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Posted by Steven Bink November 6, 2009 12:55 PM with 1 comment(s)
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Opera, Mozilla and other browser developers are calling for Microsoft to tweak its antitrust settlement offer to the European Commission in a bid to restore fair competition to the internet browser market.

Their concerns about the settlement are echoed by ECIS, a trade group representing Oracle, IBM, Red Hat and others, as well as by consumer organizations following the Microsoft antitrust case.

Microsoft has proposed that Windows operating systems should show users a 'ballot screen' inviting them to choose a web browser from among the most popular ones when they first attempt to access the internet.

Consumer organisations and the company's rivals generally approve of the idea, but believe the way Microsoft's ballot screen is designed is biased and will deter people from replacing Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser with another.

They also argue that a review period two years after the settlement would come into force is too long to wait, and they call for regular monitoring of the ballot screen every six months, to make sure it is having the desired effect of encouraging consumers to exercise their free choice.

Continue at Source: Microsoft asked to tweak IE 'ballot screen' News - PC Advisor

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Comments

 

gisabun said:

How are they going to monitor whether or not the ballot box has the "desired" effect? There is no way other than Microsoft's market share will decrease. Mozilla will probably be the biggest gainer because most people have heard of Firefox. It won't help Opera and others) that much even though the makers of Opera wsere the first to complain.

November 10, 2009 1:07 AM

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