Microsoft 561 million Euros for breaking promise in EU Microsoft has been fined €561m
Microsoft has been fined €561m ($731m, £484m) by the
European Commission for breaking an agreement to offer Windows users
alternative web browsers to Internet Explorer. A fresh investigation was
launched against Microsoft by Brussels’ competition officials in mid-2012
following complaints that the company was still using its Windows operating
system to push people into browsing the web with Internet Explorer.
Microsoft signed a
legally binding agreement with the commission that required the firm to display
a choice screen in Windows that allowed customers in Europe to pick between
using IE, Firefox, Chrome and other browsers on the market. The dialogue box
was supposed to remain in the operating system until 2014. But in February
2011, when Microsoft issued its first Windows 7 service pack, the selection
screen suddenly vanished from the software.Last year, Redmond told competition
commissioner Joaquin Almunia that it hadn’t noticed the browser choice screen
had been missing from its operating system for 17 months. This meant 15 million
customers were not offered a range of browsers to run on their PCs.The
commission said today that it was imposing a half-a-billion-euro fine on
Microsoft for failing to comply with its commitment. Almunia said in a
statement: Legally binding commitments reached in antitrust decisions play a
very important role in our enforcement policy because they allow for rapid
solutions to competition problems. Of course, such decisions require strict
compliance. A failure to comply is a very serious infringement that must be
sanctioned accordingly.
But Microsoft could have been slapped with a much bigger
monetary penalty as the commission can demand anything up to 10 per cent of a
company’s annual revenue. That means Redmond could have faced a gigantic €7.4bn
fine.
In working out how to penalise Microsoft, the commission
said it took into account the gravity and duration of the infringement. It also
considered imposing a fine large enough to grab the company’s attention so that
it would prevent itself from making the same boob again.However, Microsoft’s
cooperation with Almunia’s office proved to be a mitigating circumstance that
helped keep the fine low in relative terms.
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