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To: Scrapps who wrote (15488)5/18/1998 4:47:00 PM
From: jhild  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 22053
 
I thought that all Republicans were in it for the money.



To: Scrapps who wrote (15488)5/18/1998 4:58:00 PM
From: Moonray  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22053
 
Netscape Issues Statement on the Lawsuits Filed Today by the Justice
Department, State Attorneys General and the District of Columbia

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., May 18 /PRNewswire/ -- Netscape Communications
Corporation (Nasdaq: NSCP) issued the following statement on the
lawsuits filed today by the Justice Department, State Attorneys
General and the District of Columbia regarding Microsoft: Netscape
applauds the U.S. Department of Justice, the State Attorneys General
and the District of Columbia for today taking action which marks
the initial step in loosening the chokehold the Microsoft monopoly has
on the computer industry.

This initial step will begin to enable consumers to have a fair choice
of products that can compete in the marketplace on their own merits.
We believe government investigators have examined the case thoroughly
and would not have brought action against Microsoft unless their
investigations had uncovered serious violations of the law.


The governments' case against Microsoft seeks to return choice of
what is available on the PC desktop to both consumers and Original
Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs). This is vital. Given its
pervasiveness and role in our lives, the personal computer simply has
to be a flexible tool, one that can be adapted to a wide variety of
personal uses and preferences. If we all are required to use the same
software, meaning the software selected for us by Microsoft, the tool
will become ever more a blunt, dull, and oppressive instrument, and
consumers will lose a basic right -- the right to exercise choice of
goods and services -- that has always been fundamental to American
commerce.


For the OEMs, this case can mean the return to a time when they had
more control over their own products. The hardware industry is highly
competitive, and this case will offer the OEMs new opportunities to
innovate and compete.
Most importantly, for consumers, this case
will mean protection of their right to choose what they want to use on
and access from their computers. For software developers, this case
will mean a renewed incentive to innovate, without worry that their
innovations will either be coopted or destroyed by Microsoft. For
Microsoft, this case can mean a return to a time of competing on the
merits, indeed on the basis of their innovations, rather than on the
basis of their monopoly power and leverage. As for Netscape, we may
never know how the company would have developed in the absence of the
kinds of anti-competitive behavior that formed the basis of the
governments' case.
The fact that Netscape has reengineered its
business model to accommodate diminishing browser revenue is a tribute
to our market leading products and creative, innovative workforce.
Today, nearly all of the Fortune 500 companies are using Netscape
products. In parallel, we are quickly adding consumer online services
necessary in developing a first-class web portal, called Netscape
Netcenter, that we foresee as a major online destination for consumers
and business users. We believe the governments' action today will
help level the playing field in the software industry, spur innovation
and bring a wide array of new choices to American consumers. We look
forward to competing in an open and competitive marketplace where
consumers can more effectively exercise their right to select products
on their merit.


/CONTACT: Chris Holten of Netscape Communications Corporation,
650-937-2521, or chrish@netscape.com/

Tell "Famous" I could not find statements by a "leftest economist"
so I have chosen these more neutral statements by Netscape.<g>


o~~~ O