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By Ina Fried
Posted on ZDNet News: Jul 9, 2004 11:00:00 AM

In the summer of 1994, with the threat of an antitrust charge looming, Microsoft agreed to settle charges that it was engaged in predatory business practices in its dealings with computer makers.

Though much less well-known than the broader Sherman Act case later brought by the Department of Justice, this initial action established a legacy of treating Microsoft as a company whose monopoly power needed to be kept in check.

The 1994 accord, signed 10 years ago this month, focused on the way Microsoft worded contracts with computer makers. Specifically, Microsoft agreed to do away with a number of practices, including a system in which manufacturers got a discount on copies of Microsoft's operating systems by paying for a license for every computer they shipped--whether or not it included a Microsoft OS. The agreement also limited Microsoft from engaging PC makers in contracts that lasted more than a year, and it demanded that the company not make contracts or pricing contingent upon acquiring any other product.

In a broad sense, these provisions did eliminate some barriers that would have made it tough for rivals to compete. But some say the fact that an antitrust suit was filed against the company a few years later shows that the deal didn't represent the promise that then Attorney General Janet Reno held out when she announced it.

"Today's settlement levels the playing field and opens the door for competition," Reno said in a press release announcing the July 15 accord.

That issue, though, hasn't been entirely laid to rest. Although a U.S. Appeals Court last month upheld a deal between the software maker and the Justice Department, the European Union has levied a fine of about $600 million against the company and required certain changes to its software. The EU ruling is under appeal in a process that could stretch out for years.

To mark the anniversary of the agreement and reflect on its legacy, CNET News.com spoke to three people who were involved in the case. Microsoft lawyers Bill Neukom and Brad Smith helped negotiate the deal, while author Wendy Goldman Rohm covered the case for Wired magazine and in her book, "The Microsoft File: The Secret Case Against Bill Gates."

Wendy Goldman Rohm

News.com: What is the legacy of the 1994 consent decree?

Rohm: At that time, Microsoft agreed to a number of things, including not using illegal contracts to tie up the marketplace; disseminating technical information about the operating system in an open and nondiscriminatory manner (it had been preventing competitors from getting to market with their own applications and other products by withholding critical information that would allow them to maintain compatibility with new versions of the operating system); and, in essence, not leveraging its market dominance in one area of the marketplace (the operating system) for an unfair advantage in other areas of the market--including new and emerging markets. It was behaving like a classic monopolist, and continues to behave that way--unfettered by ongoing antitrust suits and settlements.

Has Microsoft, to this point, complied with the order?

Microsoft keeps moving faster than government regulators. It in fact is quite shrewd in this regard. Even after paying fines for noncompliance, it has made more profit over time by not complying with antitrust laws than by complying.

How many of the current complaints against Microsoft can be traced back to either the wording of that consent decree, its limits or the issues raised by it?

Many of the issues raised in the original DOJ lawsuit are the exact same issues that have been antitrust problems in recent years for Microsoft, both in this country and abroad--the same issues, but involving different products and different markets. Product tying, technological tying, predatory pricing, are all practices it continues to use around the world to gain unfair advantages in new markets. These are advantages that come directly from misuse of its market power versus superior products---something addressed directly by U.S. as well as EU antitrust law.

Bill Neukom News.com: What was the thinking at the time the 1994 accord was reached?

Neukom: I think the government thought its job was to try to ensure there was a market for the licensing of desktop operating systems going forward. The government's role was to make sure that the marketplace environment provided adequate opportunity for competition.

But Microsoft still dominates the OS market.

I think the result that Microsoft's operating systems continue to be very popular with OEMs (computer makers) and their customers has to do with the technology that was offered in those operating systems. I think what happened in terms of the shakeout with DOS, OS/2 and Windows had to do with competition on the merits of technology and price.

Before the consent decree was reached, Microsoft had disputed the notion that it held monopoly power.

