Microsoft Windows 8
Microsoft may face additional fines over its failure to properly implement a browser choice directive as instructed by the European Commission.
Since December 2009, Microsoft has been legally bound to display a browser choice screen to Windows user in Europe, allowing them to specifically select an internet browser to install.
Between February and July 2011, however, the EC has found that Microsoft failed to deliver this browser choice screen to millions of Windows 7 Service Pack 1 users.
Microsoft could be fined up to 10% of global turnover, although this severity of penalty is unlikely. The EC describes 10% as “a legal maximum, not an indication of what a possible fine would be.”
Microsoft, in a statement earlier today, said that it takes that matter “very seriously” and that it was as a result of a “technical error”. Part of that statement reads,
“Although this was the result of a technical error, we take responsibility for what happened, and we have taken steps to strengthen our internal procedures to help ensure something like this cannot happen again.”
To date, Microsoft has paid €1.6 billion in fines to the EC over the issue.
You’ve probably been coming across the term “agentic AI” a lot more recently, and in…
In order to achieve true robot intelligence, a digital twin of the entire world would…
Autonomous Biochemical Sensing can turn human bodies into surveillance tools for monitoring and control, Collaborative…
New research shows AI companions can lift mood and teach social skills, but only when…
Hate speech is a launching point for crackdowns on narratives that impede UN agendas: perspective…
On June 4, technology executives gathered at the SIM Hartford chapter presided over by Fariba…