EU gives Oracle extra time to respond to Sun inquiry
Oracle asks for more time to allow it to make its case for the deal
By Paul Meller, IDG News Service
November 20, 2009 09:42 AM ET
Oracle and Sun Microsystems have been granted an extra week to defend their planned US$7 billion merger in front of European
regulators, the European Commission said Friday.Earlier this month the Commission, Europe's top antitrust regulator, issued
formal objections to the deal, arguing that it posed a threat to competition in the market for database software.The deadline
for a final ruling has been put back to Jan. 27 from Jan. 19, which amounts to six additional working days for Oracle to win
over the skeptical regulator. "Oracle requested the extension in order to have the opportunity to further develop its arguments
in response to the Commission's concerns," the Commission said in a routine weekly statement on the status of ongoing merger
investigations.The Commission's concerns center on Oracle acquiring MySQL, an open source database developed in Europe and
bought by Sun a year ago for $1 billion. It argued in its statement of objections that the acquisition of the most significant
open source database on the market by Oracle, the proprietary database market leader, could harm competition.
Oracle responded angrily, accusing the Commission of not understanding the database market. It claims that MySQL is aimed
at a totally different type of client from the ones that use Oracle's database products.
However, the Commission, as well as many observers, argue that even if the products don't compete at the moment, Oracle's
ownership of MySQL could stifle the software's development. This could have a negative long term effect on the database market,
they said.
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Oracle and Sun Microsystems have been granted an extra week to defend their planned US$7 billion merger in front of European
regulators, the European Commission said Friday.Earlier this month the Commission, Europe's top antitrust regulator, issued
formal objections to the deal, arguing that it posed a threat to competition in the market for database software.The deadline
for a final ruling has been put back to Jan. 27 from Jan. 19, which amounts to six additional working days for Oracle to win
over the skeptical regulator. "Oracle requested the extension in order to have the opportunity to further develop its arguments
in response to the Commission's concerns," the Commission said in a routine weekly statement on the status of ongoing merger
investigations.The Commission's concerns center on Oracle acquiring MySQL, an open source database developed in Europe and
bought by Sun a year ago for $1 billion. It argued in its statement of objections that the acquisition of the most significant
open source database on the market by Oracle, the proprietary database market leader, could harm competition.
Oracle responded angrily, accusing the Commission of not understanding the database market. It claims that MySQL is aimed
at a totally different type of client from the ones that use Oracle's database products.
However, the Commission, as well as many observers, argue that even if the products don't compete at the moment, Oracle's
ownership of MySQL could stifle the software's development. This could have a negative long term effect on the database market,
they said.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.