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Financial Times: How Brad Smith used Microsoft’s $1bn law and lobbying machine to win Activision battle


Microsoft’s 21-month battle to pull off its blockbuster purchase of gaming company Activision has been one of the M&A world’s most tortuous recent sagas.The struggle has served as a striking demonstration of the power of a legal, policy and influence machine which costs more than $1bn a year to run, and which has made Microsoft one of the most effective American companies in practising a new form of global corporate diplomacy to advance its interests.Getting the Activision deal across the line meant defeating a US government effort to block it in court, while also persuading UK regulators to allow an eleventh hour reworking of a transaction they had already decided to reject.It also involved winning over regulators in many other jurisdictions — including Brussels, where Microsoft was once deeply distrusted — at a time when acquisitions by big tech companies face significant opposition.The deal’s completion against the odds, marks the culmination of more than two decades of work to recast the reputation of a company that was once seen as the tech world’s pre-eminent bully.Under Brad Smith, who became its top legal officer in 2002 and also took on the title of president in 2015, Microsoft has long worked to present a more conciliatory face to regulators.It has also sought to make itself useful to governments looking for help on everything from tech policy to emergency support against cyber attacks, part of an effort to build trust and increase the odds of winning a hearing when its own business interests are challenged.Yet while completing the deal would amount to a notable victory at a time when acquisitions by big tech companies are scarce, it may also bring a turning point in Microsoft’s relations with regulators around the world.“It helped to remind everyone that they are Big Tech too,” says one former Microsoft policy executive.Smith took over as the company’s general counsel at a low point, after the US Department of Justice came close to winning a court-ordered break-up. His rise brought a complete change in approach. While Microsoft had previously fought regulators aggressively, Smith argued for conciliation and preached the need to be more transparent with regulators.He also pushed for changes in Microsoft’s business practices to head off potential antitrust challenges before they could gather steam, according to people who have worked with him. Last year, facing complaints about Microsoft’s cloud licensing practices that threatened to trigger antitrust scrutiny, the Microsoft president publicly apologised and announced changes that he claimed would deal with the complaints. That attempt to pre-empt criticism, however, has not prevented the protests from growing louder — an indication that tactics that have served Microsoft well over the past two decades may be becoming less effective as its power in markets like cloud computing grows.Some of the tactics that helped boost its profits for many years have also been challenged. This week, it revealed it had received a demand for nearly $29bn in back taxes in the US dating back to 2004-2013, prompted by a claim that its profits to low tax countries artificially lower its taxes.In another sign of increasing pressures on the company, Smith, usually the consummate diplomat, allowed himself a rare outburst in April after British regulators said they would block the Activision deal. The move was “bad for Britain”, and Microsoft’s “darkest day in our four decades” there, he told the BBC.Yet the software company was still able to persuade the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority to reconsider, crafting a compromise that led to the agency clearing the deal while also enabling it to claim greater concessions from Microsoft than those won by other regulators. While Microsoft’s victory turned heavily on an intensive legal ground game and negotiations with regulators, it also reflects efforts over many years to put the company in a more favourable light. Behind the scenes, Smith has promoted a concerted campaign of influence-building with governments around the world that even some rival tech executives concede has given Microsoft an edge. The software company has amassed “one of the largest armies of corporate diplomats that we’ve ever seen”, said Manas Chawla, a researcher who has studied the company. “They include policy officials working on everything from how to regulate artificial intelligence to protecting elections and tackling cyberwarfare against sovereign states,” he said.In one sign of the greater lengths Microsoft has gone to than other tech companies, it set up a representative office at the UN in 2020, taking up a floor of a building close to the organisation’s headquarters in New York where several Nato countries also have their missions. Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy was the first head of state to pay a visit as part of an effort to encourage the company to invest in his country, while Microsoft hoped to use the contact to promote its cyber security capabilities.The UN efforts are part of an operation under Smith that costs more than $1bn a year to run, according to people familiar with the company. The groups inside Microsoft reporting to him include legal, corporate and government affairs, accounting for what Microsoft describes as around 2,000 “professionals”. His organisation also includes a digital crimes unit and teams working on identifying cyber attacks and misinformation campaigns.Microsoft’s attempt to claim the moral high ground on issues like cyber security has grated with rivals, who claim the company uses its work with governments to distract attention from the role that vulnerabilities in its own software have played in causing the problems in the first place. Earlier this year, for instance, US commerce secretary Gina Raimondo was one of the several officials to have her email compromised after an online email account with Microsoft was hacked.According to another former Microsoft executive, the company’s extensive international policy work reflects a strong belief that working to advance multilateralism and the rule of law globally will bring long-term benefits to the company and its customers.But this person also said these activities serve Microsoft’s more immediate business interests as well: “One of the things we learnt from the competition cases: we’re much better off building relationships and engaging and having people understand your business before you run into hard problems. That basic lesson has stayed with the company.”Smith’s bid to shape important policy discussions around tech has led to him striking ambitious positions on the global stage, though they have not always hit the goals that appeared to have been intended. Six years ago, he called for a “digital Geneva convention” that would involve nation states swearing off cyber attacks against civilians during peacetime.According to one former staffer, that plan took a back seat after Microsoft realised that, if the proposal failed to get the backing of a majority of the UN’s 193 members, it could be reshaped in ways the company had not intended. “Be careful what you wish for,” this person added. Another person familiar with the digital Geneva convention said Microsoft had not backed off the idea and it remained a long-term “moonshot” for the company.Smith’s willingness to put himself forward as an unofficial ambassador for the tech industry in this way has paid dividends for Microsoft, according to supporters. “Regulators are not going to give you a pass, but they will listen to you — you can hopefully have a credible voice with them, and that’s what’s really important,” one former executive said.As Microsoft finally puts the seal on its biggest ever acquisition, that strategy appears to be paying off.
Hot on the heels of that somewhat controversial editorial earlier this week where FT openly advocated for Microsoft to acquire Nintendo, this is a more interesting new article about the highly sophisticated and advanced worldwide lobbying operation that Microsoft has in place to ensure governments give them what they want. They spend $1 billion+ a year on this lobbying and schmoozing to ensure they will never again face a situation like they did in the late 1990's when they were nearly broken up by the US Government for illegal monopolistic behavior in what was then the largest antitrust action an American company has ever faced.
 
