Microsoft critics scoff at offer
by John Hendren Seattle Times Washington bureau
WASHINGTON - Microsoft is expected to counter the federal government's threat to break up the company today with a proposal to change its business practices - an offer critics called "the antitrust equivalent of `no TV for a week.' "
Microsoft officials were still polishing the plan late yesterday, but the punishment the nation's largest software maker is outlining for itself is expected to give competitors greater access to the codes that underlie the Windows computer-operating system, while allowing computer sellers to hide access to its Web browser and modify the "desktop" that users see on their screens.
U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson ordered the company to file the plan by today, 12 days after the federal government and 17 states filed a recommendation to break Microsoft in two.
The proposal is part of a two-pronged approach for Microsoft's legal strategists: They're offering a remedy plan that addresses the court's conclusion that Microsoft is guilty of federal antitrust violations. Separately, they're preparing a legal appeal that challenges that conclusion.
Microsoft managers have made no secret that they will continue to defy efforts to divide the company.
"They are trying to inflict government regulation on the software industry," spokesman Jim Cullinan said. Consumers have found that "Microsoft products are inexpensive and provide the features they need, whether it's at home, school or at work. We think that the customers in the marketplace of this country and around the world should be the ones who decide who wins and loses in the industry - not the government."
Microsoft's court proposal mirrors its offer during failed settlement talks. It concedes more than company lawyers say a higher court will require, but falls far short of the AT&T-style split government attorneys proposed on April 28.
The company's offer sounds similar to its 1995 consent agreement, said Ken Wasch, president of the Software and Information Industry Association. The Justice Department launched the antitrust case, claiming Microsoft violated the agreement.
"Microsoft is trying to turn back the clock to 1995 and say, `OK, we can live with the consent agreement,' " said Wasch, who supports a breakup. "It's the antitrust equivalent of `no TV for a week.' "
As Microsoft lawyers prepared to work the courtroom over the past week, company managers have been aggressively working public opinion and Capitol Hill.
Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates, for instance, wrote an article in the May 15 edition of Time magazine warning of technological perils to come under the government's plan.
"The (Justice) plan reflects a profound hostility to Microsoft's efforts to make products that work well with one another," Gates wrote. "Updates to Windows and Office technologies that could, for example, protect against attacks such as the Love Bug virus would also be much harder for computer users to obtain."
The company also briefed Washington lawmakers last Friday about the progress of the antitrust trial. This Friday, Microsoft lobbyist Jack Krumholtz is scheduled to outline the company's position for members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, who were briefed last week by Justice officials.
Microsoft attorney John Sampson also e-mailed members of Congress a letter by fellow corporate attorney David Heiner that offers a point-by-point critique of the Justice Department's proposed breakup.
The Justice plan calls for Microsoft to be divided into two companies. One - referred to as the "OS Co." - would own the operating-systems business. The second - "the Apps Co." - would own the applications business, including Office business software, Internet programs and hardware such as keyboards.
Among the problems that plan causes, according to the letter:
It "flatly bans" the operating-systems company from improving Internet Explorer in Windows, even though the Internet support in Windows "was developed at a cost of hundreds of millions of dollars." Critics say the Justice plan simply requires the applications company to come up with its own browser after licensing Explorer on a one-time basis.
It forbids the applications company from "working closely" with the operating-systems company. Such a division would result in products "that are incompatible with one another," the letter says. Microsoft rivals say the government plan would allow the two companies to work together under the same "arms-length" terms Microsoft can work with other competitors.
It assigns speech-, gesture- and handwriting-recognition technology to the applications company. Microsoft says this deprives the Windows company of years of basic research.
It "outlaws" Microsoft's BackOffice program by assigning parts of it to the two new companies. That would cause Microsoft to shut down a product expected to bring in more than $700 million in licensing agreements this year, the letter said.
It "appears to prohibit" several new and revised projects under development, including Web TV; a game console called X-Box that would compete with Nintendo and Sony; the Pocket PC handheld computers; and a tablet PC device. Making them would be impossible "because these devices draw upon both operating system and applications technology." Microsoft critics say this is simply an inaccurate reading of the Justice plan.
It institutes price controls that would bar Microsoft from charging different rates to different computer makers that put Windows on the machines they sell. Justice lawyers argued that Microsoft used those agreements to force computer makers to keep software from such rivals as Netscape Communications off their computers in order to gain favorable prices.
Microsoft isn't the only party seeking to influence legislators and public opinion. The rival Software and Information Industry Association issued a response letter yesterday that calls Microsoft's complaints about the Justice proposal "phony" and the company's counterproposal "outdated and ineffective." Association leaders point out that most of the restrictions suggested by the government last only three years under the Justice Department's proposal.
"It's important to recognize that there are no limits or bans on the business of either the Windows company or the Office company ... after the divestiture," said Ken Manashin, a former Justice Department antitrust lawyer who now works with the association. "The only thing they can't do is buy each other back."
The Justice Department, too, has continued to press its case. In a 19-page speech to business students at the University of California at Berkeley, antitrust chief Joel Klein cited "authorities" from economist Adam Smith to bank robber Willie Sutton to folk-rock duo Simon & Garfunkel to support the government's case.
Klein compared the Justice Department's proposed division of Microsoft with its earlier plan to split up AT&T. In both cases, government lawyers were accused of killing "the goose that laid the golden egg" and harming a technological innovator, he said.
"We now know, of course, that the divestiture in the AT&T case, far from making things worse, has unleashed unprecedented competition, innovation and consumer benefit," Klein said, including lower prices, the Internet, wireless communications and fiber optics.
Similarly, he said, dividing Microsoft into two companies would allow rival operating systems to thrive.
"The result will be exciting and innovative new products, with more choices and lower prices for consumers," Klein said.
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