Number Six wrote:
Even though I still have a bunch of stock, and I'm a linux lover now, so I cheer if it goes up and I cheer if it goes down, I was expecting Europe to really nail Microsoft to the wall. I dunno, I expected some surrogate America-bashing, or just a really f-you to an American company. Even though it's a record for the EU, it's a pittance to Microsoft and will be barely noticed.

What happened? Do they just have not much power? Why so light?



Indeed, and the Commission has the power to fine them 35 billion... Like it says here:


March 23, 2004



Antitrust Fine for Microsoft Said to Be $613 Million


*By PAUL MELLER*

RUSSELS, March 22 - Antitrust regulators will fine Microsoft
497 million euros ($613 million) on Wednesday, when the European
Commission formally rules that the company abused its monopoly in
computer operating systems, people close to the company said on Monday.

The fine, which was set late last week after settlement talks with
Microsoft broke down, was endorsed by regulators from the 15 member
nations of the European Union on Monday.

Microsoft said the fine was too big. "In view of the absence of a clear
legal standard under E.U. law, a fine of this size isn't warranted,"
said Tom Brookes, the company's spokesman in Brussels.

On Tuesday, the fine is to be discussed by senior aides to all 20
commissioners before being brought up at the European Commission's final
meeting on the case on Wednesday morning.

Microsoft would then be officially informed of the fine and sent a
summary of the ruling by fax, shortly before Mario Monti, the
competition commissioner, holds a news conference to announce the decision.

Under the European Union antitrust laws, the commission can set a fine
of as much as 10 percent of a company's global sales, which in
Microsoft's case would be more than $35 billion. European antitrust
regulators, however, have never fined a company the full 10 percent, and
Brussels-based lawyers and officials had expected the fine against
Microsoft to range from 100 million euros to 1 billion euros.

The biggest previous fine imposed by the commission was 462 million
euros, or about $406 million at the exchange rate at that time, against
Roche of Switzerland in 2001 for its role in several cartels that fixed
prices and market shares of vitamin products in the 1990's. (Seven other
vitamin makers were fined lesser amounts.)

Still, some people close to Microsoft had been speculating over the
weekend that the commission would not impose a fine at all.

But Amelia Torres, a spokeswoman for Mr. Monti, said: "We have already
told Microsoft many times that a negative ruling will incur a fine. A
small company could claim it didn't know the rules, but not one the size
of Microsoft."

The commission is expected to rule that Microsoft abused the monopoly
position of its Windows operating system in two ways. By withholding
vital information about Windows from rival makers of software for
servers, the company gained an unfair advantage in the separate market
for server software. It also competed unfairly by including its Media
Player audio-video software as part of Windows. The commission is
expected to announce remedies to restore competition in these markets,
requiring Microsoft to sell two versions of Windows to PC makers in
Europe, one of them with Media Player stripped out.

It would also have to share more Windows code to allow rival makers of
server software to compete with Microsoft more fairly, according to
people close to the case. Computer servers drive networks of PC's.

These remedies would have more of an impact on Microsoft than a fine,
because the company has more than $50 billion in cash reserves and has
already set some of that aside for covering legal costs.

After negotiations toward a settlement of the charges collapsed last
week, Brad Smith, the chief lawyer for Microsoft, said the company would
appeal any ruling at the European Court of First Instance in Luxembourg.


Copyright 2004 York Times Company <http://www.nytco.com/>




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