European competition commissioner Neelie Kroes hit out at Microsoft Corp. in comments to European parliamentarians Thursday, saying it is “unacceptable” that the company continues to gain market share using tactics that were outlawed in the Commission’s 2004 antitrust ruling against the software vendor.
Three years later Microsoft still hasn’t complied with the main demand imposed by the European antitrust ruling: that the company share interoperability information inside Windows at a reasonable price to allow rival makers of workgroup servers to build products that work properly with PCs running Windows.
“Microsoft is constantly gaining market share and that is what is worrying in the workgroup server operating market,” Kroes said, referring to server operating systems used to allow a team of people in an office to sign in, print and share files.
She told the parliamentarians that Microsoft’s market share in this sector has continued to rise since the 2004 antitrust ruling. When the Commission began its antitrust investigation in 1999 Microsoft held between 35 percent and 40 percent market share. By 2004 it rose to around 60 percent and now it stands at between 70 percent and 75 percent.
“That’s unacceptable,” Kroes said.
Withholding the interoperability information is an illegal competitive tactic, the Commission said in 2004. Offices full of PCs running Windows are easier to connect together using Microsoft’s workgroup server, than using the server of a rival such as Sun Microsystems Inc.
This unfair advantage would eventually result in Microsoft taking over the workgroup server market, the Commission predicted at the time of the ruling. The latest server market share figures appear to confirm that analysis.
Microsoft has repeatedly promised to comply with the 2004 ruling, even though it has appealed the decision to the European Court of First Instance in Luxembourg.
The software vendor has submitted documents on several occasions, but so far its submissions have been deemed incomplete by the Commission and an independent expert, picked by Microsoft and the Commission to oversee the company’s compliance with the 2004 ruling.
Last July the Commission fined Microsoft