Supremes reject Microsoft's Novell request
Ancient anti-trust claim gets go-ahead
Posted in Software, 17th March 2008 16:28 GMT
Increase your knowledge of the latest threats to your busines
The Supreme Court rejected an attempt today to throw out a claim by Novell that Microsoft tried to undermine the market for Novell's WordPerfect in the mid-90s.
The Supremes said Novell can go ahead and sue Microsoft under Federal anti-trust laws.
Novell claims Microsoft "specifically targeted WordPerfect and other office productivity applications". Novell claimed Microsoft did this to support its operating system monopoly.
But Microsoft argued that because Novell did not offer a competing operating system, it could not bring action under anti-trust laws.
Novell also accuses the software giant of deliberately witholding technical information which it required to get its products to interact properly with Microsoft products. Novell's evidence includes an email from Bill Gates making clear the competitive advantage of delaying the handover of information, Bloomberg reports.
Novell sold WordPerfect to Corel in 1996. ®
Increase your knowledge of the latest threats to your busines


The Total Economic Impact of Dell's PC products and services
The best practices guide for application security
Certify your software integrity with Thawte code signing certificates
The future of SaaS and IT infrastructure management
The mandate for application security
Google code cloud punts on-demand embarrassment
Microsoft weighs next-phase in open-source support
iTunes minus the player: hack your Apple beats
Oracle plans cloud strategy