On Thu, Mar 29, 2018 at 5:19 PM, Paul Winalski <paul.winalski@gmail.com> wrote:
Back in the 1960s IBM was facing two antitrust lawsuits over alleged
attempts to use its dominant market position to freeze the HPTC market
while they attempted to complete and ship the long-delayed System/360
model 90.  One lawsuit was brought by the Justice Department and
famously dragged on in court for a decade. 

​My favorite part of that story is that, IBM instead of sending exactly what was required by the courts, i.e. the minimum possible, the IBM legal team filled the basement of the justice department in Washing DC with many, many tractor trailer loads of filling cabinets, mag tapes etc. 'Hey, here you go, you asked for it...'

So IBM is being sued for anti-trust/monopoly position - what does IBM do next?  They send a sales team to Justice and ask if the folks in Justice wanted to buy computer equipment to examine what they now had in their possession.

Furthermore, contemporary to the IBM suit, AT&T was also being sued by the same Justice dept for belief that it was had failed to follow the 1956 consent decree and was using its legal monopoly position with prohibited actions.   AT&T took a rather​ different approach of giving justice a exactly the information that was required and no more.

Well, we all know what happened January 8, 1982 - the IBM suit was dropped and AT&T was broken up.