moronoxyd wrote:Well, the answer would be: It is not forbidden to become or be a monopoly. Only when you use your power in one field (here: operating systems) to unfairly push other products (here: media player, browser) your actions will be analyzed and possibly be considered anti-competitive.
Puppy wrote:Other operating system vendors do the same (Apple includes QuickTime player). Microsoft does not prevent you to install any other web browser or media player (remember the Apple 'kill switch' story ?). It is just silly whinning of vendors whose products are non-competitive.
You really have problems unterstanding the difference between "a monopoly does something" and "a company that has no monopoly does the same", right?
Nobody cares if some (rather) small company tries to make its customers use another of their products.
But if a monopoly uses all it's force to push a product, that hurts the competition, because they do not have that force in the other field.
You can call it whining all you want, but the fact that all major market oriented economies for more than a hundred years have laws against anti-competetive behaviour, no matter whether they're more free market oriented like the USA or leaning more towards a social market like the EU, is telling.
Hundreds of people who know more about economies then you and I do support that system.
There's probably a reason.
moronoxyd wrote:And as I said before: Many countries have laws against anti-competitive behaviour, including the USA. And do you really suggest that the USA is a communist country?
Puppy wrote:USA had never taken such ridiculous action focused on "getting money from a rich one" EU did.
I really hate to repeat myself: The USA was close to splitting Microsoft up into two separate corporations. That's way beyond what the EU does.
Puppy wrote:Today consumer electronics vendors have to release special editions of their products (cameras, professional monitors etc.) exclusively for EU because of some regulations, usually with limited features. So you have two versions of the same product for EU countries and the rest of (free) world -> unnecessary higher price. And this is only beginning ...
There are lots of reasons why there are separate products for different markets.
This has sometimes to do with regulations, yes, but that's nothing that only happens in the EU.
In Japan there was (or is) a law in effect that basically forced music publishers to create special versions of music CDs, because they had to make the releases different from those released elsewhere.
Last time I checked Japan was not a member of the EU.
Due to the fact that the USA considered strong encryption a "weapon", products using such encryption hat do be produced in a different version for non-US markets that did not contain such strong encryptinion.
I kid you not.
I still have installation media for IE5.5 with a separate patch from Microsoft (released later) to add 128-bit encryption.
So please stop your whining about the bad, bad EU.
They are not better or worse than many other western countries/organisations.
moronoxyd wrote:Yeah, like Microsoft products are all safe and secure and thus don't need any patches or hotfixes or... oh, wait...
Puppy wrote:No software is without bugs. I'm talking about safety of distributing the binary files from the vendor to the customer.
I call [censored].
Hundreds of thousands, if not millions of people use Firefox, Opera et. al.
Their "build mechanisms" aren't any worse than that of Microsoft.
Just because a company is bigger doesn't mean it's better.
Microsoft is everything BUT a powerhouse of safety and reliability.
And once again: Where's your prove? Where's your sources?
I've yet to see where you got that idea that the EU wants Microsoft to include alternative browsers on the installation media.
So far I only see the mad ramblings of somebody who seems to be on a crusade against the EU.