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Microsoft has been involved in numerous high-profile legal matters that involved litigation over the history of the company, including cases against the United States, the European Union, and competitors.

Governmental

[edit]

In its 2008 annual report, Microsoft stated:[1]

Government regulatory actions and court decisions may hinder our ability to provide the benefits of our software to consumers and businesses, thereby reducing the attractiveness of our products and the revenues that come from them. New actions could be initiated at any time, either by these or other governments or private claimants, including with respect to new versions of Windows or other Microsoft products. The outcome of such actions, or steps taken to avoid them, could adversely affect us in a variety of ways, including:

  • We may have to choose between withdrawing products from certain geographies to avoid fines or designing and developing alternative versions of those products to comply with government rulings, which may entail removing functionality that customers want or on which developers rely
  • The rulings described above may be cited as a precedent in other competition law proceedings.

Antitrust

[edit]

In the 1990s, Microsoft adopted exclusionary licensing under which PC manufacturers were required to pay for an MS-DOS license even when the system was shipped with an alternative operating system. Critics attest that it also used predatory tactics to price its competitors out of the market and that Microsoft erected technical barriers to make it appear that competing products did not work on its operating system.[2][3] In a consent decree filed on July 15, 1994, Microsoft agreed to a deal under which, among other things, the company would not make the sale of its operating systems conditional on the purchase of any other Microsoft product. On February 14, 1995, Judge Stanley Sporkin issued a 45-page opinion that the consent decree was not in the public interest. Later that spring, a three-judge federal appeals panel removed Sporkin and reassigned the consent decree. Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson entered the decree on August 21, 1995, three days before the launch of Windows 95.[4]

A Microsoft purchase of Intuit was scuttled in 1994 due to antitrust concerns that Microsoft would be purchasing a major competitor.[5]

After bundling the Internet Explorer web browser into its Windows operating system in the late 1990s (without requiring a separate purchase) and acquiring a dominant share in the web browser market, the antitrust case United States v. Microsoft was brought against the company. In a series of rulings by judge Thomas Penfield Jackson, the company was found to have violated its earlier consent decree and abused its monopoly in the desktop operating systems market. The "findings of fact" during the antitrust case established that Microsoft has a monopoly in the PC desktop operating systems market:[6]

Viewed together, three main facts indicate that Microsoft enjoys monopoly power. First, Microsoft's share of the market for Intel-compatible PC operating systems is extremely large and stable. Second, Microsoft's dominant market share is protected by a high barrier to entry. Third, and largely as a result of that barrier, Microsoft's customers lack a commercially viable alternative to Windows. (III.34)

The findings of fact go on to explain the nature of the "barrier to entry":[6]

The fact that there is a multitude of people using Windows makes the product more attractive to consumers. The large installed base ... impels ISVs (independent software vendors) to write applications first and foremost to Windows, thereby ensuring a large body of applications from which consumers can choose. The large body of applications thus reinforces demand for Windows, augmenting Microsoft's dominant position and thereby perpetuating ISV incentives to write applications principally for Windows ... The small or non-existent market share of an aspiring competitor makes it prohibitively expensive for the aspirant to develop its PC operating system into an acceptable substitute for Windows. (III.39–40)

The proposed remedy (dividing Microsoft into two companies) was never applied.[7] The judge who decided the original case was removed from the decision concerning the penalty due to public statements, and replaced by a judge more sympathetic to Microsoft. While new penalties were under consideration, the Clinton administration ended and the Bush administration took office. The new administration announced that in the interest of ending the case as quickly as possible, it would no longer seek to break the company up, and that it would stop investigating claims of illegal tying of products.[8] Eighteen days later, Judge Kollar-Kotelly ordered the justice department and Microsoft to "engage in discussions seven days a week, 24 hours a day."[9] The judge cited the events of September 11, 2001, in her direction to begin settlement talks but did not explain the linkage between the two.[10][11][12] Attorney General Ashcroft, however, denied that the events of September 11 had any effect on the outcome.[13] Microsoft subsequently reached a settlement with the Department of Justice and some of the states which brought suit against it.[citation needed] Several[quantify] class-action lawsuits filed after the conviction are still pending.[when?][citation needed]

In early 2002, Microsoft proposed to settle the private lawsuits by donating $1 billion (~$1.66 billion in 2024) USD in money, software, services, and training, including Windows licenses and refurbished PCs, to about 12,500 underprivileged public schools. This was seen by the judge as a potential windfall for Microsoft, not only in educating schoolchildren on Microsoft solutions but also in flooding the market with Microsoft products. Among the protesters were Apple Inc. which feared further loss of its educational market share. The federal judge rejected the proposed settlement.[14]

Headquarters of the European Commission, which has imposed several fines on Microsoft

In 2003 to 2004, the European Commission investigated the bundling of Windows Media Player into Windows, a practice which rivals complained was destroying the market for their own products.[citation needed] Negotiations between Microsoft and the Commission broke down in March 2004, and the company was subsequently handed down a record fine of €497 million ($666 million) for its breaches of EU competition law.[citation needed] Separate investigations into alleged abuses of the server market were also ongoing at the same time.[citation needed] On December 22, 2004, the European Court decided that the measures imposed on Microsoft by the European Commission would not be delayed, as was requested by Microsoft while waiting for the appeal.[citation needed] Microsoft has since paid a €497 million fine, shipped versions of Windows without Windows Media Player, and licensed many of the protocols used in its products to developers in countries within the European Economic Area. However, the European Commission has characterized the much delayed protocol licensing as unreasonable, called Microsoft "non-compliant" and still violating antitrust law in 2007, and said that its RAND terms were above market prices; in addition, they said software patents covering the code "lack significant innovation", which Microsoft and the EC had agreed would determine licensing fees.[15] Microsoft responded by saying, that other government agencies had found "considerable innovation".[16][17] Microsoft appealed the facts and ruling to the European Court of First Instance with hearings in September 2006.

In 2000, a group of customers and business filed a class action suit in Comes v. Microsoft Corp., alleging that Microsoft violated Iowa's antitrust laws by engaging in monopolistic practices.[18] In 2002, the Iowa Supreme Court ruled that indirect purchasers (consumers who purchased computers from a third-party, with Microsoft's software pre-installed in the computer) could be included as members of the class in the class action suit.[19] On remand, the trial court certified two classes of plaintiffs, and the Iowa Supreme Court ultimately affirmed the class certification.[20] In August 2007, the parties ultimately reached a settlement valued at $179.95 million.[21]

On September 17, 2007, the EU Court of First Instance rejected Microsoft's appeal.[22]

The court affirmed the original contested finding:[23]

21 In the contested decision, the Commission finds that Microsoft infringed Article 82 EC and Article 54 of the Agreement on the European Economic Area (EEA) by twice abusing a dominant position. 22 The Commission first identifies three separate worldwide product markets and considers that Microsoft had a dominant position on two of them. It then finds that Microsoft had engaged in two kinds of abusive conduct. As a result it imposes a fine and a number of remedies on Microsoft.

All elements of Microsoft's appeal were dismissed.[24]

Microsoft accepted the judgment of the Court of First Instance and proceeded to make available interoperability information as originally required by the European Commission.

Microsoft also faced competition law in South Korea and was fined $32 million (~$49.2 million in 2024) in December 2005 and ordered to unbundle instant messaging, Windows Media Player and Windows Media Service, or let competitors' products take their place.[25] Microsoft noted in their October 2005 SEC filing that they may have to pull out of South Korea, although they later denied fulfilling such a plan.[26] Microsoft's 2006 appeal was struck down; they have another appeal pending.[citation needed] Microsoft also faced sanctions from Japan Fair Trade Commission twice in 1998 when Japanese manufacturers were forced to include Microsoft Word on new systems instead of homegrown word processor software Ichitaro,[27] and again in 2004 for clauses detrimental to ability of Japanese computer manufacturers to obtain a Windows OEM license.

European antitrust regulators on February 27, 2008, fined Microsoft $1.3 billion for failing to comply with a 2004 judgment, that the company had abused its market dominance. The new fine by the European Commission was the largest it has ever imposed on an individual company, and brings the total in fines imposed on Microsoft to around $US 2.5 billion, with current exchange rates.

