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To: mr.mark who wrote (35260)7/19/2003 9:56:06 AM
From: SIer formerly known as Joe B.  Respond to of 110653
 
Judge OKs $1.1 billion Microsoft deal

By Declan McCullagh
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
July 18, 2003, 6:42 PM PT
news.com.com

A California judge on Friday gave preliminary approval to a landmark settlement under which Microsoft will pay $1.1 billion to settle a class-action suit that claimed it overcharged consumers for Windows.
The ruling by San Francisco Superior Court Judge Paul Alvarado allows the settlement to proceed to the next step, during which consumers and corporations in the state will be notified that they may qualify for vouchers ranging in value from $5 to $29. The vouchers can be used to buy most hardware or software products from any manufacturer.

Townsend and Townsend and Crew, the law firm that filed the suit, described Friday's ruling as "the largest recovery of a monopoly overcharge ever achieved in the United States and the largest recovery ever achieved under the antitrust laws of California."



Eugene Crew, a partner at the San Francisco-based law firm, said that the ruling means consumers will start to be notified.

"It'll start in 60 days and continue for 60 days after that," Crew said. "These will be notices in newspapers and magazines and notices to those people whose e-mail or direct mail addresses we have. We've been getting those records from Microsoft and (computer makers)."

Nobody can submit claims until two months from now, at which time Alvarado is expected to approve the exact wording of the public notification of the settlement.

Microsoft could not immediately be reached for comment.

The lawsuit, filed in February 1999, claimed that Microsoft violated California antitrust laws by overcharging by as much as $40 for every copy of the Windows 95 and 98 operating systems.

People seeking refunds will be able to go to MicrosoftCalSettlement.com--which was not online as of Friday afternoon--or call (800) 203-9995 to request a claim form. In addition, Townsend and Townsend and Crew has set up a settlement FAQ Web site. The settlement affects individuals and businesses in California that bought Windows or certain Microsoft application software--including MSDOS or Windows software obtained as part of the purchase of a computer--between Feb. 18, 1995 and Dec. 15, 2001.

Two-thirds of the unclaimed money will go to California public schools in a mix of donated Microsoft software and cash grants. Although the maximum value of the settlement is $1.1 billion, Microsoft could end up paying as little as $367 in cash, which is what it would owe to California public schools if no vouchers are claimed. If all vouchers are claimed, Microsoft would be required to pay the maximum, but schools would then get nothing.

During the next four months, people who object to the settlement can submit paperwork to the court. Judge Alvarado has scheduled a follow-up hearing for Feb. 13, 2004, according to Crew, to review the implementation of the settlement and then approve or reject it.

Microsoft isn't the first technology company ordered to pay large sums after finding itself a class-action defendant. In 1999, Toshiba settled a billion-dollar class-action lawsuit that arose from claims that the company had sold notebooks with defective floppy drives. Immediately after the settlement, the same lawyers that pursued Toshiba sued Compaq Computer, Emachines, Hewlett-Packard, NEC and Packard Bell NEC.



To: mr.mark who wrote (35260)7/19/2003 10:00:44 AM
From: Cy B  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 110653
 
I have a problem with Outlook Express. On Email I receive, when I try to click on a HTML address to go to a web page, Outlook Express seems to lock up. I have to use Task Manager to shut it down.

I looked under Tools to see if there was a setting I was supposed to apply to be able to go to web pages, but couldn't find anything.

This started when I downloaded all the latest software updates from the MS web site. Any suggestions?



To: mr.mark who wrote (35260)7/19/2003 4:44:40 PM
From: mr.mark  Respond to of 110653
 
javacool just compiled a list of the defs added on 7/18/03...

DCON
Stop-Popup-Ads-Now
AtHoc
ClientMan Variant
ClientMan Variant
Lop.com Variant
Lop.com Variant
Lop.com Variant
Lop.com Variant
Conducent TimeSink
NJStar Asian Explorer
SearchitBar (2)
eAcceleration StopSign (2)
SpeedPhrase
VX2 Variant
WurldMedia (11)
WurldMedia (12)
WurldMedia (13)
WurldMedia (14)
WurldMedia (15)
Showbar
Lop.com Variant
Lop.com Variant
Lop.com Variant
Lop.com Variant
Lop.com Variant
Lop.com Variant
Lop.com Variant
CommonName Variant
CommonName Variant
RedV Protector Suite
MiniBug
AffiliateCheater
Httper
Netster
Alexa Variant
WhazIt Hijacker Variant
AdultLinks / QaBar Variant
IPInsight
ZycnosMark
Netguarder Web Cleaner
TOPicks
SearchEnhancement Hijacker Variant
Stop-Popup-Ads-Now Variant
Baidu Bar Hijacker
PeopleOnPage Bar (5)
PeopleOnPage Bar (6)
PeopleOnPage Bar (7)
ToolbarCC Hijacker (2)
Ruboskizo Dialer



To: mr.mark who wrote (35260)7/28/2003 12:06:03 AM
From: mr.mark  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 110653
 
SpywareBlaster definitions update 7/28/03