IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
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UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff,
v.
MICROSOFT CORPORATION,
Defendant.
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Civil Action No. 98-1232 (TPJ) |
STATE OF NEW YORK, ex rel.
Attorney General ELIOT SPITZER, et al.,
Plaintiffs,
v.
MICROSOFT CORPORATION,
Defendant .
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Civil Action No. 98-1233 (TPJ) |
PLAINTIFFS' SUMMARY RESPONSE TO MICROSOFT'S
COMMENTS ON REVISED PROPOSED FINAL JUDGMENT
Pursuant to Scheduling Order No. 9, plaintiffs submit the following summary response to
Microsoft's specific comments as to the form of Plaintiffs' Revised Proposed Final Judgment
("Microsoft Comments").(1)
Many of Microsoft's comments go beyond merely addressing the
proposed form of the Revised Proposed Final Judgment (the "Final Judgment") and make
arguments about the merits that Microsoft has previously raised and that plaintiffs have addressed
in their prior filings. This Response does not repeat our prior arguments but rather, as plaintiffs'
counsel stated in the June 1, 2000 conference, is limited to "brief" comments on Microsoft's
proposed interlineations. It does not purport to set forth a comprehensive response to
Microsoft's proposed changes.(2)
This Response consists of two parts. The first indicates the changes proposed by
Microsoft to which plaintiffs do not object or, in some cases, to which plaintiffs do object but for
which plaintiffs are willing to agree to certain modifications. The second consists of plaintiffs'
summary response to the remainder of Microsoft's proposed changes. As set forth below, these
latter changes should be rejected largely because they would undermine or frustrate the purpose
and effectiveness of the Final Judgment; the balance are unnecessary in light of the plain language
of the Final Judgment.
I. Proposed Changes to Which Plaintiffs Do Not Object (3)
1.a. [1]While the word "reorganization" accurately describes the corporate actions
required by the Final Judgment, Plaintiffs do not object to Microsoft's request to substitute the
word "divestiture" in this provision and elsewhere in the Final Judgment where "reorganization" is
used (i.e., Sections 1.,1.a., 1.b., 1.d.iii., 2., 3., 5.a., and 7.y.).
1.c.ii. [3]The insertion of a comma is appropriate to correct a typographical error.
1.c.iii. [1] Microsoft's proposed substitution of "issuance" for "spin off" does not
accurately describe the action that is required by the Final Judgment. However, plaintiffs would
not object if the widely-used and accurate term "distribution" were substituted instead.
2.b.ii. [1] Plaintiffs do not object to the proposed insertion of the words "with one
another".
2.c. [1]Plaintiffs object to both the proposed one-year time period and the proposal that
Microsoft file only a memorandum describing written agreements, rather than the agreements
themselves. Providing a copy of each Agreement between the Applications Business and the
Operating Systems Business will not be burdensome, and the need to ensure that the two
businesses do not enter agreements inconsistent with the Final Judgment is critical. Permitting
Microsoft to wait up to an entire year to file such agreements is unwarranted. However,
quarterly filing of the required Agreements and memoranda would be appropriate and practical;
consequently, plaintiffs would not object to substituting the words "Three months after" for the
word "After" and inserting the words "once every three months thereafter" following the words
"of the Plan and".
2.e. Plaintiffs do not object to the proposed deletion in this section.
3.a.ii. [3]Microsoft's argument about the danger of collusion is inaccurate and inapposite
in this instance, and it is important that Covered OEMs and the plaintiffs be able to verify
Microsoft's compliance with this provision. However, plaintiffs do not object to modifying
Microsoft's proposal to substitute the words "a web site accessible to plaintiffs and all Covered
OEMs" for the existing words "its web site".
3.e.i. [1] The proposed deletion of this language would permit Microsoft to enter into and
enforce agreements that prohibit or limit the other party's development, production, distribution,
promotion or use of non-Microsoft Platform Software. Such agreements were an important part
of Microsoft's illegal campaign against Netscape's browser. Microsoft's concern about the word
"limit" is unfounded; however, plaintiffs do not object to eliminating that concern by changing the
word "limit" to "restrict."
4. [1] Plaintiffs do not object to this proposed change.
4.e.i. [2]Plaintiffs do not object to changing "manager" to a defined term "Manager", so
long as the proposed definition is modified as set forth by plaintiffs in the discussion of Section
7.p.*, infra.
4.e.ii. [1]Plaintiffs do not object to changing "manager" to a defined term "Manager", so
long as the proposed definition is modified as set forth by plaintiffs in the discussion of Section
7.p.*, infra.
4.e.iii. Plaintiffs do not object to changing "manager" to a defined term "Manager", so
long as the proposed definition is modified as set forth by plaintiffs in the discussion of Section
7.p.*, infra.
4.e.v. [1] Plaintiffs do not object to Microsoft's proposed addition of the words "of this
Final Judgment" so long as the words "or the antitrust laws" are inserted immediately thereafter.
