EU hits Microsoft with record fine

Software giant told to stump up €899m for charging “unreasonable prices” to software developers for information on Windows

By Kayleigh Bateman

29 Feb 2008

Be the first to comment

  • Digg
  • Tweet

Software colossus Microsoft has been fined a record €899m (£688m) by the EU for the amount it charges its rivals for information on its software.

Issued on Wednesday, the fine was the largest to have ever been issued to a single company and brings the total to just under €1.68bn, which the EU has demanded Microsoft pay in the long-running dispute over anti-trust issues.

EU regulators said the company charged "unreasonable prices" until last October to software developers who wanted to make products compatible with the Windows desktop operating system.

Remaining sceptical and explaining that Microsoft was also under investigation for two additional cases, Neelie Kroes, competition commissioner of the EU, said: "Talk is cheap - flouting the rules is expensive."

She added: “Microsoft’s actions have stifled innovation and affected millions of people around the world. The record €899m fine is a reasonable response to a series of quite unreasonable actions."

"The EU could have gone as high as €1.5bn. The maximum amount is higher than what it did at the end of the day," said Kroes.

In a statement a Microsoft representative said: “Microsoft is reviewing the Commission’s action. The Commission announced in October 2007 that Microsoft was in full compliance with the 2004 decision, so these fines are about the past issues that have been resolved.”

The EU said that Microsoft had withheld crucial interoperability information for its desktop PC software in a bid to squeeze into a new market and damage its competitors.

It also said that the software had delayed compliance for three years, only making changes in October to its patent license for competitors that needed the data to create software that works with Microsoft.

“As we demonstrated last week with our new interoperability principles and specific actions to increase the openness of our products, we are trying to focus on steps that will improve things for the future,” the Microsoft representative added.

Microsoft had previously appealed against the March 2004 decision that led to a €497m fine and an order that Microsoft should share interoperability information with rivals within 120 days. The company lost that particular appeal in September and was fined €280.5m in July 2006 for failing to obey the order.

Originally, Microsoft had a royalty rate of 3.87 per cent of a licensee’s product revenues for patents and demanded that companies looking for communication information pay 2.98 per cent of their product's revenues.

Last March, the EU complained that these rates were unfair and that Microsoft had two months to reduce its patent rates to 0.7 per cent and its license fees down to 0.5 per cent, but it only applied for Europe.

Further reading:

Microsoft pledge questioned

display:none
Loading
We won't publish your address
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms & Conditions

Your comment will be moderated before publication.

Will Apple's attitude to the channel change in 2012?

52%

19%

28%

1%

CRN Partner Connect 2012

CRN Partner Connect logo

CRN's premier networking event is back on 17 May at the Ricoh Arena

Date: Thu 17 May 2012

CRN Fight Night 2012

One of the fights from CRN Fight Night 2010

Channel fighters preparing to square up once more on 24 May

Date: Thu 24 May 2012

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Submit your email address and we'll send a link to a personal newsletter control panel

fragment image

The mobile enterprise: Secure the data, not the device

The proliferation of endpoint devices within the enterprise has highlighted the shortcomings of one of the traditional approaches to data security

fragment image

Measuring the ROI of Google Apps

This Forrester report compares the costs and benefits of legacy email and productivity software with Google Apps


Dave the dealer blog

Dave the dealer

Clocking off

Dave discovers that rozzers are seemingly living in the technology dark ages

View from the channel

Views from the Channel

Departing CEO has done Dixons a service

Mark Needham, founder of distributor Widget, argues that John Browett leaves for Apple with Dixons in better shape than when he arrived

To send to more than one email address, simply separate each address with a comma.