● 09.09.11

●● Cablegate: US Diplomats Offer to Help Microsoft Dodge European Regulators

Posted in Antitrust, Cablegate, Europe, Microsoft at 2:19 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Summary: Unnamed politicians offer to help Microsoft escape scrutiny from the EU Commission (for its antitrust abuses)

AMID trouble for its corruption regarding OOXML (with an impending European investigation), Microsoft hired Vassallo to play politics.

hired Vassallo

The following Cablegate cable shows us that when Microsoft was working on the browser ballot, for example, the US government got involved. It also offered to get involved by pressing on the EU Commission.

>

VZCZCBSI597

PP RUEHC RUCPDOC RUEAWJA RHEHNSC RUCNMEM RUCNMEU

DE RUEHBS #1310/01 2721346

ZNR UUUUU ZZH

P 291346Z SEP 09

FM USEU BRUSSELS

TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY

RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC PRIORITY

RUEAWJA/DEPT OF JUSTICE WASHDC PRIORITY

RHEHNSC/NSC WASHDC PRIORITY

INFO RUCNMEM/EU MEMBER STATES COLLECTIVE

RUCNMEU/EU INTEREST COLLECTIVE

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 BRUSSELS 001310

SENSITIVE

SIPDIS

DOJ FOR CALDWELL HARROP

DOC FOR DAVID DEFALCO

STATE FOR EUR/ERA, EEB/TPP/MTA, EEB/OIA

STATE PLEASE PASS TO USTR/DAVID WEINER AND FTC/JOHN PARISI

NOT FOR INTERNET DISTRIBUTION

E.O. 12958: N/A

TAGS: ECIN, ECON, EINT, ECPS, ETRD, EUN

SUBJECT: MICROSOFT: CLOSE TO FINAL DEAL WITH EU TO END COMPETITION

CASES

1. (SBU) SUMMARY. John Vassallo, Microsoft (MS) VP for EU Affairs,

told Charge Sept. 24 that the company "is very close" to concluding

an overarching deal with the European Commission on three antitrust

issues: 1) the Commission's case against Microsoft's tying of

Internet Explorer to Windows; 2) a five-year deal on sharing

interoperability information with rival firms; and 3) a 10-year

agreement to support PDF and other file format compatibility with

Microsoft's own file format. Vassallo said there are only a few

small issues to resolve over the tying case, which will involve MS

agreeing to provide within the EU all new Windows computer buyers,

and all customers upgrading Windows versions, a "ballot screen"

whereby customers can select from 12 internet browsers to use as

their default browser. Customers would also be able to deactivate

Internet Explorer completely. This element of the deal will require

a four-week EU market test and formal approval by the College of

Commissioners, which MS hopes for by October 28.

2. (SBU) Vassallo said the whole package represents a historic

opportunity for the Commission and Microsoft to resolve past

disputes and move into a new era of cooperative relations.

Commissioner Neelie Kroes has been publicly advertising her interest

in concluding the total deal (as part of her legacy before she

leaves the Commission), increasing its likelihood of success.

Charge asked if MS requested U.S. engagement; Vassallo said not

directly, but stressed the value of emphasizing that reaching a deal

would be good for all parties concerned. After an 11-year battle

involving nearly $2.5 billion in Commission fines against Microsoft,

both sides of this epic competition battle may be ready to end

confrontation and resolve their differences. END SUMMARY.

MICROSOFT SEES OVERALL AGREEMENT NEAR

-------------------------------------

3. (SBU) John Vassallo, Microsoft (MS) VP for EU Affairs, told

Charge d'Affaires and Acting EconCouns September 24 that press

statements by Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes and Director

General Philip Lowe, in the U.S. for conferences, that an overall

Commission-Microsoft deal is close are correct. He explained that

Microsoft and the Commission have been in intensive negotiations

since July that have brought the two parties close to an overarching

package agreement on three outstanding antitrust issues (one formal

and two informal).

THREE ELEMENTS OF PACKAGE DEAL

------------------------------

I. FORMAL AGREEMENT ON REMEDIES FOR IE-WINDOWS TYING CASE

--------------------------------------------- -------

4. (SBU) The major element of the proposed deal, Vassallo said, is

Microsoft's proposed remedy for the Commission antitrust case

against MS tying of Internet Explorer to its Windows operating

system. Vassallo briefly recounted the history of the Commission

case against MS for tying Media Player to Windows, which resulted in

a 2004 Commission decision and massive (497 million euro) fine

against Microsoft, which was upheld in 2007 by the EU Court of First

Instance. The remedy required by the Commission, that of MS

offering a version of Windows without Media Player, failed to

resolve concerns since it was commercially unsuccessful.

5. (SBU) In 2006, Vassallo said, Opera, a small Norwegian browser

company, filed a similar antitrust complaint over MS tying of IE to

Windows. The Commission took up the case, and MS began negotiations

with the Commission over a solution. In December, 2008, the two

sides were close to informal agreement, Vassallo said, but the

Commission stuck to its desire to have computer makers (OEMs)

include all major browsers in software bundles for new computers,

with customers able to choose one as a default browser.

6. (SBU) This agreement was not acceptable to MS, and the Commission

filed a formal antitrust charge (Statement of Objections) in January

2009. The Commission then offered a hearing date that MS could not

take due to scheduling conflicts, Vassallo said. Faced with an

enormous potential Commission fine (2-6 billion euros, retroactive

to 1996), MS began new informal negotiations with the Commission

towards a solution.

