Microsoft says EU antitrust deadline extended

Microsoft last night confirmed a report that it had received a one-week extension from EU antitrust regulators to respond to …

Microsoft last night confirmed a report that it had received a one-week extension from EU antitrust regulators to respond to charges that it had sought to thwart rivals by bundling its web browser with Windows systems.

"Microsoft confirms that the new deadline for the company to respond to the Commission's statement of objections is April 28th," a spokeswoman said, referring to an unsourced reference to a new deadline reported on the website of the Financial Times.

A spokeswoman for the European Commission said she could not immediately comment.

Last month, the European Union executive pushed back the original deadline to April 21st after the giant US software company asked for more time. It charged the company on January 15th with infringing EU rules by abusing its dominant position.

READ MORE

The bundling of its Internet Explorer to Windows shielded Microsoft from head-to-head competition with other browsers, and that also harmed product innovation and reduced customer choice, the Commission had said.

Microsoft has said the Commission may order the company and equipment makers to obligate users to choose a particular browser when buying a computer, or that multiple browsers be made available on new Windows-based computers.

This could come on top of a possible hefty fine. Separately, trade group ECIS - which numbers International Business Machines Corp, Nokia, Oracle and Sun Microsystems Inc among its members - joined in the case against Microsoft yesterday.

ECIS said it had been accepted as an interested third party in the Commission's case.

"Smaller, more innovative, browser developers need a level playing field," ECIS spokesman Thomas Vinje said in a statement.

Google, which offers the Chrome browser; the Mozilla foundation, producer of the Firefox Web browser, and privately held Norwegian company Opera have already added their voices to the case against Microsoft.

Reuters