7.c. [2]Plaintiffs do not object to the proposed deletion of the second reference to
"Mobile Explorer".
7.g. [2] Plaintiffs do not object to Microsoft's proposed change of the means of
determining "Covered OEM" status, by deleting the words "sales of Personal Computers in the
United States" and substituting the words "licenses of Windows Operating System Products from
Microsoft".
7.g. [3] Plaintiffs do not object to determining initially which 20 OEMs fall in the
category of "Covered OEM" based on license volume during the year preceding the effective date
of the Final Judgment or to including a specific means of redetermining which OEMs are
"Covered OEMs" on a yearly basis thereafter. Thus, plaintiffs do not object to Microsoft's
proposed change so long as the word "determine" is replaced with "redetermine" to make the
above clear.
7.k. [1] Microsoft's proposed change is unnecessary and unduly restrictive because
"Personal Computer" is already defined as including an x-86 or comparable chip. Plaintiffs do not
object to clarifying this definition accordingly, i.e., by changing "personal computer" to "Personal
Computer."
7.p.* [1] Plaintiffs do not object to the addition of a definition of Manager that would
avoid including employees who supervise only a handful of others. However, Microsoft's
suggested standard of "day-to-day supervision of more than 100" other employees would exclude
many persons with important managerial responsibilities, including those who indirectly oversee
large numbers of employees or who supervise smaller numbers of managers who themselves
supervise important groups that are smaller than 100. With these concerns in mind, plaintiffs
would agree to Microsoft's proposed change provided the words "day-to-day" are replaced with
"direct or indirect".
7.r. [1] Microsoft's proposed change of the date for determining who is a "Non-Covered
Shareholder" is not an acceptable means of addressing the concern Microsoft raises. Plaintiffs
would not object to resolving Microsoft's stated objection to the definition by rewriting the
provision as follows:
"'Non-Covered Shareholder' means a shareholder of Microsoft on the record date for the
transaction that effects the transfer of ownership of the Separated Business under Section
1.c.iii who is not a Covered Shareholder on the date of entry of this Final Judgment."
II. Microsoft's Other Proposed Changes Should Be Rejected
Microsoft's other proposals consist largely of changes that would create loopholes and
permit Microsoft to continue to engage in anticompetitive practices like those found by the Court
or otherwise to frustrate or undermine the purposes of the Final Judgment. The balance are
unnecessary because of existing, express provisions of the Final Judgment. They should be
rejected for the following reasons, among others:
1.a. [2] It is in the public interest that the remedy contemplated by the Final Judgment be
implemented as soon as possible, and the time periods proposed by plaintiffs are adequate to
perform the specified tasks, which involve only preparation of and commenting on the plan of
divestiture, not its implementation.
1.c. [1] This change should be rejected both for the reasons set forth in the response to
comment [2] on Section 1.a., supra, and because the Court will retain authority to modify the
Final Judgment as necessary should unanticipated circumstances create unavoidable delays outside
of Microsoft's control that require adjustment of the date for implementing a specific part of the
Plan.
1.c.ii. [1]The date (April 27, 2000) on which the determination is made as to the
assignment of Intellectual Property is not arbitrary (it is the day before Plaintiffs' Proposed Final
Judgment was filed), and Microsoft's proposal would allow the company to shift assets before the
Plan of divestiture is implemented to frustrate the effectiveness of the Final Judgment.
1.c.ii. [2]The demand for a definition of "Internet browser" should be rejected. The term
was used throughout the litigation and the Court recognized an industry consensus as to the
functionalities a browser offers. See Findings ¶ 150. Microsoft's attempt to reargue its position
should be rejected. See, e.g., Findings ¶¶ 150, 184.
1.d.i. [1]This provision is needed to ensure that the purposes of the Final Judgment are
not frustrated before its implementation. Microsoft has repeatedly reorganized itself, and this
provision is necessary to ensure, for example, that Microsoft does not take steps during the
appeals process to make implementation of the Final Judgment more difficult or to weaken the
effectiveness of the remedy. It simply requires Microsoft to preserve, maintain, and operate what
will be the Applications Business and the Operating Systems Business "as separate, distinct and
apart from one another as they were on April 27, 2000" (emphasis added).
1.d.ii. [1]The proposal to strike this provision should be rejected for the reasons set forth
in the response to the comment on Section 1.d.i., supra.
1.d.iii. [1]The terms "knowingly or willfully" should not be inserted because actions that
undermine the proposed remedy should be prohibited, regardless of whether Microsoft undertakes
them with that intent.
1.d.iv. [1]There is no justification for the proposed extension of time in which Microsoft
is to file a report on the steps it has taken to comply with Section 1.d. Microsoft's request
confuses the actual planning and implementation of the divestiture (Sections 1.a. - 1.c.) with the
requirement of this provision, which is simply a report to the Court on the steps Microsoft has
taken to preserve the viability and existing separateness of what will become the Applications and
Operating Systems businesses (Section 1.d.).
