Tech news
EU to probe Microsoft-Time Warner
EU to probe Microsoft-Time Warner buy
Published: August 25, 2004, 12:15 PM PDT
By Dawn Kawamoto
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
European antitrust regulators are set to launch a thorough investigation
into a plan by Microsoft and Time Warner to acquire digital rights management
company ContentGuard, a development that's seen as a setback for the deal.
The European Commission, which recently wrapped up its preliminary review of the
proposed buy, had the option of either allowing the deal to proceed or
conducting an in-depth, second-phase investigation. The Commission announced its
plans Wednesday, which was its deadline for making a decision.
"After a preliminary review, it appears to the Commission that the transaction
might possibly create or strengthen a dominant position by Microsoft in the
market for digital rights management solutions," the agency said in a statement.
"In the course of the investigation, the Commission will also investigate
further competition concerns related to the vertical integration of Microsoft in
other markets."
A representative for Time Warner said that the company and Microsoft have no
specific comment other than that the parties are cooperating fully with the
Commission. "This is a complex area," the representative said.
The Commission's decision is its second ruling against Microsoft in recent
months. In March, it imposed a historic fine of about $600 million against the
software giant, ruling that it had failed to provide competitors with the
technical information they needed to compete fairly in the market for server
software.
The antitrust regulators at that time also cited Microsoft for offering Windows
on the condition that it come bundled with the Windows Media Player, alleging
the software giant was stifling competition.
Microsoft is contesting the Commission's findings in the Media Player case and
in September will head to the Court of First Instance. It plans to ask the
European court to suspend the Commission's remedies, which include requiring
Microsoft to offer a version of Windows without Media Player.
While the ContentGuard case has no direct bearing on the Commission's case
against Microsoft in the Court of First Instance, European antitrust attorneys
say it will likely shed light on the views of incoming Competition Commissioner
Neelie Kroes.
Kroes, who will replace controversial Competition Commissioner Mario Monti when
his term expires Oct. 31, is viewed by many as pro-business. Kroes serves as a
board member on a number of multinational companies.
Because Monti is leaving the Commission in late October and the agency's
deadline to make a decision in the ContentGuard case is not until early January,
Kroes will be the one to determine whether the joint acquisition is allowed to
move forward.
"Kroes has a reputation of being pro-business. But no one knows what she'll do,"
said Frank Fine, an antitrust attorney based in Brussels, Belgium. "The question
will be--once she steps in--will there be a softening in antitrust enforcement?"
And while there is a great deal of difference between the two Microsoft cases,
Thomas Vinje, an antitrust lawyer with the firm Clifford Chance in Brussels,
said the common threads are Windows Media Player and digital rights management
technology.
"DRM is bundled in with the Windows Media Player, and that is bundled in with
the operating system," Vinje said. "The concern with DRM and the Media Player is
that Microsoft will obtain a monopoly."
Microsoft, which has been a longtime investor in Bethesda, Md.-based
ContentGuard, increased its investment in the company in April, when it
announced Time Warner would join it in acquiring virtually all of ContentGuard
from Xerox.
Microsoft and Time Warner view the ContentGuard deal as a means of establishing
a stronger stake in the growing market for digital rights management. That
technology prevents the illegal copying of content such as songs and videos.
The Commission now has until Jan. 6, 2005, to render a final decision on the
buy. If the government body ultimately determines the acquisition would violate
European antitrust laws, that ruling could be a deal-killer for the companies
because ContentGuard would be prohibited from operating in Europe, a major
market.
The Commission noted that digital rights management technology is expected to be
increasingly used for confidentiality purposes, especially in securing the
transmission of corporate documents.
European antitrust regulators also decided to investigate whether the deal might
create or strengthen Microsoft's "already leading position in the (digital
rights) solutions market," the Commission said in a statement.
The Commission is concerned that, under joint ownership, ContentGuard may have
both the "incentives and the ability" to use its portfolio of
intellectual-property rights to put Microsoft's rivals in that area at a
competitive disadvantage.
"This joint acquisition could also slow down the development of open
interoperability standards. As such, this would allow the (digital rights
management) solutions market to 'tip' towards the current leading provider,
Microsoft," the Commission said in its statement.
And because the digital rights technology is expected to become pervasive
throughout the IT industry, the Commission said it is concerned Microsoft's
position in the market "may have spill-over effects on a number of related
markets, ranging from mobile telephone to word processors."