U.S. states will attempt to stop Windows 98!

The attorneys generals from 12 states in the United States will file a joint action against Microsoft Corporation within the next two weeks, in anattempt to stop the company from shipping Windows 98. With the unparalleledmove, the states will seek

Paul Thurrott

April 23, 1998

1 Min Read
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The attorneys generals from 12 states in the United States will file a joint action against Microsoft Corporation within the next two weeks, in anattempt to stop the company from shipping Windows 98. With the unparalleledmove, the states will seek a preliminary injunction against Microsoft whilethey investigate its allegedly anti-competitive practices. At this time,Microsoft is expected to complete development of Windows 98 soon and shipit to hardware manufacturers by mid-May for a June 25th release to the general public.

In a preemptive move against the states, Microsoft has called upon its closest allies--those companies that license Windows--to publicly supportthe company and ask the states to reconsider.

"We are sure that once [the states' attorneys generals] have had a chance to look at the documents [they requested], they will realize that Microsoftis in a competitive marketplace and has done nothing wrong," said Microsoftspokesman Jim Cullinan.

Sources close to the case say that states are very, very close to filingthe suit.

"It is coming to the end," said a confidential source. You would not be toofar off the beaten path [if you thought action would occur within twoweeks]."

The joint investigation by the states has been going on for almost a yearnow and any action they take against Microsoft would come before a possibleantitrust case from the US DOJ, which has been trying to build a biggercase against Microsoft's anti-competitive practices.

Microsoft says that state action would not be enough to stop the releaseof Windows 98.

"Knowing everything we know, Windows 98 will be released on time on June 25," said Mike Murray, another Microsoft spokesperson. "There is no legalbasis or consumer benefit to blocking the release of Windows 98...thousandsof companies have built their 1998 business plans and made investments around the release of Windows 98.

About the Author

Paul Thurrott

Paul Thurrott is senior technical analyst for Windows IT Pro. He writes the SuperSite for Windows, a weekly editorial for Windows IT Pro UPDATE, and a daily Windows news and information newsletter called WinInfo Daily UPDATE.

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