Microsoft had previously been fined after the commission determined in 2004 that the company had abused the dominance of its Windows operating system to gain unfair market advantage. The commission imposing the new fine said, that it was because the company had not met the prescribed remedies after the earlier judgment.[28]

In July 2020, Slack filed an antitrust complaint with the European Commission against Microsoft, alleging that Microsoft broke EU competition rules by tying its Microsoft Teams software to its Microsoft 365 and Office 365 software suites.[29] In July 2023, the European Commission formally opened an investigation into the alleged antitrust violation,[30] and in June 2024 the European Commission announced its preliminary view that Microsoft had violated antitrust law, finding that "Microsoft may have granted Teams a distribution advantage by not giving customers the choice whether or not to acquire access to Teams" when purchasing its other software suites, and that "This advantage may have been further exacerbated by interoperability limitations between Teams' competitors and Microsoft's offerings."[31] If the European Commission confirms its preliminary view, Microsoft potentially faces a fine of up to 10% of its annual worldwide revenue.[31]

European Union

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The European Union Microsoft competition case is a case brought by the European Commission of the European Union (EU) against Microsoft for abuse of its dominant position in the market (according to competition law). It started as a complaint from Novell over Microsoft's licensing practices in 1993, and eventually resulted in the EU ordering Microsoft to divulge certain information about its server products and release a version of Microsoft Windows without Windows Media Player.

February 2008 fine

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On February 27, 2008, the European Union (EU) competitions commission announced its decision to fine the Microsoft Corporation 899 million (US$1.35 billion), approximately 1/10 of the company's net yearly earnings, for failing to comply with the 2004 antitrust order.[32]

The first decision in this antitrust case was given in 2004 citing that Microsoft withheld needed interoperability information from rival software companies which prevented them from making software compatible with Windows. The commission ordered Microsoft to provide this information. Microsoft agreed to this, providing the information for royalty fees of 6.85% of the licensee's revenues for the product on grounds of innovation (specifically, 3.87% for the patent license and of 2.98% for the information license). The EU found these royalty fees unreasonable and Microsoft was ordered to lower them. Microsoft complied with this, adjusting the royalty rates to 1.2% (changing the rates for the licenses to 0.7% and 0.5%, respectively) in the European Union, while keeping the rate the same for the rest of the world. The EU still saw this as an unreasonable rate, and Microsoft, two months after lowering the rates, reduced the rates yet again to a flat rate of €10,000 or a royalty of 0.4% applicable worldwide. Microsoft's royalty rates, which were deemed unreasonable for the period of 15 months between June 21, 2006, and October 21, 2007, are the cause for the fine. So far, the EU has fined Microsoft €1.68 billion in 3 separate fines in this case. This fine will go towards the European Union annual budget.

European Commissioner for Competition Neelie Kroes stated that the fine was "reasonable and proportionate," as the figure could have gone up as high as €1.5 billion, the maximum that the EU commission can impose. She also said that it should act as "a signal to the outside world, and especially Microsoft, that they should stick to the rules" and that "Talk is cheap. Flouting the rules is expensive." Although she also expressed hope that "today's decision closes a dark chapter in Microsoft's record of non-compliance with the Commission."

It is not certain whether Microsoft will appeal this decision. A Microsoft spokesperson has stated that Microsoft will review this latest fine, citing that "The commission announced in October 2007 that Microsoft was in full compliance with the 2004 decision, so these fines are about the past issues that have been resolved."[citation needed] Microsoft's General Counsel Brad Smith commented "It's clearly very important to us as a company that we comply with our obligations under European law. We will study this decision carefully, and if there are additional steps that we need to take in order to comply with it, we will take them." Microsoft had appealed against fines by the EU before, but all the charges were defeated. If Microsoft does not appeal the decision, the company will have 3 months (starting February 27) to pay the fine in full.

The decisions came after Microsoft announced they were disclosing 30,000 pages of previously secret software code last Thursday (February 21). The EU competition commissioner commented that this move "does not necessarily equal a change in business practice."

Spanish antitrust investigation
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In September 2011, the competition commission in Spain began an investigation into Microsoft's licence agreements, which prevent the transfer of Microsoft software to third parties.[33][34]

United States

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United States v. Microsoft Corp., 87 F. Supp. 2d 30 (D.D.C. 2000) was a set of consolidated civil actions filed against Microsoft Corporation on May 18, 1998, by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) and twenty U.S. states. Joel I. Klein was the lead prosecutor. The plaintiffs alleged that Microsoft abused monopoly power in its handling of operating system sales and web browser sales. The issue central to the case was whether Microsoft was allowed to bundle its flagship Internet Explorer (IE) web browser software with its Microsoft Windows operating system. Bundling them together is alleged to have been responsible for Microsoft's victory in the browser wars as every Windows user had a copy of Internet Explorer. It was further alleged that this unfairly restricted the market for competing web browsers (such as Netscape Navigator or Opera) that were slow to download over a modem or had to be purchased at a store. Underlying these disputes were questions over whether Microsoft altered or manipulated its application programming interfaces (APIs) to favor Internet Explorer over third party web browsers, Microsoft's conduct in forming restrictive licensing agreements with OEM computer manufacturers, and Microsoft's intent in its course of conduct.

Microsoft stated that the merging of Microsoft Windows and Internet Explorer was the result of innovation and competition, that the two were now the same product and were inextricably linked together and that consumers were now getting all the benefits of IE for free. Those who opposed Microsoft's position countered that the browser was still a distinct and separate product which did not need to be tied to the operating system, since a separate version of Internet Explorer was available for Mac OS. They also asserted that IE was not really free because its development and marketing costs may have kept the price of Windows higher than it might otherwise have been. The case was tried before U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson. The DOJ was initially represented by David Boies. On June 30, 2004, the U.S. appeals court unanimously approved the settlement with the Justice Department, rejecting objections that the sanctions were inadequate.

Acquisition of Activision Blizzard

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On January 18, 2022, Microsoft announced its intent to acquire Activision Blizzard for $68.7 billion in cash. Under the terms of the agreement, which was finalized on October 13, 2023, Microsoft would own Activision, Blizzard Entertainment, and King under the Microsoft Gaming umbrella. The acquisition proposal itself has reignited antitrust concerns targeted at Microsoft, with mixed reactions from international regulators and rival companies. In December 2022, Microsoft faced a legal action by customers against the acquisition under Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914.[35]

Usage of Microsoft Office 365 and Teams in schools and governmental institutions

[edit]

The Court of Justice of the European Union on 16 July 2020 had ruled that "it is illegal to send private data from the EU to the US"[36][37]

Microsoft Office 365 had been banned from several schools in Europe over privacy concerns.[38]

In March 2024, the European Data Protection Supervisor (EDPS) found that the use of Microsoft 365 by the European Commission (EC) violated "several key data protection rules" of the EU Regulation 2018/1725 that defines privacy rules for EU institutions. The EC was ordered by the EDPS to suspend all Microsoft 365 related data flows that violated the rules.[39]

Tax disputes

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In 2007, the Internal Revenue Service began investigating Microsoft over allegations that the company may have transferred some software rights to its international subsidiaries in an effort to evade paying tax to the United States. In 2014, after Microsoft was held in contempt of court after refusing to hand over the required foreign data,[40] Microsoft filed a Freedom of Information request on September 22, 2014, regarding a contract between law firm Quinn Emmanuel Urqhart and Sullivan and the IRS; when IRS did not respond within the required 20 day period (the IRS responded by saying it needed an extension, but after the time elapsed did not provide the requested information) Microsoft filed a lawsuit against the IRS in November.[41][42]

Other

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In March 2004, during a consumer class-action lawsuit in Minnesota, internal documents subpoenaed from Microsoft revealed that the company had violated nondisclosure agreements seven years earlier in obtaining business plans from Go Corporation, using them to develop and announce a competing product named PenWindows, and convincing Intel to reduce its investment in Go. After Go was purchased by AT&T and Go's tablet-based computing efforts were shelved, PenWindows development was dropped.[43]

In May 2004, a class-action lawsuit accused Microsoft of overcharging customers in the state of California. The company settled the case for $1.1 billion, and a California court ordered Microsoft to pay an additional $258 million in legal fees (including over $3,000 per hour for the lead attorney in the case, more than $2,000 per hour for colleagues, and in excess of $1,000 per hour for administrative work). A Microsoft attorney responded, "Somebody ends up paying for this. These large fee awards get passed on to consumers."[44] The total bill for legal fees was later reduced to just over $112 million.[45] Because of the structure of the settlement, the law firm which sued Microsoft could end up getting more money from the company than California consumers and schools, the beneficiaries of the settlement.

