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Thursday, April 27, 2006 - Page updated at 12:00 AM

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Microsoft decries order to share info with rivals

LUXEMBOURG — Microsoft complained that the European Commission forced it to hand over trade secrets to rivals, effectively giving them a "free ride" on the work the software maker did to acquire new customers and develop new technologies.

But Anthony Whelan, the commission's lawyer, said the "super-dominant" software maker had managed to strangle its rivals' innovation and was unlikely to face "an attack of the clones" if it gave companies the information they needed to make their programs work more smoothly with the Windows operating system.

"Microsoft's alarmist claims about duplication have been made for your consideration only," he told the panel of 13 judges considering the company's challenge to the commission's 2004 antitrust order and record 497 million euro ($613 million) fine.

The weeklong hearing was in its third day Wednesday, and the focus shifted from media-player software to the order of European Union regulators that Microsoft give interoperability information to makers of rival server operating systems.

Whelan said Novell and Sun Microsystems were reduced to catering to network servers with "last century's technology" — Windows NT — because Microsoft withheld the code needed to allow them to work smoothly with PCs running the world's most-used desktop software.

Microsoft's refusal to supply server protocols from 1998 onward meant most servers had to use more time-consuming and costly techniques to supply software people wanted, keeping them a generation behind Microsoft's software, he said.

Microsoft insisted that the survival of its rivals and the emergence of new companies proved the competition was strong.

The commission argued the degree of interoperability Microsoft allowed was simply not viable for most customers and that "effective competition" no longer existed.

Microsoft lawyer Ian Forrester said the commission's order has been an attempt "to handicap the [market] leader in perpetuity" by forcing it to hand over trade secrets.

He said Microsoft's server software was compatible with products made by other companies, such as those from Novell and Sun and using Linux and Unix-based servers.

"Microsoft spends an enormous amount of effort attempting to achieve interoperability," said Microsoft executive John Shewchuk.

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