An image of a man in a protective facemask walking past a Microsoft logo.

Microsoft realises criticising the FTC’s constitutionality was dumb and offers a forelock-tugging retraction

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We’ve all said things we regret, but very few of us have filed those things in print to the United States Federal Trade Commission (FTC). But most of us aren’t Microsoft, which spent a chunk of a submission to the FTC (opens in new tab) last month in full “the whole damn system’s out of order” mode, decrying the FTC’s structure and its lawsuit against Microsoft’s $69 billion acquisition (opens in new tab) of Activision Blizzard as a wholesale violation of the US Constitution. 

But Axios reports (opens in new tab) that Microsoft has done some cooling off over the Christmas break, filing an amended submission with those complaints removed and saying it was a mistake to make them in the first place. The new filing (opens in new tab) maintains Microsoft’s opposition to the FTC’s lawsuit and stringently argues that the acquisition would make Activision’s games more accessible to consumers. In fact, it’s incredibly similar to last month’s submission, save for the absence of six notes in the “Affirmative and Other Defenses” section which lambasted the FTC for violating the Constitution and Microsoft’s Fifth Amendment rights.

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