- Tue Jun 24 2008 Judge presses for more from Microsoft
Federal judge presiding over Microsoft's antitrust case wants the company to cough up more details on how various parts of Windows work together, according to a wire report.
Posted by Ina Fried
- Mon Nov 4 2002 Microsoft ruling may blunt other cases
update Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly?s antitrust ruling may have gutted many pending private lawsuits against Microsoft, but cases in California and Europe still pose a danger.
Posted by Joe Wilcox
- Fri Aug 24 2001 New Microsoft judge in the spotlight
Colleen Kollar-Kotelly has ruled on geese, telemarketers and terrorists, but not on antitrust cases.
Posted by Rachel Konrad
- Fri Mar 24 2006 Election commission takes light touch with Net regs
Bloggers may not have much to worry about, FEC indicates in proposed regulations. Vote is scheduled for Monday.
Posted by Declan McCullagh
- Wed Jan 30 2002 Judge could close Microsoft depositions
U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly grants a Microsoft request that could close upcoming depositions in its antitrust trial to the media.
Posted by Joe Wilcox
- Thu Feb 21 2002 Judge squelches case against Microsoft
Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, the federal judge overseeing the software maker's antitrust settlement, rules against a nonprofit group that sought to block the deal.
Posted by Margaret Kane
- Wed Sep 5 2007 Judge: Google can file anti-Microsoft antitrust brief
But Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly says she still trusts that Microsoft and government prosecutors have already reached "appropriate resolution" to desktop search competition complaint.
Posted by Anne Broache
- Fri Aug 24 2001 New judge assigned in Microsoft trial
A federal court randomly assigns U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly to preside over the Microsoft antitrust case as it returns to trial court for further proceedings.
Posted by Joe Wilcox
- Fri Nov 1 2002 Perspective: Machiavelli meets Microsoft
CNET News.com's Charles Cooper says when it came to deciding what to do about Microsoft, Judge Kollar-Kotelly turned to "The Prince," the famous Renaissance treatise on power politics, for direction.
Posted by Charles Cooper
- Tue Feb 15 2005 Political Web ads may be curtailed
The Federal Election Commission reluctantly says Internet political advertising may have to be regulated.
Posted by Declan McCullagh