The European Commission will proceed with its antitrust case against Microsoft regardless of the announcement late Thursday that the software giant is stripping its browser, Internet Explorer (IE), from the next incarnation of its operating system, Windows 7, in Europe.
The Commission has accused Microsoft of stealing an unfair advantage for IE by tying, or bundling it in with Windows since 1996.
Thomas Vinje, A lawyer for Norwegian browser Opera -- which sparked the antitrust investigation-- said that stripping out IE from Windows does not go far enough.
"Microsoft must now give users real choice, and not only buyers of new computers, but also existing users. Microsoft should provide a ballot screen through which both existing users and buyers of new PCs can easily select and get a browser of their choice," he said.
He also pointed out that Microsoft must be punished for tying IE into Windows for over a decade.
http://www.pcworld.com/article/16656..._decision.html
So it is now MS' job to advertise for its competitors according to the EU.