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Microsoft May Be Investigated By Attorneys General

Posted by Zonk on Tue Jun 12, 2007 08:22 AM
from the perhaps-they-should-hire-lawyers dept.
Null Nihils writes "Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal has announced that a group of state attorneys general will decide later this week whether to pursue legal action against Microsoft over allegations of anticompetitive conduct that were brought on by Google. From the article: 'Google has complained that Microsoft's new operating system puts it, and other rivals, at a disadvantage. Google said that Vista makes it harder for consumers to use non-Microsoft versions of a desktop search function, which enables users to search the contents of their hard drives. A group of state attorneys general including Connecticut and California is now determining how to react to the claims made by Google.'"
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[+] Justice Dept. Defends Microsoft Against Google 329 comments
Frosty Piss writes "The Seattle PI reports that Google has complained to US antitrust officials about the hard-drive searching tool built into Windows Vista, saying that it stymies Google's similar search program. The complaint, lodged late last year, was revealed Saturday by The New York Times in a story about the Bush administration's handling of Microsoft antitrust issues. The real story, though, is not the Google complaint itself, but how the Justice Department is failing to enforce the Microsoft anti-trust decree. According to the story, Thomas Barnett, the assistant U.S. attorney general in charge of antitrust issues, sent a memo last month to state attorneys general across the nation, seeking to persuade them to reject Google's complaint."
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  • by oliverthered (187439) <.moc.liamtoh. .ta. .derehtrevilo.> on Tuesday June 12 2007, @08:24AM (#19476779)
    If this manages to get through google will be dead in the water by the time anything's done about it.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 12 2007, @09:11AM (#19477269)
      Regardless, Google have misrepresented this entire issue.

      1) They complained to the DoJ/AG without informing Microsoft of the issue and attempting to have it solved,

      2) Windows Search is designed to only operate during idle cycles specifically so it will not interfere with any other running program including Google Desktop Search,

      4) Windows Search can be disabled from the Control Panel, the command line, and if Google could be bothered they can disable it using the Services API during an install of their software, and

      5) Google have even coded Vista Sidebar widgets that are designed to interact with GDS on Vista, which makes their complaint make even less sense.

      I'm sorry to hijack your comment but if anybody else could manage to be a little more informed on the issue rather than immediately jump to the standard "anti-competitive monopoly blah-blah" response then maybe a more intellectual debate could ensue.
    • by AKAImBatman (238306) * <akaimbatman.gmail@com> on Tuesday June 12 2007, @09:24AM (#19477425) Homepage Journal
      The last paragraph of the article is extremely telling, I think:

      The issue is the latest in an escalation between two of the heaviest hitters in the tech world.

      In April, Microsoft urged the federal competition authorities to thoroughly investigate Google's acquisition of online advertising brokerage DoubleClick, after being beaten by Google in closing a deal for the company. The Federal Trade Commission has since confirmed it is investigating the matter.

      It seems to me that Google is trying to beat Microsoft at its own game. Unfortunately, I have my doubts about Google being able to pull it off. Especially since it would require quite a bit of Evil(TM).
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by xtracto (837672)
        It seems to me that Google is trying to beat Microsoft at its own game. Unfortunately, I have my doubts about Google being able to pull it off. Especially since it would require quite a bit of Evil(TM).

        In Mexico we have a saying that goes:
        "El enemigo de mi enemigo es mi amigo" and means something like "The enemy of my enemy is my friend". I guess that if Google is "Evil(TM)" against Microsoft I would not cry a bit or be sad for that matter. The problem I see is that once Google is evil against MS and the sh
  • Unfair standard? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by elrous0 (869638) * on Tuesday June 12 2007, @08:26AM (#19476809)
    I hate to be a MS defender here (Linux Gods please forgive me) but isn't it a little unfair to ride MS's ass for security problems all the time and then also expect them to open up their kernal, file system, security, etc. to every damn third party developer out there? Should a third party developer have just as much access to Vista as MS themselves?
    • by babbling (952366) on Tuesday June 12 2007, @08:32AM (#19476871)
      It's not unfair because it is entirely possible to write libraries that are not riddled with security flaws. You are trying to relate two things that are almost completely unrelated.
      • Re:Unfair standard? (Score:5, Informative)

        by metlin (258108) <narayan&fas,harvard,edu> on Tuesday June 12 2007, @10:04AM (#19477877) Homepage Journal

        It's not unfair because it is entirely possible to write libraries that are not riddled with security flaws. You are trying to relate two things that are almost completely unrelated.
        Please. If you think that writing a complex system (especially one requiring some serious backwards compatibility, such as Windows) of libraries is accomplished without any security flaws, you probably haven't written or worked with very many real-world applications.

