In this episode of Ruled by Reason, AAI Vice President and Director of Legal Advocacy Kathleen Bradish talks with Ron Schnell, a computer scientist, startup entrepreneur, and former general manager of the Technical Committee created to monitor Microsoft’s compliance with the U.S. v. Microsoft consent decrees. Their conversation explores what the antitrust bar still hasn’t fully absorbed from one of the most consequential post-remedy enforcement undertakings in U.S. antitrust history. Three themes run through the conversation: the need for early and deep technical engagement in remedy implementation; the informational asymmetry between enforcer and defendant that monitors must work to overcome; and the predictable incentive problems that shape how companies respond to conduct obligations.
The conversation begins with the decree’s main provisions, including the communications protocol obligations (Section 3E) and the middleware access requirements (Section 3H) (4:37). Schnell quickly zeroes in on a central problem: the gap between Microsoft’s and others’ expectations about what compliance entailed and the reality on the ground. Bradish and Schnell then discuss the origins and rapid expansion of the Technical Committee, which grew from a three-person panel into a 93-person nonprofit corporation across three offices, a scaling that reflects the flexibility monitors must build in from the start to respond to challenges that no decree can fully anticipate (9:55).
The conversation turns to the communications protocols project, designed to enable competing servers to interoperate with Windows desktops. Schnell first describes how Microsoft’s initial declaration of compliance was found inadequate, leading to the eventual decision to scrap years of work and start over (13:12). Schnell then walks through the tools the Technical Committee developed to verify documentation accuracy and completeness, including building competing servers from scratch and instrumenting Microsoft’s own test labs to capture network activity. He argues that closing the informational gap requires technical expertise deep enough to go toe-to-toe with the company’s own engineers, and describes situations where TC staff did exactly that (34:33).
Bradish and Schnell then discuss the incentive dynamics that will resonate with anyone versed in behavioral antitrust remedies: any company subject to a consent decree will naturally gravitate toward minimum-effort compliance, making robust technical monitoring a necessity (34:33). They also take up the difficulty of setting enforceable technical milestones without inside knowledge of the project’s scope. On enforcement teeth, Schnell draws a striking contrast between the U.S. approach of relying on the threat of structural remedy and the European Commission’s parallel enforcement of similar protocol documentation requirements against Microsoft, where daily fines proved far more effective at producing timely results than anything in the U.S. decree’s toolkit. Issues that had languished for years in the U.S. proceeding were resolved within days once the EC began imposing fines (39:48).
The conversation also addresses the tension between competition remedies and privacy. Schnell notes that consumer privacy was not a significant factor in the Microsoft decree, where the protocol obligations ran largely business-to-business. But he cautions that privacy will be a much more live issue in remedies touching search, advertising, and data access. While decree drafters and implementers must take these concerns seriously, they must remain alert to defendants invoking privacy as a shield against compliance obligations they would prefer to avoid (43:44).
The episode closes with Schnell’s reflections on what still surprises him about the Microsoft experience, the challenges of recruiting technical talent to monitor work, and his view that AI and automation could substantially accelerate future compliance monitoring, but only if technical committees with the right expertise are built in from the start (53:30).
GUEST
Ron Schnell is Keystone Distinguished Technology Fellow and Expert with over 40 years of experience in software development, cybersecurity, and IT forensics. He began his career as an operating system kernel programmer at Bell Labs, IBM, and Sun Microsystems, and went on to found three technology startups as an entrepreneur. From 2005 to 2011, he served as General Manager and chief executive of the Technical Committee, the private corporation established by the U.S. Courts to monitor Microsoft’s compliance with the 2002 antitrust Final Judgments, a role that drew praise from the U.S. Attorney General across three administrations, multiple state Attorneys General, and the presiding federal court judge. He is also co-author, with antitrust expert Jay Himes and Columbia computer science professor Jason Nieh, of Antitrust Enforcement and Big Tech: After the Remedy Is Ordered, published in the Stanford Computational Antitrust Journal.