Uhm, didn't FT have full page ads paid by MS advocating for the deal to go through?
Yep, they sure did. Looks like they have first-hand experience about the $1 billion+ operation. I don't think it's that expensive to get advertising in old-school newspapers like FT though, so they still had a little bit of cash left after that to deal with the UK government and the CMA on the acquisition plus throw a few bucks to their lawyers in the US and EU to make sure there were no problems there either.
 
Pretty obvious that's why they're going to get their own way. Rishi Twatnak here in the UK said he was disappointed in the CMA's decision to block the merger and said he would "strategically steer" them towards the right decision. He then pretended to be upset at the comment of the UK not being open for investment and then spoke about how important Microsoft is as a cyber security partner to the UK government.

In other words, Rishi said I don't want to piss them off because they help keep us safe. That's leverage Microsoft will use to get whatever they want and another reason I've gone towards Linux. Honestly fuck Microsoft and their monopolistic business practices. Cyber security? Wasn't it bad enough that we found out in 2019 that major NHS offices were still running Windows fucking XP??
 

FoxMcChief

Gold Member
Money well spent. God bless America.

american-flag-bikini-busty-babe.jpg
 

L*][*N*K

Banned
Uhm, didn't FT have full page ads paid by MS advocating for the deal to go through?
Some of you act like this was a football match and they needed to play fair, as long as they didn’t break any laws everything is a fair game, go look at what the oil companies and pharmaceutical companies do in court.

Fan boys needs to stop hating Microsoft for winning this, no one is hating Sony when the NPD reports come out every month.
 

skit_data

Member
Some of you act like this was a football match and they needed to play fair, as long as they didn’t break any laws everything is a fair game, go look at what the oil companies and pharmaceutical companies do in court.

Fan boys needs to stop hating Microsoft for winning this, no one is hating Sony when the NPD reports come out every month.
I was mostly alluding to the fact that FT is blowing this up as some kind of revelation/gotcha/news while being more or less part of the lobbyism.
But please go along.
 
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Crayon

Member
Yeah it's too bad. But that's the system we are in these days. Celebrating it is pretty pathetic. It's not a good thing that there are a handfull of these enourmous companies. I could be happy with it if things were more like blade runner and there were girls in shiny raincoats with glitter all over and their titties out. Too bad.
 
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Dirk Benedict

Gold Member
Global Corporate Diplomacy. Mike Pondsmith was right all along...

We're headed to it. I can see the groundwork already being laid out. I just hope we don't destroy ourselves before we get to find out if we can become legends in our own version of Night City. :messenger_sunglasses:
 
Multi-billon dollar company uses a lot of its resources to get what it wants. News at 11.