In 2006, Microsoft initiated an investigation of Lithuanian government institutions for determining whether they choose long-term strategies of the software they use correctly. The investigation, funded by Microsoft itself, will be performed by the Vilnius University together with the Lithuanian Institution of the Free Market, a think tank organization. The investigation was initialised after the government started to prepare 860 thousand litas project to encourage the use of open-source software. The vice-president of Microsoft, Vahe Torossian, stated that "the government should not be technologically subjectivist".[46]

Microsoft was sued for the "Windows Vista Capable" logo[47][48] and in Iowa.[49][50][51][52][excessive citations] Microsoft Word was also a subject of court case.[53]

On July 12, 2013, Microsoft is suing the U.S. Customs and Border Protection over Google phone ban. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano is also named in the lawsuit.[54]

Private

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Microsoft has also fought numerous legal battles against private companies. The most prominent ones are against:

  • Alcatel-Lucent, which won US$1.52 billion in a lawsuit which alleged that Microsoft had infringed its patents on playback of audio files. This ruling was overturned in a higher court.[55]
  • Apple Inc. (known as Apple Computer, Inc. at the time), which accused Microsoft in the late 1980s of copying the "look and feel" of the graphical user interface of Apple's operating systems. The courts ruled in favor of Microsoft in 1994. Another suit by Apple accused Microsoft, along with Intel and the San Francisco Canyon Company, in 1995 of knowingly stealing several thousand lines of QuickTime source code in an effort to improve the performance of Video for Windows.[56][57][58][59] After a threat to withdraw support for Office for Mac,[60][61] this lawsuit was ultimately settled in 1997. Apple agreed to make Internet Explorer the default browser over Netscape, and Microsoft agreed to continue developing Office and other software for the Mac for the next 5 years, purchase $150 million of non-voting Apple stock, and made a quiet payoff estimated to be in the US$500 million-$2 billion range.[62][63][64][65]
  • AOL, on behalf of its Netscape division.[66] Netscape (as an independent company) also was involved in the United States v. Microsoft antitrust suit.
  • AtomicPark.com, which in 2009 was ordered to pay $1.2 million to Microsoft for selling unauthorized versions of Microsoft software.[67][68]
  • Be Inc., which accused Microsoft of exclusionary and anti-competitive behavior intended to drive Be out of the market. Be even offered to license its Be Operating System (BeOS) for free to any PC vendors who would ship it pre-installed, but the vendors declined due to what Be believes were fears of pricing retaliation from Microsoft: by raising the price of Microsoft Windows for one particular PC vendor, Microsoft could price that vendor's PCs out of the market.[69]
  • Bristol Technology, which accused Microsoft illegally withheld Windows source code and used its dominant position with Windows to move into other markets.[70][71][72] A ruling later ordered Microsoft to pay $1 million to Bristol Technologies[73] (see also Windows Interface Source Environment).
  • Caldera, Inc. in 1996, accused Microsoft of several anti-competitive practices,[3] including vaporware announcements, creating FUD, exclusionary licensing and artificial tying.[74][75][76][77] One of the claims was down to bundling and tying MS-DOS 7 and Windows 4 into a single product (Windows 95) for the sole purpose of eliminating competition, another to having modified Windows 3.1 so that it would not run on DR DOS 6.0 although there was no technical reason for it not to work.[74][78] Several industry experts revealed that Microsoft put encrypted code, which became known as AARD code, in five otherwise unrelated Microsoft programs in order to prevent the functioning of DR DOS in pre-releases (beta versions) of Windows 3.1,[79][80][81] and that it was technically possible to run Windows 4 on DR-DOS 7 after bypassing some new and non-essential interface code through WinGlue.[82][83][84][85][86][87] In 2000, Microsoft settled out of court for an undisclosed sum, which in 2009 was revealed to be $280 million,[88][89][90][91][92] and the Caldera evidence was destroyed in 2003.[93][94]
  • Opera Software, which accused Microsoft of intentionally making its MSN service incompatible with the Opera browser on several occasions.[95][96]
  • Sendo, which accused Microsoft of terminating their partnership so it could steal Sendo's technology to use in Pocket PC 2002 Phone Edition.[97]
  • Spyglass, which licensed its browser to Microsoft in return for a percentage of each sale; Microsoft turned the browser into Internet Explorer and bundled it with Windows, giving it away to gain market share but effectively destroying any chance of Spyglass making money from the deal they had signed with Microsoft; Spyglass sued for deception and won an $8 million settlement.[98]
  • Stac Electronics, which accused Microsoft of stealing its data compression code and using it in MS-DOS 6.0.[99] Microsoft eventually lost the subsequent Stac v. Microsoft lawsuit and was ordered by a federal court to pay roughly $120 million in compensation.[100]
  • Sun Microsystems, which held Microsoft in violation of contract for including a modified version of Java in Microsoft Windows that provided Windows-specific extensions to Sun's Java language; Microsoft lost this decision in court and were forced to stop shipping their Windows-specific Java virtual machine. Microsoft eventually ceased to include any Java Virtual Machine in Windows, and Windows users who require a Java Virtual Machine need to download the software or otherwise acquire a copy from a source other than Microsoft.
  • Zhongyi Electronic, which, having licensed two fonts which it had designed to Microsoft for use only in Windows 95, filed suit in China in April 2007, accusing Microsoft of using those fonts in subsequent Windows 98, 2000, XP, Server 2003 and four other Chinese-language Windows operating systems. Beijing's No. 1 intermediate people's court ruled on November 16, 2009, that Microsoft violated the scope of licensing agreements between the two companies. The result of the verdict is that Microsoft has to stop selling Chinese-language versions of the aforementioned operating systems.[101][102] Microsoft said it will appeal.[103] One of the fonts in question may be SimSun.[104]
  • Many other smaller companies have filed patent abuse and predatory practice suits against Microsoft.

Patents

[edit]

Alcatel-Lucent

[edit]

The dispute between Microsoft and Lucent (and later Alcatel-Lucent) began in 2003 when Lucent Technologies (acquired by Alcatel in 2006) filed suit against Gateway in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California in San Diego. Lucent also sued Dell in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia; soon thereafter, that court transferred the Dell case to San Diego, where it was consolidated with the case against Gateway. Lucent claimed in this first San Diego case that Dell and Gateway had violated patents on MP3-related technologies developed by Bell Labs, a division of predecessor company American Telephone & Telegraph. Other patents said to be infringed relate to MPEG video technology, speech technology, internet technology, and other technologies. Microsoft intervened in the lawsuit in April 2003 and Alcatel was added after it acquired Lucent.[105]

After the first San Diego lawsuit was filed, Microsoft and Lucent have filed additional patent lawsuits against each other. In February 2007, Microsoft filed a lawsuit at the International Trade Commission claiming that Alcatel-Lucent infringed its patents.[106] There is a second case in San Diego where Microsoft is asserting that Alcatel-Lucent infringes 10 of its patents, and yet another case in Texas where each alleges that the other is infringing its patents.[107]

Burst.com

[edit]
  • Burst.com claims that Microsoft stole Burst's patented technology for delivering high speed streaming sound and video content on the internet. Also at issue in the case is a 35-week period of missing emails in the evidence Microsoft handed over to Burst which was discovered by Burst.com's lawyers. Burst accuses Microsoft of crafting a 30-day email deletion policy specifically to cover up illegal activity. Microsoft settled with the company for $60 million in exchange for an agreement to license some of the company's technologies.[108][109][110]

Eolas

[edit]
  • Eolas and University of California, which accused Microsoft of using some of its software patents in their web browser, won $521 million in court;[111] however, Eolas' patents were invalidated in 2012.

SurfCast

[edit]

SurfCast is suing Microsoft for infringing patent on Live Tiles.[112]

Copyrights

[edit]

Apple

[edit]

Apple Computer Inc. v. Microsoft Corporation, 35 F.3d 1435 (9th Cir. 1994) was a copyright infringement lawsuit in which Apple Computer, Inc. (now Apple Inc.) sought to prevent Microsoft Corporation and Hewlett-Packard from using visual graphical user interface (GUI) elements that were similar to those in Apple's Lisa and Macintosh operating systems. Some critics claimed that Apple was really attempting to gain all intellectual property rights over the desktop metaphor for computer interfaces, and perhaps all GUIs, on personal computers. Apple lost all claims in the lawsuit, except that the court ruled that the "trash can" icon and file folder icons from Hewlett-Packard's now-forgotten NewWave windows application were infringing. The lawsuit was filed on March 17, 1988 and lasted four years; the decision was affirmed on appeal in 1994,[113] and Apple's appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court was denied.

