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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3-page paper covers the aspect of competition policies as they relate to the Microsoft Corp. cases. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTcomppoli.rtf
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one form of such policy, as its assumed that higher tariffs on foreign goods mean that people will turn to the domestic goods instead.
Microsoft Corp. has again recently been in the spotlight, as a little more than 10 years ago. Sun Microsystems lodged a complaint with the European Commission against
Microsoft (Ahlborn and Evans, 2009). About five years ago, the EC ruled that "Microsoft had abused its dominant position in client operating systems" by not providing computer protocols that would
allow competing service operating systems venders to operate with Microsoft Windows systems (Ahlborn and Evans, 2009). Furthermore, Microsofts tying of the Windows Media Player to its operating system meant more
potentially monopolistic scenarios (Ahlborn and Evans, 2009). Ultimately, the European Court of First Instance rejected Microsofts grounds for annulling the abuse findings, and in 2007, Microsoft decided not to appeal,
thus dropping the case (Ahlborn and Evans, 2009). The CFIs ruling (not to mention the ECs ruling meant that the company had to share protocols with competition. This, of course,
is not the first time that Microsoft has run into problems with antitrust and monopolistic situations - throughout the majority of the 1990s, the Redmond, WA company fought the U.S.
Justice Department on similar charges - and similarly, lost the battle. Technically, competition policy is supposed to create a fair market
for all. The basic concepts behind competition policy are that policies are introduced so that society, as a whole benefits (Basic Concepts of Competition Policy, 2004). Competitive markets and market
behavior sometimes focuses on the extent to which another (or a lot) of companies can enter the market and then introduce, or sustain, price increases (Basic Concepts of Competition Policy,
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