
"The European Commission has
imposed a EUR 561 million fine on Microsoft for failing to comply with its commitments to offer users a browser choice screen enabling them to easily choose their preferred web browser. In 2009, the Commission had made these commitments legally binding on Microsoft until 2014. In today's decision, the Commission finds that Microsoft failed to roll out the browser choice screen with its Windows 7 Service Pack 1 from May 2011 until July 2012. 15 million Windows users in the EU therefore did not see the choice screen during this period. Microsoft has acknowledged that the choice screen was not displayed during that time."
Burn.
Member since:
2009-05-19
A non free market resulted in a workaround. That is not the goal of the competition regulators.
The competition(general sense, not separate companies) in the browser market was restricted.
That does not mean that both perpetrators should get off free(legally though, Google can't be persecuted). Microsoft was there first and had a bigger role in IE's long-standing dominance, also easier to prosecute.