2.b.ii. [2]Microsoft's proposed provision is overbroad and unnecessary in light of the
last sentence of Section 2.b., which already provides that this section "shall not prohibit the
Operating Systems Business and the Applications Business from licensing technologies (other
than Middleware Products) to each other for use in each others' products or services, provided
that such technology (i) is not and has not been separately sold, licensed, or offered as a product,
and (ii) is licensed on terms that are otherwise consistent with this Final Judgment." The existing
formulation achieves the purposes described in plaintiffs' Reply brief by differentiating permissible
licensing of technology from licensing of products Microsoft separately sells, licenses, or offers.
2.b.iii. [1]The term "technical information" should be retained because, in its
uncapitalized form, it refers to technical information about products other than Microsoft
Platform Software running on a Personal Computer. This provision thus forbids favoritism with
regard to technical information that does not fall within the scope of Section 3.d. Permitting the
Operating System and Applications companies to give each other preferential access to such
information would enable them to frustrate the purposes of Section 2.b.
2.b.iii. [2&3]The proposed revisions are overbroad and unnecessary in light of the last
sentence of Section 2.b. (see response to comment [2] on Section 2.b.ii., supra). Microsoft's
argument to the contrary is based on selectively quoting plaintiffs' Reply brief, a full reading of
which makes clear that the Operating System and Applications companies will be free to
communicate and cooperate "just as Microsoft communicates and cooperates with third-party
developers today" -- so long as they do so on a non-discriminatory basis. Plaintiffs' Reply at 39.
The existing provision will prohibit the two companies from "treating each other as preferred
partners rather than competitive rivals," while permitting legitimate cooperation. Id. at 41.
2.b. [2]The proposed deletion of the words "is not and has not been separately sold,
licensed, or offered as a product, and" should be rejected. Because "technologies" fall within the
scope of "products" as that term is used throughout the Final Judgment, the language in question
is necessary to ensure that arrangements that involve "technologies" that are not separately
distributed as products are not as a practical matter simply a pretext for arrangements involving
"products," and thus to ensure that the Businesses do not evade Section 2.b.ii., by describing as a
"technology" that which is actually a "product" as they are distinguished in this section.
3.a.i. [1]The proposed change would allow Microsoft to withhold critical information
about its future plans from certain OEMs in retaliation for their supporting non-Microsoft
products, an OEM concern that was expressed at trial. The existing language of this provision
does not impose any general obligation on Microsoft to disclose such information; it prevents
Microsoft from basing its decision to reveal future plans to OEMs on anticompetitive and
retaliatory factors.
3.a.i. [2] The proposed change should be rejected because Microsoft should not be
allowed to take an adverse action against an OEM where such action is in any respect a result of
the OEM's engaging in any of the behavior enumerated in subsections (1) and (2); with the
proposed change, Microsoft would be able to evade the provision by pointing to other plausible
but pretextual reasons for retaliation.
3.a.ii. [1]The proposed change would allow Microsoft to reward or punish Covered
OEMs based on the extent of their support for Microsoft and non-Microsoft products and
services with different Windows non-price licensing terms and conditions. Such terms and
conditions are extremely important to OEMs, and Microsoft has used them in the past to threaten
or retaliate against OEMs and could do so again and thus evade the purposes of the Final
Judgment.
3.a.ii. [2] The proposed change would allow Microsoft to reward or punish Covered
OEMs with different Windows pricing terms through the use of market development allowances;
the Court has found that Microsoft uses market development allowances to induce OEMs to take
actions that protect Microsoft's monopoly.
3.a.ii. [4] The proposed change would permit Microsoft to reward or punish Covered
OEMs by charging them different Windows prices, based on Microsoft's use of undefined and
unbounded "objective" pricing criteria. This would create a loophole that would allow the very
discrimination and retaliation against OEMs that the provision is designed to prevent.
3.a.ii. [5]The existing requirement of "reasonable" uniform volume discounts is
necessary to prevent Microsoft from manipulating the dividing lines between volume levels in
order to charge certain Covered OEMs different prices that, while purportedly based on volume,
are in fact reward or punishment for their support or non-support of Microsoft or its competitors.
"Reasonable" in this context means only that Microsoft cannot contrive its discount categories to
achieve that objective.
3.a.ii. [1]("Without limiting the foregoing" paragraph) Microsoft's proposed deletion
of "licensing terms" and "discounts" would allow it to reward or punish Covered OEMs with
different Windows prices and non-price licensing terms and conditions and thus to evade the
purposes of the Final Judgment. See responses to comment on Section 3.a.ii., supra.
Furthermore, "deny a request" should not be substituted for "deny equal access". The burden
should not be on OEMs to know of and affirmatively seek out equal treatment; Microsoft could
take advantage of a Covered OEM's ignorance of what has been provided to other Covered
OEMs to reward or punish that OEM and thus to evade the purposes of the Final Judgment.