        Writing 100% bulletproof applications in the real-world (especially given customer and consumer expectations) is next to impossible, not unless you were doing small and simple things and you've enormous amount of time and money at your disposal. No matter how much you test and secure your system or how bulletproof you make it, there is almost always a point where usability versus security becomes an issue, or compatibility versus security becomes an issue.

        There was a time when Microsoft's products were riddled with security flaws, but over the years, their platforms and offerings have stabilized considerably. If anything, for the amount of complex stuff that they write, their security flaws are hardly a surprise.

        I mean, sure, you can have something like OpenBSD, but just how usable do you think such a system would be? Consider the kernel, the UI, the file system, assorted applications (browser, office applications) etc. and you'd begin to see how hard it becomes to keep the system locked tight with that level of complexity (not to mention scalability).

        I know that it's all fun to bash Microsoft on Slashdot and all that, but sometimes I just wish that people would just get a grip on reality, not their ideal, tiny little world.
        • by drinkypoo (153816) <martin.espinoza@gmail.com> on Tuesday June 12 2007, @10:42AM (#19478349) Homepage Journal

          Please. If you think that writing a complex system (especially one requiring some serious backwards compatibility, such as Windows) of libraries is accomplished without any security flaws, you probably haven't written or worked with very many real-world applications.

          This is true. So Microsoft should stop lying and claiming to always use proper bounds-checking string routines when they clearly do not, as they create so very many buffer overflows, and they should stop claiming that they have the most secure OS, et cetera.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by cyphercell (843398)

          If anything, for the amount of complex stuff that they write, their security flaws are hardly a surprise.

          The anti-competitive cases are usually about getting Microsoft to focus on their core functionality, like the security of the operating system, rather than write up stupid little weather bug clones for the desktop. Get M$ out of browser space, out of desktop search, get them to quit trying to own everything the user touches and quit using their monopoly status to ship this crap that snuffs out any market emerging on the desktop.

          /car analogy/ If Microsoft was a car company, not only would you have only o

    • by 140Mandak262Jamuna (970587) on Tuesday June 12 2007, @08:34AM (#19476883) Journal
      If MSFT is not competing in the applications arena and sells only the OS then it can say "I am locking up the kernel and you guys play by this rule". But MSFT is competing in the office, gaming, database, search, and email arenas. And it is using its monopoly in the OS arena to unfairly benefit its own application products.

      What gives complaints against MSFT legitimacy is that it has 1. monopoly in the OS marke. 2. It has used its monopoly to unfairly undermine its competitors in other markers. MSFT can easily get out of all these restrictions and actions by breaking the company into two pieces. One is the OS company and the other is the applications company. And the OS company will give equal access to all vendors in the applications arena.

      Please understand the issue is not the quantum of access given to the OS. It is the unequal access given to other vendors.

        • by 140Mandak262Jamuna (970587) on Tuesday June 12 2007, @09:07AM (#19477221) Journal
          It is true no one would buy a car without tires. Or even a radio. Would you let auto makers off the hook so easily if they tried to make it impossible to install a thirdparty tire or radio? Infact the auto makers did that and it took lots of legislative action in the 70s to open up the "connectors and specs" to level the playing field, (or so I understand from a slashdot post.)

          Now how far should the automaker go? Should you be able to install a thirdparty glove box? A steering wheel? or a gear box and transmission? The automobile is quite tangible and most consumers are well informed and they vote with their dollars in these questions. If they make a car that will accept only Ford tires, the marketplace will shun it. It is possible the glove box (and possibly the windshield) was thirdparty add-on way back in 1910s. And eventually it got incorporated into the automobile.