Trademarks

[edit]

Lindows

[edit]

Microsoft v. Lindows.com, Inc. was a court case brought on December 20, 2001, by Microsoft against Lindows, Inc, claiming that the name "Lindows" was a violation of its trademark "Windows". In addition to the United States, Microsoft has also sued Lindows in Sweden, France, Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and Canada. Michael Robertson has called this situation "Sextuple Jeopardy", an extension of the term double jeopardy.

In response to these lawsuits, Lindows had launched ChoicePC.com, which allows people to purchase lifetime Lindows memberships that includes a free copy of LindowsOS, free LindowsOS upgrades for life, and a ChoicePC.com T-shirt, for US$100. All money from the memberships goes towards helping Lindows in its legal battle against Microsoft.

MikeRoweSoft

[edit]

In a legal dispute, Microsoft sued a Canadian high school student named Mike Rowe over the domain name MikeRoweSoft.com.[114] The case received international press attention following Microsoft's perceived heavy handed approach to a 12th grade student's part-time web design business and the subsequent support that Rowe received from the online community.[115] A settlement was eventually agreed, with Rowe granting ownership of the domain to Microsoft in return for training and gifts.[116]

As of this writing, the domain MikeRoweSoft.com still redirects to Microsoft.com.

Shah

[edit]

Microsoft sued several parties for contributory cybersquatting—that is, encouraging others (through software and instructional videos) to cybersquat on domain names that infringed on Microsoft's trademarks. Microsoft prevailed in court and also established a precedent that liabilities under the Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act (ACPA) include contributory trademark infringement.

Windows Commander

[edit]

From 1993 until 2002, Total Commander was called Windows Commander; the name was changed in 2002, out of fear of a lawsuit after the developers received a letter from Microsoft pointing out that the word "windows" was trademarked by Microsoft.[117]

wxWindows

[edit]

The wxWindows project was renamed to wxWidgets in September 2003 out of fear of a lawsuit after the founder developer Julian Smart received a letter from Microsoft pointing out that the 'Windows' is a UK trademark owned by Microsoft.[118]

Microwindows

[edit]

The Microwindows project was renamed to Nano-X Window System in January 2005, due to legal threats from Microsoft regarding the Windows trademark.[119]

Other

[edit]

Ticketmaster deep linking case

[edit]

In 1997, Ticketmaster sued Microsoft over practice of deep linking - at the time a controversial practice as it was argued it would bypass advertising on a website's front page - on its Sidewalk.com website, having previously blocked requests coming from the website following a stalemate of an agreement that would allowed such.[120] The case was settled two years later when Microsoft agreed to stop deep linking Ticketmaster on Sidewalk.com.[121]

Xbox 360

[edit]

Microsoft has been accused of deceiving consumers by concealing the high failure rate of its Xbox 360 game console. A woman from California sued Microsoft in October 2008 in Superior Court in Sacramento County, stating that the company violated multiple state consumer-protection and unfair-competition laws. The woman alleged that the company continued to sell the Xbox 360 even though it knew that the console's hardware was likely to fail.[122][123][124]

OpenAI data scraping

[edit]

In June 2023, a lawsuit claimed that Microsoft's partner and supplier OpenAI scraped 300 billion words online without consent and without registering as a data broker. It was filed in San Francisco, California, by sixteen anonymous plaintiffs. They also claimed that Microsoft and OpenAI continued to unlawfully collect and use personal data from millions of consumers worldwide to train their artificial intelligence models.[125]

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Microsoft litigation encompasses the protracted series of antitrust enforcement actions and intellectual property disputes involving Microsoft Corporation, stemming from its dominance in personal computing software markets since the 1990s.[1][2] The most defining case, United States v. Microsoft Corp., was filed by the U.S. Department of Justice in 1998, alleging violations of Sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act through Microsoft's monopoly maintenance in operating systems and unlawful tying of Internet Explorer to Windows 95 and 98.[3] The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia found in 2000 that Microsoft had engaged in exclusionary practices to stifle competition, including predatory acts against Netscape Navigator, but the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals in 2001 reversed the tying claim and remanded for remedy adjustments, ultimately leading to a settlement requiring Microsoft to share application programming interfaces and abstain from certain restrictive contracts with original equipment manufacturers.[4][5] Parallel scrutiny from the European Commission resulted in multiple fines exceeding €2 billion, beginning with a €497 million penalty in 2004 for withholding interoperability information from competitors and bundling Windows Media Player, followed by €899 million in 2008 and €561 million in 2013 for repeated non-compliance with browser choice and technical disclosure commitments.[2][6][7] More recently, investigations into bundling Microsoft Teams with Office 365 prompted a 2023 formal charge, resolved in 2025 via commitments to unbundle the products across the European Economic Area without a fine.[8] Beyond antitrust, Microsoft has litigated extensively over patents, both as plaintiff and defendant, with notable outcomes including a $1.52 billion verdict against it in favor of Alcatel-Lucent in 2007 (later reduced and settled) for audio codec infringements and a $242 million jury award to IPA Technologies in 2024 for voice assistant technology used in Cortana, which Microsoft settled post-trial.[9][10] These disputes underscore Microsoft's strategic use of intellectual property to defend market position amid ongoing regulatory probes, such as the U.S. Federal Trade Commission's 2024 inquiry into its cloud licensing and bundling practices.[11]

Antitrust and Competition Challenges

United States Antitrust Proceedings

The United States Department of Justice (DOJ) first investigated Microsoft for potential antitrust violations in the early 1990s, with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) examining its software licensing agreements with original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) starting in 1990.[12] The DOJ assumed the probe in 1993, leading to a 1994 consent decree that required Microsoft to revise certain licensing terms but imposed limited behavioral restrictions.[3] These early actions centered on allegations that Microsoft used restrictive contracts to protect its dominance in personal computer operating systems, though no monopoly maintenance claims were pursued at the time.[13] The landmark proceedings began on May 18, 1998, when the DOJ, joined by 20 states, filed United States v. Microsoft Corp. in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, accusing Microsoft of violating Sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Antitrust Act.[3] The complaint alleged that Microsoft unlawfully maintained a monopoly in Intel-compatible PC operating systems, holding over 90% market share with Windows, and attempted to monopolize the web browser market by bundling Internet Explorer with Windows at no extra charge, integrating it into the OS to disadvantage rivals like Netscape Navigator.[1] Specific practices included exclusive deals with OEMs prohibiting installation of competing browsers, technical restrictions on non-Microsoft middleware, and misleading statements about browser functionality to preserve Windows' applications barrier to entry.[1] Trial commenced in October 1998 before Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson, featuring testimony from Microsoft executives and industry witnesses; the DOJ presented evidence of Microsoft's internal communications acknowledging competitive threats from Java and browsers.[14] In November 1999, Judge Jackson issued findings of fact determining Microsoft possessed monopoly power and willfully maintained it through anticompetitive means, including bundling as an illegal tie under a rule-of-reason analysis adjusted for network effects.[1] Conclusions of law in June 2000 held the conduct violated antitrust laws, rejecting Microsoft's defenses of innovation and pro-competitive justifications.[4] Jackson ordered a breakup of Microsoft into separate operating systems and applications businesses in June 2000, but the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals in June 2001 reversed the divestiture as premature, criticized Jackson's conduct, and remanded for a new judge while upholding most monopoly findings.[15] The case settled via a November 2001 consent decree approved in 2002 by Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, requiring Microsoft to share application programming interfaces with rivals, abstain from retaliating against OEMs or distributors supporting competitors, appoint a technical oversight committee, and undergo periodic compliance reviews—remedies that expired in 2008 and were extended to 2012.[16] Nine states rejected the settlement and pursued stricter remedies, resulting in a 2002-2003 trial where Kollar-Kotelly imposed additional requirements in November 2003, such as mandatory display of rival software launch icons and uniform contract terms for OEMs, effective from November 2004 after appeals.[17] Microsoft also settled private suits, including a $1.375 billion agreement with Caldera Inc. in 2000 over DR-DOS claims.[14] Enforcement oversight by the DOJ continued until 2011, with reports documenting Microsoft's compliance amid criticisms from some states of insufficient structural changes to curb ongoing bundling practices.[18] In recent years, antitrust scrutiny has revived amid Microsoft's expansion into cloud computing and AI. The FTC issued a civil investigative demand to Microsoft in late 2024, probing bundling of Teams with Office 365, Azure cloud practices, and potential exclusionary conduct in productivity software and enterprise markets, building on a 2023 administrative complaint tied to the Activision Blizzard merger review.[19] [20] As of October 2025, the investigation remains ongoing without formal charges, reflecting heightened FTC focus on vertical integration in tech platforms.[21] These proceedings echo 1990s concerns over leveraging dominance across products but emphasize data-driven markets and subscription models.[22]

