Under oath, Sun discloses Web plans.
Published:
3 May 1999 y., Monday
The second of a series of public depositions in the Microsoft antitrust case turned more private than public yesterday when lawyers for Sun Microsystems insisted that members of the media and public leave the courtroom. The deposition was expected to shed light on the recent merger of Microsoft_s chief rivals, AOL and Netscape Communications. The $10 billion stock deal also included a strategic partnership between AOL and Sun. But less than an hour after the deposition began, the only people left in the room were the man being deposed - M. Popov, vice president and CEO of Sun - and the lawyers, a videographer and a court reporter. When Microsoft lawyer R. Pepperman signaled that he was going to start asking detailed questions about Sun_s alliance with AOL, Sun lawyer J. Young invoked an exemption in the open-deposition order allowing the proceeding to be closed if trade secrets or "highly confidential" information were to be elicited. Depositions in the Microsoft antitrust trial were ordered public after a consortium of media companies, citing an obscure law, successfully sued to open them up. In the latest series of depositions, Microsoft is seeking to question AOL, Netscape and Sun officials about the deal, attempting to demonstrate that the merger proves competition in the computer industry is vibrant, rendering the antitrust case irrelevant. The relatively short public sessions focused on when Popov learned of merger talks between AOL and Netscape. Pepperman_s line of questioning seemed aimed at establishing that seeds of the deal occurred before the government filed its antitrust case against Microsoft in May 1998. After the deposition, Justice Department lawyer P. Malone asserted that nothing said in public or in private does anything to change the overall facts of the case. At least two more public depositions scheduled at Microsoft_s request are expected to take place before the trial resumes.
Šaltinis:
Internet
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
In Brussels, Prime Minister Gediminas Kirkilas participated in the meeting of Nordic and Baltic (NB6) Prime Ministers which focused on the pressing topics on the agenda of the European Council: global finance crisis, energy, climate change, EU-Russia relations, and financial situation in Iceland.
more »
Prime Minister Gediminas Kirkilas attended the working dinner with President of the European Commission José Manuel Barroso, Danish, Estonian, Finnish, Latvian, Polish Prime Ministers – Anders Fogh Rasmussen, Andrus Ansip, Matti Vanhanen, Ivars Godmanis, Donald Tusk – and Swedish Minister of Foreign Affairs Carl Bildt.
more »
The European Commission has put forward a revision of EU rules on deposit guarantee schemes that puts into action the commitments made by EU Finance Ministers on 7 October.
more »
The United States began releasing long-awaited details of its $700 billion rescue plan.
more »
Australia's Prime Minister announces plans for the government to guarantee bank deposits for the next three years.
more »
Ethical bank, Triodos, says it is offering customers an alternative way to invest their funds.
more »
Energy security was the dominant theme during the meeting between Lithuanian Prime Minister Gediminas Kirkilas and Latvian Prime Minister Ivars Godmanis.
more »
The draft law would require utilities to separate – or unbundle – the distribution of electricity and gas from production.
more »
A holistic approach to eradicating poverty, which seeks to ensure adequate incomes, quality jobs and better access to social services, is advocated by the EP in an own-initiative report.
more »
Dubai showcases multi-billion dollar development projects at the annual Cityscape exhibition.
more »