The Korea Fair Trade Commission (KFTC) has rejected an appeal by Microsoft to reconsider a multimillion-dollar fine and other penalties levied against the software maker earlier this year.In February, the KFTC concluded a 21-month investigation into Microsoft’s business practices in South Korea by ordering the company to pay a 33 billion won (US$35.2 million) fine and offer two versions of its Windows XP operating system in the country: one without Windows Media Player and Windows Messenger, and another that includes links to websites offering rival software.Microsoft was given until Aug. 24 to comply with the decision. In response, it filed two appeals: one with the Seoul High Court over the decision and one with the KFTC to reconsider its decision. The KFTC said Monday that it would not alter its judgment.“We respect the Korea Fair Trade Commission’s decision. However, Microsoft believes it has complied with Korean competition laws, and has conducted business for the benefit of the consumers in Korea,” said Oliver Roll, a regional spokesman for Microsoft in Singapore. “We will continue to defend our position.” Microsoft expects the Seoul High Court appeal to take a couple of years before a final ruling is issued. In the meantime, Microsoft is looking for the court to issue a stay on the KFTC’s judgment so that it won’t have to release the new Windows versions in August.The KFTC investigation was sparked by complaints made to the KFTC by local portal-site operator Daum Communications in 2001 and by RealNetworks in 2004. Microsoft last year settled with Daum in a package valued at US$30 million, while it paid RealNetworks US$761 million in an out-of-court deal, but these private settlements weren’t enough to stop the KFTC investigation. Both complaints concerned bundling of software with the Windows operating system, and the KFTC’s ruling will affect the yet-to-be-launched Windows Vista.“The ruling concerns messenger technology and media player technologies and it would apply to future versions [of Windows], but what it means we can’t yet comment on,” said Roll.-Martyn Williams, IDG News ServiceCheck out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content Saudi Vision 2030: Why the Kingdom is becoming a hub in EdTech education By Andrea Benito Jun 07, 2023 5 mins brandpost From edge to cloud: The critical role of hardware in AI applications The rise of generative artificial intelligence By Broadcom Jun 06, 2023 5 mins Machine Learning Artificial Intelligence brandpost The new value calculator: Levers for business optimization Squeezing maximum value out of your data is not only about cost-savings—it’s time to create significant potential by transforming your competitive position. By Sandrine Ghosh Jun 06, 2023 5 mins Data Management brandpost The new wave of data observability Innovative ‘applied observability’ can detect issues and diagnose their root causes swiftly and effectively. By Sandrine Ghosh Jun 06, 2023 4 mins Data Management Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe