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Microsoft’s appeal to the
antitrust case against Novell has been rejected by the Supreme Court of Appeals
on Tuesday and the complaint will go forward on trial. The antitrust case
between the two parts dates back to the mid 1990s regarding Novell’s software
product WordPerfect.
In 2004 Novell sued Microsoft
for abusing its position and trying to monopolize the market, by simply destroying
WordPerfect. According to that lawsuit, Microsoft made an abuse by suppressing “the
sales of WordPerfect and Novell’s related office productivity.”
Novell argued in its lawsuit
that Microsoft was afraid of the competition WordPerfect would make to its own
software products and specifically kept essential information that would have
allowed a WordPerfect – Windows 95 compatibility.
According to the statistics, WordPerfect
had 50 percent of the market in 1990, and dropped to less than 10 percent in
1996, two years after Novell bought it. At the same time, Microsoft’s Word
dominance on the market became clear, owning 90 percent of it by 1996.
In its recent appeal, Microsoft
tried to argue that the antitrust lawsuit should no longer be valid,
considering Novell is not in the operating system market anymore, but that didn’t
seem to convince the judges. Chief Justice John Roberts, Microsoft shareholder,
recused himself from the decision.
Microsoft already got an
unfavorable decision and if the case goes further on trial, Novell could ask
for more. Microsoft declined to say whether they were planning on settling this
outside the court.
The Redmond-based company
released a statement after the decision: “We filed our petition because it offered
an opportunity to address the question of who may assert antitrust claims. We look
forward to addressing this and other substantive matters in the case before the
trial court. We believe the facts will show that Novell’s claims, which are 12
to 14 years old, are without merit.”
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