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Technology Stocks : MSFT Internet Explorer vs. NSCP Navigator -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: John F. Dowd who wrote (21223)11/4/1998 9:31:00 PM
From: John F. Dowd  Respond to of 24154
 
To All: (thinking people that is)- Interesting interview of disinterested third part Yale Law Professor:
Still, the case remains a wild card for Microsoft's prospects. George L. Priest, the John M.
Olin Professor of Law and Economics at Yale Law School, talked about the trial and what it
means for business.

Q. You have no interest in the case beyond that of a well-informed bystander. What is your
take on what has transpired thus far?

A. I don't think the Justice Department has shown much of anything yet in the Microsoft
case. They have emphasized meetings and memos that are ambiguous at best. But nothing I
have read rules out the possibility that the Internet Explorer and its integration into Microsoft
Windows is a superior product for consumers than an unbundled browser, such as
Netscape's Navigator. And that has to be the ultimate standard: What is the impact on
consumers? How are consumers worse off?

Q. It seems the Justice Department is bringing an antitrust case in an industry whose
lifeblood is speed. Even if the government wins its case, isn't there a risk that competitive
conditions in the business will be far different once a remedy is proposed than they were
when the case was brought?

A. The case will be obsolete by the time it is settled unless the judge rules for the government and slaps some kind of
injunction on Microsoft. That would be unfortunate for consumers, the economy and the world.

One of the problems is that most of our antitrust law has been developed in the context of manufacturing, where if a firm has a
very large market share we know it will take a long time to erode, because of the costs of getting into the market.

But this is not U.S. Steel, whose monopoly took 30 years to erode. This is an industry where market share can be overturned
in a very short period.

Q. What sort of remedy do you think might be imposed if the government wins?

A. If the judge puts a limitation on the Microsoft browser, and tells them to unbundle it, that is not so important. It is not a
clear gain for consumers, but it will not dramatically affect the industry.

As it is, anyone with the mildest level of computer sophistication can download
Netscape's Navigator within a matter of minutes. It can't be an important restraint of
trade to exclude Navigator when you can get it off the Internet that quickly.

Q. What if the court ordered a breakup of Microsoft?

A. I don't think Microsoft can be broken up. This is not a company with different
plants. What are you going to do, put partitions in the halls of Microsoft's
headquarters in Redmond, Wash.? The notion of breaking up Microsoft is lunacy.

Q. Still, might a victory over Microsoft embolden the government to take on other
high-technology companies?

A. I don't think the industry will be thrown into a tizzy if Microsoft loses, if only
because Justice does not have the prosecutorial resources to bring massive numbers of
suits.

This is not like the 1960s and 1970s, when the Warren Court began issuing decisions
that effectively agreed with everything Justice brought before them. That type of
authority did have a substantial impact on all industrial development in the United States, and it was only in the 1980s and
1990s that that sort of thrust has been reversed. I don't think that is going to happen here.

Q. The Microsoft case is capturing the headlines, but the government recently brought an antitrust suit against Mastercard
and Visa. Is this the start of a new period of activism by Justice in antitrust?

A. I don't know why Justice has gotten more active. It is unfortunate that it seems more activist on the behalf of individual
firms that at the moment are not doing as well as their competitors in the marketplace, be they American Express in the
Mastercard/Visa case or Netscape Communications in the Microsoft action.

I am a strong supporter of antitrust law, as a general matter. But given the increased level of competition in the world, we are
going to need fewer antitrust cases.

Monopolization will become less relevant because of the possibilities of entry into a given market. We have fewer trade
restrictions now, and that allows foreign companies to enter and compete if there is even a threat of dominance.
JFD