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 Attorneys for Microsoft and Google argued in court Tuesday over whether former Microsoft executive Kai-Fu Lee should be allowed to start work for the search company. | BEIJING, Sep. 7 (Xinhuanet)-- Attorneys for Microsoft
and Google argued in court Tuesday over whether former Microsoft executive
Kai-Fu Lee should be allowed to start work for the search company.
Microsoft is asking King County Superior Court Judge Steven Gonzalez to issue a preliminary injunction to
stop former vice president Kai-Fu Lee from working for Google ahead of a trial
scheduled for January 2006.
Microsoft won a temporary restraining order against Lee
and Google in July.
Microsoft attorney Jeffrey Johnson argued in court that
Lee, who built Microsoft's Beijing research and development center, is violating
a non-compete contract that he signed with Microsoft because he has intimate
knowledge of Microsoft's operations in China.
"Dr. Lee should live up to his promise," said Johnson.
Google's high-powered legal counsel John Keker argued that
if Lee were allowed to join Google before the trial he would only work on
setting up a China office and would do nothing on speech and search
technologies, ostensibly two areas of biggest concern to Microsoft.
He said that in his most recent role at Microsoft, Lee was
in a different part of the software giant's organization than either MSN, a
direct competitor to Google, or research efforts in China.
"Microsoft has exaggerated who Dr. Lee is. They have
exaggerated what he has done. They have exaggerated what he plans to do at
Google," Keker said.
The hearing, which will last another day, is the latest
move by the Redmond, Washington-based software giant to stop Lee from working at
Google while he is still obligated by the one-year non-compete agreement, which
went into effect when Lee quit Microsoft in mid-July. Enditem
(Agencies) |