When Microsoft settled its antitrust battle with the Computer & Communications Industry Association earlier this month, the CCIA's top executive--an outspoken critic of Microsoft--was paid nearly $10 million, the Financial Times has reported.
According to the documents seen by the London-based Financial Times, Ed Black, chief executive officer of the CCIA, took half of the $19.75 million payment Microsoft made to the association. The payment was approved by the board of the CCIA, the newspaper said. A Microsoft spokeswoman told Silicon.com that while the company made the payment to the association, it did not have any part in saying how the money was distributed after it was paid.
"It was, of course, up to the CCIA board to decide how to use the money it received from us, and we had no involvement at all in that process," she said. The CCIA declined to comment. However, when Microsoft and the CCIA announced the settlement on Nov. 8, the software giant may have intended the cash for lawyers' pockets, not Black's. The spokeswoman said: "Microsoft agreed to make a payment to CCIA as an organization as reimbursement for certain legal and related expenditures that it had incurred."
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