          But in the computer arena, the public is not well informed. It would take a generation of kids who grew up with computers all their life to distinguish between what is the "glove box" and what is a "tire" in a computer. At that point we might not need any legislative action. But right now, to preseve the endangered species of independent software developers and application developers we need some basic action from the courts/legislation.

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by Red Flayer (890720)

            If they make a car that will accept only Ford tires, the marketplace will shun it.

            Unless, of course, the marketplace is doiminated by Ford. That's the whole gist of the problem.

            It has nothing to do with public education, it has to do with the inability of a market to operate more-or-less freely, due to domination of one sector by one firm (Microsoft, in this case).

            I understand what you're getting at -- defining what is peripheral (like the tires) and defining what is intrinsic to the product (like the gl

        • by ozmanjusri (601766) <aussie_bob@hotm a i l . c om> on Tuesday June 12 2007, @09:25AM (#19477451) Journal
          So, practically speaking, how is MS supposed to give third party developers "equal access" with so many possible combinations of applications?

          Fully documeneted and open APIs. Documented and open protocols. Documented and open file formats. They're required by the terms of their prosecution in the European Union to provide this documentation and keep refusing. The US department of Justice has asked them to provide the protocols to potential competitors.

          Microsoft has repeatedly refused to comply properly with these legal requirements. The answer to your question is simple. Microsoft should do what lawmakers have been telling them to do for years. Provide potential competitors with enough information to interoperate with the OS as effectively as MS themselves.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by Retric (704075)
          No Windows can stay the same. The idea is they can sell windows with anything in it that helps them sell more copies of windows aka Note Pad but they can't add anything that helps them sell other products like Office, IIS etc.

          So you have a windows company A that can only sell windows and windows server edition.

          And you have windows company B that can sell IIS, XBOX, MS Word, MS Office, MS mouse, Visual Studio... but not windows.

          The idea is that windows could include IE but if Microsoft is not selling IIS the
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      My understanding is that Google want MS to provide a way for the average user to turn off the MS indexing, to avoid unnecessarily consuming resources by running search engines from both Google and MS side by side. By 'average user' they mean someone who isn't familiar with tinkering around in the services widget.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        couldn't google just put an option to do it in thier software (i'm pretty sure service control is documented in the winapi docs).
      • Re:Unfair standard? (Score:5, Informative)

        by will_die (586523) on Tuesday June 12 2007, @09:03AM (#19477191) Homepage
        Microsoft desktop search is used by other microsoft products for its searching. For example if you want to do email searching in outlook 2007 you have to go and download microsoft desktop search, this is on windows XP.
        So if you want to do searches in your email and also use google desktop search you are in trouble since both search engine now have to be running and scanning everything.
        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          So if you want to do searches in your email and also use google desktop search you are in trouble since both search engine now have to be running and scanning everything.


          And people are STILL believing this bullshit?

          Google can install, and set itself as the default search engine that works inside Outlook, the Desktop, OneNote, etc. There are clear APIs that Google can use on both sides to hook into the application. Google can also TURN OFF THE MS SEARCH ENGINE COMPLETELY.

          Google is pissing on the intelligenc
    • Re:Unfair standard? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by UnknowingFool (672806) on Tuesday June 12 2007, @08:43AM (#19476985)
      That would be unfair but that is not the specific complaint of Google. From what I read (not the linked article), Google is finding issues with Vista's built-in search. From a AP article in USA Today: [usatoday.com]

      The Vista operating system, which became widely available in January, includes a desktop search function that competes with a free program Google introduced in 2004. Several other companies also offer desktop search applications.

      Besides bogging down competing programs, Google alleged Microsoft had made it too complicated to turn off the desktop search feature built into Vista.

      With its allegations, Google hopes to show that Microsoft isn't complying with a 2002 settlement of an antitrust case that concluded the world's largest software maker had leveraged the Windows operating system to throttle competition.

      The consent decree requires Redmond, Wash.-based Microsoft to ensure its rivals can build products that run smoothly on Windows -- something that Google says isn't happening.

      "The search boxes built throughout Vista are hard-wired to Microsoft's own desktop search product, with no way for users to choose an alternate provider," Google spokesman Ricardo Reyes said in a statement issued Monday.

      In a way, Google's complaint mirrors that of Netscape but instead of browsers, it's search applications.

      • In a way, Google's complaint mirrors that of Netscape but instead of browsers, it's search applications.

