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Houston is winning the competition to establish tech hubs in Texas – MarketWatch

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A crumbling Sears department store is being converted into a sparkling, state-of-the-art space for early-stage tech startups to receive financing and expert advice. The shell of a Baker Hughes Co. facility that manufactured oil and gas equipment is home to a bustling “maker lab” for 33 tenants. A 300,000-square-foot complex incubating the next tech ideas for the likes of Johnson & Johnson and AT&T Inc. is known affectionately as “the cookie factory,” because it was originally the home of Nabisco. 
These scenes from Houston are part of an attempted industrial resurrection for the nation’s fourth-largest city, which is trying to move from older companies that were a part of the city’s oil-propelled boom to an economy based on fostering technology. The crown jewel of this renaissance could be the gleaming new corporate headquarters of Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co. HPE, -0.97% in northern Houston — when the sprawling, 439,000-square-foot complex designed in part by HPE Chief Executive Antonio Neri opens in early 2022, it will be home to about 3,000 people, making HPE the city’s eighth-biggest employer.
“Every company [in Houston and elsewhere] is an IT company now,” Neri told MarketWatch in a 30-minute video interview last week. “They all need to turn their talent in different directions, and reinvent themselves.”
HPE’s decampment to Houston offers a vivid snapshot of a new tech frontier where the energy industry, three major local universities, the world’s largest medical center, the mayor’s office, and the local tech ecosystem are working hand-in-hand to accelerate research in medicine, climate change and cloud computing.
A confluence of events — stepped up by the pandemic and a steady migration of Californians to Texas — has helped Houston shed its image as an oil town and position itself as the hardware-solutions tech nexus to Austin’s business-to-consumer software/app focus, and the old-school sensibility of Dallas (the global headquarters of AT&T Inc. T, -1.77% ). San Antonio, too, is part of the mix, as a data-center destination.
Houston’s resurgence is part of a Texas tech wave: Oracle Corp. ORCL, -0.82% is relocating its corporate headquarters to nearby Austin, and Tesla Inc. TSLA, -2.51% is expanding operations to the state capital as well.
“I want the rest of the world to know how much Houston is changing,” Amy Chronis, managing director of Deloitte Houston, told MarketWatch. “The wakeup call was Amazon looking at candidates for HQ2, and Houston not making the second cut. Not enough technological talent was their reason. It was incorrect, but it lit a fire here.”
Seen through the prism of old, established facilities converted into accelerators and incubators, Houston may be America’s preeminent new tech hub. Sure, the pandemic played a part in a recent migration of tech workers from California to Texas, but the trend was already in motion, as energy companies and medical facilities pivoted to tech.
“For years, Houston was lagging the rest of the county in its innovation-engine system. Houston was always an industrial, major organization city,” Bob Harvey, CEO of Greater Houston Partnership, the business organization for the 12-county region that functions as a Chamber of Commerce, told MarketWatch. “What we didn’t do well was startups. Houston is now showing up in lists of tech talent.”
What has changed is an intertwined economy that includes three major universities in the area: Rice University, the University of Houston and Texas A&M University. The likes of Chevron Corp. CVX, +1.49%, Shell RDS and Halliburton Co. HAL, +3.70% are working more closely with local tech startups in an attempt to expand their businesses after relying for years on in-house R&D, and cloud giants such as Microsoft Corp.’s MSFT, -1.67% Azure, Amazon’s AMZN, -0.24% AWS and Alphabet Inc.’s GOOGL, -1.72% GOOG, -1.69% Google Cloud are placing more talent in Houston to work with the energy industry.
Change is coming, but with deep Houston roots. In 2001, then-Hewlett Packard Co. merged with Compaq Computer Corp., based in Houston, for $25 billion in one of tech’s most controversial mergers. By the time the corporate dust had settled, in 2015, HP was split into HPE and HP Inc.
To be sure, an influx of startups has set the stage for HPE’s return. The appeal of a massive labor market teeming with engineers, a booming enterprise market, a low cost of living, and a thriving health industry led to several sizzling startups to open second headquarters in Houston.
Among the transplants are Roboze Inc., an Italian-based robotics company specializing in 3-D printing of high-spec parts for energy and aerospace industries; autonomous driving unicorn Nuro; fintech firm Bill.com; and Solugen Inc., a green tech company that processes and cleans water in petro-chemical plants.
In a state teeming with tech expansion, Houston appears to be the hot spot, as Austin grappled with flagging funding over the past year. Venture-capital investments in Houston increased to $753 million in 2020 from $284 million in 2016.  Last year, Houston-based health-care companies generated $256 million in VC funding, accounting for $1 of every $3 VC dollars raised there. 
“One way to keep people in Houston is to get more venture funding and develop talent here,” said Sandy Guitar, managing director of the HX Venture Fund. She knows from personal experience: She founded a company in Palo Alto, Calif., and commuted there from Houston for years.
Talent has always been in Houston, which ranks first in the U.S. for tech workers in non-tech companies, according to a Cyberstates study in April 2021.
Yet Austin, home of the SXSW digital conference/musical festival/film festival, has traditionally been Texas’ tech darling.
“Austin did a good job of being viewed by the coasts as the tech center of Texas,” Harvey of Greater Houston Partnership said. “But it has become more expensive and crowded. Plus, what Houston has to offer is culture, professional sports and a more diverse community.”
