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Strategies & Market Trends : Roger's 1998 Short Picks -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Pancho Villa who wrote (5655)3/27/1998 5:50:00 PM
From: Tom Hua  Respond to of 18691
 
The following is text of a letter Orrin Hatch and
other senators on the Judiciary Committee sent
to Microsoft CEO Bill Gates. (See related story)

March 26, 1998

Mr. Bill Gates
Chairman and CEO
Microsoft Corporation
One Microsoft Way
Redmond, WA 98052-6399

Dear Mr. Gates:

Thank you for appearing at the Committee's March
3 hearing. Your participation provided a critical
perspective on the important issues regarding
competition in the software industry. We appreciate
that Microsoft's input is essential to ensure that our
understanding of these issues is balanced and
well-informed, and look forward to Microsoft's
continued cooperation.

As the Committee follows up on questions raised at
the March 3 hearing, it would be helpful to hear not
just from Microsoft and its competitors, but also
from the respective companies' licensees and other
contractual partners. We therefore renew and
further clarify the request already made by Senator
Hatch that Microsoft provide the Committee with a
letter (hereinafter "Clarifying Letter") that would
free Microsoft's licensees and other contractual
partners to provide information to the Committee
without first notifying, or obtaining the permission of
Microsoft. The same request is being made of
Netscape and Sun Microsystems.

Specifically, we ask that you provide the
Committee with a letter containing essentially the
same terms as the September 8, 1997, letter from
Microsoft Senior Attorney David Heiner to Justice
Department attorney Kenneth Gaul (attached). This
letter states, in relevant part, the following:

Microsoft does not interpret its license
agreements or non-disclosure
agreements as requiring its licensees
or NDA signatories to inform the
company of any discussions or
dealings with the Department of
Justice. Microsoft further believes that
receipt by a licensee or an NDA
signatory of an executed copy of a
letter in the form attached hereto will
serve to satisfy the confidentiality
obligation of that person or entity with
regard to protection of any
confidential Microsoft documents or
information which the person or entity
may produce to the Department.

Procedural rules governing the Justice Department's
handling of commercially sensitive information do
not, of course, apply to the Judiciary Committee.
We are, however, sensitive to the interests of
Microsoft, and its contractual partners, in
protecting the confidentiality of such information.
We therefore would like to minimize the extent to
which such sensitive information is provided to the
Committee and, at the same time, provide adequate
protection for any sensitive information the
Committee might receive. Toward this end, we
offer the following assurances:

1) Scope of information provided to the
Committee: The Committee is, at this point,
interested in examining a limited number of
Microsoft's contractual relationships. More
specifically, we are interested in Microsoft's
relationships with major Original Equipment
Manufacturers; Internet/On-line Service Providers
who participate in the Windows referral program or
otherwise have prominent placement within the
Windows boot-up sequence and/or environment;
and Internet Content Providers who appear either
on the Internet Explorer 4.0/Windows 98 "channel
bar" or within one of the channels (excluding the
channel guide). The Committee is, therefore,
interested in working with Microsoft to identify the
particular Microsoft contractual signatories to
whom the clarifying letter would be sent. The
Committee also is willing to review (on a
confidential basis) sample licensing provisions that
Microsoft believes contain particularly sensitive
information; to hear why Microsoft has a legitimate
interest in protecting the confidentiality of such
information; and, to the extent the Committee
agrees and determines that the information in these
provisions is not relevant to the Committee's
inquiry, to make clear to Microsoft's contractual
signatories that this information should be redacted
before any licenses are provided to the Committee.

2) Protection of information provided to the
Committee: We would take appropriate steps to
protect the confidentiality of information which
Microsoft legitimately believes is commercially
sensitive. In the event that the Committee receives
commercially sensitive licensing information from
Microsoft's contractual partners, as a result of a
request made pursuant to and in connection with
the clarifying letter, the Committee will protect the
confidentiality of that information as follows:

(a) No disclosure of this confidential information
shall be made by Committee staff or Members,
unless specifically authorized by the Chairman, after
consultation with the Ranking Member and
reasonable notice to the companies that have
requested confidential treatment.

(b) Only Committee Members, and designated
Majority and Minority staff of the Full Committee
and the Antitrust subcommittee, shall have access
to such information.

The Committee may receive information
independent of any requests made pursuant to the
Clarifying Letter. Such independently obtained
evidence will not be subject to the above
mentioned protocol.

We appreciate your stated willingness to cooperate
with the Committee on this matter. We request that
the Clarifying Letter be provided to the Committee
by Monday, April 6, and look forward to working
with you in the coming days to facilitate your timely
provision of the Clarifying Letter.

Sincerely,

Orrin G. Hatch
Chairman

Patrick J. Leahy
Ranking Member

Herb Kohl
Ranking Member, Subcommittee on Antitrust,
Business Rights, and Competition

Mike DeWine
Chairman
Subcommittee on Antitrust, Business Rights, and
Competition



To: Pancho Villa who wrote (5655)3/27/1998 6:29:00 PM
From: Amots  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 18691
 
Pancho.
We are getting there...

biz.yahoo.com

Amots