Declan McCullagh on Thu, 23 Oct 1997 19:45:30 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> Bill Gates, the Bully Savior, from The Netly News |
***************** http://cgi.pathfinder.com/netly/opinion/0,1042,1517,00.html The Netly News Network (http://netlynews.com/) October 21, 1997 Bill Gates, the Bully Savior by Declan McCullagh (declan@well.com) When the Justice Department yesterday accused Microsoft of using its operating system near-monopoly to violate the law, the government did more than attack the world's largest software company. It also handed Microsoft's chief competitor, Netscape, a major business -- and political -- victory. Netscape has long been urging the Clinton administration to rein in Bill Gates. For years its lobbyists have bent the ears of powerful Washington policymakers. And, unlike many other Silicon Valley chiefs, Netscape's Jim Barksdale -- a veteran of such highly regulated companies as Federal Express and McCaw Cellular -- appears to truly understand how Washington works. So was Janet Reno motivated by politics, or law? "Fundamentally, I think it's a legal issue," says Ed Black, president of the Computer and Communications Industry Association. "But to say whenever the wealthiest man in America and one of the most powerful companies in America is challenged by a cabinet official, you can't say there's no political impact. You're in a political world at that level." When asked to name the most pressing issues Netscape faces in Washington, company lobbyists rattle off a long list of topics from encryption to copyright and education. But antitrust has always topped the list. This, after all, is the company's primary policy goal: to stop what it considers to be Microsoft's predatory practices. "This is not a Netscape-Microsoft issue," says Netscape's public policy counsel Peter Harter. "This is not a browser war. This is about obeying the law." Perhaps. But clearly Netscape has been complaining to the government about Internet Explorer since the Microsoft browser first hit the Net. Naturally, the company cheered Janet Reno's suggestion that Microsoft be punished with a fine of up to $1 million a day. "We're very supportive of the actions the Department of Justice has taken," Roberta Katz, Netscape's chief counsel, told the Netly News last night. "This lawsuit is about preserving competition as we move to the era of digital commerce." It is, of course, also an efficient way for Netscape to protect its commanding share of the browser market. "Bill Gates is a successful rival who makes it difficult for others to do business. Rather than compete against him head to head in the market, competitors turn to antitrust laws," says Don Boudreaux, a professor of law and economics at Clemson University. "What people at Netscape probably don't like is the fact that Internet Explorer is a good product." Netscape has slowly been emerging as the grand marshal in the Everyone But Microsoft parade. Last year Netscape hired the heavyweight Silicon Valley law firm of Wilson, Sonsini, Goodrich & Rosati, whose partner Gary Reback is a veteran anti-Microsoft campaigner. In November 1994 Reback prepared -- after a request from the Department of Justice, which was investigating Microsoft -- a 100-page white paper on behalf of three anonymous high tech clients. The theme: Microsoft's apparent anticompetitive behavior. Netscape's Katz declined to say how much Netscape is assisting the government's most recent probe. "I can't go into the details of that because it's part of their investigation," she says. "Their investigation is broad so we've been asked to provide information on a broad range of software and Internet issues." A broad range of issues is exactly what Barksdale hopes to influence with TechNet, Silicon Valley's first step toward coordinated, net-wide political action. Besides lobbying for laws to benefit its member companies, it also will pour money into national and state political action committees. A lot of money, when you stop to consider just how fat Silicon Valley has become these days. (Its executives total 26 on Forbes' list of the 400 richest in America.) Not surprisingly, TechNet's ranks swell with these CEOs, including most of Microsoft's enemies from the 1995 antitrust battle: Sun Microsystems, Cisco Systems, Intuit, Netscape, and its former chief nemesis, Apple Computer. Microsoft is, noticably, not a member of TechNet, though it's been reported that the world's biggest software maker is certainly welcome. In the meantime, TechNet has already begun flexing its political muscle. Before it even launched in July 1997, members met with President Clinton and perennial Republican presidential contender Jack Kemp. During the last two weeks of August the group feted California Governor Pete Wilson, and attracted four U.S. senators (including Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle (D-SD), who lunched at Netscape). Barksdale also has the ear of Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott: they went to Ole Miss together. Sen. Conrad Burns (R-Montana), who introduced a bill to relax encryption rules, has become another Netscape ally. When the senator christened the Burns Telecommunications Center at Montana State University, Barksdale showed up to speak. Soon afterwards Burns and two other senators wrote a letter to the Federal Trade Commission asking them to investigate Microsoft's antitrust violations. Another Netscape ally is the Consumer Project on Technology, a group founded by Ralph Nader. "Multiple web browsers lead to open standards. One web browser integrated into 90 percent of desktops in America leads us to something brand new for the Internet, which is a set of proprietary standards," says CPT's James Love. "If Netscape exits the market, what's the point of (Internet Engineering Task Force) or standards setting for the Internet?" CPT has demanded even more action from the Justice Department: Love wants to prohibit Microsoft from shipping its browser with its Windows operating system. The organization has organized a two-day "Appraising Microsoft" conference to be held in Washington on November 13 and 14. Microsoft's next move will come when it files court papers next month in response to the government. Yet the march of technological progress seems to be on the side of Bill Gates: When Internet access is seamlessly integrated into Windows, who needs Netscape Navigator? For now, at least, Wall Street doesn't seem especially concerned about what browser consumers will choose. Netscape stock surged more than $4 yesterday, closing at $39.25. But Microsoft shares recovered from an initial drop and was up over $2 a share by lunch. ### ------------------------- Declan McCullagh Time Inc. The Netly News Network Washington Correspondent http://netlynews.com/ --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@icf.de and "info nettime" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@icf.de