        Not exactly.

        In the Netscape case, they had an established product, then MS started to compete. In this case, Vista (originally Longhorn) had a powerful search functionality built in since it's inception. (2001) In fact that was one of the first features that was announced about Vista. Even Windows 2000 and above had text search indexing (indexing service) integrated, although it's not as powerful as the i
    • Bullshit (Score:3, Insightful)

      by toby (759) *
      So you're a fan of security by obscurity?

      Ever notice how the really secure systems (*BSD, Solaris, etc) have every line of code public?

      PS. It's spelled "kernel".
      • Re:Bullshit (Score:5, Insightful)

        by KarmaMB84 (743001) on Tuesday June 12 2007, @09:14AM (#19477305)
        Most of the Unix systems were relatively secure even before anyone open sourced their implementations. Microsoft has simply made a LOT of trade offs to make their system "user friendly". I also suspect we'll find all the anti-trust business holding them back from ever fixing it for fear of inviting third parties to sue them.
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by TheRaven64 (641858)

          Most of the Unix systems were relatively secure even before anyone open sourced their implementations

          UNIX was code-visible (not Free Software or Open Source) from the time of release. It was not taken seriously as a secure platform until a good twenty years after it was first launched. Even more modern releases have had their share of security problems. The number of security holes that were fixed by Theo De Raadt and friends in between forking NetBSD and releasing the first version of OpenBSD are staggering.

  • Dupe & Duplicity (Score:5, Informative)

    by Macthorpe (960048) on Tuesday June 12 2007, @08:27AM (#19476823) Journal
    Not only is this a dupe [slashdot.org], but Google's argument was already shown in the comments to that article to be a complete sham.

    Have Google actually deigned to comment on the issue yet? Last time I checked they were shunning any reasonable debate on the matter.
  • Which means... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Billosaur (927319) * <wgrother@@@optonline...net> on Tuesday June 12 2007, @08:29AM (#19476839) Journal

    Sunday's New York Times reported that the federal government had weighed in on the matter, urging state attorneys general who had received Google's complaint not to investigate Microsoft further. According to the article, a memo from Thomas O. Barnett, assistant attorney general at the Department of Justice, had been circulated to some state-level competition authorities.

    This can only mean:

    1. Microsoft is adhering to its deal with the DOJ and they have investigated the matter and find Google's complaint without merit
      - or -
    2. The DOJ is trying to keep the state Attorneys General from getting involved in what they regard as a Federal matter

    It will be interesting to see how this plays out.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by nomadic (141991)
      This can only mean: Microsoft is adhering to its deal with the DOJ and they have investigated the matter and find Google's complaint without merit - or - The DOJ is trying to keep the state Attorneys General from getting involved in what they regard as a Federal matter It will be interesting to see how this plays out.

      -or more likely-
      The anti-trust division of the DOJ is run by libertarian free-market zealots who have no problem disregarding the law to further their own ideology.
  • It's MS OS (Score:4, Interesting)

    by WED Fan (911325) <akahige AT trashmail DOT net> on Tuesday June 12 2007, @08:31AM (#19476863) Homepage Journal

    If Chrysler decided to design a car that worked better with specific parts, who would complain. If MS designs their OS so their desktop search works better, great. If Google really wants to be a competitor let them spend all that evil filthy lucre they've amassed and build thier own stinking OS that they can lock MS out of.

    • by Mr. Underbridge (666784) on Tuesday June 12 2007, @08:42AM (#19476963)

      If Chrysler decided to design a car that worked better with specific parts, who would complain. If MS designs their OS so their desktop search works better, great. If Google really wants to be a competitor let them spend all that evil filthy lucre they've amassed and build thier own stinking OS that they can lock MS out of.

      Did Chrysler increase their market share by 90% last night? If not, the difference between Chrysler and MS is that Microsoft is a convicted monopolist with a very high marketshare of desktop computers while Chrysler is a small player in the US auto market. This means that MS is subject to laws and rules that, in general, Chrysler is not. One of them is leveraging their market share in one market (operating systems) into others (search tools, browsers, etc). If MS is using anticompetitive tactics to render Google's products less capable of working with MS's operating system, to MS's advantage, that could be illegal.

