Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 25th Jun 2012 08:50 UTC
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RE[3]: Comment by shmerl
by tomcat on Tue 26th Jun 2012 03:36
in reply to "RE[2]: Comment by shmerl"
I don't see this in practice. Microsoft was never explicitly prohibited from bundling practice with OEMs. Thus the ridiculous Windows tax issue is present until this day.
Of course not. Antitrust law is intended to restore competition in a given market, not kill it outright. Google and others were permitted to incentivize OEMs to include additional software. So, it made sense that MS was allowed to compete w/o tying incentives to the license cost of the OS.




Member since:
2011-05-19
The ending of per-PC licensing was a condition of the antitrust settlement.
The antitrust settlement also prohibited Microsoft from controlling what software OEMs may preload on their systems. Hence the crapware epidemic.