3.a.ii. [2]("Without limiting the foregoing" paragraph)Plaintiffs object to this
proposed change because there was evidence at the trial that OEMs feared Microsoft would
withhold information about future plans from OEMs in retaliation for their supporting non-Microsoft products. See response to comment [1] on Section 3.a.i., supra.
3.a.ii. [3]("Without limiting the foregoing" paragraph)This proposed change is
unnecessary. See response to comment [1] on Section 3.a.ii., supra.
3.a.ii. [4]("Without limiting the foregoing" paragraph) The proposed change would
enable Microsoft to continue to use participation in joint marketing and sales efforts to reward or
punish Covered OEMs.
3.a.ii. [5]("Without limiting the foregoing" paragraph)The proposed change would
allow Microsoft to continue to enforce provisions in existing agreements with Covered OEMs
that are inconsistent with the Final Judgment in a way that would continue to cause
anticompetitive harm.
3.a.iii.(4) [1] The proposed change would enable Microsoft to frustrate the purposes of
the Final Judgment by creating needless dependencies between its "Windows Operating System
Product" and a Microsoft Middleware Product included therein, thereby enabling Microsoft to
prevent OEMs from disabling end-user access to such Microsoft Middleware Product and
forestalling competition on the merits between Middleware Products. Also, the change is
unnecessary because OEMs are unlikely to remove end-user access to a Microsoft Middleware
Product if doing so would deprive the user of important functionality.
3.a.iii.(4) [2] The proposed change should be rejected because modifying or removing a
small amount of "software code" in a Windows Operating System Product, without removing
APIs, may be necessary to enable OEMs to exercise the various options enumerated in 3.a.iii.(4)
Microsoft's proposed change is unnecessary to avoid any legitimate concern, and it would enable
Microsoft to thwart the purposes of Section 3.a.iii., and other provisions by prohibiting OEMs
from taking limited steps, not involving the removal of APIs, to customize the PCs they sell for
their customers' needs or to make non-Microsoft Middleware the Middleware that is invoked by
the operating system or by third-party applications and Middleware.
3.a.iii.(4) [3] The proposed change is unacceptable both because it would condition an
OEM's use of Microsoft's trademarks and logos on an OEM not exercising any of the options
provided to it under Section 3.a.iii. (such as, for example, removing End-User Access to Internet
Explorer) and because, as the Court found, Microsoft routinely allows OEMs to use its
trademarks and logos when those OEMs make similar, Microsoft-permitted modifications to
Windows. See Findings ¶ 222.
3.b. [1]The proposed change is unacceptable because Microsoft's proposed definition of
"Interoperate" is inappropriate and inconsistent with the purposes of the Final Judgment. See
discussion of 7.n*, infra. In any event, the change is unnecessary.
3.b. [2] The proposed changes would enable Microsoft to withhold APIs,
Communications Interfaces and Technical Information regarding interfaces that Microsoft
Middleware Products, e.g., Internet Explorer, use to interoperate with the Operating System.
The changes would permit Microsoft to manipulate the definition of "internal" and to deny to
third parties much information used by its own applications and middleware developers to make
products interoperate with its Platform Software. The changes would thereby enable Microsoft to
frustrate the purposes of the Final Judgment by hampering interoperation of competing
Middleware Products with the Operating System. The proposed deletion of Section 3.b.iii.,
would have the same effects.
3.b. [3] The proposed deletion would enable Microsoft to continue the kind of
anticompetitive behavior that was demonstrated in this litigation by withholding APIs,
Communications Interfaces and Technical Information that Microsoft software running on servers
and other computing devices uses to interoperate with Windows, thereby stifling potential
competition to Windows that is facilitated by software running on such servers and other
computing devices.
3.b. [4] Microsoft's proposed deletion of "effectively" in connection with interoperation,
both here and elsewhere in the Final Judgment, (see infra, Section 7.cc.) should be rejected.
Without a requirement of facilitating "effective" interoperation as the intended purpose of third-parties' use of the secure facility, Microsoft could unduly minimize the value of this provision by
claiming that, so long as OEMs, ISVs, or others had access to just enough source code or
documentation to enable their products to interoperate in a minimal, degraded way, Microsoft had
satisfied its obligation -- even though Microsoft's developers face no such limitations.
3.b.[5] The proposed change would permit Microsoft to continue to discriminate in
access to information that it makes available to its developers but not third parties. Additionally,
it is unnecessary because any third party from which Microsoft licensed source code may either
consent to inclusion of its source code in the secure facility or ask Plaintiffs (and if necessary
petition the Court) for relief from the provision.
3.b. [6] The proposed change is overbroad, vague and unnecessary. The existing
provision permits Microsoft to require agreements of confidentiality that restrict third-party
interaction with the source code to "the sole purpose of enabling their products to interoperate
effectively with Microsoft Platform Software" -- but without imposing unnecessary, additional
restrictions that would serve only to ensure that few third parties are able to take advantage of the
source code access.
