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Microsoft Corp.

Microsoft Goes Beyond EU Decision by Offering Windows Source Code

Brussels (ots/PRNewswire)

- Announcement Underscores Microsoft's Commitment to Resolve
Compliance  Issues by Giving Licensees Access to its Source Code
BRUSSELS, January 25 /PRNewswire/ --
Today, Microsoft General Counsel Brad Smith announced Microsoft's
decision to license all the Windows Server source code for the
technologies  covered by the European Commission's Decision of March
2004. The company is  making this voluntary move in order to address
categorically all of the  issues raised by the Commission's December
22, 2005 Statement of Objections. That document asserted that
Microsoft's prior technical documentation  provided insufficient
information to enable licensees to implement  successfully certain
Windows Server communications protocols.
"Today we are putting our most valuable intellectual property on
the  table so we can put technical compliance issues to rest and move
forward  with a serious discussion about the substance of this case."
said Brad  Smith, Microsoft Senior Vice President and General
Counsel. "The Windows  source code is the ultimate documentation of
Windows Server technologies.  With this step our goal is to resolve
all questions about the sufficiency  of our technical documentation."
With today's announcement, Microsoft is going far beyond the
European  Commission's March 2004 decision and its legal obligations
to provide  companies with the technical specifications of its
proprietary  communications protocols. A reference license to the
Windows Server source  code will provide software developers the most
precise and authoritative  description possible of the Windows
protocol technologies. With it,  software developers will be entitled
to view the Windows source code in  order to better understand how to
develop products that interoperate with  Windows, but not to copy
Microsoft's source code.
"We have now come to the conclusion that the only way to be
certain of  satisfying the Commission's demands is to go beyond the
2004 Decision and  offer a license to the source code of the Windows
server operating system,"  said Smith. "While we are confident that
we are presently in full  compliance with the Decision we wish to
dispel any notion that Microsoft's  technical documents are
insufficient."
For server software developers who take a license under this
program,  Microsoft previously had created more than twelve thousand
pages of  technical documentation covering specifications for the
communications  protocols covered by the 2004 Decision as well
additional technology going  beyond those protocols. In addition,
Microsoft previously offered  voluntarily to provide up to five
hundred hours of free technical support  from experienced Microsoft
professionals who can answer any questions  licensees might have.
With today's announcement Microsoft has supplemented  these resources
with a new license for all of the Windows Server source  code that
implements all of the communications protocols covered by the  2004
Decision.
Microsoft has a similar protocol licensing program that was
established  in the United States pursuant to a consent decree there,
covering certain  protocols in the Windows desktop operating system.
More than 20 companies  have taken licenses to Microsoft's protocols
under that program and many  are shipping products incorporating such
protocols.  To continue to foster  consistency between both licensing
programs, Microsoft has decided to make  available for the desktop
protocols the same reference license for source  code it is offering
for server protocols, and the company will provide  competition
authorities in the United States with information so they can
consider the matter. The merits of the 2004 Decision are being
reviewed by  the European Court of First Instance. While Microsoft
contests the merits  of the 2004 Decision through that judicial
process, today's announcement  underscores the company's resolve to
satisfy the Commission's compliance  demands. In addition, Microsoft
will continue to move forward to prepare  its response to the
December Statement of Objections, which is now due on  15 February.
For more information on the licensing program, please visit the
WSPP  (Windows Server Protocol Program) at:
http://www.microsoft.com/mscorp/legal/eudecision/.
About Microsoft
Founded in 1975, Microsoft Corp. (Nasdaq: MSFT) is the worldwide
leader in software, services and solutions that help people and
businesses  realize their full potential.
This material is for informational purposes only. Microsoft Corp
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be liable for  any special, direct, indirect or consequential
damages, whether in an  action of contract, negligence or other
action arising out of or in  connection with the use or performance
of the material. Nothing herein  should be construed as constituting
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Contact:

If you have any queries please contact: Europe: Dirk Delmartino,
+32-2-550-0621, dirkdelm@microsoft.com, Tom Brookes, +32-2-238-1093,
tombrookes@gpluseurope.com; US: Stacy Drake, +1-425-705-6954,
sdrake@microsoft.com

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