EU says it must check that Oracle takeover of Sun will not hike prices for database software

By Aoife White, AP
Thursday, September 3, 2009

EU probes Oracle’s bid to buy Sun

BRUSSELS — European Union regulators on Thursday launched an antitrust probe into U.S. software maker Oracle Corp.’s takeover of Sun Microsystems Inc., saying they wanted to make sure Oracle was committed to developing Sun’s rival open-source database software MySQL.

EU approval is now the main stumbling block for the $7.4 billion deal which has already been cleared in the U.S. by the Department of Justice.

The European Commission now has 90 days — until Jan. 19, 2010 — before it makes a final decision to clear the deal or block it. It often presses companies to make changes that eliminate antitrust worries, such as selling off parts of their business.

EU Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes said Thursday that regulators needed to examine the effect of a deal “when the world’s biggest proprietary database company proposes to take over the world’s leading open-source database company.”

She said the EU executive wanted to check that customers won’t see less choice or higher prices as a result — and was keen to make sure that open-source software continues to rival larger companies that develop their own code and don’t share it with others.

EU officials said they plan to look closely at Sun’s MySQL database, an open-source product that is popular among Web-based companies. They claim that MySQL will increasingly pose a threat to Oracle’s market-leading database software as it adds features and attracts more customers.

They said they would examine “Oracle’s incentive to further develop MySQL as an open source database.”

Kroes said it was important that customers could choose between open source and proprietary software.

“In the current economic context, all companies are looking for cost-effective IT solutions, and systems based on open-source software are increasingly emerging as viable alternatives to proprietary solutions,” she said. “The commission has to ensure that such alternatives would continue to be available.”

The EU described the database market as “highly concentrated” with the three main proprietary software companies — Oracle, IBM and Microsoft — controlling some 85 percent of the market by revenue.

Peter Alexiadis, a partner at the Brussels office of law firm Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP, said he was “hard pressed” to see how the deal would strengthen Oracle’s position in the database market which covers a wide variety of software for different needs.

“If the commission goes down the path of defining narrow database markets, they might be going down a path they may regret,” he said. “There is plenty of competition in the middleware space, and that should shut down that line of argument.”

Oracle’s bid for Sun marks new territory for the company, turning it into a one-stop technology shop, like IBM Corp. and Hewlett-Packard Co.

It is already expanding aggressively outside its core database software business by moving into business applications and will start making hardware if the Sun deal goes through.

Sun is the world’s No. 4 maker of computer servers, which power Web sites and corporate back offices.

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