The US Department of Justice (DoJ) is investigating allegations that IBM
abused its dominance of the mainframe business to squeeze rivals out of the
market.
The investigation follows a complaint from the
Computer
and Communications Industry Association (CCIA).
CCIA chairman Ed Black told Reuters that the CCIA had urged the DoJ to open
the probe, claiming that IBM withdrew licences for its operating systems from
customers using non-IBM hardware.
IBM is also accused of retaliating against business partners deemed disloyal,
bundling its mainframe operating systems with hardware, and acquiring mainframe
hardware startup PSI to stifle competition.
The CCIA is a non-profit trade group with a membership that includes
Microsoft and Oracle, but not IBM.
At the centre of the allegations is IBM's refusal to license its mainframe
operating systems to users of 'Hercules' for installation on machines other than
IBM's expensive big iron.
Hercules is open-source software that allows IBM's mainframe operating
systems to run on x86 machines.
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article