7. (SBU) In July MS and the Commission came to initial agreement on

a remedy that would resolve the complaint. MS agreed to direct all

new computer buyers within the EU, upon their first connection to

the Internet, to a "ballot screen" that would allow them to download

any of12 competing browsers, make it their default browser, and

deactivate IE if desired. This would only be true for OEMs who

include IE as the initial default browser; if OEMs reach a better

financial deal with another browser maker (e.g. Google) to make that

browser the default, the customer would not get the ballot screen

option. Vassallo added that existing Windows computer users would

get the same ballot screen and IE deactivation option when upgrading

their version of Windows.

8. (SBU) This formal agreement to resolve the tying case is subject

to approval by the College of Commissioners, Vassallo continued,

which is only possible after a four-week mandatory market test of

the proposed remedy. MS hopes to begin this test extremely soon, he

said, to allow time for formal Commission approval by October 28.

9. (SBU) Vassallo said there are a few very minor issues to resolve

over this part of the deal, including such points as: required

security awareness messages for ballot screen users, the order in

which browser options might be displayed, and the size of different

logos. He hoped to resolve these within days and thought none are

likely to upset a final deal.

10. (SBU) Vassallo clarified that MS will launch Windows 7 in Europe

on October 22, in advance of likely final approval of the agreement.

This would not include a ballot screen option, but if a deal is in

fact concluded within the following weeks, MS would link Windows 7

computers automatically back to the ballot screen webpage, so the

launch timing should not disrupt conclusion of a deal.

II. INFORMAL AGREEMENT ON INTEROPERABILITY

------------------------------------------

11. (SBU) Vassallo said that a second part of the deal would resolve

a Commission investigation, based on a complaint by anti-MS lobby

group ECIS (which counts Sun, IBM and other U.S. and EU firms as

members) of MS alleged failure to share adequate code or information

on understanding MS code to allow MS competitors and develop and run

products that would work properly with MS operating systems and

other software. This agreement will involve MS offering licenses on

certain code for a nominal fee, posting 75,000 pages on its code on

the web and establishing labs where competitors' software developers

can come for instruction on how to develop products to work with MS

code. There will also be a rapid arbitration procedure for

disputes, Vassallo added, and MS will agree to pay 135,000 euros/day

to operators who cannot get their system to work with MS products

after recourse to the above.

III. INFORMAL AGREEMENT ON PDF AND OTHER FILE SUPPORT

--------------------------------------------- --------

12. (SBU) The third and final part of the package is an agreement

under which MS will be obliged to support for 10 years compatibility

of Adobe PDF files and other similar document files with Microsoft's

Open XML proprietary format. The support will be

backwards-compatible, allowing billions of documents in older

formats to be accessible. Vassallo noted here the Commission's

positive July statement on MS efforts to promote interoperability,

which he said was without precedent.

13. (SBU) Both informal agreements will only come into effect once

the formal agreement is concluded, Vassallo added.

MICROSOFT: DEAL REPRESENTS "HISTORIC OPPORTUNITY" FOR COMMISSION

--------------------------------------------- --------

14. (SBU) Vassallo underscored that the whole package represents a

historic opportunity for the Commission and Microsoft to resolve

past disputes and move into a new era of cooperative relations. If

the small pending issues for the formal agreement on tying are

resolved quickly, the Commission can move to the market test.

Vassallo said that MS had seen a remarkable turnaround in the

willingness of the Commission to deal directly and openly with

Microsoft, which he attributed to Commissioner Kroes' strong,

publicly-stated interest in resolving the Microsoft cases as part of

her legacy before she leaves the Commission in the next few months.

15. (SBU) Vassallo said his only major fear was that the Commission

might use the results of the ballot screen market test to come back

to MS and ask for more concessions/changes before final Commission

approval. This could scotch a final deal. If the deal falls apart,

the Commission would face the choice of proceeding with a fine and

forced remedy, which Microsoft would challenge in court. Vassallo

said he understood that Kroes and DOJ AAG Varney have been in close

touch on the overall deal.

16. (SBU) The Charge asked about MS outreach to USG officials in

Washington; Vassallo noted that Microsoft has briefed DOJ on the

impending settlement. Charge then asked if MS is requesting direct

USEU engagement; Vassallo said no, but , but added that if senior

USEU or visiting USG officials happen to meet with relevant EU

decisionmakers, they could stress the value of reaching a deal for

all parties concerned. The proposed deal is good for the EU, the

market and consumers, Vassallo concluded.

COMMENT

-------

17. (SBU) Vassallo's story reflects Microsoft's point of view, and

it is unclear how the Commission sees prospects and potential

obstacles involved in an overarching package deal on Microsoft's

competition cases. Microsoft does have other potential issues in

Europe, with the possibility of a Commission review of its

advertising alliance with Yahoo, and with browser competition with

Google turning increasingly nasty. Nevertheless, after an 11-year

battle involving nearly $2.5 billion in Commission fines against

Microsoft, both sides of this epic competition policy battle may be

ready to end confrontation and resolve their differences, for now.

END COMMENT.

MURRAY

Why can they not let the EU Commission.decide on its own? And never mind the fact that this settlement was rather ineffective as it hardly punished Microsoft for illegally getting market share (breaking competition rules), as we explained in prior years… █

Share in other sites/networks: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.

Permalink  Send this to a friend

Permalink
↺ Send this to a friend

----------

Techrights

➮ Sharing is caring. Content is available under CC-BY-SA.