Microsoft Witness Denies Cut-Throat Quote

Published: 30 January 1999 y., Saturday
Microsoft_s star witness, Paul Maritz, denied Monday he had ever said Microsoft wanted to "cut off Netscape_s air supply" with its browser strategy. That quote, attributed to Maritz, Microsoft_s group vice president of platforms and applications, by an Intel executive has been a flashpoint of the trial. The government is trying to prove Microsoft used the heft of its operating systems monopoly to bully partners and competitors alike and to further entrench and expand its power… Courtroom spectators were on the edges of their seats, as lead prosecutor David Boies said Maritz was "considerably less positive" about this when he was deposed last October, pointing out that testimony. At that time, Maritz said he had no recollection of saying that -- that it "was possible, but I just don_t recall." The quote came into play after Intel vice president Steven McGeady attributed it to Maritz earlier in the antitrust trial. However, McGeady_s contemporaneous notes of the meeting did not include reference to the quote, according to Microsoft attorneys. After the hearing, Microsoft senior vice president of legal affairs Bill Neukom said Maritz had not contradicted himself -- that his testimony was "straightforward and consistent." After the initial deposition, Maritz revisited his testimony in "a search for the truth," Neukom said. On another major point, Maritz also contradicted testimony from Apple executive Avie Tevanian that the giant software company used Microsoft Office for the Macintosh "as a club" to force Apple to use Microsoft Internet Explorer, rather than Netscape Navigator, as its default browser. Maritz maintained that for Microsoft, the main point of its August 1997 pact with Apple was to get rid of patent issues between the companies. Apple had a long standing patent-infringement suit against Microsoft at that time. According to a July 21, 1997, e-mail from Microsoft chief financial officer Greg Maffei to chairman Bill Gates, there were four terms of the deal, none of which included IE. Boies said the two companies had previously discussed IE, and there was an earlier agreement for Apple to include IE. Maritz agreed but said that did not include IE as the default browser. Earlier in the day, the courtroom viewed several taped demonstrations, geared to show Linux as a viable OS competitor to Windows. Another was a demonstration of an IBM network computer, the Network Station 1000 with built-in browsing, which the company also painted as a competitive technology. When Boies tried to get Maritz to pinpoint just how lucrative the Windows market is for Microsoft, Maritz acknowledged the OS generates about $3 billion per year in revenue, but the company does not break out profit figures. Of that revenue, about $1 billion is channeled into R&D, Maritz said.
Šaltinis: Trial
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Commission approves amendment to Lithuanian crisis measure allowing small amounts of aid

The European Commission has approved, under EC Treaty state aid rules, an amendment to a Lithuanian scheme allowing aid to be granted of up to €500 000 per company, initially approved on 8 June 2009. more »

The EU and Russia reinforce the Early Warning Mechanism to improve prevention and management in case of an energy crisis

As agreed by the President of the European Commission and the President of the Russian Federation during the last EU-Russia Summit in Khabarovsk, the EU and Russia have strengthened the current dispositions under the EU-Russia Energy Dialogue to prevent and manage potential energy crises, with an enhanced Early Warning Mechanism. more »

EU provides EUR 1 billion for trade facilitation in developing countries

The European Union has today presented to the World Trade Organization the trade facilitation projects it has financed between 2006 and 2008. more »

Commission approves Romanian state guarantee to Ford Romania

The European Commission has authorised, under the EC Treaty’s rules on state aid, a planned state guarantee by Romania to enable Ford Romania SA to access a loan from the European Investment Bank (EIB). more »

Getting out of the red

The economic crisis has left many countries with budget deficits well over the 3% limit. The commission is proposing deadlines for reducing the gaps. more »

In October 2009 prices for consumer goods and services went down by 0.4 per cent

Statistics Lithuania informs that in October 2009, against September, prices for consumer goods and services went down by 0.4 per cent. more »

Lithuania and China aim at strengthening economic and trade dialogue

Lithuania’s Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs Šarūnas Adomavičius took part in bilateral political consultations with representatives from foreign affairs, commerce and transport ministries of the People’s Republic of China. more »

Excessive Deficit Procedure steps: the Stability and Growth Pact as the anchor for fiscal exit strategies

Under the budgetary surveillance powers conferred by the EU Treaty, the European Commission today proposed to the Council to set 2013 as the deadline for the correction of the budget deficits in Austria, the Czech Republic, Germany, Slovakia, Slovenia, the Netherlands and Portugal. more »

World Bank and Moldova Join Forces to Fight Impacts of Climate Change on Agriculture

A joint partnership between the World Bank, the Moldovan Ministry of Agriculture and Food Industry and the Ministry of Environment was launched in Moldova’s capital in the late days of October. more »

World Bank Group President Zoellick Launches Global Urban Strategy at Inaugural Infrastructure Finance Summit

World Bank Group President Robert B. Zoellick today joins senior officials from the Government of Singapore to launch a new global urban strategy that will guide Bank advisory services and financing in the sector over the next decade. more »