What also distinguishes the Houston tech scene is the nature of its mission. Many of its companies are tackling big problems — health, climate change — that require “hard tech,” said Dr. Emily Reichert, CEO of Greentown Labs, the largest climate-tech startup incubator in North America. Its tenants include SolarFi, a maker of solar-powered pods, and Katz Water Technologies.
Ambitions are equally sky high at Texas Medical Center (TMC) Innovation, a 300,000-square-foot facility that was the former home of Nabisco, the cookies and snacks subsidiary of Mondelēz International Inc. MDLZ, -2.00%. One of TMCI’s occupants, Johnson & Johnson’s JNJ, -1.57% JLABS, works with Stellanova Therapeutics, which is developing an antibody that targets fiber blast cells that protect cancer cells against treatment and promote cancer cell growth, and biotech firm Tvardi Therapeutics. Tvardi, which is developing medicines for cancer, chronic inflammation and fibrosis, just landed $74 million in funding.
Pharma and medical devices are the focus at JLABS, Fiona Mack, the lab’s head, told MarketWatch.
Meanwhile, catty corner from Greentown Labs is The Ion, a six-story, 266,000-square-foot art deco building that opened as a Sears department store in 1939. When the tech and innovation hub opens in the fall, it will be home to Chevron Technology Ventures and Microsoft Corp., according to Jan Odegard, Ion’s executive director.
“Eventually, we want to turn midtown here into a 15-minute city,” Odegard told MarketWatch, referring to a major business/lifestyle movement among the under-40 crowd in the San Francisco Bay Area, Phoenix and elsewhere — where people work and live within a 15-minute driving radius. This is an especially novel approach in a metropolis like Houston, where it often takes an hour to get from one location to another, traffic pending.
On the other end of town, in an industrial section, the $37 million East End Maker Hub was once home to Baker Hughes Co., one of the world’s largest oil-field services companies that was acquired by General Electric Co. GE, -0.89% in 2017. The 307,000-square-foot facility (yes, it seems everything in Houston is large) houses 33 local manufacturers, fabricators, crafters and innovators. One standout is Volumetric Biotechnologies Inc., a Houston startup that makes 3-D-printed human organs. It has leased about 11,000 square feet.
“We have it all here — welders, shop artists, robotics, all manufacturers, a prison-entrepreneurship program,” Mike Pittman, vice president of real estate for Urban Partnerships Community Development Corp., told MarketWatch.
Halliburton Corp., which reported $14.45 billion in sales last year, is taking an in-house approach. The multinational conglomerate just opened a new tech center to “lower the friction” between itself and startups. Its initial cohort, NanoTech Inc., is a material-science company focused on fireproofing and insulation technologies that recently completed its $5 million seed round of financing.
“This is a front door for the company to engage with companies, and expand into areas where Halliburton is already working,” Dale Winger, managing director of Halliburton Labs, told MarketWatch.
At the Greater Houston Partnership’s first State of Technology event in April, HPE’s Neri struck a familiar theme: The original Silicon Valley startup, whose roots extend to Palo Alto, Calif., in 1939 as Hewlett-Packard Co., moved its corporate headquarters to Texas to take advantage of a large, diverse talent base.
There is some personal history there, in addition to generous state tax breaks. Neri, who lived in Houston from 2007-’15 while working as an HP executive, acknowledged that HPE has to do “way more work” in inclusion and diversity, and that the task is more easily achievable in Houston than in the more competitive San Francisco Bay Area. He promised a new facility in Houston in 2018, and announced the corporate headquarters move to Houston in December 2020.
HPE’s new campus serves as a blueprint for the hybrid work experience — an interconnected phalanx of office space, amphitheater, gym and cafe. HP Inc. HPQ, -1.88% and Exxon Mobil Corp. XOM, +1.83% also have facilities in the same Springwoods Village development just north of Houston.
“I made a promise in 2018 to build a new campus in Houston,” said Neri, who had a major hand in its design. (Neri also studied art in Argentina for nine years and has taught art, specializing in drawing and painting.) “It’s really the best of both worlds, with major operations in Houston and San Jose.”
HPE will maintain a large workforce focused on product innovation in San Jose, Calif., though it is in Houston that HPE has its second-largest workforce, behind India.
“The talent is in Houston and Silicon Valley,” said Neri, who will spend most of his time in Houston, with other executives sprinkled between the two regions. He also mentioned the geographical advantage Texas offers for traveling to Latin America and Europe for business.
Pradeep Kumar, who as senior vice president and general manager of HPE’s Pointnext Technology Services group, leads a $6 billion business that employs 17,000 people. HPE reported $27 billion in 2020 sales; it employs about 60,000 worldwide.
“There is always competition for up-and-coming talent in [Silicon] Valley, and it will continue despite antitrust backlash,” Kumar, a Compaq veteran who has lived in Houston for 23 years, told MarketWatch. “We have an advantage in Houston with college grads and existing talent. It is our city’s time.”
Much like anything dealing with John McAfee, 'Running With the Devil' has quickly devolved into heated debate, controversy and possibly a lawsuit.
Jon Swartz is a senior reporter for MarketWatch in San Francisco, covering many of the biggest players in tech, including Netflix, Facebook and Google. Jon has covered technology for more than 20 years, and previously worked for Barron’s and USA Today. Follow him on Twitter @jswartz.
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How a faulty CrowdStike update crashed computers around the world

