July 17th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Man, the EU is really not too fond of Intel, is it? Adding to all the other antitrust charges filed against the chipmaker, the friendly grey suits at the European Commission have slapped on an additional three: paying a “leading European retailer” not stock AMD products, giving incentives to PC makers to switch to Intel chips, and paying an unspecified company to delay the launch of an AMD-based product. For its part, Intel is reacting like it always does when the Europeans get prickly: by steadfastly denying everything. Intel has eight weeks to file a formal response, but as with all of these cases, we wouldn’t expect a resolution any time soon.
[Thanks, Ricky]
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Posted in Intel, lawsuit, legal, antitrust, eu, European Commission, european union, EuropeanCommission, EuropeanUnion | No Comments »
June 17th, 2008 by
Filed under: Cellphones
Not like we were really suspecting any issues or anything, but the European Commission has just made public its “unconditional approval” of Nokia’s “voluntary tender offer for all the shares in Trolltech ASA.” In other words, Nokia’s acquisition of Trolltech is officially complete, with today being the final day in which the latter company is listed on the Oslo Stock Exchange. Such a cute couple, don’t you think?
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Posted in europe, acquisition, nokia, European Commission, EuropeanCommission, business, industry, trolltech, troll | No Comments »
June 17th, 2008 by
Filed under: Cellphones
Not like we were really suspecting any issues or anything, but the European Commission has just made public its “unconditional approval” of Nokia’s “voluntary tender offer for all the shares in Trolltech ASA.” In other words, Nokia’s acquisition of Trolltech is officially complete, with today being the final day in which the latter company is listed on the Oslo Stock Exchange. Such a cute couple, don’t you think?
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Posted in europe, acquisition, nokia, European Commission, EuropeanCommission, business, industry, trolltech, troll | No Comments »
June 17th, 2008 by
Filed under: Cellphones
Not like we were really suspecting any issues or anything, but the European Commission has just made public its “unconditional approval” of Nokia’s “voluntary tender offer for all the shares in Trolltech ASA.” In other words, Nokia’s acquisition of Trolltech is officially complete, with today being the final day in which the latter company is listed on the Oslo Stock Exchange. Such a cute couple, don’t you think?
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Posted in europe, acquisition, nokia, European Commission, EuropeanCommission, business, industry, trolltech, troll | No Comments »
May 9th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Microsoft’s no stranger to appealing antitrust decisions before the European Commission’s Court of the First Instance, and it looks like it’s saddling up for another go ’round: the software giant has decided to appeal that $1.3B antitrust fine handed down in February. Saying that it was only filing as part of a “constructive effort to seek clarity from the court,” Microsoft has asked that the decision be annulled. Yeah, that seems pretty clear. As always, our suggestions that this be resolved with a GTA IV / CoD4 round-robin deathmatch on Live have gone unheeded in favor of tedious paperwork and months of delay, but we’re still holding out hope.
[Thanks, Hosain]
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Posted in Microsoft, lawsuit, legal, antitrust, eu, European Commission, european union, EuropeanCommission, EuropeanUnion | No Comments »
April 7th, 2008 by
Filed under: Cellphones, Wireless
Not even a week after hearing that Air France was forging ahead with an in-flight calling trial, the European Commission has now voiced its approval of using mobiles on planes in European airspace. After six months of deliberating, the decision was finally made to give airlines the choice of offering up services in order for guests to dial loved ones at 3,000-meters or more. The EU telecoms commissioner, Viviane Reding, went on to warn operators to “keep the cost of calls made on planes at a reasonable level,” and of course, not all is clear just yet. For starters, the European Aviation Safety Agency still needs to green-light the whole ordeal by approving any hardware that would be used, and we won’t be seeing any 3G action up high just yet. Still, at least one less hurdle stands in the way of you phoning home from over Europe (and simultaneously making enemies out of all your neighbors trying to get a few decent minutes of shuteye).
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Posted in europe, eu, European Commission, EuropeanCommission, airplane, flight, plane, france, in-flight, in-flight calling, In-flightCalling, trial, OnAir, ofcom, pico cell, pico cells, PicoCell, PicoCells | No Comments »
March 28th, 2008 by
Filed under: Cellphones, GPS
It may have won approval from the U.S. Federal Trade Commission and NAVTEQ shareholders alike, but it looks like the EU’s European Commission needs a bit more time to think over Nokia’s acquisition of the company, and it’s now launched an “in-depth” probe into the matter. According to Reuters, the Commission said that the “proposed merger raises serious doubts with regards to … competition concerns,” although it was quick to add that the decision to open the inquiry does not prejudge the result of the probe. Among other things, the probe will apparently attempt to asses whether whether the purchase would affect the cost of maps for other companies providing navigation services on cellphones. If all of this has a familiar ring, it should, because it wasn’t all that long ago that the EU launched a similar probe into TomTom’s similar acquisition of map-maker Tele Atlas.
