I think this is the actual issue, not the fact that it comes bundled. It's that there's no way to get rid of it. One might argue that there are parts of WebKit built into OS X that stick around even if you get rid of Safari, but you can definitely remove Safari and have the OS still function.
I think this is the actual issue, not the fact that it comes bundled. It's that there's no way to get rid of it. One might argue that there are parts of WebKit built into OS X that stick around even if you get rid of Safari, but you can definitely remove Safari and have the OS still function.