Actualités

International

imprimerenvoyerrecevoir

CIO en VO : Microsoft face à un nouveau procès anti-trust


Edition du 19/08/2008 - par CIO Etats-Unis / IDG News Service

Nouveau venu sur la liste des Etats poursuivant Microsoft pour des atteintes à la concurrence : Taïwan. La liste comportait déjà plusieurs états des Etats-Unis, l'Europe, la Corée du Sud...

Taiwan's Fair Trade Commission has launched an investigation into whether or not Microsoft holds a monopoly position over the island's software market and if it abuses such a position, an official said Monday.

The government investigation into Microsoft will also look into complaints Microsoft is limiting consumer choices by restricting the availability of Windows XP on new PCs and whether or not pricing of Microsoft products is fair to consumers on the island.

Taiwan's investigation is unique in that no other country where Microsoft has traditionally faced regulatory issues, including the U.S., Europe and South Korea, is currently looking at the company for the same reason.

"Taiwan doesn't have its own (OS) software," said an official from the Fair Trade Commission. "Most people in Taiwan use Microsoft software and depend on it for work. Their market share should be very high," she said.

Should the world's largest software maker be found to have broken Taiwanese antitrust laws, the company could face a fine of up to NT$25 million (US$797,361) as well as be forced to change some of its business practices on the island.

"We fully intend to comply with the process and make sure they get all the information they need," said Matt Pilla, Microsoft's director of public relations in Asia.

Taiwan's investigation was launched in part due to urging by Taiwan's non-profit Consumers' Foundation.

The group last month called on Microsoft to continue selling Windows XP as an option on all new PCs, saying that discontinuing sales of the OS would violate Taiwanese antitrust laws. The Consumers' Foundation alleges that Microsoft is using its market position to try to force people in Taiwan to switch to Windows Vista.

The foundation conducted a survey on the island that found 67 percent of consumers are opposed to Microsoft's decision to stop selling XP at the end of June.

The main complaint is against a lack of choice when people buy new computers. Around 56 percent of survey respondents who had bought a new computer recently were told they could not buy Windows XP and instead were forced to purchase Vista, the foundation said.

The foundation said Microsoft controls 98 percent of Taiwan's OS market share, with 75 percent of survey respondents using Windows XP on their PCs and 23 percent using Vista.

A majority of respondents to the survey, over 53 percent, said they did not think Vista is as useful as XP, while 23 percent said Vista is the better OS.

Page suivante (2/2) >


Rejoignez cio-online.com, commentez cet article
Nombre de commentaires postés (0) - Lire tous les commentaires
Pour commenter cet article inscrivez vous ou identifiez vous ci-dessous si vous êtes déjà inscrit :

Email :
Mot de passe :  oublié ?
Mémoriser mes identifiants
L'ACTUALITÉ DU MOMENT
Sondage flash : les usages professionnels des réseaux sociaux peinent à convaincre

(01/12/2) - Malgré notre article sur l'étude d'Anderson Analytics, les usages (...)

Etude mondiale CIO/PWC : la sécurité trop souvent vue comme un simple problème technique

(01/12/2) - « Les dirigeants d'entreprises et d'administrations se préoccupent de plus en plus (...)

La réponse au paradoxe de Robert Solow

(01/12/2) - « On voit des ordinateurs partout, sauf dans les statistiques de productivité » a (...)

Guerre de la maintenance : SAP répond.

(28/11/2) - Avec l'établissement d'Enterprise Support à 22%, vous avez à affronter une véritable (...)

CIO en VO : la belle histoire d'Asterisk, le libérateur de l'IP-PBX

(28/11/2) - Imagine an IP voice and unified communications system that can be integrated into (...)

Recherche

Sondage flash
Pratiquez-vous le e-learning ?
Conférences
29/01/2009
TELECOMS : l'entreprise étendue et mobile
De 8h30 à 14h00 à l'Automobile Club de France - Paris
Agenda
Du lundi 1 décembre 2008 au mardi 2 décembre 2008
Forum Mondial du Logiciel Libre
Maison de la Chimie, 28 rue saint Dominique 75007 Paris