If we become aware of any instance in which the information on the tapes may have been accessed or misused, ... we will alert anyone impacted immediately of additional steps that can and should be taken.

[The debate] has been overtaken by the tremendous progress in the marketplace with AT&T, AOL and Time Warner all committed to providing open access and choice for consumers, ... Today's decision is good news because it will continue the momentum for open access.

This is a long planned transition and it will be a seamless one.

What AOL has sought is to be able to compensate other computer manufacturers for promotional rights that Microsoft has taken for free. Microsoft doesn't like that because it has not faced [this kind of challenge] before.

In the wake of the court ruling, Microsoft is clearly scrambling, but they still have a long way to go to address the anti-consumer, anti-competitive elements of Windows XP.

Time Warner retains that information to administer retirement, compensation and other benefits information for its employees.

There's nothing new here, and given that, we're not going to comment.