Funnily enough, many of the people bashing Microsoft for for battling the FTC and CMA (and winning) are the same ones who boast about Japanese companies (Nintendo, Sony, Square Enix, etc.) Being able to operate with near impunity and complete government backing within Japan which makes it nearly impossible for foreign companies to enter the market or gain any ground there.

Im Shocked Hip Hop GIF by WE tv
 
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Aces High

Member
If only they put the same effort into making games.
Google says GTA 5 had $250m development cost.

Let's assume Xbox managers are complete dumbfucks (just for this thought experiment) and need 4 times the budget to produce an equally spectacular entertainment product. Thst $1bn.

And then we double that money because Xbox managers are so fucking stupid (in this thought experiment) that they need a 10 figure marketing budget to get sales.

Even then, Microsoft could have produced 34 GTA5-tier games for the money that they invested into ABK.

But Microsoft managers are not stupid. Some people got filthy rich in the process. And while the video game industry witnessed a record investment of $70bn, nothing of value was added.

Can't wait for the Hollywood adaption with Josh Brolin as Phil Spencer and Brandon Gleeson as Jim Ryan.
 

Three

Member
Multi-billon dollar company uses a lot of its resources to get what it wants. News at 11.

Funnily enough, many of the people bashing Microsoft for for battling the FTC and CMA (and winning) are the same ones who boast about Japanese companies (Nintendo, Sony, Square Enix, etc.) Being able to operate with near impunity and complete government backing within Japan which makes it nearly impossible for foreign companies to enter the market or gain any ground there.

Im Shocked Hip Hop GIF by WE tv
Boohoo some big forgien conglomerate can't come and buy specific Japanese companies. It can try and compete there though without trying to buy it up. What are you upset about?

Impunity from what crime though? I've seen more Japanese videogame figures go to jail for lesser crimes. Meanwhile I've seen US company videogame figureheads dodge sexual harassment charges without a scratch, pay politicians openly, and dump and buy stock before public announcements with actual impunity.
 
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Bojanglez

The Amiga Brotherhood
Their deal with the FT must have just expired too, as they have been one of the biggest mouthpieces for MS throughout the deal.
 

Hudo

Member
FT really trying to mine this whole thing for all that it's worth, huh? Next week they will most likely release yet another shit blog post about how Bobby Kotick is the real master mind since he managed to sell ABK for far more than its valuation even with all the problems the company had and still has. And the week after that we will see yet another shitty blog post about what Sony and Nintendo should do now (or perish).

I'll bet other bloggers like The New York Times and Wallstreet Journal will also chime in with their shit as well at some point.
 

Orbital2060

Member
A lot of companies have lobbying budgets and people on the payroll. I dont know about global, but it was established during the whole ABK process that Sony had X amounts of lobbyists in the congress. Versus so and so many lobbyists for Microsoft. Its just a game of politics that many global corporations have to deal with.
 

Fabieter

Member
Multi-billon dollar company uses a lot of its resources to get what it wants. News at 11.

Funnily enough, many of the people bashing Microsoft for for battling the FTC and CMA (and winning) are the same ones who boast about Japanese companies (Nintendo, Sony, Square Enix, etc.) Being able to operate with near impunity and complete government backing within Japan which makes it nearly impossible for foreign companies to enter the market or gain any ground there.

Im Shocked Hip Hop GIF by WE tv

But somehow apple managed to get bigger than sony in the mobile space which says this is pretty bullshit. And you can be sure that the usa wouldnt give up some of their companies if some foreign would try to buy them. But even if its true you said ( it isnt), what you said is whataboutism. "Nothing to see here, japan is alot worse"! No one should excuse this. I would be ashamed as part of their fanbase defending it or as an employee working there. Its depressing.
 
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DenchDeckard

Moderated wildly
No it doesn't. Excusing Lobbying with "makes sense" no no it doesn't. I feel nauseated.

According to rhe article, Brad Smith changed Microsoft over 20 years to be more open with regulators, changed how the entire company operates to improve their anti competitive ways.

Then they did the clever lobbying of basically "helping" the government with cyber warfare etc. That's the part that's lobbying and is dirty imo. The first part is fine and good. The second is big business intelligently making themselves needed in various parts of the operation of the world so they can't lose when it's needed.

Clever but dirty. Luckily, this is just the purchase od an entertainment company and not something else.
 

Flutta

Banned
So, company wants to complete the biggest entertainment acquisition in history and spends a lot of money to do everything they can to ensure it goes through.....makes sense.

Why am i not surprised seeing you shilling and acting like a corpo boot licker over and over again.

Do you know what a bribe is? Do you also know why people do bribes?

