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Microsoft to boost S. Korean
investment
SEOUL—Microsoft’s chief executive announced expanded
investments and projects in South Korea on Thursday, describing
the country as a global high-tech leader, even as the US software
company presses ahead with a legal challenge over an antitrust
ruling.
Microsoft Corp. is investing
a total of S$60 million over three years to promote innovation
in information technology, CEO Steve Ballmer said.
South Korea is “one
of the two or three leading digital economies in the world,”
Ballmer said in a speech to Seoul Digital Forum 2006, a three-day
gathering of leading industry figures. “Microsoft is very
committed to really helping enable growth in this market.”
Ballmer said the investment
includes “innovation that’s designed to help over
60 Korean software companies thrive not only here in Korea but
in export throughout the world.”
Under the plan, the
company will invest $30 million to expand an innovation center
to “incubate new products and technology for export,”
Microsoft said in a release.
That comes on top of
$30 million already put into the project, Ballmer said at a press
conference after the speech.
The expanded investment
comes as Microsoft is embroiled in a dispute with the Korea Fair
Trade Commission, which has fined the software giant 32.5 billion
won ($34 million), ruling it abused its dominant market position
by tying certain software to its Windows operating system.
The commission on Monday
rejected Microsoft’s appeal to reconsider the ruling. The
company has also lodged a separate appeal with the Seoul High
Court, where no decision has been reached.
“Our case is obviously
at this stage in the Korean legal system, which we respect,”
Ballmer said. “It’ll work its way through that system.”
Separately, the company
said it would cooperate with Samsung Corp., the country’s
largest conglomerate, in developing strategies for integrating
digital products onto a single platform in new apartments Samsung
will construct. AP