After more than two months of dueling briefs, filings, and press releases, the legal dispute between the Justice Department and Microsoft takes a critical turn. Both parties are caught in the latest wrinkle stalling their high-profile antitrust dispute: whether the company is in contempt of court and should be fined $1 million per day for not following the judge's order to unbundle Internet Explorer from Windows 95.
Latest developments | |
| MS, DOJ filings bolster positions |
| Lessig insists on impartiality |
| Lessig's declaration to the court |
| Microsoft revises deals in Europe |
Microsoft backlash | |
| Judge miffed at Microsoft over OS |
| MS appeals Lessig ruling |
| SPA to meet over antitrust |
| MS hardball backfires, analysts say |
| Back to drawing board in Redmond? |
| Judge won't remove special master |
Contempt hearing begins | |
| Klein: DOJ action is "essential" |
| Judge, MS differ on terms of compliance |
| Microsoft inspected in Japan |
| Contempt hearing looms |
Previous coverage | |
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Microsoft case in court U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson has dealt Microsoft a legal setback in the first round of the Justice ![]() |