- Microsoft has responded to CMA’s decision report
- It claims that British customers have not submitted so many complaints
- AWS doesn’t play ball, and Google speaks “out of both sides of his company’s mouth”
Microsoft, who has apparently found itself at the center of countless antitrust examinations in recent years, has returned to comments compared to an ongoing British CMA study.
The technology giant has contested the competition and Markets Authority (CMA )’s preliminary decision -making report and argues that it is based on hypothetical concerns rather than actual market conditions.
Microsoft issued an official reaction to 101 pages that tackle all aspects of CMA’s probe, and even claimed that British customers have raised “limited” complaints and suggested that the body has overreacted.
Microsoft challenges CMA’s study
“We are particularly concerned about its singling of Microsoft and its accusation that Microsoft is unfairly using some of its software products to prevent Amazon Web Services and Google Cloud from competing effectively for UK customers,” the company wrote.
In the letter, the tech giant even threw his primary hyperscaler -Rival, AWS, not to share his own software with Microsoft “or anyone else” -the answer criticizes AWS for believing it can licenses Microsoft’s software “to its own advantage and on favorable terms.”
Microsoft later continued to condemn Google to “speak out of both sides of his company’s mouth” that boasts of both his “incredible momentum in the cloud industry” and mocks Microsoft’s growth at the same time.
When turning attention to artificial intelligence, Microsoft Cloud Computing providers noticed are set to invest $ 250 billion globally to meet the intensifying demands of AI and argue that CMA has ignored the relevance of technology.
The company also noticed measures and its rivals have already taken steps to counteract antitrust examinations, including removal of output fees for customers changing from a cloud computing provider to another 12 months ago. The company rejected output fees as a major problem and claimed that the lack of removal of mass migration after the fee after the fee proves that they did not significantly affect customer decisions in the first place.
Microsoft wrapped by concluding that it has been a “larger investor” in the British economy for four decades, and urged CMA to step carefully to avoid “weakened[ing] One of Britain’s most dynamic industries with high growth. “
Looking ahead, all parties have until April 2025 to submit their answers. CMA is set to make a final decision by July 2025 before the deadline of August.
Techradar Pro have asked CMA to share additional comments, but we did not receive an immediate response.