Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Web
  4. Legacy Archives

Microsoft To Offer Browser Ballot to EU Customers

Add as a preferred source on Google

Microsoft LogoMicrosoft and the European Union have announced an agreement to conduct a trial program, under which European Windows customers will be presented with a “browser ballot” enabling them to choose a default Web browser for their PC, rather than being forced to use Microsoft’s Internet Explorer by default. The agreement is meant to settle antitrust claims against Microsoft by European regulators, who claim Microsoft has abused its dominant position in the operating system market to control the browser market as well. Microsoft has maintained that it makes no sense to distinguish between operating systems and browsers in today’s Internet-centric computing environment.

If the pilot program works out, Microsoft may be bound to the “browser ballot” agreement for five years.

Recommended Videos

“We welcome today’s announcement by the European Commission to move forward with formal market testing of Microsoft’s proposal relating to web browser choice in Europe,” said Microsoft’s general counsel Brad Smith, in a statement. “We also welcome the opportunity to take the next step in the process regarding our proposal to promote interoperability with a broad range of our products.”

Under the agreement, PC manufacturers will be able to set up any browser they like as the default Web browser under Windows, and will be able to enable or disable IE as they see fit. Windows users who have Internet Explorer set up as their default browser will see a “ballot screen” that will enable them to download and install other browsers, if they so choose. Users will also be able to turn Internet Explorer off altogether, regardless of whether they’ve set up another browser as their default. The ballot screen will be shipped as part of Windows 7, and will be pushed to existing Windows XP and Vista users via Windows Update.

“The Commissions’ concern has been that PC users should have an effective and unbiased choice between Internet Explorer and competing Web browsers to ensure competition on the merits and to allow consumers to benefit from technical developments and innovation both on the Web browser market an on related markets, such a Web-based applications,” EU officials said in a statement.

Geoff Duncan
Former Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Topics
A hacker’s arrest just revealed how Microsoft can track your Windows device
Microsoft knew what websites his Windows PC visited.
Windows 11 on a laptop

A teenager allegedly used a VPN to cover his tracks while hacking a US jewelry retailer, but Microsoft knew anyway.

Court documents unsealed in the US case against Peter Stokes, a 19-year-old dual US-Estonian citizen accused of being a member of the notorious Scattered Spider hacking group, reveal that Microsoft provided the FBI with records tied to a tracking mechanism called the Global Device Identifier, or GDID. 

Read more
The days of cheap Chinese AI models could be number as government mulls restrictions similar to the US
The AI world’s bargain aisle could be closed by China soon.
DeepSeek AI chatbot running on an iPhone.

DeepSeek's R1 helped kickstart global interest in low-cost Chinese AI. This was followed by increasingly capable systems from Alibaba, ByteDance, and Z.ai. Some models can be downloaded, customized, and hosted independently, giving many developers an alternative to paying for access to expensive US platforms.

However, this bargain may soon face a geopolitical lock--and this time, it's because of China and not the US. Reuters reports that Chinese authorities have held meetings with Alibaba, ByteDance, and Z.ai about potentially restricting overseas access to the country’s most advanced AI systems. Discussions apparently included closed models and open-weight releases, along with technology that has yet to reach the public.

Read more
Microsoft pushed Copilot everywhere, but barely anyone bought it, and even fewer use it: Report
Users are barely showing up for Copilot
Microsoft Copilot Banner Featured

Microsoft has spent the past few years making Copilot extraordinarily difficult to avoid. It appeared in Windows 11, and soon found its way to Edge, Word, and almost everywhere else in Microsoft's software suite. New laptops even received a dedicated Copilot key. Microsoft wanted AI to become a daily habit, and it had hundreds of millions of existing customers to leverage.

But the latest adoption figures suggest that the distribution was quite disappointing. Microsoft revealed that Copilot 365 has more than 20 million paid seats. While that does sound impressive at a glance, this number is dwarfed when you compare the company's more than 450 million paid commercial Microsoft 365 seats. So fewer than 4.5% of those customers pay for the full Copilot experience.

Read more