Updated: July 11, 2020 (January 2, 2000)
Analyst ReportDoJ Says Microsoft Violated Key Antitrust Law
The U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ) says that Microsoft has violated the Sherman Act, the cornerstone of U.S. antitrust law, in at least four ways.
The DoJs “proposed conclusions of law,” presented Dec. 6, state the governments position on how U.S. law applies to the facts of the antitrust case against Microsoft. The facts themselves were defined in the Washington, D.C., Circuit Court by Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson last month, after nearly a year of testimony from Microsoft, its competitors, partners, and experts. (See “Judge Labels Microsoft a Monopolist” on page 27 of the Dec. 1999 Update.)
Given the DoJs success in persuading Judge Jackson at the fact-finding stage, the DoJs submission that Microsoft violated U.S. antitrust law was a foregone conclusion.
The Charges
The DoJ charges that Microsoft violated U.S. antitrust law by:
- “A host of actions” that illegally maintained its monopoly in the market
- Impairing Netscapes access to the market
- Illegally tying its Internet
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