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To: Skeeter Bug who wrote (5863)6/13/1998 9:03:00 AM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
****OT****

Gates hits U.S. government's suit against Microsoft

Reuters Story - June 13, 1998 00:05
%BUS %ENT %US %NEWS MSFT NSCP V%REUTER P%RTR

LOS ANGELES, June 12 (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp .
Chairman Bill Gates sharply criticized the government's
landmark antitrust suit against the software giant in a letter
to The Economist magazine.
"America's antitrust laws do not provide any basis fpr
government regulators to design software products," Gates wrote
in a letter to the magazine in response to an article it had
published earlier. The letter was posted on the magazine's Web
site.
State and federal governments sued Redmond, Wash.-based
Microsoft last month, arguing that the company had a monopoly
in the operating system for personal computers and had used it
to compete unfairly.
The lawsuit accused Microsoft of using Windows, the crucial
operating software on most of the world's personal computers,
to seize control of the software market for browsers to access
the Internet. Microsoft has denied the charges.
Critics have claimed Microsoft uses its dominance in
computer operating systems to try to drive other companies,
such as Netscape Communications Corp ., out of
business.
"Contrary to the government's central accusation, Microsoft
planned the integration of Internet technology into Windows
well before Netscape was even formed, and long before it
shipped its first browser in October 1994," Gates said in the
letter.
"The fact that our browser was integrated into Windows 95
from the outset did not in an way prevent consumers from
choosing another browser," he said.
Regulators have sought to force Microsoft to offer its
latest operating system, Windows 98, without Microsoft's
Internet browser or with Netscape's browser.
"We have invested hundreds of millions of dollars
developing and promoting Windows," Gates said. "We should not
be forced to link Windows to software made by a competitor,
whose quality we could not vouch for."
He said the company was seeking to defend "the legal right
of every company to decide which features go into its own
products."