      Note that if Chrysler made 95% of the cars on the road, and Chrysler intentionally restricted their cars so that they would only work with Chrysler-blessed stereos, that would be illegal as well.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by daeg (828071)
        But in this case there is nothing illegal about it. It's a file search! There are numerous ways to turn it off, both user-imitated and automated. Google Desktop's installer could simply disable it and replace it.

        I like Google tools as much as the next guy, and generally distrust MS... but.. it's a file search. Searching files is something an operating system does.

        I can only imagine Google's crying if MS had left their new queryable file system in place.
  • Wrong issue (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rlp (11898) on Tuesday June 12 2007, @08:35AM (#19476897)
    I'd rather see the AG's go after Microsoft for their anti-Linux patent FUD. The DOJ is completely asleep at the wheel (or bought off) on this issue. Maybe the EU will do something about it.
  • by Gilatrout (694977) on Tuesday June 12 2007, @08:50AM (#19477059)
    My problem with this is not if it actually easier or not to replace Apples search, but the entire presumption that a company cannot put x feature into y product becuase it's hard for someone else. If MSFT wants to put in a search to be competative with APPL, then by all means they have that right, and they are IMO under no obligation to make it simple to replace. What they are obligated to do is allow 3rd parties to develop and install alternatives. The customer can then choose which implementation is better. This choice in no way requires that one implementation must not be coexist with the other.
  • Why is it (Score:3, Insightful)

    by toby (759) * on Tuesday June 12 2007, @08:55AM (#19477105) Homepage Journal
    That every antitrust story is tagged politics but never crime?

    A curious clue to contemporary American thought patterns?
  • by the_humeister (922869) on Tuesday June 12 2007, @09:09AM (#19477245)
    Should TCP/IP stack vendors also complain that Microsoft includes a TCP/IP stack in Vista? Yes there was a time when a TCP/IP stack was a separate product that had to be purchased, even on unix systems.
  • Lame (Score:3, Insightful)

    by MrCrassic (994046) <mrcrassicNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Tuesday June 12 2007, @09:11AM (#19477265) Homepage Journal

    I really hope that this case doesn't get taken to the heights of Microsoft's anti-trust suits did because it's really not worth it...

    Mac OS X includes desktop-wide search functions. I am not sure as to how difficult they are to "turn off," but it comes with the OS to provide ease of use for the user instead of having to find third-party utilities to do the same job as Windows users of the past have had to.

    Now, Microsoft decides to include desktop searching functions as well. If I am not mistaken, these functions can be turned off, but that does not matter. Google is then planning to sue Microsoft for unfair competition because their Desktop Search Application is no longer useful?

    If Google's primary argument in this case is that the integrated desktop search is too difficult to turn off, they better have pretty good lawyesr that can establish a clear and persuasive definition of what it means to "turn off" something. I'm pretty sure that if Google truly wanted to, they could establish an option within their own program (or set a default option) to turn off the Windows searching mechanism. There are also plenty of instructions that could be written to turn off the searching ability. I could go on with this, but the point here is that this main argument is a weak one that will get them nowhere even before the gavel hits the desk.

    Google has a ton of applications that are universally useful; why must they target something that MIcrosoft finally got right?

  • by nootron (935356) on Tuesday June 12 2007, @09:13AM (#19477287)
    Ok, IE integration I can see being a problem. But searching files? Isn't this a core feature of an OS? Whats next, suing MS because Windows allows one to store files? Or maybe Maxtor can sue MS because Windows allows you to format hard drives?
  • by Bullfish (858648) on Tuesday June 12 2007, @09:13AM (#19477297)
    Frankly, I don't blame MS for locking up the kernel. We all wanted that right? Security, remember that? At the same time as Google has grown it has shown all the earmarks of becoming what they said they wouldn't be, and it started with the desktop search. Now they are being accused of poor privacy protection, collaborating with censors...

    I don't want google or yahoo or anyone else searching my hard drive.
  • by Anon-Admin (443764) on Tuesday June 12 2007, @09:22AM (#19477409) Journal
    1) MS investigated by the AG's of several states.
    2) MS taken to court by the states.
    3) Federal government takes case away from states claiming federal jurisdiction. Then drops antitrust case due to pressure from executive branch.
    4) MS Profits!

