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"We understand the Department of Justice has asked T3 for documents from the litigation," IBM said. "We continue to believe there is no merit to T3's claims, and that IBM is fully entitled to enforce our intellectual property rights and protect the investments that we have made in our technologies." Armonk, N.Y.-based IBM said it will cooperate with any inquiries from the Justice Department. That case stems from a conflict between IBM and Platform Solutions Inc., whose technology was used to run IBM's mainframe operating software on non-IBM computers. Platform had also complained to European regulators about IBM's conduct, until IBM bought Platform last year and the companies dropped their lawsuits against each other. T3 had joined the case on Platform's side. IBM's clashes with antitrust authorities go far back. For nearly 50 years the company operated under an agreement with the government that sought to limit IBM's power in certain markets. The agreement, a so-called antitrust consent decree, was struck in 1956 to settle allegations of monopoly abuse in the market for electronic tabulating machines. It also covered computers, and parts of it gradually phased out until all provisions were dropped in 2001. The company's last clash with antitrust authorities was a 13-year fight that stretched from 1969, when the government filed a separate antitrust lawsuit against the company, until 1982, when the government dropped the case.
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