By
Anne Broache
Thursday, May 18 2006 11:14 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39360571,00.htm
WASHINGTON--A federal judge on Wednesday signed off on a two-year
extension on the term of Microsoft's landmark antitrust settlement with the
government.
Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly of the U.S. District Court for the District of
Columbia, who approved the initial settlement in 2002, said that "it sounds, at
least on paper, like it's the way to go."
Kollar-Kotelly said she only questioned why both parties hadn't made the
suggestion earlier, deeming the extension "the perfect solution."
As part of its regular status reports to the judge, the Justice Department
last week called
for an extension of certain parts of the final judgment reached by Microsoft
and the government, shifting its end date from November 2007 to 2009. Microsoft
agreed to the idea, leaving both sides to await the judge's approval at an
already-scheduled status conference.
The regulators said in their court filing that they were concerned Microsoft
was moving too slowly in delivering technical documentation to rivals licensing
its Windows communication protocols. Kollar-Kotelly had
echoed those concerns at a recent status conference in her courtroom. The
government was careful to note, however, that it did not believe the company had
"willfully violated" those provisions of the judgment.
Attorneys for the federal government and the state plaintiffs repeated those
sentiments during the two-hour court proceedings on Wednesday. "There seems to
be a genuine concern on Microsoft's part to make this happen as fast as
possible," said Renata Hesse, a Justice Department lawyer.
Stephen Houck, a lawyer for the group of California plaintiffs, blamed the
delays described in the court filings on "insufficient planning at the outset of
the program" but acknowledged the company has "made a greater commitment to
doing this the way it should be done" in recent months.
The software maker set up the Microsoft Communications Protocol Program to comply with its
2002
consent decree from the Bush administration. The program is designed to aid
third-party developers in creating software that works with Windows, through
licensing access to protocols. According to Microsoft, it currently has 31
licensees.
Microsoft attorney Charles "Rick" Rule described the difficulties the company
had encountered in finding engineers familiar enough with the protocols to
perform the documentation work, deeming the project "new" and "unprecedented" in
the level of knowledge and resources required.
"The company has recognized that documenting and licensing (protocols) is now
going to be part of the business process going forward, regardless of the
decree," Rule said.
The approval of the settlement extension means that Microsoft will begin
rewriting substantial portions of its technical documentation and devising a new
plan to validate its accuracy. It has designated the head of its server and
tools business, Bob Muglia, to oversee that process--a move that the regulators
praised as a sign of Redmond's seriousness. The major question that remained at
Wednesday's hearing was how long the task will take.
Addressing the judge on Wednesday, Muglia said he thought the timetable would
be "measured in months, not years" but added, "It's never the case that you can
say on an engineering basis that something will (be) complete on a given date."
Kollar-Kotelly said she was concerned that Microsoft's efforts to undertake a
similar documentation project required
by the European Commission could cause the U.S. version to get
"shortchanged." She warned the company to alert her "immediately" if any
conflicts arose across the Atlantic that would complicate the process at home.
"I want to make sure we have the resources to get this done," she said,
adding that the project has "accomplished an enormous amount of things" in
recent months.
In agreeing to the proposed extension, Microsoft said last week that it
planned to create a new "interoperability lab," in which licensees can test and
de-bug their protocols and receive assistance from Microsoft engineers.
The company also agreed that even if the final judgment expires in 2009,
it will continue to license the technology that it currently is required to
offer through Nov. 11, 2012. Companies would be able to license the technology
for a minimum of five years.
At the same time, the Justice Department last week dismissed
antitrust concerns over Microsoft's plans for Windows Vista, including a
recent outcry from Google over a new search box that is part of Internet
Explorer 7.
Near the end of Wednesday's conference, Kollar-Kotelly pressed the regulators
to explain their reasoning in arriving at that conclusion. "I didn't quite
figure out in this instance why it got resolved and why there wasn't a problem
here," she said.
Noting that Google had never formally lodged a complaint with the feds, Hesse
explained what she assured the judge was a "simple" process for changing the
default search engine to something other than MSN in the new software.
Kollar-Kotelly appeared satisfied with that justification.
The parties plan to continue filing status reports and are scheduled to make
their next appearance before the judge in September.
CNET News.com's Ina Fried contributed to this report.