3.b. [7]The disclosure of APIs, Communications Interfaces and Technical Information
required by the Final Judgment will enable third parties to make their products interoperate
effectively with Windows, thereby increasing the value of Windows as a platform. The
information disclosed is not intended for use in PC operating systems; there is thus no need or
justification to charge a royalty for access to the same information about interoperation with
Microsoft Platform Software on a Personal Computer that Microsoft's own developers receive.
3.b. [8] There is no justification for requiring third parties to disclose to Microsoft the
APIs and Communications Interfaces in their products that interoperate with Windows.
Microsoft has monopoly power in the market for PC operating systems, and third-party
developers of middleware that might challenge that monopoly are thus dependent on access to
Windows APIs, Communications Interfaces and Technical Information. Microsoft has previously
withheld access to APIs and interfaces to defeat such threats in the past, and the restoration of
competition requires that it not be permitted to do so in the future. No comparable concern has
been raised in this case about access to information regarding third parties' products. In any
event, third parties that get access to APIs, Communications Interfaces, and Technical
Information are doing so to create complements to Microsoft's operating system.
3.b. [9]Microsoft's proposed addition is unnecessary given the "sole purpose" limits on
third parties' use of Microsoft's source code at the secure facility. Indeed, Microsoft's proposal
would allow it to inspect the source code even of ISVs who have never examined Microsoft's
source code at all. In any event, because of these reasons and those set forth in response to
comments [7] and [8] on Section 3.b., supra, there is no justification for the access Microsoft
seeks; it retains its full rights, including appropriate discovery rights, to use the legal process to
protect its intellectual property from use beyond that permitted by this provision.
3.c. [1] The proposed changes would severely weaken the provision by permitting
Microsoft to take actions that it knows will interfere with or degrade the performance of non-Microsoft Middleware without notifying the supplier of such Middleware of the problem or of
ways known to Microsoft to avoid or reduce it. Adding an additional requirement that it be
shown that Microsoft "intended" the interference or degradation would enable Microsoft to act
pretextually for anticompetitive purposes.
3.d. [1] The proposed changes would permit Microsoft to engage in conduct, such as the
"First Wave" agreements at issue in the case, that provides valuable consideration to ISVs for
using Microsoft's products rather than competitors' and that excludes competitors on a basis
other than competition on the merits.
3.d. [2] This proposed change should be rejected for the reasons set forth in response to
comment [1] on Section 3.a.i., supra. The provision in the Final Judgment does not impose any
general requirement on Microsoft to reveal its future plans to ISVs or IHVs; instead, it prevents
Microsoft from deciding whether to reveal such information based on whether the ISV or IHV is
willing to favor Microsoft's products or exclude Microsoft's competitors.
3.d. [3] Plaintiffs object to the proposed change for reasons set forth in response to
comment [2] on Section 3.a.i., supra.
3.d. [4]Microsoft's proposed deletion of the prohibition on discriminating against or
rewarding ISVs or IHVs based on whether they "use, distribute, promote or support any
Microsoft product or service" should be rejected because it would permit Microsoft to engage in
conduct, such as the "First Wave" agreements at issue in the case, that provides valuable
consideration to ISVs in return for their using Microsoft's products and not competitors',
regardless of their relative merits.
3.d. [5] The proposed language is unnecessary for the reasons set forth in plaintiffs' Reply
Brief at page 56; Section 3.d. does not restrict Microsoft from entering into bona fide joint
development efforts; it prohibits Microsoft from rewarding or punishing ISVs or IHVs based on
whether they support Microsoft or non-Microsoft products.
3.e. [2]The proposed change would permit Microsoft to condition IAP and ICP access to
Windows on their agreeing to distribute Microsoft Platform Software and thus would enable
Microsoft to achieve the same anticompetitive purpose achieved by the IAP and ICP agreements
at issue in the case simply by amending those agreements to require distribution of Microsoft's
browser instead of limiting distribution of competing browsers.
3.f. [1] The proposed change would permit Microsoft contractually to tie separate
products to Windows simply by having some component of the Windows Operating System
Product "rely" on the separate product. For example, Windows could be designed to "rely" on
Office to display documents that have a "doc" or "xls" file format, and Microsoft could then use
such reliance as a basis to tie Office to Windows.
3.f. [2]This proposed change is unnecessary and would render the provision meaningless;
it would permit Microsoft unilaterally to evade the restriction on contractual tying by continuing
to call separate products (as it did with Internet Explorer) "improvement[s] to a Windows
Operating System Product" and making them available to the installed base of users "via
electronic downloading from the Windows Update Web site or other means." Microsoft
Comments at 24 (emphasis added).
3.g. [1] The proposed change is unnecessary because Microsoft will have nine months
from entry of the Final Judgment to prepare the modified version required by this provision.
3.g. [2] The proposed deletion would reduce the effectiveness of the provision by
requiring OEMs, in effect, to pay for Microsoft Middleware Products, even if they want to
remove them, and thus would provide a substantial disincentive for the OEMs to license and
install competing Middleware Products, thereby foreclosing opportunities for those products to
create competition for the Windows platform.
