Microsoft hit with EU fine of $731 million
The software giant is punished for breaking its promise to give Europeans a choice of Web browsers.
WASHINGTON — European Union antitrust officials fined Microsoft Corp. $731 million for failing to live up to a promise to allow Windows users to easily choose a Web browser other than Internet Explorer.
That promise was part of a 2009 settlement of an investigation by the European Commission’s competition directorate into allegations that Microsoft abused its dominant position in desktop software by tying Internet Explorer to Windows.
Microsoft agreed to include a browser choice screen in Windows. But the commission said Wednesday that Microsoft failed to offer that screen in a Windows 7 service pack software update from May 2011 to July 2012, in violation of the agreement.
“If companies agree to offer commitments which then become legally binding, they must do what they have committed to do or face the consequences — namely, the imposition of sanctions,” Joaquin Almunia, the commission’s vice president in charge of competition policy, said in announcing the fine of 561 million euros.
It was the first time European regulators fined a company for failing to comply with an agreement, he said.
The fine comes on top of about $2.5 billion in levies from European officials on the software giant for antitrust violations in a series of high-profile cases dating from the early 2000s.
Microsoft said it took full responsibility for what it called a “technical error” and apologized for the problem.
“We provided the commission with a complete and candid assessment of the situation, and we have taken steps to strengthen our software development and other processes to help avoid this mistake — or anything similar — in the future,” the Redmond, Wash., company said.
Under the agreement, Microsoft was required to offer the browser choice screen to its Windows customers in Europe until 2014.
For about 14 months, “around 15.3 million users did not see the choice screen as they should have,” Almunia said. “Such a breach is, of course, very serious, irrespective of whether it was intentional or not, and it calls for a sanction.”
Once the problem was discovered, Microsoft cooperated with the commission’s investigation, Almunia said. The cooperation was “taken into account as a mitigating circumstance,” he said. jim.puzzanghera@ latimes.com