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A trust is “any large industrial or commercial
corporation or combination having a monopolistic or semi-monopolistic
control over production of some commodity or service” (Webster’s) |
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So antitrust means against or opposing a trust |
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Antitrust law protects competition, not
necessarily competitors |
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for the benefit of the consumers (long run) |
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Original federal statute opposing trusts (1890) |
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Named for Senator John Sherman |
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Based on Congress’ constitutional power to
regulate interstate commerce |
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Regulated by the Antitrust Division of the
Department of Justice (DOJ) and/or the Federal Trade Commission |
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Many states have similar statutes |
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“if we will not endure a king as a political
power, we should not endure a king over production, transportation and sale
of any of the necessaries of life” |
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Monopoly power |
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having substantial market share (over the long
run), i.e. enough power to control the market |
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Exclusionary or predatory practices |
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acts which have no legitimate business purpose
other than to stamp out competition |
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The Journal (in Lorain, Ohio) would not take ads
from businesses that advertised on the local radio station which
represented the only competition for advertising revenue |
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Monopoly power: they were the only paper in town |
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Exclusionary or predatory practices: refusing to take ads had no legitimate
business justification other than to eliminate competition |
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Attorney General, Janet Reno |
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Assistant Attorney General, Joel Klein |
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The trial counsel, David Boies (a.k.a. Jaws,
also lawyer for Gore in Florida Supreme Court) |
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Chairman, Bill Gates |
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President and CEO, Steven Ballmer |
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Lawyer, William Newkom |
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1. Does Microsoft have monopoly power? |
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2. Has it engaged in predatory or exclusionary
practices? |
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The judge has ruled the pertinent market to be
that of Intel-Compatible PCs |
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so non-Intel compatible PC operating systems (e.g.
Mac) are not seen officially as competitors |
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likewise for non-PC operating systems (e.g.
Unix) |
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in the market so defined, Microsoft has monopoly
power and is likely to maintain it for some time to come (why?) |
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Recall that the software between the user and
the hardware is multi-layered |
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The operating system provides a platform, the
so-called “application programming interfaces” (APIs) upon which
applications interact with the hardware |
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This platform allows Independent Software
Vendors (ISVs) to focus on application software and not hardware
idiosyncrasies |
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Microsoft’s dominance provided ISVs with a
standard platform to build their applications upon |
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Self-perpetuating situation: |
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The more “standard” it became, the more ISVs
used it to write their applications |
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The more ISVs used it to write their
applications, the more “standard” it became |
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“The overwhelming majority of consumers will use
only a PC operating system for which there already exists a large and
varied set of high-quality, full-featured applications” |
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One criterion for establishing whether a company
has monopoly power is its pricing practice. |
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It is difficult to apply the standard rules to
software |
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Most of the cost is in development, almost none
in production |
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Establishing monopoly power is not enough |
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Did Microsoft engage in predatory practices to
maintain or extend its monopoly? |
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The current allegations focus on Microsoft’s
inclusion of its browser Internet Explorer (IE) along with its operating
system Windows |
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Recall a browser is software used to gain access
to and view files on the World Wide Web |
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Part of the operating system’s job is to manage
files; these days those files may be on the web, so maybe the browser is
part of a “modern” operating system |
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But the browser is used directly by the user, so
maybe it’s an application |
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The inclusion of IE is a matter of integration
and innovation; it is: |
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what the user wants |
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what the ISV wants |
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consistent with past business practices (Office
is the integration of word processing, spread sheets, and so on) |
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The inclusion of IE is a matter of bundling and
leveraging |
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Bundling is offering or supplying related
products or services in a single transaction at one all-inclusive price |
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Leveraging is the act of placing a less popular
product in the same “package” as a
very popular product |
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The DOJ views the inclusion of IE with Windows
98 as giving it away, which would constitute predatory pricing |
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Microsoft also gave IE to users of non-Microsoft
operating systems, such as Apple’s Macintosh |
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Withholding crucial technical information |
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Excluding Netscape Navigator from important
distribution channels |
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Developing and insisting upon the usage of their
own implementation of Java |
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1. Finding of fact |
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November
1999 |
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2. Conclusions (ruling) of law |
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April 2000 |
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3. Remedy (judgment) |
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June 2000 |
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After a 76-day trial (no jury), Judge Jackson
came out with his Findings of Fact, the first step toward judgement |
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His view is very consistent with the DOJ’s and
has been called “a Reader’s Digest version of the government’s Finding of
Fact” |
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“Microsoft possesses a dominant, persistent and
increasing share of the worldwide market for Intel-compatible operating
systems” |
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“Microsoft has demonstrated that it will use its
prodigious market power and immense profits to harm any firm that insists
on pursuing initiatives that could intensify competition.” |
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“Microsoft needed to give its browser away in
furtherance of the larger strategic goal of accelerating Internet
Explorer’s acquisition of browser usage share.” |
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Not very surprising, given the Findings of Fact |
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According to them, Microsoft did violate the
Sherman Antitrust Act |
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"We are very pleased with the Court's
ruling. The Court concluded that Microsoft violated the antitrust laws by
abusing its monopoly power and attempting to monopolize the internet
browser market. The decision will benefit consumers and stimulate competition
and innovation in the high-tech industry." |
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“We spent the past 25 years thinking of
ourselves as a small, aggressive company playing catch-up to industry
giants, even though at some point along the way we became a large company. |
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“… values we hold dear — opportunity for
everyone, integrity, innovation, customer focus and partnership — have been
called into question today.” |
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Breaking up Microsoft |
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Baby Bills |
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One for Operating Systems |
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One for Applications (incl. browsers) |
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The big wigs cannot own a substantial stock in both |
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(who will be the “standard bearer”?) |
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Directly to the Supreme Court? |
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NO |
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United States Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia Circuit |
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No. 00-5212 (U.S. vs. Microsoft) |
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No. 00-5213 (New York, et al. v. Microsoft) |
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To speed things up, the Appeals judges were
going to have a technology review |
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But even basic questions like “what is a
browser?” and “what is an operating system?” are controversial in this case |
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And neither side wanted their point of view
compromised by the review |
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Oral arguments in the Court of Appeals are
scheduled for Feb. 26 and 27 |
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After that: |
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Supreme Court? |
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European Union? |
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Individual and/or class action suits? |
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http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/doj/rickrulewp.htm |
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http://www.usdoj.gov/atr/cases/f3800/msjudgex.htm |
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http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/trial/apr00/04-03conference.asp |
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http://www.usdoj.gov/atr/public/press_releases/2000/4464.htm |
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http://www.cadc.uscourts.gov/ECF/Microsoft/microsoft.asp |
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Newsweek, Nov. 15, 1999. |
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The Wall Street Journal, Nov. 8, 1999. |
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The Wall Street Journal, Apr. 5, 2000. |
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The Washington Post, Oct. 27, 2000. |
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