European Union Competition Enforcement

The European Commission has enforced competition law against Microsoft primarily under Article 102 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, targeting alleged abuses of dominant position in personal computer operating systems and related software markets. Investigations began in 1998 following complaints from competitors like Sun Microsystems regarding interoperability between Windows client and server software. The Commission's actions have resulted in multiple fines totaling over €2 billion and imposed behavioral remedies, including unbundling products and sharing technical information.[2] In its landmark March 24, 2004 decision, the Commission found Microsoft abused its dominance by bundling Windows Media Player with Windows and refusing to supply interoperability information to rival work group server vendors, stifling competition in media playing and server markets. It imposed a €497 million fine—the largest antitrust penalty at the time—and required Microsoft to license protocol specifications for 120,000 pages of documentation at reasonable rates for five years, offer a version of Windows without Media Player (Windows XP N), and appoint a monitoring trustee. Microsoft appealed to the Court of First Instance, which largely upheld the decision on September 17, 2007, confirming the tying and refusal to supply as abuses while annulling parts of the fine calculation.[2][23] Subsequent enforcement addressed non-compliance. On July 12, 2006, the Commission fined Microsoft €280.5 million for failing to fully disclose server protocols. Further, on February 27, 2008, it levied an €899 million penalty (later reduced to €860 million by the General Court in 2012) for charging unreasonable prices for protocol access and inadequate disclosure, marking the highest fine then imposed for breaching antitrust commitments. In the browser market, following a 2009 settlement requiring a "browser choice screen" for European Windows users, the Commission fined Microsoft €561 million on March 6, 2013, for failing to display the screen to users who upgraded via Windows Update between May 2011 and July 2012.[2][6][24] More recently, the Commission investigated bundling of Microsoft Teams with Office and Microsoft 365 suites, prompted by complaints from Slack in 2020 and others in 2023. On June 25, 2024, it issued a Statement of Objections alleging the tying abused Microsoft's dominance in productivity applications, foreclosing competitors in collaboration tools. To resolve the case without admitting liability, Microsoft offered commitments in 2025, including unbundling Teams for new EEA customers from September 2024, allowing removal for existing subscribers, providing interoperability APIs with rival platforms, and offering Office without Teams at a 25-40% discount. The Commission accepted these binding commitments on September 11, 2025, averting a potential fine up to 10% of Microsoft's global turnover and closing the probe.[2][25][26]

Acquisition Scrutiny and Merger Blocks

Microsoft's acquisitions have faced heightened antitrust scrutiny from U.S., EU, and UK regulators, primarily due to concerns over potential entrenchment of dominance in gaming, cloud computing, and enterprise software markets. Regulators argued that deals could foreclose competition, particularly in emerging areas like cloud gaming and AI-driven services, though many transactions ultimately proceeded after concessions or judicial rejections of block attempts. This scrutiny intensified following Microsoft's aggressive M&A strategy under CEO Satya Nadella, with over 200 acquisitions since 2014, including high-profile gaming expansions.[27] The most contentious case involved Microsoft's $68.7 billion proposed acquisition of Activision Blizzard, announced on January 18, 2022, which would have added franchises like Call of Duty to Microsoft's portfolio amid its Xbox ecosystem and Azure cloud infrastructure. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) authorized an administrative complaint in June 2022 and filed a lawsuit on December 8, 2022, to block the merger, alleging it would enable Microsoft to suppress competition in multiplayer gaming and cloud services by leveraging Activision's content exclusivity.[28][29] A federal judge denied the FTC's request for a preliminary injunction on July 13, 2023, ruling that the agency failed to demonstrate a likelihood of anticompetitive harm, as Microsoft committed to multi-year Call of Duty access on rival platforms like Sony's PlayStation.[30] The deal closed on October 13, 2023, but the FTC appealed; the Ninth Circuit Court rejected the challenge on May 7, 2025, and the FTC dismissed its in-house case on May 22, 2025, effectively ending U.S. opposition under the incoming Trump administration's less aggressive enforcement stance.[31][32] In the United Kingdom, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) provisionally blocked the Activision deal on April 26, 2023, citing risks to cloud gaming innovation, where Microsoft could withhold Activision titles from competitors, potentially stifling nascent rivals in a market projected to grow significantly.[33] This marked one of the few explicit merger blocks against Microsoft in recent decades, prompting Microsoft to restructure the transaction by divesting cloud streaming rights for Activision games to Ubisoft for 10 years, ensuring broader access. The CMA approved the revised deal on October 13, 2023, following a fresh Phase 2 review.[34][35] The European Commission cleared the acquisition on May 15, 2023, subject to commitments from Microsoft to abstain from cloud exclusivity for Activision content and to license games to EU cloud providers on fair terms, addressing fears of foreclosure in the cloud gaming segment. Earlier deals like the $7.5 billion ZeniMax Media (Bethesda) acquisition in 2020 underwent FTC review but cleared without a block in September 2021, despite concerns over exclusive titles impacting multi-platform developers. Similarly, the $19.7 billion Nuance Communications deal in 2021 faced FTC scrutiny for potential AI and healthcare market consolidation but proceeded under a consent agreement requiring divestitures of overlapping assets. These cases illustrate a pattern where scrutiny often yields remedies rather than outright blocks, with critics arguing regulators overreached on speculative harms unsubstantiated by market evidence.[36][37]

Emerging AI and Cloud Market Probes

In November 2024, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) initiated a broad antitrust investigation into Microsoft, examining potential violations across its cloud computing, artificial intelligence (AI), software licensing, and cybersecurity operations.[20] The probe focuses on allegations of anticompetitive bundling, where Microsoft integrates its productivity tools like Microsoft 365 and security products such as Microsoft Defender with Azure cloud services, potentially locking in customers and foreclosing rivals.[38] This inquiry builds on prior FTC scrutiny of Microsoft's $13 billion investment in OpenAI, including concerns over exclusive access to AI models like GPT series running primarily on Azure infrastructure, which critics argue entrenches Microsoft's cloud dominance—Azure held approximately 25% global market share in Q3 2024.[39][40] The investigation continued and escalated in 2026 under the second Trump administration, demonstrating bipartisan continuity in scrutinizing Microsoft's dominance in cloud and AI markets. On February 13, 2026, reports indicated that the FTC had issued civil investigative demands (CIDs) to at least six of Microsoft's competitors, seeking detailed evidence on licensing terms, interoperability restrictions, AI training costs, bundling of AI services (including Copilot), security, and identity products with Azure and other offerings, as well as the competitive effects of these practices. The probe remains in the investigative phase, with no formal complaint or lawsuit filed as of the latest updates.[41][42] This U.S. action aligns with continued global regulatory attention, including the European Commission's enforcement under the Digital Markets Act (DMA) regarding Azure's potential gatekeeper status and interoperability obligations, and the UK CMA's ongoing public cloud infrastructure market investigation. Complementing the FTC effort, a class-action lawsuit filed on October 13, 2025, by AI users accuses Microsoft of antitrust violations stemming from its OpenAI partnership, claiming the deal imposed exclusivity clauses requiring OpenAI's AI workloads to prioritize Azure, thereby restraining competition and inflating costs for non-Azure users.[43] Plaintiffs allege this arrangement, initiated in 2019 and expanded through multibillion-dollar investments, distorts the AI market by leveraging Microsoft's cloud scale to sideline alternatives like AWS or Google Cloud, with evidence drawn from leaked partnership terms.[44] Separately, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) and FTC have coordinated probes into AI chip distribution and partnerships involving Microsoft, OpenAI, and Nvidia, targeting potential bottlenecks in GPU access that favor incumbents.[40] In the United Kingdom, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) launched a market investigation into public cloud infrastructure services in 2024, issuing a provisional decision on January 28, 2025, that Microsoft—alongside Amazon—exercises significant unilateral market power, stifling competition through practices like long-term contracts, data egress fees, and AI integration favoring proprietary stacks.[45] The CMA highlighted how Microsoft's Azure expansions, including AI tools like Copilot, create switching barriers for customers, with the UK cloud market valued at over £20 billion annually and dominated by three hyperscalers holding 90% share.[46] These findings echo CMA reports on AI foundation models from 2023-2024, warning of risks from cloud providers restricting third-party AI access.[47] European regulators have pursued parallel scrutiny, with the European Commission monitoring Microsoft's OpenAI ties since 2023 without classifying it as a notifiable merger but expressing competition concerns over AI market foreclosure.[48] In July 2024, Microsoft settled complaints from the Cloud Infrastructure Services Providers in Europe (CISPE) by committing to fairer software licensing for non-Azure clouds over nine months, averting a formal probe into Azure-favoring terms.[49] Notably, OpenAI itself lobbied EU authorities in October 2025 to address Microsoft's practices, citing customer lock-in via bundled AI services and restricted app distribution, underscoring tensions even among partners.[50] These probes reflect broader regulatory unease with Microsoft's pivot to AI-driven cloud growth, where Azure revenue surged 30% year-over-year in fiscal 2025, amid calls for remedies like interoperability mandates.[51]

