Skype Now Officially Part of Microsoft | PCMag.com

Microsoft formally closed its acquisition of Skype on Friday, meaning the video-chat service is now a division of the software giant.

In a blog post about the deal, Skype chief Tony Bates said the goal is to “transform communications,” though he reiterated that Skype will remain available on non-Microsoft platforms, like Mac, Android, and Apple iOS.

Microsoft and Skype complement one another because both are “disruptive, innovative, software-oriented companies,” Bates said in a video message (below). “The world I see in a few years is really one of complete, pervasive video communications, something that’s across all parts of your life,” he said.

“Skype is a phenomenal product and brand that is loved by hundreds of millions of people around the world,” said Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer. “We look forward to working with the Skype team to create new ways for people to stay connected to family, friends, clients and colleagues — anytime, anywhere.”

via Skype Now Officially Part of Microsoft | News & Opinion | PCMag.com.

Skype Now Officially Part of Microsoft | PCMag.com

Microsoft formally closed its acquisition of Skype on Friday, meaning the video-chat service is now a division of the software giant.

In a blog post about the deal, Skype chief Tony Bates said the goal is to “transform communications,” though he reiterated that Skype will remain available on non-Microsoft platforms, like Mac, Android, and Apple iOS.

Microsoft and Skype complement one another because both are “disruptive, innovative, software-oriented companies,” Bates said in a video message (below). “The world I see in a few years is really one of complete, pervasive video communications, something that’s across all parts of your life,” he said.

“Skype is a phenomenal product and brand that is loved by hundreds of millions of people around the world,” said Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer. “We look forward to working with the Skype team to create new ways for people to stay connected to family, friends, clients and colleagues — anytime, anywhere.”

via Skype Now Officially Part of Microsoft | News & Opinion | PCMag.com.

Microsoft Sets Sept. 15 Date for IE9 Beta Launch | News & Opinion | PCMag.com

On Thursday afternoon, Microsoft sent out invitations to the launch of Internet Explorer 9 beta on Sept. 15, in San Francisco. The invitation to the event, dubbed “Beauty of the Web,” included an HTML5 invitation site with an animated word game taking advantage of that emerging set of Web standards.

Microsoft had previously disclosed that it would release an IE9 beta in September.

Since March, the software giant has released four “platform previews,” which lacked a true user interface with conveniences like bookmarks, search, and history. And just last week, the fourth preview was released, with the accompanying blog post by Internet Explorer General Manager Dean Hachamovitch noting that it would be the last platform preview before the beta phase. He also noted that the previews had been downloaded 2.5 million times, and the accompanying test site of demos had received over 20 million visits.

via Microsoft Sets Sept. 15 Date for IE9 Beta Launch | News & Opinion | PCMag.com.

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 to pay $200 million in patent dispute | Microsoft – CNET News

Microsoft will pay VirnetX Holding $200 million to settle a patent dispute over VPN technology in Windows, the companies announced Monday.

As part of the settlement, Microsoft will also obtain a license to use VirnetX technology in Microsoft products.

VirnetX first sued Microsoft in 2007, claiming the software giant had violated two of its VPN (virtual private network) patents through the use of the technology in Windows XP and Vista. A U.S. District Court ruled in VirnetX’s favor in March, determining that Microsoft had willfully infringed on the VPN patents in question and ordering the company to pay VirnetX damages of $105.75 million.

Just a few days after the verdict was handed down, VirnetX filed another lawsuit against Microsoft, claiming that the same patent-violating technologies were also in Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2.

VirnetX asserted that Microsoft had violated U.S. patents 6,502,135 and 7,188,180, which both cover specific ways to secure IP-based communications through VPNs and similar technologies.

As part of the settlement, the lawsuits will be dismissed. Although the final $200 million in damages is almost double the $105.75 million that Microsoft was first ordered to pay, that amount could have tripled had the companies not come to an agreement, according to Reuters.

via Microsoft to pay $200 million in patent dispute | Microsoft – CNET News.

Infosys lands deal to manage Microsoft’s internal IT services | ZDNet.com

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Microsoft has outsourced its internal IT services—help desk, desk-side services, infrastructure and application support—to Indian outsourcing firm Infosys.

For Infosys, managing Microsoft’s internal IT gives it a high-profile customer and insight to using the latest technologies from the software giant. Infosys will manage IT services for Microsoft employees worldwide. Microsoft has noted that Infosys is benefiting from a consolidation of services that were already outsourced to HP and others.

Specifically, Infosys is tasked with streamlining processes, simplifying support and service and cutting costs by using Microsoft’s own software, say Windows 7. Infosys will support Microsoft’s applications, devices and databases in 450 locations. Infosys has partnered with Unisys to deliver on-premise support and service desk capabilities.

Infosys said in a statement that it can take its Microsoft learnings and apply them to other customers.

via Infosys lands deal to manage Microsoft’s internal IT services | Between the Lines | ZDNet.com.

Adobe Will Be Top Target for Hackers in 2010, Report Says – PC World Business Center

Adobe Systems' Flash and Acrobat Reader products will become the preferred targets for criminal hackers in 2010, surpassing Microsoft Office applications, a security vendor predicted this week.

“Cybercriminals have long picked on Microsoft products due to their popularity. In 2010, we anticipate Adobe software, especially Acrobat Reader and Flash, will take the top spot,” security vendor McAfee said in its “2010 Threat Predictions” report (PDF).

Hackers usually target the most widely used products in order to achieve the maximum impact. For a long time that has made Microsoft their primary target. But the software giant has tightened security in its recent OS releases, leading hackers to look for additional targets.

Adobe’s CTO acknowledged recently that his company’s software is being attacked more frequently, and said the company has stepped up its efforts to respond.

“We have absolutely seen an increase in the number of attacks, around Reader in particular and also Flash Player to some extent,” CTO Kevin Lynch told reporters at the Adobe Max conference in October. “We’re working to decrease the amount of time between when we know about a problem and when we release a fix. That used to be a couple of months; now it's within two weeks for critical issues.”

via Adobe Will Be Top Target for Hackers in 2010, Report Says – PC World Business Center.

Europe Drops Microsoft Antitrust Case Over Browsers – NYTimes.com

European regulators dropped their antitrust case against Microsoft on Wednesday after the software maker agreed to offer consumers a choice of rival Web browsers. The settlement averted a second costly legal battle for the American software giant.

The agreement, announced in Brussels by the European competition commissioner, Neelie Kroes, calls for Microsoft to give Windows users a choice of up to 11 other browsers from competing companies, including Mozilla, Apple and Google.

Users of Microsoft’s ubiquitous Windows operating system in Europe who have chosen its Internet Explorer as their default browser will receive in a software update an option to switch to a rival, starting next year.

via Europe Drops Microsoft Antitrust Case Over Browsers – NYTimes.com.