On April fifteen,
Office 2010 Professional, the European Commission (EC) granted a request through the European Committee for Interoperable Techniques (ECIS) to develop into an interested third-party within the existing browser-bundling case involving Microsoft.ECIS is an association whose members consist of various Microsoft rivals, including Adobe, Corel, IBM, Nokia, Opera, Oracle,
Office Professional Plus 2007, RealNetworks and Sun.Microsoft also may be granted a 2nd extension — until April 28 — in its deadline for responding to the EC;s statement of objections, issued in January. (A statement of objections is roughly equivalent to a preliminary finding.) Originally,
Cheap Office 2010, Microsoft had until April 21 to make its situation regarding its business practice of such as Internet Explorer with Windows. Microsoft has argued within the past the its browser is surely an inextricable part of its operating system.ECIS joins Mozilla and Google as other entities which have been granted third-party status inside the situation — the result of an antitrust complaint lodged by Opera against Microsoft in December 2007. The EC said in its preliminary conclusion it believed Microsoft;s tying of IE to Windows harmed competition among Web browsers and reduced consumer choice.In March,
Office 2010 Professional Plus, Microsoft acknowledged that it is adding the ability to remove IE from
Windows 7,
Office Professional 2010 Key, a feature that will debut first within the Release Candidate build of
Windows 7 that Microsoft is expected to make available to the public in May.
Windows 7 is widely expected to ship this fall.Given the EC;s past record when it comes to Microsoft-related actions, I;d be very surprised if Microsoft had luck in getting the EC to reconsider its preliminary conclusion. Whether the EC considers the new “remove IE” checkbox option to be remedy enough will be interesting. If the growing amount of Microsoft competitors have their say, I;d bet other additional remedies (plus fines) will be required of Microsoft, too.Antitrust cases are supposed to get about proving harm to consumers. Do you feel that Microsoft;s policy of bundling IE with Windows can be shown to be harmful to users — and not just Microsoft;s competitors? If it were any court other than the EC, I;d say proving that contention might be tough. But in this court, all bets are off….Update (April 20): Now the Association for Competitive Technology (ACT) continues to be granted third-party status in this case, as well. ACT will be, as it always is, supporting Microsoft and its arguments.