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Technology Stocks : How high will Microsoft fly? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: John F. Dowd who wrote (7707)5/20/1998 12:22:00 PM
From: denni  Respond to of 74651
 
the road to launch:

microsoft.com



To: John F. Dowd who wrote (7707)5/20/1998 3:16:00 PM
From: John F. Dowd  Respond to of 74651
 
This sums it uppretty well and explains why MSFT is going to court:
Microsoft speaks out on lawsuits
By Dan Goodin and Jeff Pelline
Staff Writers, CNET NEWS.COM
May 18, 1998, 3:00 p.m. PT

The antitrust lawsuits filed against Microsoft today will hurt
consumers, the software industry, and the U.S. economy, chief
executive Bill Gates and other company executives said today.

Gates said the lawsuits filed against Microsoft would be "costly
to taxpayers." The software giant's chief financial officer, Greg
Maffei, said he did not expect the state and federal suits to have
any "material impact on its business." Company executives said
they did not expect them to hinder day-to-day operations.

"How ironic it is that in the United States--where freedom and
innovation are core values--these regulators are trying to punish
an American company that has worked hard and successfully to
deliver on these values," Gates said. "The government's action is
a step backward for America."

In a briefing at the company's Redmond
headquarters, Gates said the Justice
Department and state attorneys general
were being unreasonable in their demands
related to the integration of products on its
Windows 98 operating system.

"It's like requiring Coca-Cola to include three cans of Pepsi in
every six-pack," he said of one request to provide alternative
browsers, not just its own, in Microsoft's operating system.

Gates was joined today by William Neukom, Microsoft's senior
vice president for law and corporate affairs, among other
executives. Gates and Neukom both had been leading the ten
days of negotiations meant to head off today's lawsuit.

Neukom charged that federal and state regulators want Microsoft
to "deconstruct our Windows product," and "there is no sensible
basis in law or policy for demands like that." He called the case a
repeat of the one filed against the software giant last October,
which now is on appeal.

Neukom added that original equipment manufacturers can place
the Netscape icon anywhere they want on "about 80 percent of
the Windows' desktops. There is complete flexibility for the
OEM and, most important, for the end user, to configure this
desktop."

Both Gates and Neukom repeatedly referred to a sentence in last
week's order by the U.S. Court of Appeals that stayed U.S.
District Judge's Thomas Penfield Jackson's preliminary
injunction as it applies to Windows 98. In it, a three-judge panel
wrote: "Any interpretation of [the consent decree] which barred
the distribution of Windows 98 under the conditions evidently
contemplated by Microsoft would 'put judges and juries in the
unwelcome position of designing computers.'"

Following are the regulators' demands and complaints, and
Microsoft's responses to them:

 Including Netscape's browser in Windows. Microsoft
called this a "free ride" for Netscape and said it would not add a
product to Windows that would "marginalize" the operating
system. It does not believe the demand is reasonable or supported
by law.

 Allegedly limiting choice for consumers when PC
users turn on their machines that run on Windows 98.
Consumers who buy a new PC and see the Windows desktop on
the first screen are assured of the product's "quality, simplicity,
and reliability," Microsoft argued. "Once that first 'boot up' takes
place, they can customize the desktop in any way they like."

 Supposedly exclusive agreements with Internet
service and content providers. Microsoft calls the
cross-promotional agreements "legal and commonplace."

Gates called allegations that Microsoft asked Netscape not to
build browsers for the Windows platform "an outrageous lie."

"Computer users today have more choices than ever before," he
said. "Interfering with the freedom to innovate through lawsuits
like these will limit--not expand--choice."