Microsoft attacks EC for 'denying due process'

EC retorts: 'We'll decide whether Microsoft is compliant, not Microsoft'

By Ingrid Marson, 16 February 2006 09:25

NEWS

Microsoft launched an attack on the European Commission on Wednesday, accusing it of disregarding evidence and denying due process.

In a response filed to the EC on Wednesday afternoon, the software giant explained why it believes it has complied with the 2004 antitrust ruling.

In the filing, Microsoft claims the EC had not reviewed the most recent documentation submitted by Microsoft, when it warned in December that Microsoft faced penalties for not providing "complete and accurate" specifications for the server interoperability information.

The Microsoft filing stated: "When the Commission issued its statement of objections on 21 December, 2005, the Commission and its experts had not even bothered to read the most recent version of those documents which Microsoft had made available on 15 December, 2005."

Microsoft also claimed it has not been given enough time to respond to the EC's concerns and has therefore been "denied due process in defending itself".

The filing stated: "The Commission waited many months before informing Microsoft that it believed changes were necessary to the technical documents and then gave Microsoft only a few weeks to make extensive revisions."

The EC has also been accused by Microsoft of repeatedly refusing to clearly define its requirements and concerns. The software giant claims it has provided "clear evidence that Microsoft is in full compliance with [the] technical documentation mandate".

The EC said it "will consider carefully the response that Microsoft filed today" but rejected Microsoft's claim it had not reviewed the most recent documentation when it released its most recent objections.

The EC said in a statement: "In its press statement issued today, Microsoft alleges that neither the Commission nor the monitoring trustee had read the latest version of the technical documents 'made available' by Microsoft (in Redmond USA) on 15 December. In fact, this documentation was actually supplied on 26 December to the commission, 11 days after the 15 December deadline and five days after the statement of objection was sent."

It added that this new technical documentation only addressed formatting issues and was therefore not substantially different from the documents that the commission examined in its statement of objections on 15 December.

The EC also rejected the claim that Microsoft had not been given enough time to respond to its concerns.

The EC stated: "Following the rejection by the court of first instance of Microsoft's request for interim measures on 22 December, 2004, Microsoft was obliged to comply with the March 2004 Commission decision. Since then, the Commission has repeatedly reminded Microsoft of the need to provide complete and accurate specifications. To cite an example, in June 2005, the Commission sent to Microsoft a first report by the Commission's experts, where very serious doubts were expressed as to the completeness and accuracy of the technical documentation."

The EC also pointed out that despite Microsoft's claim it has provided clear evidence of being in full compliance, this is a evaluation for the Commission itself to make.

It said: "It is, of course, the European Commission that will decide whether Microsoft is compliant with the March 2004 decision, and not Microsoft."

Ingrid Marson writes for ZDNet UK

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