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How a faulty CrowdStike update crashed computers around the world

Airlines, banks, hospitals and other risk-averse organizations around the world chose cybersecurity company CrowdStrike to protect their computer systems from hackers and data breaches.

But all it took was one faulty CrowdStrike software update to cause global disruptions Friday that grounded flights, knocked banks and media outlets offline, and disrupted hospitals, retailers and other services.

“This is a function of the very homogenous technology that goes into the backbone of all of our IT infrastructure,” said Gregory Falco, an assistant professor of engineering at Cornell University. “What really causes this mess is that we rely on very few companies, and everybody uses the same folks, so everyone goes down at the same time.”

The trouble with the update issued by CrowdStrike and affecting computers running Microsoft’s Windows operating system was not a hacking incident or cyberattack, according to CrowdStrike, which apologized and said a fix was on the way.

But it wasn’t an easy fix. It required “boots on the ground” to remediate, said Gartner analyst Eric Grenier.

“The fix is working, it’s just a very manual process and there’s no magic key to unlock it,” Grenier said. “I think that is probably what companies are struggling with the most here.”

While not everyone is a client of CrowdStrike and its platform known as Falcon, it is one of the leading cybersecurity providers, particularly in transportation, healthcare, banking and other sectors that have a lot at stake in keeping their computer systems working.

“They’re usually risk-averse organizations that don’t want something that’s crazy innovative, but that can work and also cover their butts when something goes wrong. That’s what CrowdStrike is,” Falco said. “And they’re looking around at their colleagues in other sectors and saying, ‘Oh, you know, this company also uses that, so I’m gonna need them, too.’”

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Worrying about the fragility of a globally connected technology ecosystem is nothing new. It’s what drove fears in the 1990s of a technical glitch that could cause chaos at the turn of the millennium.

“This is basically what we were all worried about with Y2K, except it’s actually happened this time,” wrote Australian cybersecurity consultant Troy Hunt on the social platform X.

