Wednesday, February 27, 2008

EUROPEAN UNION REGULATORS FINE MICROSOFT $1.3 BILLION

The European Commission fined Microsoft $1.3 billion for failing to comply with a 2004 judgment that found the software giant guilty of abusing its market dominance. This fine brings the total Microsoft has paid due to European Commission rulings to $2.5 billion.

From The New York Times:

Microsoft had earlier been fined after the commission determined in 2004 that the company had abused the dominance of its Windows operating system to gain unfair market advantage. The commission imposed the new fine Wednesday, it said, because the company had not met the prescribed remedies after the earlier judgment.

“Microsoft was the first company in 50 years of E.U. competition policy that the commission has had to fine for failure to comply with an antitrust decision,” the European competition commissioner, Neelie Kroes, said in a statement.

Microsoft said it was “reviewing the commission’s action.”

The company, the world’s biggest maker of software, said in a statement that the commission had announced in October 2007 “that Microsoft was in full compliance with the 2004 decision, so these fines are about past issues that have been resolved.”

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