Intellectual Property Disputes

Patent Infringement Battles

Microsoft has engaged in extensive patent infringement litigation, both asserting its own patents against competitors and defending against claims from patent holders, often resulting in settlements, licensing agreements, or court-awarded damages exceeding hundreds of millions of dollars. These battles span software technologies like XML processing, database structures, and mobile interoperability, reflecting the high stakes in tech patent portfolios. Outcomes frequently hinge on standards essential to industry standards (SEPs) and fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory (FRAND) licensing obligations, with Microsoft securing royalties from Android device manufacturers while facing losses in cases involving legacy productivity software.[52][53] A prominent defensive case arose in 2007 when i4i Inc., a Toronto-based software firm, sued Microsoft in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, alleging willful infringement of U.S. Patent No. 5,787,499, which covers a method for storing and manipulating XML data in word processing systems, as implemented in Microsoft Word 2003 and earlier versions. The jury found infringement and rejected Microsoft's invalidity defenses, awarding i4i $200 million in damages, later enhanced by a trebling for willfulness to approximately $290 million plus injunction considerations. Microsoft appealed, challenging the statutory presumption of patent validity under 35 U.S.C. § 282, arguing for a preponderance-of-evidence standard rather than clear and convincing evidence to prove invalidity based on prior art. In a unanimous 2011 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the higher evidentiary burden, affirming the judgment and emphasizing the policy of deference to Patent and Trademark Office examinations despite acknowledged imperfections in the patent system.[54][55][56] The case underscored challenges for accused infringers in overcoming issued patents, with Microsoft ultimately complying via software redesigns in later Word versions rather than further appeals.[57] In offensive actions, Microsoft aggressively asserted patents against Android ecosystem players, claiming essential technologies for file systems, networking, and user interfaces infringed by Google's open-source OS and devices from OEMs like Samsung and Motorola. By 2011, Microsoft had licensed its patents to over a dozen Android vendors, extracting royalties estimated at $5–$15 per device, with Samsung alone paying more than $1 billion over 11 months in 2014 to cover shipments. These assertions stemmed from Microsoft's pre-Android patent filings in areas like FAT file systems and SMB protocols, positioning the company to monetize non-Windows mobile growth without market share loss. Lawsuits targeted non-licensors, including suits against Barnes & Noble and Foxconn in 2011, but most resolved via confidential settlements, avoiding trials.[58][53][59] A key confrontation unfolded in 2010 when Microsoft sued Motorola (later acquired by Google) in the Western District of Washington, alleging breach of FRAND commitments for SEPs covering H.264 video and wireless protocols used in Xbox and Windows devices; Motorola countersued for infringement of its own patents. The district court ruled in 2013 that Motorola violated good-faith RAND obligations by demanding up to 2.25% of end-product revenue, awarding Microsoft $11.65 million in supplemental damages, a decision affirmed by the Ninth Circuit in 2015.[52][60] The dispute contributed to broader truces, culminating in a 2015 cross-licensing agreement between Microsoft and Google dropping multiple U.S. and international suits.[61] More recently, Microsoft faced defeats in emerging tech domains, such as the 2024 jury verdict in the District of Delaware where Infinite Perios, LLC (IPA) prevailed on infringement of U.S. Patent No. 6,901,404, covering AI-driven software tagging and analysis, awarding $242 million—the third-largest patent verdict in that district's history. The case highlights ongoing vulnerabilities for Microsoft in defending against specialized software patents despite its vast portfolio of over 60,000 filings. Conversely, Microsoft has prevailed in eligibility challenges, as in Enfish, LLC v. Microsoft (2016), where the Federal Circuit reversed summary judgment invalidating self-referential database patents, deeming them non-abstract improvements over conventional systems under Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank.[62][63][64] These battles illustrate Microsoft's dual role: leveraging patents for revenue diversification while navigating a litigation landscape where empirical validity rates and settlement incentives favor resolution over adjudication, with total Android-related royalties reportedly in the billions annually before strategic shifts toward open-source compatibility pledges.[65] The primary copyright infringement claims against Microsoft in recent years center on the alleged unauthorized use of copyrighted materials to train artificial intelligence models developed in partnership with OpenAI. On December 27, 2023, The New York Times filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York against OpenAI and Microsoft, accusing them of systematically scraping and using millions of the newspaper's articles without permission to train large language models like ChatGPT, resulting in direct reproduction of copyrighted content in AI outputs.[66] The suit alleges direct, vicarious, and contributory infringement, seeking billions in damages and an injunction to prevent further use.[67] In April 2025, a federal judge denied most of OpenAI and Microsoft's motion to dismiss, allowing key infringement claims to proceed while dismissing some DMCA and unfair competition allegations; as of early 2026, the case remains ongoing in the discovery phase, with no final resolution, settlement, or major ruling reported, and no trial dates set.[68] Similar claims have proliferated from other media outlets and authors. On April 30, 2024, eight U.S. newspapers, including The Tribune, The New York Post, and The Star Tribune, sued OpenAI and Microsoft in the Southern District of New York, alleging the companies ingested millions of their articles to train AI systems, enabling verbatim reproduction of copyrighted works without licensing or payment.[69] The suit highlights instances where AI queries produced near-exact copies of paywalled content, undermining the publishers' business models.[70] Authors have also pursued actions; for instance, on January 5, 2024, two nonfiction book authors filed a proposed class-action suit against Microsoft and OpenAI, claiming the defendants "simply stole" their works by incorporating them into training datasets for models powering tools like Microsoft's Copilot.[71] By April 2025, twelve such U.S. copyright cases against OpenAI and Microsoft—primarily from authors and news entities—were consolidated in New York federal court for coordinated pretrial proceedings.[72] In June 2025, additional authors sued Microsoft specifically over the use of their books in AI training, seeking injunctions and statutory damages up to $150,000 per infringed work.[73] Microsoft has defended these suits by arguing that AI training constitutes fair use under U.S. copyright law, as it transforms source materials into new, non-substitutive outputs, though courts have yet to issue definitive rulings on this defense in these cases.[74] In response to such litigation risks, Microsoft introduced the Copilot Copyright Commitment in September 2023, offering indemnification to enterprise customers against third-party copyright claims arising from use of its AI tools.[75] Historically, Microsoft has also enforced its own copyrights aggressively against alleged infringers. In Microsoft Corp. v. Software Wholesale Club, Inc. (2001), a Texas federal court found defendants liable for copyright infringement through unauthorized bulk distribution and resale of Microsoft software, awarding damages and injunctive relief under federal copyright law.[76] Microsoft maintains dedicated processes for reporting third-party infringements of its software copyrights, emphasizing respect for intellectual property while prioritizing enforcement against piracy and unauthorized copying.[74] These actions contrast with the inbound AI-related claims, where Microsoft is positioned as the accused party amid broader debates over data scraping and generative AI's impact on creative industries.

