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News Releases


No. 13/08
February 27, 2008
EUROPEAN COMMISSION IMPOSES 899 MILLION EURO PENALTY ON MICROSOFT FOR NON-COMPLIANCE WITH MARCH 2004 DECISION
The European Commission has imposed a penalty payment of
899 million euros on
Microsoft for non-compliance with
its obligations under the Commission’s
March 2004
Decision. Today's Decision finds that, prior to October
22, 2007, Microsoft had charged unreasonable prices for
access to interface documentation for work group
servers. The 2004 Decision, which was upheld by the
European
Court of First Instance in September 2007, found that
Microsoft had abused its dominant position under Article
82 of the
EC Treaty, and required Microsoft to disclose
interface documentation which would allow non-Microsoft
work group servers to achieve full interoperability with
Windows PCs and servers at a reasonable price.
"Microsoft was the first company in fifty years of EU
competition policy that the Commission has had to fine
for failure to comply with an antitrust decision," said
European
Competition Commissioner
Neelie Kroes. "I hope
that today's Decision closes a dark chapter in
Microsoft's record of non-compliance with the
Commission’s March 2004 Decision and that the principles
confirmed by the Court of First Instance ruling of
September 2007 will govern Microsoft's future conduct."
The Commission's Decision of March 2004 requires
Microsoft to disclose complete and accurate
interoperability information to developers of work group
server operating systems on reasonable terms.
Initially,
Microsoft had demanded a royalty rate of
3.87% of a licensee's product revenues for a patent
license (the "patent license") and of 2.98% for a
license giving access to the secret interoperability
information (the "information license"). In a statement
of objections of March 1, 2007, the Commission set out
its concerns regarding Microsoft's unreasonable pricing.
On May 21, 2007, Microsoft reduced its royalty rates to
0.7% for a patent license and 0.5% for an information
license, as regards sales within the European Economic
Area, while leaving the worldwide rates unchanged.
Only as from October 22, 2007, did Microsoft provide a
license giving access to the interoperability
information for a flat fee of 10,000 euros and an
optional worldwide patent license for a reduced royalty
of 0.4 % of licensees’ product revenues.
Today's Decision concludes that the royalties that
Microsoft charged for the information license – i.e.
access to the interoperability information – prior to
October 22, 2007, were unreasonable. Microsoft therefore
failed to comply with the March 2004 Decision for three
years, thereby continuing the behavior confirmed as
illegal by the Court of First Instance. Today's Decision
concerns a period of non-compliance not covered by the
penalty payment decision of July 12, 2006 starting on
June 21, 2006 and ending on October 21, 2007. The
Decision does not cover the royalties for a distinct
patent license.
The Commission has based its conclusions as to the
unreasonableness of Microsoft's royalties prior to
October 22, 2007 on the lack of innovation in a very
large proportion of the unpatented interoperability
information and a comparison with the pricing of similar
interoperability technology.
For further information and background on this case,
please visit:
http://www.eurunion.org/newsweb/HotTopics/Microsoft.htm
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Further Contact Information:
Press and Public Diplomacy
Delegation of the European Commission
2300 M Street, NW
Washington, DC 20037
http://www.eurunion.org/PressRoom
Tel: 202-862-9552
Fax: 202-429-1766
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