February 11, 2009 7:09 PM
- Text
Microsoft Loses Battle With Google
(AP)
A judge in Seattle has ruled that a former Microsoft executive can go to work for Google Inc. in China -- with limitations.
The judge says a non-compete contract with Microsoft is still valid. That means the executive, Kai-Fu Lee, can't recruit other Microsoft employees or work on products, services or projects on which he worked at Microsoft, such as computer search technology.
The King County Superior Court judge ruled today on Microsoft's request for a temporary restraining order against Google. The case is still headed to trial in January to further define the meaning of Lee's non-compete agreement.
Lee worked for Microsoft for five years but left in July to lead Google's expansion into China.
Former Microsoft Corp. executive Kai-Fu Lee accused the software titan of incompetence in its plans to gain a business footing in China, and testified last Tuesday that being yelled at by Chairman Bill Gates was a low point before he defected to rival Google Inc.
The case has cast light on the growing competition between Microsoft and Google and their plans for business in China.
Google has been raiding other companies, a tactic that sparked the legal battle Microsoft Corp. Last week, Google announced that it had hired Internet pioneer Vinton Cerf, formerly of MCI Inc., to float more ideas and develop new products, adding another weapon to the online search engine leader's rapidly growing arsenal of intellect.
In testimony during a hearing on Microsoft's lawsuit against Lee and Google, Lee said he wrote a memo to another Microsoft executive saying he was "deeply disappointed at our incompetence in China — that we have wasted so many years in China with little to show for it."
Microsoft sued on the grounds that Lee, an expert in computer recognition of language and Internet search technology, signed a non-compete agreement, in which he agreed not to perform similar work for any rival for one year after leaving Microsoft. Lee was hired away by Google this summer; Google and Lee maintain that he has not, and has no intention of, compromising Microsoft's trade secrets.
The judge says a non-compete contract with Microsoft is still valid. That means the executive, Kai-Fu Lee, can't recruit other Microsoft employees or work on products, services or projects on which he worked at Microsoft, such as computer search technology.
The King County Superior Court judge ruled today on Microsoft's request for a temporary restraining order against Google. The case is still headed to trial in January to further define the meaning of Lee's non-compete agreement.
Lee worked for Microsoft for five years but left in July to lead Google's expansion into China.
Former Microsoft Corp. executive Kai-Fu Lee accused the software titan of incompetence in its plans to gain a business footing in China, and testified last Tuesday that being yelled at by Chairman Bill Gates was a low point before he defected to rival Google Inc.
The case has cast light on the growing competition between Microsoft and Google and their plans for business in China.
Google has been raiding other companies, a tactic that sparked the legal battle Microsoft Corp. Last week, Google announced that it had hired Internet pioneer Vinton Cerf, formerly of MCI Inc., to float more ideas and develop new products, adding another weapon to the online search engine leader's rapidly growing arsenal of intellect.
In testimony during a hearing on Microsoft's lawsuit against Lee and Google, Lee said he wrote a memo to another Microsoft executive saying he was "deeply disappointed at our incompetence in China — that we have wasted so many years in China with little to show for it."
Microsoft sued on the grounds that Lee, an expert in computer recognition of language and Internet search technology, signed a non-compete agreement, in which he agreed not to perform similar work for any rival for one year after leaving Microsoft. Lee was hired away by Google this summer; Google and Lee maintain that he has not, and has no intention of, compromising Microsoft's trade secrets.
- 1
- 2
- Next Page »
-
Stephen Smith Stephen Smith is a news producer and sports editor for CBSNews.com
Popular Now in SciTech
- Retro Duo will play your old Nintendo games
- Apple iPad 3 rumors: thicker, sharper, coming soon
- Tesla's Model X: Finally, an electric car we all want
- Happy 50th to computer game Spacewar
- iPad 3 mini on the way, says analyst
- Apple iPhone 5 rumors, reports say June release
- Apple iPad 3 rumors resurface, sources say March release
- Obama's 2012 campaign playlist now on Spotify
- Facebook required for Spotify account, here's a trick
- Facebook graffiti artist David Choe, from homeless to millions
- How to get the Diablo III beta test
- Google developing home entertainment system
- Ethical iPhone 5 petitions head to Apple stores
- Google TV announcements slated for Monday
- Apple iPad 3 rumors, let's get real
- SOPA is dead, Smith pulls bill
- Hackers release Symantec pcAnywhere source code
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News
- Carnival goes to the dogs with Rio pet parade
- Arab League wants UN peacekeepers in Syria
- Investigators seek answers to Houston's death
- Investigators seek answers to Houston's death
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News





