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Microsoft Agrees To EU Browser Ballot Screen

An anonymous reader sends in coverage from Ars Technica of Microsoft's capitulation to the EU, after European regulators requested that Redmond bundle multiple browsers on new PCs. "Microsoft has decided that the last thing it needs in this economy is some combination of the following: fines, legal bills, and a delay of Windows 7. It has offered to adopt the European Union's preferred solution for browser competition: a browser selector screen at startup."

12 of 438 comments (clear)

  1. IE will still dominate by gstep · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My guess is most people will still choose to use Internet Explorer, unless they already use Firefox/Chrome/Safari or whatever. People like what they're used to, even when it's crap. I try hard to convince people to stop using Internet Exploder but they always tell me they like it because it's what they know.

  2. Why not OEMs? by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 5, Insightful

    European regulators requested that Redmond bundle multiple browsers on new PCs

    Excuse me? I can understand requesting IE to be unbundled, but telling MS to bundle other browsers is just stupid. Let the OEMs do that. I hope the summary isn't having a rare moment of accuracy.

  3. Good idea for Microsoft. by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Someone on another forum brought this up. Microsoft should offer a list of about 100 browsers in the EU version of Windows. Literally 100. Put IE first and then put the rest in random order.

    Then tell the EU to put that in their pipes and smoke on it.

  4. Re:MS just needs to pull out. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You do realize that if they pull out of Europe then Europe will have little choice but to move to alternative OSs right?

    The last thing that Microsoft wants to do is push a large market to (possibly free) alternatives.

  5. Utterly stupid by Darkon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Who gets to decide which browsers are included in this "ballot screen"? Based on what criteria?

    If it's simply going to be the top 5 or whatever based on current market share then this is simply cementing the status quo rather than helping competition and innovation, and if any any every browser gets a look in then what's to stop SuperSpywareBrowser2009 from appearing in the choices?

  6. You're a genius. by chrb · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously, Microsoft should just pull out of an economy of $18.394 trillion GDP? While in the meantime, the governments involved would most likely invoke the "national security" clauses in copyright treaties to allow piracy of Windows and Office, whilst simultaneously launching accelerated projects to switch to Linux asap? What do you think this would do to the MS stock price? And why should any corporation have the right to violate the laws of democratic nations anyway? Microsoft is not the only corporation to have been fined by the E.U.

  7. Re:In before the morons by John+Betonschaar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'd mod you up if I had points, I don't really get it either. It's a good thing if anti-competetive behaviour is punished but the whole browser story really is beating a dead horse. The EU is trailing reality by a few years again, just like when they forced Microsoft to release a Windows-N without Windows Media Player. All the poisoning Microsoft could have done to the market when it comes to media players is already in the past. There really isn't anything stopping you from installing alternate media players or browsers in WIndows, forcing file associations or whatever. As much as I'd love to see the world move away from Windows and Microsoft, I really don't see the point in making their life hard over media players or browsers right now.

    I expect the EU to be fining Microsoft for deliberately screwing up standardization of office document formats... In 2020...

  8. Re:I wonder what choices they will pick? by RLiegh · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Actually, looking at what they do with IE8, I think that you're almost right. To be accurate, what (IMO) is most likely is that when you install 7 you'll get a dialog box that says something like:

    Please set up your browser experience:
    1)Express setup (use default settings for browser, email and blogging)
    2)Custom setup (choose your custom applications for web, search, blogging, email, messaging, help, tags and a variety of other confusing minutae that you really don't want to spend 45 minutes going through.

    They'll make option 2 intimidating and a total PITA that most people will pick option 1 (which, of course, installs ie8.)

  9. Imagine these choices by Kashell · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Internet Explorer
    Yeratu
    Swallow
    Tires

    I made these up of course, but to your average user, that's exactly what they'll see when they see:

    Internet Explorer
    Firefox
    Opera
    Chrome

    What browser do you think they will choose? Hmmmm?

    1. Re:Imagine these choices by jonbryce · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But if it is

      Internet Explorer
      Mozilla Firefox
      Opera
      Google Chrome

      A lot of people will go for the fourth option. They have heard of google.

  10. Re:Wimps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You know, some of us have sig display turned off. Would you please quote what TF you're talking about. Otherwise you sound like a retard answering a question that no one's asked. This goes double in half a year, when your parent has changed his sig to "This is Bunny".

  11. Re:In before the morons by jez9999 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    MS aren't a successful merkin company. This is a successful merkin company.