- Tue Oct 11 2005 Microsoft not out of legal woods yet
Settlement with RealNetworks deprives EU's antitrust prosecution of major corporate ally. But Real's evidence was already in.
- Wed Mar 24 2004 Ruling could be key to Microsoft's future
A European Union decision to force the company to unbundle its media software with Windows could set legal limits on its product strategy.
- Mon Nov 17 2003 EU seeks longer review of Oracle deal
update European antitrust regulators announce that they're extending their review of Oracle's hostile bid for PeopleSoft into an in-depth second phase. - Wed Oct 30 2002 Nintendo edges into online gaming
The GameCube maker's cautious move into online gaming kicks off with the release of Internet adapters for the console. Also, the EU hits the company with a $147 million price-fixing fine.
- Tue Jun 8 2004 Intel probe highlights EU-U.S. regulation tussle
The European Union's revival of a moribund antitrust investigation reaffirms the region's growing reputation as an aggressive regulator willing to cross swords with the United States. - Thu Mar 18 2004 EU, Microsoft fail to agree on deal
The European Commission and Microsoft have been unable to reach a settlement on the landmark antitrust case, the top EU regulator said.
- Wed Feb 27 2008 If Microsoft thinks it's got an EU headache now, just wait
Steve Ballmer may have had his fill of Neelie Kroes but their fractious history is likely to affect how the EU handles a possible Microsoft-Yahoo merger.
- Wed Mar 24 2004 A tale of two cases
European regulators are going far beyond what U.S. prosecutors ultimately agreed to accept from Microsoft. How did similar antitrust philosophies lead to divergent courses?
- Wed Aug 25 2004 EU to probe Microsoft-Time Warner buy
The decision is a setback for the two companies and their plan to acquire ContentGuard, a digital rights management firm.
- Wed Mar 24 2004 U.S. politicos fire at EU's Microsoft ruling
In a strongly worded letter, members of the House International Relations committee ask regulators in Brussels to reconsider their decision to levy a record fine against the U.S.-based company.