3.h. [1]The Court found that Microsoft repeatedly attempted to enter into
anticompetitive market allocation agreements with Netscape and others. Section 3.h., of the Final
Judgment is intended flatly to prohibit such agreements; it is appropriate for an antitrust remedy
to include simple prohibitions to ensure that the defendant will be unable to repeat its unlawful
conduct. This provision is narrow in scope; it applies only to agreements with actual or potential
Platform Software competitors not to compete in the provision of Operating System Products or
Middleware Products. The addition proposed by Microsoft is unnecessary and would enable
Microsoft to enter into anticompetitive market division agreements regarding such products by
labeling them, as it attempted to label at trial the June 1995 Netscape meeting, "joint development
agreements" or "agreements ancillary to lawful joint ventures." As noted in plaintiffs' Reply
Memorandum at page 64, plaintiffs intend to enforce the provision only against anticompetitive
agreements, and Microsoft is of course able to seek the views of the Antitrust Division about any
contemplated agreement that it fears might violate the provision.
3.i. [1]The proposed change would enable Microsoft to undermine the effectiveness of
the provision by making significant changes to the operating system in an OEM Service Release
and depriving OEMs of the benefit of those changes unless they license the most current version
of the operating system.
3.i. [2] Microsoft's proposed changes would enable it to undermine the effectiveness of
the provision by continuing its practice of making significant changes in versions of an operating
system (including OSR releases) after the initial version, but depriving OEMs that wish to take
advantage of this provision of the benefits of those changes by giving them only the option of
licensing the initial version of the operating system, which does not include those important
changes. The number of such "OSR" releases has historically been quite small, and no undue
burden will be imposed.
4.e. [1] There is no justification for postponing advising appropriate personnel of the
Final Judgment and what it requires within 90 days of its entry.
4.e.iii&iv. [1] Provisions of this kind are common in antitrust decrees, and Microsoft has
no justification for objecting to it.
4.g. [1]There is no sound reason, in light of the evidence in this case, that Microsoft
cannot, and ought not be required to, retain the e-mails of the persons in question. Indeed,
Microsoft's claim that "the government has never had any difficulty obtaining relevant e-mail from
Microsoft" is belied by the testimony of Bill Gates. In his deposition, Gates testified that "most
people here delete most of the e-mail they receive every day," "I don't keep most e-mail I
receive," "I delete 98 percent of my e-mails," and "Q. You never preserve messages that you
send? A. I don't preserve them. There is the extremely rare case, which I've done almost never,
where you copy yourself on the e-mail." See Attachment 1, Gates dep. 9/2/98 at 589:21 - 590:20.
See also Attachment 2, Engstrom, 2/23/99pm, at 18:12-19:9 (on "a routine basis, I delete all mail
. . . two months old.").
5.a.i. [1] The plaintiff States are law enforcement officials responsible for enforcing the
antitrust laws in their respective States and are therefore entitled to participate in matters relating
to the enforcement of the Final Judgment. As plaintiffs pointed out in their Reply Memorandum
at pages 67-68, there is ample precedent supporting the States' authority to enforce a decree in a
case brought under both federal and state law. See, e.g., Hawaii v. Standard Oil Co., 405 U.S.
251, 257-260 (1972) (summarizing cases establishing the right of a State "to sue as parens patriae
to prevent or repair harm to its quasi-sovereign interests").
5.a.i.(1) [1] The language in the Final Judgment is standard in consent decrees, and in any
event Microsoft's the proposed change is unnecessary because the operative language of Section
5.a., already provides that access to records is "subject to any legally recognized privilege."
5.a.i.(2) [1]This proposed change should be rejected because there is no justification for
preventing individual Microsoft officers, employees and agents from deciding for themselves
which counsel they wish to have present in interviews with plaintiffs (consistent with plaintiffs'
obligations under 28 U.S.C. § 530B and other legal obligations).
5.a.ii. [1] This change also should be rejected, for the reasons set forth in response to
Comment [1] on Section 5.a.i, supra.
5.a.iii. [1]There is no justification for restricting use of information obtained pursuant to
Section 5 of the Final Judgment in legal proceedings to which a plaintiff is a party.
5.a.iv. [1] There is no justification for restricting use of information obtained pursuant to
Section 5 of the Final Judgment in legal proceedings to which a plaintiff is a party.
6.b. [1]This proposed change is unnecessary because Section 2.e., states that the
provisions of Section 4 do not apply to the Applications Business following implementation of the
Plan.
6.c. [1]Ten years is customary in antitrust cases, and in any event four years is too short
a time for the Final Judgment to remain in effect. Despite its assertion that "[t]en years is an
extraordinarily long time in the software industry," Microsoft has had the dominant position in the
operating-systems business for at least a decade (see Findings ¶ 35), and under the circumstances
there is no sound justification for entering a decree of shorter duration.
6.d. [1]The proposed change is unnecessary. The Due Process Clause is applicable to
the federal courts, whether or not the Final Judgment so states.
