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Microsoft
Plan To Be Released
By EUN-KYUNG KIM, Associated Press
Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Details of a plan to break up
Microsoft will be released today when the Justice Department and 19 states
that successfully sued the software giant for antitrust violations submit
their joint proposal on what sanctions to impose.
The remedy, which would split Microsoft into two parts,
is intended to prevent the company from engaging in any illegal behavior
in the future. The proposal would forbid the split companies from
recombining for 10 years, according to a published report.
The proposal will be submitted after financial markets
close to U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson, who on April 3
ruled that Microsoft repeatedly violated federal antitrust laws intended
to maintain fair competition by using its monopoly power in the operating
systems market to crush rivals.
Jackson gave the government and the states the option of
submitting separate briefs if they failed to agree on a remedy. Despite
doubts expressed by some states on the divestiture plan, a single proposal
will be filed with the court, according to people close to the talks.
``There will be one document which will be the voice for
the Department of Justice and virtually all of the states,'' one source
said Thursday, speaking on condition of anonymity. However, ``one or two
states may choose to put in an appendix or footnotes'' to record their
difference of opinion in some areas.
Microsoft has said it plans to appeal Jackson's ruling
and company executives have insisted that no laws were broken. In an
interview earlier this week with The Associated Press, Microsoft Chairman
Bill Gates said divestiture of any part of the company he founded 25 years
ago would hurt consumers and be ``a very inappropriate thing.''
New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer called the
recent comments by Gates, along with those by the chief executive officer,
Steve Ballmer, ``fundamentally distortive.''
``The truth is that Microsoft has been a monopolist
found by a federal judge to have undercut innovation and hence competition
and consumer welfare,'' said Spitzer, pointing to passages of Jackson's
April 3 ruling.
Microsoft has until May 10 to respond to the
government's filing but has said it would request an extension to respond
to a proposal as extreme as a breakup.
Under the government's proposal, one company would sell
Windows, the operating system that runs most of the world's personal
computers. The other would handle applications software, such as the
dominant Office suite, which includes the word processor Word and the
spreadsheet program Excel.
The two companies wouldn't be able to recombine for 10
years, The Washington Post reported today, quoting unidentified people who
had seen the plan. Gates and his board of directors would have to create a
proposal for implementing the split. Gates and other officials would
receive stock in only one of the new companies, while ordinary
shareholders would get stock in both.
The report said the plan would also impose three-year
restrictions on the Windows company to give computer makers more
flexibility to feature rival products. Microsoft would also be banned from
retaliating against business partners who have resisted the company's
wishes.
Justice Department officials gave an ``informational
briefing'' on the proposal to White House economic advisers earlier this
week ``because I think it is a significant and important case,'' Attorney
General Janet Reno said.
In a separate document filed with the court Thursday, a
group of prominent antitrust experts urged Jackson to order a more extreme
measure - to ``clone the operating systems into three companies.''
The government's likely proposal ``is a move in the
right direction, but doesn't go far enough,'' said the brief's chief
author, Robert Litan, a former Justice Department official who negotiated
with Microsoft in a related 1994 case and now works for the Brookings
Institution.
Other authors of the report, which was not commissioned
by either side, are Roger Noll, an economist at Stanford University;
William D. Nordhaus, a Yale University economist; and Frederic Scherer, an
economist at Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government.
In addition to the government's lawsuit, Microsoft faces
more than 100 private antitrust lawsuits. On Tuesday, a panel of federal
judges consolidated 27 of them in a single court in Baltimore.
U.S. District Judge J. Frederick Motz will coordinate
pretrial activities for the 27 claims, which were filed in 17 federal
jurisdictions.
The private claims echo the antitrust charges detailed
in the federal antitrust lawsuit but carry the potential for triple
damages against Microsoft.
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