Microsoft Appeals Java Injunction
(01/14/99, 4:00 p.m. ET)
By Lee Pender, Computer Reseller News
The dispute over Java between Microsoft and Sun Microsystems rose to a new
level Thursday when Microsoft filed an appeal to a district court judge's
preliminary injunction against the company.

In November, Judge Ronald Whyte of the U.S. District Court in San Jose,
Calif., filed a preliminary injunction against Redmond, Wash.-based
Microsoft stating Sun would likely win the dispute between the two companies.

The case began in October 1997, when Sun, in Palo Alto, Calif., sued
Microsoft for copyright infringement after Microsoft released a version of
Java that was not compatible with the version from Java-creator Sun.

Microsoft, however, filed its appeal in a U.S. Appeals Court in San
Francisco, claiming Whyte's court misinterpreted the companies' licensing
contract in granting the injunction. Microsoft officials also said the
court was mistaken in treating the case as a copyright issue rather than a
contract dispute.

"Microsoft believes the district court made several errors that should be
reversed by the court of appeals," said Tom Burt, associate general counsel
at Redmond, Wash.-based Microsoft, in a statement. "This lawsuit is about
the contract between two companies. We believe the court's preliminary
injunction ruling was based on an erroneous analysis of the contract."

Meanwhile, Sun officials said the company's law firm received a copy of the
appeal late last night. Sun officials said the company stands by Whyte's
injunction and would like to work with Microsoft on bringing its version of
Java into compliance with Sun's.

"The ability to maximize compatibility and minimize switching costs is a
central value of the Java platform -- millions of developers and users rely
on that value," the Sun statement says. "They would be best served if
Microsoft would come back into compliance with the Java specifications. We
renew our invitation to Microsoft to do so, and renew our offer to assist
them in coming into compliance."

Last week, Whyte ordered Microsoft and Sun to schedule a settlement
conference in front of a magistrate to resolve their dispute. In part, the
judge said a conference would be productive because both parties had
received the court's preliminary injunction rulings. No such conference has
been scheduled.



From MAILER-DAEMON@cs.depaul.edu Thu Jan 14 16:36:48 1999