7.b. [1] The proposed change would enable Microsoft to withhold APIs,
Communications Interfaces and Technical Information regarding interfaces that Microsoft
Middleware Products, e.g., Internet Explorer, use to interoperate with the Operating System.
This would undermine the purposes of the Final Judgment by hampering the opportunity for
competing Middleware Products, such as Netscape Navigator, to interoperate with Microsoft's
operating system as well as Microsoft's own Middleware Products. See response to comment [2]
on Section 3.b., supra. The inclusion of Microsoft's vague and wholly undefined term "internal"
would be inaccurate in this context and is not necessary given that this provision is employed in
the Final Judgment only with regard to interoperation across the boundaries identified in Sections
2.b.iii., 3.b.i., 3.b.ii., and 3.b.iii.
7.c. [1] It is unclear what change, if any, is proposed by comment [1] in Section 7.c.
Microsoft's objection to the section is meritless because the provision does not prohibit the
Operating Systems Business from offering products that include middleware technologies, either
under the license granted the Operating Systems Business in accordance with Section 1.c.ii., of
the Final Judgment or by developing such technologies on its own.
7.d. [1]The terms "remove" and "uninstall" are commonly used in software products,
including Windows and other Microsoft products, and these were the terms used throughout the
trial.
7.f. [1] The proposed change is unnecessary. Any third party from which Microsoft
licensed proprietary protocols may either consent to inclusion and disclosure of its protocol as a
Communications Interface pursuant to Section 3.d., of the Final Judgment or ask plaintiffs (or if
necessary petition the Court) for relief from the provision.
7.g. [1] The proposed change to the number of OEMs included as Covered OEMs should
be rejected because the ten largest OEMs do not comprise a large enough set of the major OEMs
that install Windows.
7.h. [1] Proper effectuation of the purposes of the Final Judgment requires determination
of Covered Shareholder status as of the date of entry of the Final Judgment.
7.j. [1] Plaintiffs object to the proposed change because indirect access to middleware has
been an important mechanism for forcing it upon consumers and OEMs.
7.j. [2]The first proposed change is unacceptable because it reverses the meaning of the
provision, which is designed to prevent operating system design that binds otherwise separate
middleware; and the second proposed change is unnecessary because Microsoft may obtain such
functionality without binding it to the browser product.
7.m. [1] The term "Intellectual Property," like the other defined terms in the Final
Judgment, has been defined to serve appropriately the particular purposes of the judgment itself;
Microsoft's assertion that the term has a different "generally recognized legal meaning" is both
unsubstantiated and irrelevant.
7.m. [2] See response to comment [1] on Section 7.f., supra.
7.n* [1]Microsoft's proposed definition of "interoperate" should be rejected because it
falls far short of expressing what transpires when two pieces of software interact with one another
and would thus significantly narrow the applicable provisions of the Final Judgment and thereby
undermine its purpose.
7.n. [1]The proposed change to the definition of "ISV" would exclude software
developers developing products, including those for servers or for sub-PC devices, that might
challenge the Windows monopoly even if those products must interoperate in a network with
Microsoft Platform Software.
7.p. [1 & 2]The proposed changes to the definition of "Middleware" would restrict
Middleware to the small set of Microsoft products that are already ported to other operating
systems and would enable Microsoft to exclude from the scope of the information disclosure and
binding provisions of the Final Judgment virtually all Microsoft Middleware, including but not
limited to Internet Explorer, because each individual version of Internet Explorer and of other
products is, of course, "designed for use with a particular operating system."
7.q. [1 & 2]The proposed exclusions from the definition of "Middleware Product" would
exclude from the scope of the information disclosure and binding provisions of the Final Judgment
both any product not distributed separately and any product that Microsoft chooses to call an
"improvement to a Windows Operating System Product" and makes available to the installed base
of users. This language would exclude Internet Explorer and other products that are intended to
be covered by subpart i of the definition. See also response to comment [2] on Section 3.f.,
supra.
7.s [1] The proposed changes to the definition of "OEM" would permit Microsoft to
retaliate against smaller OEMs for supporting non-Microsoft products.
7.t. [1 & 2] The proposed changes to the definition of "Operating System" should be
rejected because they would permit Microsoft to define the Operating System (not just in the
Operating System Product) to include any functionality it chooses and because they would
exclude some operating systems shipped by the Operating System Business.
7.u. [1]The proposed exclusions from the definition of "Operating System Product"
would permit Microsoft to avoid application of the Final Judgment to new operating systems
simply by making them successors to the enumerated products.
7.v. [1] It is unclear what change, if any, is proposed by comment [1] on Section 7.v.
Microsoft's objection to the section is without merit because the provision does not prohibit the
Operating Systems Business from offering products that include middleware technologies, either
under the license granted the Operating Systems Business under Section 1.c.ii., of the Final
Judgment, or by developing such technologies on its own.
