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EU Gives Oracle Extension to Build Sun Deal Defense

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EU Gives Oracle Extension to Build Sun Deal Defense

The EU and Oracle have been at loggerheads over Oracle's planned acquisition of Sun, with the European regulators claiming the deal could hurt competition and Oracle arguing, essentially, that they just don't understand the dynamics of open source. Oracle ownership of Sun's open source MySQL database software is at the heart of the dispute. Meanwhile, Sun is bleeding.


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European Union regulators said Friday that they have extended until Jan. 27 a deadline to wrap up their antitrust review of Oracle's (Nasdaq: ORCL) planned US$7.4 billion takeover of Sun Microsystems (Nasdaq: JAVA).

The European Commission said Oracle had asked for more time "in order to have the opportunity to further develop its arguments in response to the Commission's concerns."

The EU executive gave them an extra six working days.

Regulators sent a formal charge sheet to Oracle earlier this month laying out competition problems that they see with the deal, claiming Oracle's purchase of open source database software MySQL could eliminate a crucial rival and hike prices.

EU Doesn't Know Open Source?

The EU can block the takeover -- which has already been approved by the United States -- or demand changes to eliminate competition concerns.

Officials complained that Oracle had not tried to offer any solutions -- possibly selling off MySQL, which Oracle says it doesn't want to do.

Oracle has criticized the EU for not understanding the database market or open source dynamics well enough.

High Stakes for Sun

MySQL is popular among Web-based companies, and regulators say it will increasingly pose a threat to Oracle's market-leading database software as it adds features and attracts more customers.

Sun paid $1 billion for it last year.

The EU objection ratchets up tension about the fate of the deal, which Sun badly needs to go through.

It lost $120 million in the quarter ended Sept. 27 and is rapidly shedding market share to rivals like IBM (NYSE: IBM) and HP (NYSE: HPQ).

© 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved.
© 2009 ECT News Network. All rights reserved.


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