Microsoft Wins Best Legal Department of 2010 | Corporate Counsel

It was a holiday gift ten years and billions of dollars in the making.

On Dec. 16, 2009, Microsoft Corporation’s legal department settled the company’s longest and most expensive antitrust legal battle. In a major concession to European regulators, the software giant agreed to open its Windows operating system to rival Web browsers.

Microsoft’s general counsel, Brad Smith, and his legal team spent months last year hammering out the details of the 61-page settlement with the European Commission, the European Union’s executive body. By fall, Microsoft’s legal department had held 24 videoconferences and 34 conference calls with E.C. lawyers. “We wanted to be seen as a company that would work with regulators,” said deputy general counsel David Heiner, who heads the antitrust group and led much of the negotiations.

Some have called the settlement one of Smith’s crowning achievements. He and his legal team ended more than a decade of close scrutiny by European regulators. The software colossus can keep doing business across the Atlantic, and the stage is now set for better relations with Brussels. “There could have been an endless succession of slug-it-out battles to the death, and instead Microsoft elected to make some perhaps unwelcome but nonetheless significant concessions,” said Ian Forrester, a partner at White & Case who represented Microsoft in Brussels. The case, he said, is “a really extraordinary piece of legal history.”

The settlement was also symbolic for the company’ s legal team, which has set out to prove that it can resolve disputes amicably, despite Microsoft’s reputation for aggressively fighting legal disputes to their bitter, final end. And much of that effort has focused on building relationships and listening to what the other side wants, and fears. “We have tried to make that a defined part of how we train people to negotiate — in any context,” Smith said. “That is not always successful, but has been widely successful for us.”

Since Smith took the helm of Microsoft’s in-house legal department in 2002, he’s led a campaign to recast his company’s pugnacious image and come to terms with both regulators and Redmond’s fiercest competitors. Last year, for example, along with resolving the Brussels imbroglio, the department helped put together a friendly partnership deal with Yahoo! Inc. after months of acrimonious takeover discussions. The E.C. agreement was the culmination of Smith’s diplomatic offensive.

That’s not to imply that Microsoft has gone all touchy-feely. It remains a formidable legal opponent, especially when it comes to protecting the company’s most valuable asset — its intellectual property. Last year the legal department won two precedent-setting patent defense victories on appeal. Meanwhile, it stopped several consumer lawsuits from getting class certification.

Those litigation successes are among the many reasons we have awarded Microsoft’s lawyers the accolade of Best Legal Department of 2010. It's the fifth time we’ve given out the award, and, as usual, the competition was extremely tight. Corporate Counsel’s writers and editors spent days debating, arguing, and exchanging sometimes heated e-mails. After sending reporters to interview the finalists, we confirmed our ultimate choice.

via Law.com – Microsoft Wins Best Legal Department of 2010.

Microsoft Accuses Salesforce.com of Infringing Software Patents – BusinessWeek

Microsoft Corp. said it sued Salesforce.com Inc. today, accusing the company of infringing nine patents for ways to make software more efficient.

The complaint targets the customer-relationship management, or CRM, software that is the hallmark of Salesforce.com’s business. It seeks a court order that would prevent the San Francisco-based company from providing features that Microsoft claims it invented.

Salesforce.com, founded in 1999, offers software that businesses subscribe to and use over the Internet for running marketing campaigns and tracking sales leads. It competes against Microsoft’s Dynamics software in the CRM market.

“Microsoft has been a leader and innovator in the software industry for decades and continues to invest billions of dollars each year in bringing great software products and services to market,” said Horacio Gutierrez, the Redmond, Washington-based company’s deputy general counsel for intellectual property and licensing. Microsoft “cannot stand idly by when others infringe” our intellectual property rights, he said.

The complaint was filed in federal court in Seattle after more than a year of talks, according to Microsoft, the world’s biggest software maker.

via Microsoft Accuses Salesforce.com of Infringing Software Patents – BusinessWeek.

Court Tells Microsoft to Edit Word | BusinessWeek

Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), the world's biggest software maker, must alter its popular Word software or stop selling the product after it lost its appeal of a $200 million patent-infringement verdict won by a Canadian company.

The company, based in Redmond, Washington, was given until Jan. 11 — five months from the original order issued in August — to make the change by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington. Word is part of Microsoft’s Office software, used by more than 500 million people.

The court today upheld a verdict which has since grown to $290 million won by closely held I4i LP of Toronto. The dispute is over a patented invention related to customizing extensible markup language, or XML, a way of encoding data to exchange information among programs. Microsoft has called it an “obscure functionality.”

via Court Tells Microsoft to Edit Word – BusinessWeek.