Thursday, November 28, 2019
Anti-Trust Legislation Essays - Software, Computing, Business
  Anti-Trust Legislation  As many people have noticed, recently there has been a huge focus in the media  on Bill Gates, and his huge Microsoft Corporation. This past Friday, May 22,    1998, a federal judge combined two lawsuits and set a trial date for September    8, 1998. This trial date will address a government request for a preliminary  injunction concerning Windows 98 as well as broader issues. The Sherman    Anti-trust Act was passed in 1890. Then in 1914 the Clayton Act was passed to  help with Anti-trust Cases. Anti-trust Lawsuits are few and far between, but  recently cases against Microsoft are stacking up all around the world. In 1890  the Sherman Anti-trust Act was passed, but it was not until much later that it  was enforced. The Act stated "every contract, combination in the form of  trust or otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce among the  several States, or with foreign nations." The Sherman Anti-trust act was  too vague and too difficult to enforce. The Clayton Act of 1914 helped this  problem by making a more specific attack on monopolies. Things like predatory  price-cutting, price discrimination, and acquisition of stock in a competing  company with intent to destroy competition all became illegal. John D.    Rockefeller is a prime example of monopolies in US History. By buying out  competitors, or driving them out of business he obtained nearly 100 percent of  the market in oil refining. The Standard Oil Company was eventually forced to  dissolve into smaller companies after the case Standard Oil Company vs. United    States, 221 U.S. 1 (1911). Before this case the Anti-trust Laws had not been put  to much use, which was not to the benefit of consumers. Now the spotlight is on    Microsoft Corporation, and their apparent attempt to take over the Internet  browser market. Concerns aroused recently because of the expected release of    Windows 98, which uses Microsoft Internet Explorer in almost every application  it runs. The US government has seemingly acknowledged Microsoft's monopoly of  operating systems and let it go by because of lack of competition in the market.    But now new issues are at stake, should Microsoft be allowed to expand its  already almost monopoly into yet another field in the computer industry? With  the incorporation of Microsoft Internet Explorer into the Microsoft operating  system Windows 98, Netscape Communications Corporation felt vulnerable, and  filed complaints with the Justice Department. Once the investigations were  initiated, it seemed flocks of people jumped the bandwagon to attack the alleged    Microsoft Corporation Monopoly. 20 State Attorney Generals and the District of    Columbia, along with the Justice Department have filed against Microsoft    Corporation. Japan has also filed an Antitrust Lawsuit against Microsoft. It  seems that everywhere Microsoft is, there looms a bit of concern for the  consumers and their futures. Currently 90 percent of the world's personal  computers run on Microsoft operating systems. The remaining ten percent of the  industry is divided between Apple's Macintosh, IBM's OS/2, and Unix. The federal  and state antitrust regulators are arguing that Microsoft has illegally used the  popularity of its operating systems to eliminate its competition in the software  industry. Many economists feel that these lawsuits against Microsoft Corporation  could be as revolutionary as those against Bell Telephone in 1984 and John D.    Rockefeller's Standard Oil Company in 1911. Microsoft Corporation however,  disagrees, arguing that the changes being demanded by federal and state  government will take months to perform and would cause the software to be  useless. Microsoft clings strongly to their beliefs that Windows 98 cannot  succeed without Internet Explorer. "Such an operating system - which would  take many months (if not years) to develop and test - would bear little, if any,  resemblance to Windows 98 because Internet Explorer technologies are such a  critical element of that product," Microsoft wrote. Although it may be true  that Windows 98 is based around Internet Explorer, should the government allow    Microsoft to sell its product and gain more market share? One option that  federal and state governments gave Microsoft was to have the Windows 98 package  be sold with the Netscape Navigator Browser, Microsoft's main competitor. This  request was seen as ridiculous by Mark Murray, a spokesman at Microsoft  headquarters, who has been quoted as saying, "that's like the government  forcing Coke to put two cans of Pepsi in every six-pack." The only choices  being offered to Microsoft at this point are to "unbundle" Windows 98  and Internet Explorer, or to add in the Netscape Navigator Browser. The  unbundling process is what Microsoft Corporation says will take seven months to  handle, and therefore had asked    
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