There are no barriers to entry in the technology industry. It's not like owning a quarry or a forest. Besides, having a monopoly in and of itself is by no means illegal. It doesn't mean you are a bad company. It means you are a successful company.

What do you make of criticism of the 1994 consent decree--that it did not go far enough?

I don't think of the 1994 consent decree as broadly criticized. I think competitors often have complaints about what their competitors are doing. You don't have to watch the NBA finals to know that the referee often gets an earful of complaints. The criticism is more from competitors. I don't think it's from OEM customers. Regulators listen to customers, not competitors, and the customers were not complaining.

Why is it that Microsoft is able to reach settlements now that weren't possible in the past?

I think there is something to be said for Scott McNealy's comments where he said, "We finally listened to our customers." Key managers in leading companies in information technology are more likely to work together now to try and find common ground than to pick a fight with a rival. I think that is a sign of maturity. Microsoft is more mature. I think the industry as a whole is more mature.

Brad Smith News.com: Some critics say the 1994 consent decree must not have worked if the later actions by regulators were needed.

Smith: I think it is more accurate to say the 1994 decree achieved its objectives, but its objectives were limited. The purpose of the 1994 decree was to make it easier for developers of competing operating systems to enter into contracts with (computer makers). There was a concern at the time that a (computer maker) would never be interested in another operating system because of contractual terms. It wasn't meant to address everything that affects operating systems...Look at Dell and HP, they offer Linux in a landscape today that was shaped, to some degree, by the 1994 decree.

What stands out to you about that accord?

When we concluded that agreement in 1994, it was the first time that the DOJ and European Union had ever negotiated together to resolve an antitrust issue. In a global economy, I think that is a constructive step. Personally, I felt in 1994 that it would be the first of probably several such coordinated attempts in the decade that followed. I think it is unfortunate that we are looking back 10 years later and that has never been repeated.

Some say Microsoft scored its biggest success by ensuring that while it was limited in conventionally tying sales of one product to another, it remained able to combine the features of products together, so-called technological tying.

In 1994 we were entering the final development phases for what became Windows 95, which was code-named Chicago. There was more euphoria about that than any software release in the history of the industry. It was the integration of two products (DOS and Windows) that had been separate. The irony, and there is one, is that the issue that became so controversial in 1998 was viewed in 1994 as a demonstrably good thing that everyone was excited about.

Did the 1994 consent decree establish a companywide sense of the company's unique obligations as far as antitrust matters?

It certainly contributed to that. The company (had already) started to focus in a serious manner on antitrust issues. There was an FTC investigation that started in 1990. People at Microsoft today have a really enormous sensitivity to operate under the law and more broadly in accordance with their responsibilities as an industry leader. The 1994 consent decree contributed in one way to that evolution. I'd say later events contributed even more.

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MONOlithic
It is obvious you know nothing about MONO. It doesn't copy anything. It is simply an interface that allows WINDOWS .NET developers to write applications that will run on Linux.

