Microsoft 'destroyed emails'
SOFTWARE giant Microsoft is being accused of a policy of systematically destroying company documents to frustrate legal action brought against it. Californian firm Burst.com claims crucial evidence in emails and other documents was destroyed even after a court order to retain them.
In court filings in Baltimore, Burst says it has evidence of 'institutional policies' by Microsoft 'to make sure that incriminating documents disappeared'.
Burst alleges Bill Gates' company stole intellectual property after breaking off talks with it on a joint multimedia software project. It says it needs the emails to prove its case. 'Critical emails have been destroyed and will never be recovered. We've tried; they're gone forever,' said Burst's lawyer, Spencer Hosie. He is asking the judge to tell the jury Microsoft had disposed of important documents relating to the case, implying that it had something to hide.
Burst says Microsoft executive Jim Allchin sent a message to Windows Division staff on 23 January 2000 telling them to purge emails every 30 days. 'This is not something you get to decide,' the memo is alleged to say. 'This is company policy. Do not archive your mail. Do not be foolish.'
Microsoft spokeswoman Stacy Drake acknowledged the memo but said Allchin followed it up saying the policy did not apply to staff involved in legal proceedings.
Most watched Money videos
- Here's the one thing you need to do to boost state pension
- Phil Spencer invests in firm to help list holiday lodges
- Is the latest BYD plug-in hybrid worth the £30,000 price tag?
- Jaguar's £140k EV spotted testing in the Arctic Circle
- Five things to know about Tesla Model Y Standard
- Can my daughter inherit my local government pension?
- Reviewing the new 2026 Ineos Grenadier off-road vehicles
- Richard Hammond to sell four cars from private collection
- Is the new MG EV worth the cost? Here are five things you need to know
- Putting Triumph's new revamped retro motorcycles to the test
- Daily Mail rides inside Jaguar's first car in all-electric rebrand
- Steve Webb answers reader question about passing on pension
-
How to use reverse budgeting to get to the end of the...
-
China bans hidden 'pop-out' car door handles popularised...
-
At least 1m people have missed the self-assessment tax...
-
Britain's largest bitcoin treasury company debuts on...
-
Irn-Bru owner snaps up Fentimans and Frobishers as it...
-
Bank of England expected to hold rates this week - but...
-
One in 45 British homeowners are sitting on a property...
-
Elon Musk confirms SpaceX merger with AI platform behind...
-
Satellite specialist Filtronic sees profits slip despite...
-
Plus500 shares jump as it announces launch of predictions...
-
Sellers ripped carpets and appliances out of my new home....
-
Overpayment trick that can save you an astonishing...
-
My son died eight months ago but his employer STILL...
-
Prepare for blast-off: Elon Musk's £900bn SpaceX deal...
-
Civil service pensions in MELTDOWN: Rod, 70, could lose...
-
UK data champions under siege as the AI revolution...
-
Fat jab maker Novo Nordisk warns over sales as it faces...
-
AI lawyer bots wipe £12bn off software companies - but...

