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Microsoft appeals Java ‘must-carry’ ruling

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WASHINGTON: Microsoft Corp has asked a federal appeals court to shelve a lower court order that would force it to start incorporating Sun Microsystems' Java programming language in its Windows operating system.



Microsoft filed an emergency motion with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in Richmond, Va. seeking a stay of the Java "must-carry" order until the court considers its challenge of the order.



In the motion, Microsoft's lawyers asked for an expedited hearing of the lower-court ruling, which they called "extreme and unprecedented."



"The injunction will inflict serious harm on Microsoft and Windows, Microsoft's flagship product, that is distributed to many millions of customers throughout the world," Microsoft told the appeals court.



Microsoft is hoping to overturn an order issued on Tuesday by U.S. District Judge J. Frederick Motz in Baltimore that requires Microsoft to begin putting Sun's Java into Windows within 120 days after the order is entered.



© Reuters

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