Across the world Friday, affected computers were showing the “blue screen of death” — a sign that something went wrong with Microsoft’s Windows operating system.

But what’s different now is “that these companies are even more entrenched,” Falco said. “We like to think that we have a lot of players available. But at the end of the day, the biggest companies use all the same stuff.”

Founded in 2011 and publicly traded since 2019, CrowdStrike describes itself in its annual report to financial regulators as having “reinvented cybersecurity for the cloud era and transformed the way cybersecurity is delivered and experienced by customers.” It emphasizes its use of artificial intelligence in helping to keep pace with adversaries. It reported having 29,000 subscribing customers at the start of the year.

The Austin, Texas-based firm is one of the more visible cybersecurity companies in the world and spends heavily on marketing, including Super Bowl ads. At cybersecurity conferences, it’s known for large booths displaying massive action-figure statues representing different state-sponsored hacking groups that CrowdStrike technology promises to defend against.

CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz is among the most highly compensated in the world, recording more than $230 million in total compensation in the last three years. Kurtz is also a driver for a CrowdStrike-sponsored car racing team.

After his initial statement about the problem was criticized for lack of contrition, Kurtz apologized in a later social media post Friday and on NBC’s “Today Show.”

“We understand the gravity of the situation and are deeply sorry for the inconvenience and disruption,” he said on X.

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Richard Stiennon, a cybersecurity industry analyst, said this was a historic mistake by CrowdStrike.

“This is easily the worst faux pas, technical faux pas or glitch of any security software provider ever,” said Stiennon, who has tracked the cybersecurity industry for 24 years.

While the problem is an easy technical fix, he said, it’s impact could be long-lasting for some organizations because of the hands-on work needed to fix each affected computer. “It’s really, really difficult to touch millions of machines. And people are on vacation right now, so, you know, the CEO will be coming back from his trip to the Bahamas in a couple of weeks and he won’t be able to use his computers.”

Stiennon said he did not think the outage revealed a bigger problem with the cybersecurity industry or CrowdStrike as a company.

“The markets are going to forgive them, the customers are going to forgive them, and this will blow over,” he said.

Forrester analyst Allie Mellen credited CrowdStrike for clearly telling customers what they need to do to fix the problem. But to restore trust, she said there will need to be a deeper look at what occurred and what changes can be made to prevent it from happening again.

“A lot of this is likely to come down to the testing and software development process and the work that they’ve put into testing these kinds of updates before deployment,” Mellen said. “But until we see the complete retrospective, we won’t know for sure what the failure was.”

___

Associated Press writer Alan Suderman in Richmond, Virginia, contributed to this report.

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Worldwide IT outage: Airlines rush to get back on track

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Worldwide IT outage: Airlines rush to get back on track

Transport providers, businesses and governments on Saturday are rushing to get all their systems back online after long disruptions following a widespread technology outage.

The biggest continuing effect has been on air travel. Carriers canceled thousands of flights on Friday and now have many of their planes and crews in the wrong place, while airports facing continued problems with checking in and security.

At the heart of the massive disruption is CrowdStrike, a cybersecurity firm that provides software to scores of companies worldwide. The company says the problem occurred when it deployed a faulty update to computers running Microsoft Windows, noting that the issue behind the outage was not a security incident or cyberattack.

Here’s the Latest:

Microsoft: 8.5 million devices on its Windows system were affected

Microsoft says 8.5 million devices running its Windows operating system were affected by a faulty cybersecurity update Friday that led to worldwide disruptions.

A Saturday blog post from Microsoft was the first estimate of the scope of the disruptions caused by cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike’s software update.

“We currently estimate that CrowdStrike’s update affected 8.5 million Windows devices, or less than one percent of all Windows machines,” said the blog post from Microsoft cybersecurity executive David Weston.

“While the percentage was small, the broad economic and societal impacts reflect the use of CrowdStrike by enterprises that run many critical services.”

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Weston said such a significant disturbance is rare but “demonstrates the interconnected nature of our broad ecosystem.” Windows is the dominant operating system for personal computers around the world.

Austrian doctors’ group calls for better data protection for patients

In Austria, a leading doctors organization said the global IT outage exposed the vulnerability of health systems reliant on digital systems.