Imagine Balmers' horror: Windows developers deploying on Linux!... (Read the rest)
Posted by: htotten Posted on: 07/26/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Arrogant Microsoft will be stopped by industry, not useless govt.  Xunil_Sierutuf | 07/09/04
Obviously oblivious?  Bill4 | 07/09/04
Obvious it isn't.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
Please understand  Bill4 | 07/09/04
Obviously you don't have a clue  Jeff Spicoli | 07/09/04
Separate the issues  rapson | 07/09/04
YOu were asked to NEVER respond to my posts again.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
You are  Linux User 147560 | 07/09/04
I do NOT care what you think.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
You DID enough to post!  Jeff Spicoli | 07/09/04
Then I ask you...  Cardinal_Bill | 07/09/04
I could care less what you demand of me  Jeff Spicoli | 07/09/04
NWOR  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
post  richhayes | 07/12/04
Obvious it is.  Update victim | 07/09/04
Once more for the slow ones.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
yes YES YESSS!!!  Michael Kelly | 07/09/04
Great Line  Jeff Spicoli | 07/09/04
Whose responsibility?  rapson | 07/09/04
Ah, there you go with common sense again.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
Don't agree  Michael Kelly | 07/09/04
Sounds like marriage....  Monkey_MCSE | 07/09/04
10 year setback  Eggs Ackley_z | 07/09/04
So your saying Linux can't innovate?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
Linus T. is focusing on kernel innovation, not desktop  Michael Kelly | 07/09/04
So you agree, MS is not stopping Linux from innovating.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
Other than trying to sue linux (SCO) out of existence, you're right!  Jeff Spicoli | 07/09/04
No, he's saying Microsoft is like a big plug ...  Judas I. | 07/09/04
Silly arguemt at best.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
Not Silly, but the Golden Rule ...  Judas I. | 07/09/04
Yes silly in the extreme.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
Buying the Presidency is OK by Axey!  Judas I. | 07/09/04
You can't buy the presidency  Michael Kelly | 07/09/04
Michael, your point is a good one ...  Judas I. | 07/09/04
hmm  NemesisNL | 07/09/04
They're all big companies now.  Anton Philidor | 07/09/04
I'm not sure about that  rapson | 07/09/04
not necessarily  Jeff Spicoli | 07/09/04
Of course  rapson | 07/09/04
No, this story must be wrong  Spoon Jabber | 07/09/04
Yep  rapson | 07/09/04
Nope  Jeff Spicoli | 07/09/04
The one main reason  Spoon Jabber | 07/09/04
Now how about a real reason??  Jeff Spicoli | 07/09/04
I got your reason!  htotten | 07/26/04
Foreign vs. domestic  rapson | 07/09/04
Some points  Jeff Spicoli | 07/09/04
Follow-up  rapson | 07/09/04
Few more things  Jeff Spicoli | 07/09/04
To Jeff: EOT  rapson | 07/09/04
Responces from posters is interesting.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
Hello, meet reality  cuervo-gold | 07/09/04
Let's take it one point at a time.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
What a skewed myopic view.  LazLong | 07/09/04
one question Axe  Monkey_MCSE | 07/09/04
MONOlithic  htotten | 07/26/04
Et tu, No_Ax?  Anton Philidor | 07/09/04
Removing capabilities is about giving people options  Michael Kelly | 07/09/04
Just take the thought one step further.  Anton Philidor | 07/09/04
If by UNIX mindset you mean modular, yes I am.  Michael Kelly | 07/09/04
Virtues sell; flaws are fixed  Anton Philidor | 07/09/04
Compare MS Outlook to KDE's Kontact  Michael Kelly | 07/09/04
But if the monolithic approach allows the user to do more?  IT_User | 07/09/04
You said it all!!!!!  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
Oh I agree  Michael Kelly | 07/09/04
You have it backwards.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
oh come on  NemesisNL | 07/09/04
Oh come off it  Anton Philidor | 07/09/04
You're right. It would be a hard sell.  IT_User | 07/09/04
The modular eXPerience  Anton Philidor | 07/10/04
HOGWASH...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
Good you brought it up  IT_User | 07/09/04
Then CHOOSE another OS and be on your way!  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/10/04
CHOOSE something else  NemesisNL | 07/10/04
Good for you, go to head of class.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/10/04
Ah a one liner guy  NemesisNL | 07/10/04
Not so fast Bit...  Tim Patterson | 07/09/04
Two things  rapson | 07/09/04