7.w. [1] Plaintiffs object to the proposed deletion of the words ", and computers that are
commercial substitutes for such computers" because such a deletion is unnecessary and
inaccurate. The relevant market at trial was for operating systems for Intel-compatible personal
computers.
7.z. [1]Plaintiffs have objected to the proposed changes in the definitions of "Operating
System" and "Middleware." See responses to comments [1&2] on Section 7.p., and to comments
[1&2] on Section 7.t., supra.
7.cc. [1]Deletion of the word "effectively" from the definition of "Technical Information"
would enable Microsoft to withhold APIs, Communications Interfaces and Technical Information
that third-party applications and middleware need to interoperate effectively with Microsoft
Platform Software, while providing such information to its own applications and middleware
developers. See response to comment [4] on Section 3.b. The remaining proposed deletions
eliminate necessary language that makes the definition more precise, and would enable Microsoft
to withhold Technical Information regarding interfaces that Microsoft Middleware Products, e.g.,
Internet Explorer, use to interoperate with the Operating System and that Microsoft software
running on such servers and computing devices uses to interoperate with Windows, thereby
frustrating the purposes of the Final Judgment by hampering interoperation of competing
Middleware Products and server-based threats to the Windows platform with the Operating
System.
7.dd. [1]The proposed change in the definition of "Timely Manner" would enable
Microsoft to advantage its own applications and Middleware Products by giving APIs,
Communications Interfaces and Technical Information to Microsoft developers long before such
information is released to third-party developers.
7.dd. [2] Microsoft's proposed doubling of the time period is unnecessary. Microsoft has
not demonstrated any reason to believe that the existing time period is unreasonable, and doubling
it would simply provide Microsoft with another opportunity to favor its own developers over
competitors.
7.ee. [1]The proposed deletions from the definition of "Windows Operating System
Product" should be rejected because, as Microsoft acknowledges in its Comments on this point, it
has chosen and in the future may choose to distribute some or all of its Windows Operating
System Products to some OEMs in source code form. The deletions Microsoft proposes would
allow it to choose to provide source code selectively in order to reward or punish OEMs contrary
to the purposes of the Final Judgment.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, and those stated in plaintiffs' previous submissions, the
Court should enter the Final Judgment with the modifications described in Part I of this Summary
Response, and reject the balance of Microsoft's proposed changes.
Joel I. Klein
Assistant Attorney General
A. Douglas Melamed
Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General
Jeffrey H. Blattner
Special Counsel for Information Technology
Susan M. Davies
Senior Counsel
U.S. Department of Justice
Antitrust Division
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20530
Kevin J. O'Connor
Lead State Trial Counsel
Office of the Attorney General of Wisconsin
Post Office Box 7857
123 West Washington Avenue
Madison, WI 53703-7857
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Dated: June 5, 2000
Respectfully submitted,
_______________/s/________________
Christopher S Crook
Chief
Phillip R. Malone
John F. Cove, Jr.
Pauline T. Wan
Attorneys
U.S. Department of Justice
Antitrust Division
450 Golden Gate Avenue
San Francisco, CA 94102
David Boies
Special Trial Counsel
Harry First
Richard L. Schwartz
Assistant Attorneys General
Office of the Attorney General
of New York
120 Broadway, Suite 26-01
New York, NY 10271
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FOOTNOTES
1. 1References below are to existing section numbers in the Final Judgment (except references with
an asterisk, which refer to provisions Microsoft proposes to insert); numbers in brackets refer to
comment numbers in Microsoft's Comments relating to those provisions.
2. 2 As provided in Scheduling Order No. 9, plaintiffs also are not responding herein to Microsoft's
additional arguments in its Comments regarding process or to its Supplemental Offer of Proof.
3. 3Attachment 3 to this Response consists of a red-lined version of the Final Judgment reflecting
each of the particular changes to which plaintiffs would agree.
4. 4Microsoft's contention that Plaintiffs have said otherwise and that its proposed change "conforms
. . . to the government's explanation" (Microsoft Comments at 17) is inaccurate and based on an
incomplete quotation from Plaintiffs' Reply. The Reply in fact reads: "Microsoft asserts that that
provision will 'permit OEMs to perform radical surgery on Windows, ripping and replacing large
blocks of software code, while still entitling them to market the resulting Frankenstein's monster
using Microsoft's valuable Windows trademark and logos'" (Microsoft Summary Response at
29-31). But Section 3.a.iii.4., permits no such thing; it will not authorize OEMs to 'rip and
replace' anything in Windows, but will simply enable them to configure their systems so that
non-Microsoft software can launch automatically, OEMs can offer their own Internet access
provider or other start-up sequence, and non-Microsoft Middleware can be made the default.
Indeed, the provision expressly confines OEM removal of Windows features to 'the means of
End-User Access for Microsoft's Middleware Product.' . . . little if any underlying software code
and no APIs will be removed in the process of exercising this flexibility . . . " (Plaintiffs' Reply at
46-47; portions quoted in Microsoft Comments underlined).
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