Ofcourse you do but here’s a reminder:
”You pay a bribe to get someone to do something they wouldn't do otherwise. It's usually dishonest and often criminal”

If the politicians and the judges where not currupted this deal wouldn’t go through and the higher ups at MS would be infront of a judge by now.
 
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Goalus

Member
I guess he had to, with Sony lobbying against the deal.
He seems to be a good strategist.

Do you know what a bribe is? Do you also know why people do bribes?

Ofcourse you do but here’s a reminder:
”You pay a bribe to get someone to do something they wouldn't do otherwise. It's usually dishonest and often criminal”
I know very well what bribing means.
As an Xbox owner I have a lot of hands-on experiences with Sony bribing developers and publishers to skip or neglect Xbox. It's refreshing that Microsoft gave them a taste of their own medicine.
 
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Fabieter

Member
According to rhe article, Brad Smith changed Microsoft over 20 years to be more open with regulators, changed how the entire company operates to improve their anti competitive ways.

Then they did the clever lobbying of basically "helping" the government with cyber warfare etc. That's the part that's lobbying and is dirty imo. The first part is fine and good. The second is big business intelligently making themselves needed in various parts of the operation of the world so they can't lose when it's needed.

Clever but dirty. Luckily, this is just the purchase od an entertainment company and not something else.

Well if its "just entertainment" than its totally fine ofc

/s

I think companys this big shouldn't be allowed at not and not even buy more shit to get bigger but if we think its fine than we deserve the dystopia future.

Do you mean same Smith who threatened a whole country over "just an entertainment company". That alone should have made sure to break them into 20 separate companys.

God i hope valve makes it one day to make steam fully playable under Linux so I can finally drop MS.
 

Goalus

Member
Yes, but the issue is with people accepting this type of behaviour. Curruption should never be tolerated even if it’s coming from your favorite brand, idol, politician, country etc. Shit needs to be called out. I mean it’s common sense lol. Guess not 🤷‍♂️
Sony's bribing tactics absolutely need to be called out. Happens rarely though. And they actively try to cover up their deceitful behavior.
 

Fabieter

Member
Sony's bribing tactics absolutely need to be called out. Happens rarely though. And they actively try to cover up their deceitful behavior.

You can call out some timed exclusives all you want but this isn't the same bro it just isn't. It would have been the same if we have an article sony lobbying for ms to not buy any more companies and succeed with that garbage. Keep your whataboutism.
 

GHG

Member
The responses in this thread help explain why Phil sees this sort of activity as a "career moment" instead of putting out some good fucking games.

Funnily enough, many of the people bashing Microsoft for for battling the FTC and CMA (and winning) are the same ones who boast about Japanese companies (Nintendo, Sony, Square Enix, etc.) Being able to operate with near impunity and complete government backing within Japan which makes it nearly impossible for foreign companies to enter the market or gain any ground there.

Try visiting Japan, you might be surprised.

This "problem" that you seem to think exists is one very much exclusive to Xbox. I'm not kidding.
 

Fabieter

Member
They did exactly that. They just didn't succeed.

Everyone can try all the want as long as they don't succeed with such disgusting tactics. How can people excusing this?

Some yellowstone eruption to throw humanity to sqaure 1 again could help. I have serious loosing faith i humanity moment here. Can i have a tag like that 🙏
 

Flutta

Banned
I guess he had to, with Sony lobbying against the deal.
He seems to be a good strategist.


I know very well what bribing means.
As an Xbox owner I have a lot of hands-on experiences with Sony bribing developers and publishers to skip or neglect Xbox. It's refreshing that Microsoft gave them a taste of their own medicine.

LMAO 🤣 🤣🤣 Sure you do 👀.
Your own mind is so damn currupted that bribing seems like a normal thing to do ”but but Sony also”, what a sad little individual.

Making deals with devs and giving money to law makers to bypass the law for this deal to go through is not remotly the same thing you d….. m….

You didn’t have to tell me you where an XBOX owner. most of us can tell from a mile away, stupidity is running rampant amongs you.

dumb barack obama GIF by Obama
 
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DenchDeckard

Moderated wildly
This is one reason why no one should root for cooperation this big. Imo Google, and Microsoft should break into many pieces. Also apple to an extent

Well I never saw the logic behind calling this lobbying. Its straight up corruption.

Where’s Goalus Goalus #Sonytoo tag?

I swear M$ have been slacking recently letting these people try and think for themselves. It really shows in the quality of post.


I think the best thing to do, is break them all up into smaller companies.

Everyone.
 
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