Microsoft has agreed to change its Windows Vista operating system in
response to a complaint by Google that a feature of Vista is
anticompetitive, a U.S. Justice Department report said.
Under an agreement with the department and 17 state attorneys general and the District of Columbia, Microsoft will build into Vista an option to let users select a default desktop search program. The function, known as "Instant Search," allows Windows users to enter a search query and get a list of results from their hard drive that contain the search term. The agreement was made public as part of a joint report that the U.S. Justice Department and Microsoft filed late Tuesday with the court overseeing Microsoft's compliance with a 2002 antitrust consent decree. Google had made its complaint confidentially as part of the consent decree proceedings set up to monitor Microsoft for any anticompetitive conduct after it settled a landmark antitrust lawsuit five years ago that had been brought by the states and the Clinton administration. |
|
Random Technology News
Nokia may sign second label to mobile music service
|
|
|
Latest Technology News
|
Popular Technology News
Google leaps forward with Chrome 2.0 dev. preview
Asus debuts S121 netbook with Windows 7 and 512GB SSD
Verizon picks Microsoft search over Google and Yahoo
|
Microsoft has agreed to change its Windows Vista operating system in
response to a complaint by Google that a feature of Vista is
anticompetitive, a U.S. Justice Department report said.