Spoit On!  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
I'm trying!!!  Michael Kelly | 07/09/04
You'll recognize the first step  Anton Philidor | 07/09/04
Actually...  Michael Kelly | 07/09/04
That's not marketing, that's commanding  Anton Philidor | 07/09/04
uh no...  Michael Kelly | 07/09/04
Michael  IT_User | 07/09/04
I hope you're successful...  rapson | 07/09/04
Thanks wink  Michael Kelly | 07/09/04
Yuk yuk  Jeff Spicoli | 07/09/04
To Jeff: Yours too  rapson | 07/09/04
Marketing Linux  Anton Philidor | 07/09/04
Yup, the Big Plug advantage of the Monopolist  Judas I. | 07/09/04
You mean like Ford stops BrueLift.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
Who?  Linux User 147560 | 07/09/04
EXACTLY! You finally got it!!  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
Marketing Linux  IT_User | 07/09/04
Business marketing  Anton Philidor | 07/09/04
Granted, home use follows business  IT_User | 07/09/04
Valid points, but not marketing-related.  Anton Philidor | 07/10/04
Tim, ranting won't help a bit.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
that tiny monority is getting bigger isn't it?  NemesisNL | 07/11/04
Not by any metric I have seen.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/11/04
Responces from posters is interesting.  Loverock Davidson | 07/09/04
They don't pay enough.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
Perhaps No_Ax lacks confidence in what he can write about.  B.O.F.H. | 07/09/04
Let me ask you something...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/10/04
Maybe my BS detector is working too well.  B.O.F.H. | 07/10/04
simple  NemesisNL | 07/11/04
My, you are catching on.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/11/04
Don't put to much faith in his posts.  B.O.F.H. | 07/11/04
With one small exception, I tend to agree with you  Michael Kelly | 07/09/04
I take exception at your exception.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
Oh don't forget the other choice we have...  Michael Kelly | 07/09/04
It's all about choice.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/09/04
You wouldn't have to buy them out...  Anton Philidor | 07/09/04
Most people don't choose  voska | 07/12/04
naive  NemesisNL | 07/09/04
Clue one: Competition is never "Fair".  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/10/04
ahum  NemesisNL | 07/11/04
What most people wanted.....  middle of nowhere | 07/09/04
And I didn't. I won.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/10/04
Maybe that explains the cuts at Microsoft!  B.O.F.H. | 07/09/04
Were you attempting to make a point?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/10/04
Ask your parents, maybe they can explain it to you!  B.O.F.H. | 07/10/04
Cute rant, but still no point.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/11/04
and how many posts to how many articles have you done?  B.O.F.H. | 07/11/04
And yet...  rapson | 07/10/04
For those that wish to use Linux as a desktop...  B.O.F.H. | 07/10/04
Don't even bother, go with Windows.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/11/04
And you have some supporting articles to back your assertion?  B.O.F.H. | 07/11/04
Any proof of that?  Rick_K | 07/12/04
Who knows what people prefer  voska | 07/12/04
You point is valid but  voska | 07/12/04
Memories...  gtdworak | 07/09/04
Yup, I can see you're sentimental...  Anton Philidor | 07/09/04
Blows out of the water a certain theory  dscherf | 07/09/04
What standard?  amicus_curious | 07/09/04
Did any of you read this yet? I didn't see it on ZDNet's pages  AbsolutelyNot | 07/09/04
Clear, measurable commitments  Anton Philidor | 07/09/04
see guys  V Sanders | 07/09/04
It's really the customers who are to blame  worknman | 07/09/04
Why didn't Unix grow faster, or Apple use more 3rd parties  FilledOut | 07/09/04
They didn't sell because they didn't want sales.  Anton Philidor | 07/10/04
Apple and IBM were not thinking about software  StorageGuru | 07/10/04
Hitting the "crack pipe" again I see  Rick_K | 07/12/04
It was cost  voska | 07/12/04
Wow, No_Facts, You have OVER 20 posts in this thread ...  Plain Logic | 07/09/04
Hmmm, you must have ran out of fingers and toes to count.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/10/04
Don't be to rough on No_Ax  B.O.F.H. | 07/10/04
You need a new search engine.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/11/04
You are challanging 2 search engines?  B.O.F.H. | 07/11/04
And in related news: Japan investigates Microsoft  B.O.F.H. | 07/11/04

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