Trademark Infringement Cases

Microsoft has pursued trademark infringement claims primarily to protect its globally recognized marks, including "Microsoft," "Windows," and associated product names, against counterfeiters, domain squatters, and entities using confusingly similar terms that could mislead consumers. These actions, often under the Lanham Act in the U.S. or equivalent laws abroad, have resulted in settlements, injunctions, and damages awards, reflecting the company's strategy to maintain brand integrity amid widespread counterfeiting of its software. Courts have generally upheld Microsoft's claims where evidence of consumer confusion or dilution was demonstrated, though outcomes vary when Microsoft faces countersuits or defends against alleged overlaps.[77] In December 2001, Microsoft filed suit against Lindows.com, Inc. in U.S. federal court, alleging that the defendant's "Lindows" operating system name infringed the "Windows" trademark by evoking visual and phonetic similarity, potentially causing consumer confusion. The litigation spanned multiple jurisdictions, including Europe, where a Swedish court initially ruled against Lindows but was overturned on appeal. The case settled in July 2004 on confidential terms that included Microsoft paying Lindows approximately $20 million, with Lindows agreeing to rebrand its product as Linspire, cease worldwide use of the "Lindows" mark within 60 days, and transfer related domains to Microsoft after a four-year period.[78][79][80] Another notable domain-related dispute arose in January 2004 when Microsoft issued a cease-and-desist letter to Canadian high school student Mike Rowe over his "MikeRoweSoft.com" website, claiming trademark infringement and cybersquatting due to the phonetic resemblance to "Microsoft." Rowe initially sought fair compensation for the domain, rejecting Microsoft's $10 offer covering registration costs, but the parties settled out of court shortly thereafter, with Rowe transferring the domain to Microsoft in exchange for an Xbox console, Microsoft software, and coverage of his legal expenses.[81] In India, Microsoft secured a significant victory in January 2025 against Retnec Solutions Private Limited, a Gurugram-based entity operating fraudulent call centers that impersonated Microsoft support to scam customers. The Exclusive Commercial Court in Gurugram granted an ex-parte permanent injunction, holding Retnec liable for misusing the "Microsoft" well-known trademark, and awarded ₹55 lakh in damages plus additional costs totaling around ₹75 lakh for reputational harm and lost goodwill. The court emphasized the defendants' deliberate deception, including use of Microsoft's logos and false claims of affiliation.[82][83] Microsoft has also faced claims as a defendant, as in Veeva Systems Inc. v. Microsoft Corporation, filed February 3, 2025, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. Veeva, a pharmaceutical software provider holding trademarks for "Viva" in customer relationship management tools, alleged that Microsoft's "Viva" employee experience platform—launched in 2021 for workplace analytics and engagement—infringes by offering overlapping collaboration features, likely causing confusion among users in regulated industries. Veeva seeks an injunction to halt Microsoft's use of the mark and unspecified monetary damages. The case remains ongoing as of October 2025.[84][85]

Contractual and Licensing Conflicts

Software Licensing Practices

Microsoft's software licensing agreements with original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) faced scrutiny in the United States v. Microsoft Corp. antitrust case filed on May 18, 1998, where the U.S. Department of Justice alleged that the company imposed restrictive terms to stifle competition in web browsing software.[3] These included per-processor licensing for Windows that discouraged OEMs from offering alternative operating systems, requirements to pre-install Internet Explorer alongside Windows 95 and 98, and prohibitions on OEMs removing or altering desktop icons and boot sequences to promote Microsoft's products.[86] The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia found in 2000 that such practices unlawfully maintained Microsoft's operating system monopoly by deterring OEMs from distributing rival software like Netscape Navigator.[1] The case's 2001 settlement, upheld on appeal, mandated Microsoft to loosen OEM licensing restrictions, including allowing customization of the Windows desktop and boot process, and prohibiting retaliation against OEMs licensing rival middleware.[5] Despite these remedies, critics argued the terms failed to fully address entrenched practices, as evidenced by ongoing private lawsuits alleging residual anti-competitive effects, such as inflated pricing from bundling obligations.[87] In enterprise and cloud contexts, Microsoft's volume licensing models have sparked disputes over compliance audits and punitive enforcement. The company's Business Software Alliance-led audits of enterprise agreements often result in demands for back-licensing fees plus penalties for alleged under-licensing, with reported cases imposing multimillion-dollar settlements on non-compliant organizations.[88] Legal challenges have contested the validity of these audits, claiming Microsoft's self-reported compliance tools and broad audit rights under agreements like the Enterprise Agreement enable overreach, though courts have generally upheld the contracts' enforceability absent fraud.[89] Recent litigation has targeted cloud-specific licensing, particularly Microsoft's policies for Windows Server and SQL Server on non-Azure platforms. A December 2024 UK antitrust suit by cloud providers seeks £1 billion ($1.25 billion) in damages, alleging that "license mobility" fees—up to 40% surcharges for using Microsoft software on rivals like AWS or Google Cloud—artificially inflate costs and lock customers into Azure, harming competition.[90] Similarly, a May 2025 UK class action claims Microsoft abuses its dominance by restricting secondary markets for perpetual licenses, forcing upgrades and driving up prices for consumers and businesses.[91] These practices echo earlier EU probes, culminating in a July 2024 settlement with the Cloud Infrastructure Services Providers in Europe (CISPE), where Microsoft committed to offering compliant licensing options for hybrid clouds by April 2025 to avoid fines.[92] Such disputes highlight causal links between Microsoft's dominant market position—over 70% in desktop OS and significant shares in server software—and licensing terms that prioritize ecosystem lock-in over interoperability, as regulators in the UK and EU have noted in ongoing probes.[93] Proponents of the practices defend them as necessary for security and feature consistency, but empirical evidence from affected providers shows reduced innovation and higher barriers for smaller competitors.[94]

Enterprise and Government Contracts

In 2019, the U.S. Department of Defense awarded Microsoft a $10 billion contract known as the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure (JEDI) for cloud computing services to modernize military data handling.[95] Amazon Web Services protested the award to the Government Accountability Office (GAO), alleging bias and procedural flaws, including claims of political interference favoring Microsoft during the Trump administration.[96] The GAO sustained the protest in November 2020, citing the DoD's failure to consider other vendors adequately, prompting a reevaluation.[97] Microsoft defended its technical qualifications, while Amazon pursued parallel federal court litigation against the DoD and Microsoft, which was stayed pending administrative resolution.[98] The DoD canceled the JEDI contract on July 6, 2021, citing evolving requirements for multi-vendor cloud capabilities incompatible with the single-provider structure, shifting to the Joint Warfighting Cloud Capability (JWCC) program.[99] Microsoft expressed disappointment but reaffirmed its commitment to DoD partnerships, noting prior investments in secure cloud tech during the dispute.[100] The episode highlighted tensions in government procurement, with critics pointing to undue influence from executive politics over merit-based selection, though no formal findings of illegality emerged.[101] Enterprise contract disputes have centered on Microsoft's licensing terms, particularly allegations of restrictive clauses embedded in agreements that limit resale or migration options. In a UK tribunal case initiated in 2021, reseller ValueLicensing sued Microsoft, claiming the company unlawfully inserted anti-resale provisions into customer contracts, violating EU-derived competition law on perpetual licenses.[102] By October 2025, Microsoft shifted its defense to copyright infringement arguments, asserting ownership over transferred licenses, amid ongoing proceedings that could impact enterprise software reuse.[102] A December 2024 UK class-action lawsuit, led by Justin Gutmann, accuses Microsoft of anti-competitive pricing in cloud licenses, charging enterprises up to four times more for software used on Azure compared to on-premises or rival clouds like AWS, potentially entitling thousands of businesses to £1 billion in damages.[103][104] The claim alleges these terms in enterprise agreements exploit Microsoft's dominance to stifle competition, forcing lock-in and inflating costs without equivalent functionality.[105] Microsoft has countered that its pricing reflects value provided, including integrated security and support, though the case awaits certification and trial.[103] Such disputes underscore broader enterprise concerns over opaque Enterprise Agreement (EA) renewals, where bundled commitments can lead to unforeseen compliance audits and penalties.[106]

Tax and Regulatory Disputes

International Tax Evasion Allegations

Microsoft has faced allegations of international tax evasion through complex profit-shifting structures involving subsidiaries in low-tax jurisdictions such as Ireland and Bermuda, primarily aimed at minimizing taxable income in higher-tax countries where sales occur. Critics, including tax advocacy groups and government investigators, contend that these arrangements artificially relocate profits via royalty payments for intellectual property (IP), resulting in effective tax rates far below standard corporate levels in Europe and elsewhere. For instance, a 2012 U.S. Senate investigation highlighted Microsoft's use of Irish entities to channel European sales royalties to Bermuda-based units with zero corporate tax, reducing U.S. and EU tax liabilities on foreign earnings.[107] [108] A key mechanism alleged in these claims is the "Double Irish" arrangement, under which Microsoft transferred IP rights to an Irish-incorporated subsidiary treated as tax-resident in a zero-tax haven like Bermuda, while routing royalties from another Irish entity to avoid Irish withholding taxes and defer U.S. taxation. This strategy, employed by Microsoft from the early 2000s until Ireland phased it out by 2020, enabled profits from global software licensing to be taxed at effectively 0-2% rather than Ireland's 12.5% rate or higher rates in sales markets. The U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS) later challenged related transfer pricing during 2004-2013, proposing $28.9 billion in additional taxes plus penalties, asserting the transactions lacked economic substance and were designed to evade federal income tax—a dispute intertwined with these international flows.[109] [110] [111] Specific examples underscore the scale: Microsoft Round Island One, an Irish-registered entity tax-resident in Bermuda, reported a $314.7 billion profit for the year ending June 2020—primarily from global license fees and unrealized gains on IP transfers—but paid no corporate tax due to Bermuda's zero rate and hybrid entity status unrecognized for Irish taxation. Operating profits of $13.6 billion were offset or deferred, with dividends taxed elsewhere, exemplifying how shell-like structures with minimal staff collect revenues generated in high-tax regions like the EU. Reports estimate such practices contributed to tech firms, including Microsoft, underpaying $96 billion in global taxes over a decade by inflating low-tax jurisdiction income.[112] [113] While no major European Union (EU) enforcement actions or fines have targeted Microsoft for state aid or illegal tax evasion—unlike cases against Apple or Starbucks—allegations persist from EU parliamentarians and NGOs citing BEPS (Base Erosion and Profit Shifting) violations, with calls for global minimum taxes to curb such routing. Microsoft maintains these structures comply with laws and reflect IP value creation in Ireland, where it employs thousands and invests heavily, but critics argue they erode tax bases in value-generating markets without genuine economic activity. The absence of EU litigation may reflect selective focus on sweeter tax rulings rather than broad profit-shifting probes, amid broader OECD efforts post-2015 to reform rules.[114][115]

