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June 8, 2000 

 

WASHINGTON, JUNE 7 (AP) - The U.S. judge overseeing the Microsoft Corp. antitrust case said he would rule Wednesday in the historic case that could lead to a breakup of the software giant.

 

U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson moved swiftly after Microsoft filed a fresh response Tuesday to the Justice Department's plan to divide the corporation into two companies.

 

As his company was taking care of the last-minute legal work, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates was in Washington appearing at a congressional hearing on the future of high technology in the United

States and around the world. 

  

In its filing, Microsoft, disdainful of the department's response to the company's earlier concerns, asked Jackson to include previously suggested language that would give a broken-up Microsoft more freedom to enter into agreements with software developers and computer makers.

 

"Instead of agreeing to correct the many defects in the revised proposed final judgment, and thereby minimize the damage that its entry would inflict on a wide range of participants in the computer industry, the government has agreed to only a few cosmetic changes," Microsoft's lawyers wrote.

 

In the brief, Microsoft also said the Justice Department was, in its recent filing, "confirming that certain provisions are more extreme than they might appear at first blush" and "blithely ignoring substantial problems Microsoft identified regarding the feasibility of complying with many of the provisions as drafted." 

  

In Washington, Justice Department spokeswoman Gina Talamona dismissed Microsoft's response. "The filing rehashes Microsoft's old arguments, ignores the extensive violations found by the court, denies the need for serious relief and grossly distorts our proposed remedy," she said.

  

Microsoft had been due to file the brief Wednesday. But company spokesman Jim Cullinan said the "cosmetic" filing by the government made it easier to reply quickly.

 

Jackson had been set to rule on the case - including whether to split the company into two parts - last week, but the Justice Department asked for more time so it could address clarifications brought up by the company.

  

In Monday's court filing, the Justice Department agreed to grammatical and semantic changes, but refused to concede to the company on major points such as giving Microsoft additional time to

nail down details on how the breakup should occur, or more freedom in licensing and marketing its products. 

  

The department and 17 states have pushed to have Microsoft broken into two separate companies - one to market and produce Windows, and the other to handle Microsoft Office and other applications software, along with the Internet Explorer Web browser.

   


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