“Yesterday’s incidents underscore how important it is for hospitals to have analogue backups” to safeguard patient care, Harald Mayer, vice president of the Austrian Chamber of Doctors, said in a statement on the organization’s website.

The organization called on governments to impose high standards in patient data protection and security and on health providers to train staff and put systems in place to manage crises.

“Happily, where there were problems, these were kept small and short-lived and many areas of care were unaffected” in Austria, Mayer said.

Germany warns of scams after major IT outage

BERLIN — The German government’s IT security agency says numerous companies are still struggling with the consequences of a far-reaching technology outage.

“Many business processes and procedures have been disturbed by the breakdown of computer systems,” the BSI agency said on its website.

But the agency also said Saturday that many impacted areas have returned to normal.

It warned that cybercriminals were trying to take advantage of the situation through phishing, fake websites and other scams and that “unofficial” software code was in circulation.

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The agency said it was not yet clear how faulty code ended up in the CrowdStrike software update blamed for triggering the outage.

European airports appear to be close to normal

LONDON — Europe’s busiest airport, Heathrow, said it is busy but operating normally on Saturday. The airport said in a statement that “all systems are back up and running and passengers are getting on with their journeys smoothly.“

Some 167 flights scheduled to depart from U.K. airports on Friday were canceled, while 171 flights due to land were axed.

Meanwhile, flights at Berlin Airport were departing on or close to schedule, German news agency dpa reported, citing an airport spokesman.

Nineteen flights took off in the early hours of Saturday after authorities exempted them from the usual ban on night flights.

On Friday, 150 of the 552 scheduled inbound and outbound flights at the airport were canceled over the IT outage, disrupting the plans of thousands of passengers at the start of the summer vacation season in the German capital.

German hospital slowly restoring its systems after widespread cancellations

BERLIN — The Schleswig-Holstein University Hospital in northern Germany, which on Friday canceled all elective surgery because of the global IT outage, said Saturday that it was gradually restoring its systems.

In a statement on its website, it forecast that operations at its two branches in Kiel and Luebeck would return to normal by Monday and that “elective surgery can take place as planned and our ambulances can return to service.”

Britain’s transport system still trying to get back on track

LONDON — Britain’s travel and transport industries are struggling to get back on schedule after the global security outage with airline passengers facing cancellations and delays on the first day of summer holidays for many school pupils.

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Gatwick Airport said “a majority” of scheduled flights were expected to take off. Manchester Airport said passengers were being checked in manually and there could be last-minute cancellations.

The Port of Dover said it was seeing an influx of displaced air passengers, with hourlong waits to enter the port to catch ferries to France.

Meanwhile, Britain’s National Cyber Security Center warned people and businesses to be on the lookout for phishing attempts as “opportunistic malicious actors” try to take advantage of the outage.

The National Cyber Security Center’s former head, Ciaran Martin, said the worst of the crisis was over, “because the nature of the crisis is that it went very wrong very quickly. It was spotted quite quickly and essentially it was turned off.”

He told Sky News that some businesses would be able to get back to normal very quickly, but for sectors such as aviation it would take longer.

“If you’re in aviation, you’ve got people, planes and staffs all stranded in the wrong place… So we are looking at days. I’d be surprised if we’re looking at weeks.”

Germany airline expects most of its flights to run normally

BERLIN — Eurowings, a budget subsidiary of Lufthansa, said it expected to return to “largely scheduled” flight operations on Saturday.

On Friday, the global IT outage had forced the airline to cancel about 20% of its flights, mostly on domestic routes. Passengers were asked to take trains instead.

“Online check-in, check-in at the airport, boarding processes, booking and rebooking flights are all possible again,” the airline said Saturday on X. “However, due to the considerable extent of the global IT disruption there may still be isolated disruptions” for passengers, it said.

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Delta Air Lines and its regional affiliates have canceled hundreds of flights

DALLAS — Delta Air Lines and its regional affiliates canceled more than a quarter of their schedule on the East Coast by midafternoon Friday, aviation data provider Cirium said.

More than 1,100 flights for Delta and its affiliates have been canceled.

United and United Express had canceled more than 500 flights, or 12% of their schedule, and American Airlines’ network had canceled 450 flights, 7.5% of its schedule.