    I guess we can drop the ??? on this one.
  • RTFOAs (Score:4, Insightful)

    by durnurd (967847) on Tuesday June 12 2007, @09:39AM (#19477627) Homepage
    (O: Other)

    While the article posted doesn't necessarily make it entirely clear what Google is complaining about, I had the sneaking suspicion that it wasn't just that a search function existed in Vista, as there has always been. So take a look at some other articles if you really want to know what the complaint is about. I found this [axcessnews.com]:

    In a 50-page document Google submitted to the Court, the search provider contends that Vista's desktop search, which is separate from internet search, limits users abilities to run Google's desktop search instead. Basically, Google says Microsoft's new OS only permits users to search Microsoft compatible information, such as e-mail.

    A Google spokesperson said in a statement that Microsoft Vista "violates the consent decree" and that its nearly impossible to turn off. "There is no visible way for users to choose an alternate search provider," the Google spokesman stated.
  • Google should STFU (Score:3, Interesting)

    by pyite69 (463042) on Tuesday June 12 2007, @10:21AM (#19478105)

    Google are the ones who make a Windows-only product - why are they complaining now? It is the same story every time: they strengthen the Windows franchise and then complain that Microsoft has an unfair advantage.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      You don't have to. But if you wanted the choice it would be unfeasible for you. You are missing the overreaching concern. It isn't about what you in particular want but about choices for everyone in the context of a monopoly.
    • by iknownuttin (1099999) on Tuesday June 12 2007, @08:42AM (#19476973)
      I predict the lawyers will be the only winners here.

      Blumenthal is using a tactic that another famous Connecticut Attorney General used to create a political career from a position (AG) that's not usually very visible. He went after the insurance companies, cut some half-assed deals that looked like they helped the consumer, made himself look like a hero to the little guy and then ran for Democratic Senator of CT and has never left - one close call last year. Yes, it's Joe Lieberman.

      Blumenthal is just using the same tactic on a different industry (ies) 30 years later. I guarantee you, Blumenthal will be running for Governor, Senator, or something in the near future and these investigations are nothing but ways to raise his name recognition among the public.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by illumin8 (148082)

      If a kid didn't play fair with you, did you run and bitch to your parents every minute of the day, or did you eventually learn not to play with the kid.
      What if the kid owned over 90% of all the toys in the playground and only let you play with the crappy blocks unless you were his friend?
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Tony (765)
      Why no complaints about Calculator or Notepad? Why no complaints about Hyperterminal?

      Because you can easily replace them? Because Microsoft hasn't limited the ability to run other programs, such as Putty?

      Why isn't Google complaining about Linux's find?

      Because the GNU/Linux developers haven't intentionally hobbled Google's ability to write a search system for GNU/Linux?

      Apple is far more anti-competitive than MS? Why doesn't anyone hassle them?

      Uhm... how do you mean? Is Apple in a dominant position, and capab
      • MICROSOFT HASN'T LIMITED GOOGLE'S ABILITY TO RUN GOOGLE DESKTOP SEARCH.

        Microsoft hasn't "intentionally hobbled" GDS!

        It's very easy to turn off Vista search indexing. There is an API to use for Google itself!

        Google is lying.
    • Anti-trust (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Tony (765)
      Why is Microsoft "obligated" to make it easier for their competitors?

      It's simple, really. A free market is only "free" inasmuch as the consumer is in control. That is, as long as the old middle-school "supply-and-demand, build-a-better-mousetrap" balance is maintained, you have a more-or-less free market.

      It has been noted throughout history that when on company achieves a stranglehold on a market, there is no competition. Corporate control of a market is much more sure than government control of a market, b
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      In this case the issue is not that they included the search feature, it's that they artificially made it more difficult for other parties to compete with their product. The question of whether this should be included in an OS isn't an issue here.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Todd Knarr (15451)

      This whole flap isn't about Microsoft merely including products in Vista. It's about them including their products in Vista and also locking Vista down to use only Microsoft's products for certain purposes even when Microsoft themselves provide and use an API specifically designed to allow for seamless substitution of service providers. It's as if Microsoft let you install any word processing software you wanted but no matter what settings you changed or what you told the system, double-clicking on a docume