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I am now satisfied that competition and innovation will be preserved on all the markets concerned,” European Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes said in a statement today in Brussels. “Oracle’s acquisition of Sun has the potential to revitalize important assets and create new and innovative products.”
Oracle, the second-biggest software maker, aims to squeeze $1.5 billion in operating profit from Sun in the first year after the deal closes in the next few weeks. Oracle Chief Executive Officer Larry Ellison said in September that the delay was breeding customer uncertainty, causing Sun to lose $100 million a month as companies held off purchases.
Gaye Hudson, a spokeswoman for Oracle in Reading, U.K., did not respond to a message left on her mobile phone.
‘Competitive Constraint’
The commission had threatened to block the deal because of concerns that Oracle might be able to eliminate MySQL as a competitor. The regulator, which said that MySQL is the “leading” open-source database, investigated whether Oracle’s purchase of MySQL would remove a “competitive constraint.”
MySQL had an estimated market share of 0.2 percent and $40 million in revenue in 2008, according to IDC, a research firm in Framingham, Massachusetts. Click here to read the full article >>