Advertisement
Promo

Compliance Toolkit

CCIA chief pockets $10m from MS settlement

Jo Best silicon.com

Published: 24 Nov 2004 13:10 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

When Microsoft settled its antitrust battle with the Computer and Communications Industry Association (CCIA) earlier this year, one of the CCIA's top execs and an outspoken critic of Microsoft was paid nearly $10m.

According to the documents seen by the Financial Times, Ed Black, president of the CCIA, took half of the $19.75m payment Microsoft made to the association. The payment was approved by the board of the CCIA, the paper said.

A Microsoft spokeswoman said that while the company had made the payment to the association, it had not had any part in saying how the money was distributed after it was paid.

"It was of course up to the CCIA Board to decide how to use the money it received from us and we had no involvement at all in that process. Microsoft agreed to make a payment to CCIA as an organisation as reimbursement for certain legal and related expenditures that it had incurred."

As part of the settlement, the CCIA agreed to drop its antitrust suit against Microsoft, which alleged that Windows XP was anticompetitive. It also agreed to drop out of acting for the European Commission in its antitrust case against the software maker, which ruled that Microsoft should pay €497m and sell a version of Windows without its media player software bundled in.

The EU also recently lost another of its antitrust backers when Novell withdrew its support after settling with Redmond for $536m.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Did you find this article useful?
69 out of 136 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

1 comment

  1. One word. NAUSEATING! S G Thomas

Video icon

Video

Cloud Watch Special Report

Five cloud computing myths exploded

Five cloud computing myths exploded

Analysis The cloud is providing a fertile habitat for the marketeers and their exaggerated claims. We examine the hokum and debunk the five most frequently peddled misconceptions about the cloud

More Special Reports

Sentry Posts Blog

Official Organizations Losing Data

How does this article from earlier today make you feel? How many more government, health service, or military officials are going to lose pen drives, DVDs, USB hard disks and even entire... More

2 comments

Twitter hack was DNS redirect

Twitter has said an attack on Thursday which took the site offline for many users was the result of a DNS redirect. A group calling itself the Iranian Cyber Army redirected users... More

1 comment

McKinnon lawyers seek judicial review

Lawyers seeking a judicial review for Nasa hacker Gary McKinnon lodged fresh evidence of his psychiatric state at the High Court on Thursday. Karen Todner, McKinnon's solicitor,... More

1 comment


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters