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U.S. vs. Us
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USA
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Today leads with our ambassador to the U.N. giving a speech there
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Monday saying that if it doesn't reduce America's dues, there will be serious
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damage done to the U.S. relationship with the world body. The New York Times ,
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Washington Post and Los Angeles
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Times each lead with the announcement by Janet Reno and her top
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anti-trust aide that the Department of Justice filed a federal lawsuit against
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Microsoft alleging that the company's current marketing practices are in
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violation of a 1995 consent decree it signed with the government. The Wall Street Journal flags the suit in its business and
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finance news box, and USAT dedicates its front page "cover story" to
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it.
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When a story dominates a day like this one does, it's the differences that
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stand out. Everybody makes it clear that the central bone of contention is
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Microsoft's practice of requiring PC makers to include its Internet Explorer
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browsing software on each computer sold with MS's Windows operating system. But
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some accounts of what could be legally suspect about that are more successful
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than others. The most concise is in USAT , which says that a section of
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the 1995 consent decree "bans Microsoft from signing licensing agreements that
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force PC makers to also license other Microsoft products. In parentheses, the
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section adds: 'provided, however, that this provision in and of itself shall
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not be construed to prohibit Microsoft from developing integrated products.'"
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The Justice Department argues that Internet Explorer constitutes a separate
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product. Microsoft's position, says USAT , is that the browser is simply
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an "extension" of Windows.
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And the WP has the detail that the DOJ says at least three unnamed
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computer manufacturers were turned down when they asked Microsoft for
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permission either to remove the Internet Explorer browser entirely or just the
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desktop icon for it. Justice says, according to the Post , that in 1996,
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Microsoft threatened to withhold Windows 95 from one of the country's largest
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computer makers if it didn't include Internet Explorer.
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The DOJ is asking for the imposition of a daily $1 million fine until
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Microsoft complies, and also asked the court to force the company to revise the
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non-disclosure provisions of the contracts it has product licensees sign, on
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the grounds that such provisions have a chilling effect on those wishing to
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complain.
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Question: Is it sloppy writing or just paranoia that leads the WSJ to
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state that "for years," Microsoft has required personal computer makers that
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license Windows 95 to also install Internet Explorer?
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A front-page LAT piece details a little noticed post-Cold War
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military development: a submarine arms race among Third World countries. Some
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of the least stable, most hostile countries on the planet--such as China, Iran,
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and North Korea--are, reports the paper, "buying, building and arming
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submarines seemingly as fast as their treasuries will allow." Most of the subs
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come from former Soviet shipyards.
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The headline writers at the WP distinguish themselves with their
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effort over a story about a woman suing a man she says promised marriage to her
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only as a way to cultivate her brother as an organ donor for him: "Woman
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Alleges Fiance Stole Her Heart, Brother's Kidney."
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