Southwest and Alaska do not use the CrowdStrike software that led to the global internet outages and had canceled fewer than a half-dozen flights each.

Portland, Oregon, mayor declares an emergency over the outage

PORTLAND, Ore. — Mayor Ted Wheeler declared an emergency Friday after more than half of the city’s computer systems were affected by the global internet outage.

Wheeler said during a news conference that while emergency services calls weren’t interrupted, dispatchers were having to manually track 911 calls with pen and paper for a few hours. He said 266 of the city’s 487 computer systems were affected.

Border crossings into the US are delayed

SAN DIEGO — People seeking to enter the U.S. from both the north and the south found that the border crossings were delayed by the internet outage.

The San Ysidro Port of Entry was gridlocked Friday morning with pedestrians waiting three hours to cross, according to the San Diego Union-Tribune.

Even cars with people approved for a U.S. Customers and Border Protection “Trusted Traveler” program for low-risk passengers waited up to 90 minutes. The program, known as SENTRI, moves passengers more quickly through customs and passport control if they make an appointment for an interview and submit to a background check to travel through customs and passport control more quickly when they arrive in the U.S.

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Meanwhile, at the U.S.-Canada border, Windsor Police reported long delays at the crossings at the Ambassador Bridge and the Detroit-Windsor tunnel.

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European Union accuses Microsoft of breaching antitrust rules by bundling Teams with office software

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European Union accuses Microsoft of breaching antitrust rules by bundling Teams with office software

LONDON (AP) — Microsoft violated European Union antitrust rules with “possibly abusive” practices by tying its Teams messaging and videoconferencing app to its widely used business software, the bloc said.

The European Commission said Monday it informed Microsoft of its preliminary view that the U.S. tech giant has been “restricting competition” by bundling Teams with core office productivity applications such as Office 365 and Microsoft 365.

The commission, the 27-nation bloc’s top antitrust enforcer, said it suspects Microsoft might have granted Teams a “distribution advantage” by not giving customers a choice on whether to have Teams when they purchased the software. The advantage might have been widened by limits on the ability of rival messaging apps to work with Microsoft software, it said.

“We are concerned that Microsoft may be giving its own communication product Teams an undue advantage over competitors, by tying it to its popular productivity suites for businesses,” Margrethe Vestager, the commission’s executive vice-president for competition policy, said in a statement.

“And preserving competition for remote communication and collaboration tools is essential as it also fosters innovation on these markets.”

The commission took aim at Microsoft a day after accusing Apple of breaching the bloc’s new digital competition rulebook, in a flurry of regulatory action underlining Brussels’ leading role as a watchdog for Big Tech companies.

Microsoft made some changes last year in an effort to head off an penalty, including offering the software packages without Teams for European customers. But the commission said Tuesday the changes are not enough to address its concerns and that it needs to do more to “restore competition.”

“Having unbundled Teams and taken initial interoperability steps, we appreciate the additional clarity provided today and will work to find solutions to address the Commission‘s remaining concerns.” Microsoft President Brad Smith said in a prepared statement.

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In April, the company also gave customers worldwide the option to get Microsoft 365 and Office 365 without Teams. The two software suites include programs like Word, Excel and Outlook.

Microsoft now has a chance to respond to the accusations, formally known as a statement of objections, before the commission makes its final decision. The company could face a fine worth up to 10% of its annual global revenue, or be forced to carry out “remedies” to satisfy the competition concerns.

The commission opened its investigation in July 2023 after rival Slack Technologies, which makes popular workplace messaging software, filed a complaint with Brussels. Alfaview, which makes videoconferencing software, also filed a separate complaint.

Slack, owned by business software maker Salesforce, had alleged that Microsoft abused its market dominance to eliminate competition — in violation of EU laws.

“The Statement of Objections issued today by the European Commission is a win for customer choice and an affirmation that Microsoft’s practices with Teams have harmed competition,” Salesforce President Sabastian Niles said. “We appreciate the Commission’s thorough investigation of Slack’s complaint and urge the Commission to move towards a swift, binding, and effective remedy that restores free and fair choice and promotes competition, interoperability, and innovation in the digital ecosystem.”

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