don't let the FUD the PC press enjoys spreading confuse you or cloud the reality of what is simply American capitalism. The alternatives of what the old DOJ wanted to do would have been, and are, the things we should worry about. The day the government truly determines my computing experience is the day I no longer use a computer.

Larry November 06, 2001


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