A Microsoft Corp. executive on Thursday denied that the company used its Windows operating system monopoly to thwart rival audio and video players, as alleged in its landmark antitrust case.
Will Poole, a vice president in charge of Microsoft's Windows New Media Platform Division, told federal court that RealNetworks Inc. was the dominant media-playing software despite its complaints about Microsoft.
"The inclusion of multimedia technology in Windows has not impeded RealNetworks' ability to create competing media players that run very well on Windows and to distribute and promote those media players broadly to users," Poole said in written testimony.
|