Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 11th Jun 2009 22:03 UTC
Windows In a move to basically outflank the EU antitrust investigation, Microsoft has announced that all version of Windows 7 shipped in Europe will not include Internet Explorer 8 by default. This is reminiscent of the Windows XP N editions, which did not include Windows Media Player, but the difference here is that Microsoft will not ship versions of Windows 7 with Internet Explorer 8 in Europe.
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RE: Bleh
by LB06 on Thu 11th Jun 2009 22:42 UTC in reply to "Bleh"
LB06
Member since:
2005-07-06

There we go again. It's not intrinsically illegal to bundle things. Hence, everybody does it. You probably won't be able to replace the software embedded in your cappuccino machine, for example.

But it is illegal to abuse your (defacto) monopoly in one area (OS'es) in order become a monopolist in another area (browsers). And for a reason, because then the abuser would have an unfair advantage over the competitors. The advantage is not based on intrinsic quality, lower price or better availability or anything, but purely on a monopoly that has on itself nothing to do with the product. Call it predatory bundling. Like with pricing, it's not illegal, but when it becomes predatory it certainly is. Predatory anything is bad for the economy, bad for innovation and hence bad for anyone but the abusing party. That's why it's been declared illegal and has held up in court. Go Neelie!

If Microsoft would have a market share of 50% or lower this wouldn't have been a problem. because then they would not have been able to abuse their position in the OS market to gain market share in the browser market.

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