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Posted in nokia, navteq, eu, European Commission, european union, EuropeanCommission, EuropeanUnion | No Comments »
March 18th, 2008 by
Filed under: Portable Video
As expected, the European Commission just did the obvious and made the EU’s de facto DVB-H standard, standard. The move is expected to accelerate the deployment of mobile television services across Europe in the same way that GSM standardization in the early 90s gave Europe a head-start on backwater cellular locations like North America. So get outta Dodge Qualcomm and South Korea with your MediaFLO and DMB mobile television technologies, you aren’t welcome around Brussels anymore.
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Posted in europe, nokia, eu, European Commission, EuropeanCommission, qualcomm, dmb, DVB-H, mediaflo | No Comments »
February 21st, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets

Echoing the reactions of many to Microsoft’s decision to open things up this morning, the European Commission issued a statement this morning saying that while it welcomes any moves towards “genuine interoperability,” it’s not going to believe it until it sees it — it’s counted four similar announcements by Redmond in the past, with nothing to show for it. Of course, Microsoft is currently being investigated for antitrust violations in Europe, so there’s a whispered belief that the new steps are a ploy to derail that process, but that’s pretty doubtful — and the EU’s not having it anyway, saying that “Today’s announcement by Microsoft does not address the tying allegations.” For its part, Microsoft actually agrees, saying that it’s opening things up on its own — the move reflects both “the reality of our unique legal situation” as well as “new opportunities and risks in the connected world.” That’s certainly an interesting approach — but we’ll see how the EU reacts if and when Microsoft follows through on these promises.
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Posted in Microsoft, antitrust, eu, European Commission, european union, EuropeanCommission, EuropeanUnion, interoperatbility | No Comments »
January 21st, 2008 by
Filed under: Portable Video
It may be exceptionally easy to use, but rolling out Apple’s iTunes movie rental service to Europe will be no easy task. This according to a piece just published by the The New York Times. Despite known collectively as Europe, the EU’s 27 member countries remain a patchwork of convoluted regulatory fragments related to digital media. For example, in The Netherlands, it remains uniquely and ambiguously legal to download, but not upload, copyrighted material. Release schedules also vary widely across Europe — sometimes releasing the same day as in the US or months later. Notably for Apple, a distributor of content must secure individual licenses to films in every country they wish to do business. No easy task given Apple’s rental agreements cover all the major and many smaller studios. This lack of coherence makes a pan-European iTunes rental agreement daunting, to say the least. Fortunately, commissioner Vivian Reding of the European Commission, plans to make a proposal mid-year that would streamline digital commerce efforts across European borders. Remember, Viv is the force responsible for stomping out the EU’s ridiculous roaming rates. In other words, we can expect more than just lip-service in the months ahead. Unfortunately, given Apple’s history of trouble with the EU over pan-European iTunes pricing and DRM, you can bet they’ll tread the EU waters carefully (read: slowly) as they attempt to go live in Europe.
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Posted in europe, eu, European Commission, EuropeanCommission, itunes, rent, rental, vivian reding, VivianReding | No Comments »
November 28th, 2007 by
Filed under: GPS
The European Commission has just opened an investigation into TomTom’s proposed purchase of Tele Atlas, claiming that consumers could be hurt by a GPS hardware maker owning one of the two major digital map providers. Specifically, the so-called “in-depth inquiry,” which will be concluded no later than April 17th of next year, stems from “serious doubts that the acquisition by TomTom of Tele Atlas might…lead to a significant impediment of effective competition within the EEA.” With Nokia going after NAVTEQ and Garmin having given up on Tele Atlas, this investigation clearly makes sense from the free market standpoint, as the Dutch firm is not likely to slip past without at least committing to fair map licensing terms for other PND manufacturers. In response to the Commission’s announcement, TomTom decided to extend its offer for shares of Tele Atlas until March 31st, 2008, with the option to issue another extension if certain conditions are not met.
[Thanks, Daniel]
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in nokia, legal, garmin, tomtom, acquisitions, navteq, European Commission, EuropeanCommission, tele atlas, TeleAtlas, business, mergers | No Comments »
October 1st, 2007 by
Filed under: Cellphones
Qualcomm finding itself in more legal trouble? Say it ain’t so! Sure enough, the chip maker is now facing even more heat as the European Commission “has launched formal antitrust proceedings” against it after “mobile phone manufacturers complained it charged far too much for vital technology licenses.” The move had reportedly been expected for some time, and while the Commission noted that this would be considered “a matter of priority,” no deadline was immediately set for a resolution. Apparently, Qualcomm feels that mobile phone makers were trying to “stifle the competition that it brought to the market,” and while the probe could eventually be scrapped, the other outcomes are likely to involve Qualcomm coughing up some dough unless it proves that the allegations were without merit.
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in europe, court, legal, antitrust, eu, European Commission, european union, EuropeanCommission, EuropeanUnion, qualcomm | No Comments »