Domestic Tax Challenges

In October 2023, the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS) issued a notice to Microsoft asserting that the company owes $28.9 billion in additional taxes for the period 2004–2013, plus penalties and interest, stemming from an audit of its federal income tax returns.[116] [117] The IRS's adjustments primarily target Microsoft's cost-sharing agreements with foreign affiliates, alleging improper profit allocation through intercompany transactions that shifted income offshore, including to a Puerto Rico-based subsidiary engaged in software duplication and distribution.[118] Microsoft maintains that these arrangements complied with arm's-length transfer pricing principles under IRS regulations and prior private letter rulings, and it plans to contest the determination through administrative appeals and, if necessary, litigation.[116] The audit, described as one of the largest in IRS history, highlights tensions over multinational corporations' use of cost-sharing to allocate intellectual property rights and associated profits between U.S. parents and foreign units.[118] Microsoft estimates that any final liability could be offset by up to $10 billion through competent authority procedures under U.S. tax treaties and provisions of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), such as the deemed repatriation transition tax under section 965.[117] As of late 2023, the matter remains unresolved, with Microsoft disclosing the dispute in its SEC filings and expressing confidence in its tax positions based on contemporaneous documentation and economic substance.[116] At the state level, Microsoft has pursued litigation over apportionment and repatriation taxation. In Microsoft Corp. v. Department of Revenue (Oregon Tax Court, 2024), the court granted partial summary judgment to Microsoft, ruling that 20% of deemed dividends repatriated under TCJA section 965 qualified for Oregon's dividend-received deduction and were exempt from state corporate excise tax, rejecting the state's broader inclusion of such income in the sales factor.[119] Earlier federal disputes include a 2003 Tax Court decision in Microsoft Corp. v. Commissioner, where the IRS challenged the company's treatment of employee stock options as non-deductible for export property purposes under pre-TCJA rules, resulting in a deficiency judgment upheld on appeal.[120] These cases underscore ongoing scrutiny of Microsoft's domestic tax strategies amid evolving U.S. rules on income sourcing and inter-entity dealings.

Other Significant Litigation

Product Defect and Consumer Actions

Microsoft faced multiple consumer lawsuits alleging defects in its Xbox 360 gaming console, particularly the widespread "Red Ring of Death" (RROD) hardware failure caused by overheating and poor soldering, which affected an estimated 30% of units sold between 2005 and 2010.[121] In October 2008, a class action lawsuit filed in California Superior Court accused Microsoft of selling defective consoles despite knowing of the high failure rate, seeking refunds and disgorgement of profits from affected sales.[122] Microsoft responded by extending the console's warranty from one to three years in July 2007, ultimately incurring $1.15 billion in repair and replacement costs, a decision approved by then-CEO Steve Ballmer to prioritize customer goodwill over short-term profits.[121] Separate class actions also targeted disc-scratched damage from the console's optical drive vibrations, with a 2015 Ninth Circuit ruling allowing one such suit to proceed after initial denial of certification, though Microsoft prevailed in related Supreme Court appeals on procedural grounds in 2017 without admitting liability.[123] Additional consumer claims involved Xbox 360 firmware updates exacerbating hardware instability, but courts largely dismissed class certification attempts due to individualized proof of defect causation and damages varying by usage patterns.[124] Microsoft discontinued formal RROD support after 2010 but offered paid repairs until the Xbox 360's end-of-life in 2016, maintaining that the issues stemmed from manufacturing variances rather than inherent design flaws.[121] In software-related defects, a 2017 class action filed in Illinois federal court alleged that Microsoft's Windows 10 upgrade process, promoted as free and automatic, damaged hard drives and caused data loss on incompatible older PCs by failing to verify hardware suitability before installation.[125] Plaintiffs claimed the upgrade rendered devices inoperable, with no reliable rollback option, affecting users who experienced boot failures and file corruption post-installation in 2015-2016.[126] Microsoft defended the upgrades as optional despite aggressive prompts, attributing issues to user hardware limitations rather than software defects, and the suit sought compensatory damages for repair costs but did not result in a certified class or settlement admission of fault.[127] Individual consumer successes included a 2016 California small claims victory where plaintiff Teri Goldstein received $10,000 for a forced Windows 10 upgrade that allegedly bricked her system, highlighting risks of automatic updates overriding user control.[128] Similar complaints arose from Windows updates causing blue screen errors or peripheral incompatibilities, but Microsoft disclaimed liability for third-party hardware interactions or user-induced errors in its end-user license agreements.[126] Surface hardware lines faced defect allegations, including Surface Pro 4 screen delamination and flickering ("Flickergate") due to backlight failures, prompting Microsoft to launch a no-cost replacement program in 2018 for out-of-warranty units after widespread user reports.[129] Swollen batteries in Surface Book models raised fire hazards, leading to voluntary replacements but no major class actions, as Microsoft attributed issues to manufacturing defects covered under extended support rather than systemic design flaws.[130] These actions underscored consumer frustrations with premium device reliability but resulted in warranty expansions over litigation payouts.

Data Practices and Privacy Suits

In June 2023, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) settled charges against Microsoft for violations of the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) related to its Xbox gaming platform.[131] The agency alleged that from 2015 to 2020, Microsoft collected personal information from children under 13—such as names, email addresses, phone numbers, gamertags, profile pictures, avatars, and unique identifiers—without obtaining verifiable parental consent or providing adequate notification.[131] This data was also shared with third-party developers, and Microsoft retained it beyond necessary periods.[131] Under the settlement, Microsoft agreed to pay a $20 million civil penalty, delete data collected without consent, implement enhanced privacy protections including parental notifications and consent mechanisms for child accounts created before May 2021, and inform game publishers about child users.[131] Microsoft's subsidiary LinkedIn faced regulatory action in October 2024 from Ireland's Data Protection Commission (DPC), its lead EU privacy regulator, for breaches of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).[132] The DPC determined that LinkedIn lacked a lawful basis for processing users' personal data to enable targeted online advertising, violating GDPR principles of lawfulness, fairness, and transparency.[132] The fine imposed was €310 million (approximately $335 million), one of the largest GDPR penalties to date, reflecting the scale of data processing involved in LinkedIn's ad personalization practices.[132] In September 2023, Microsoft and OpenAI were hit with a consumer class action lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, accusing them of unlawfully scraping and misusing personal data from hundreds of millions of internet users to train ChatGPT and related AI models.[133] Filed by two software engineers represented by Morgan & Morgan, the suit claimed violations of privacy rights, property interests, and consumer protection laws, alleging the data collection led to unauthorized use of plaintiffs' personal information and professional expertise.[133] This followed a similar June 2023 class action by Clarkson Law Firm, highlighting concerns over non-consensual data harvesting for AI development.[133] A related class action against LinkedIn emerged in January 2025 in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California (San Jose division), where Premium subscribers alleged the platform disclosed their private InMail messages to third parties without authorization to train AI models.[134] Plaintiffs contended this breached contracts, California's Unfair Competition Law, and the federal Stored Communications Act, noting that a privacy policy update on September 18, 2024, permitted such use retroactively, with opt-outs not applying to prior data training.[134] The proposed class, potentially representing millions of users, seeks unspecified damages plus $1,000 per person.[134] These cases underscore ongoing scrutiny of Microsoft's data handling in AI contexts, with allegations centered on insufficient user controls over sensitive communications.[134]

References

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