Skip to content
OnMSFT.com
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • News
  • How-to
  • Feature stories
  • Deals
  • Microsoft / office 365
  • Reviews
Menu
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • News
  • How-to
  • Feature stories
  • Deals
  • Microsoft / office 365
  • Reviews
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Chinese regulators are stuck in the 90s, open antitrust investigation into Microsoft’s practices

Chinese regulators are stuck in the 90s, open antitrust investigation into Microsoft’s practices

Joseph Finney Joseph Finney
August 21, 2019
2 min read

Chinese regulators are stuck in the 90s and open an antitrust investatgation into Microsoft's practices

Chinese antitrust authorities have opened an investigation into Microsoft’s bundling practices. Accusing Microsoft of exhibiting anti-competitive behavior, Chinese officials are concerned with Internet Explorer and Windows Media Player being included in Microsoft Windows.

These are the same concerns US and EU regulators have had in the 90s. In the early days of personal computers, there were a lot of unknowns involving how Microsoft was shaping the tech landscape by bundling its software with Windows. Eventually it was concluded in the EU that Microsoft had to offer a version of Windows without Windows Media Player. Also in the EU, the first time the internet is accessed, customers are prompted with a browser ballot where they choose a browser and it is downloaded and installed.

In the US, there was less strict fall out from the antitrust lawsuits. Microsoft was required to provide the APIs to enable developers to create competitive software such as media players and web browsers. Microsoft was not required to sell a copy of Windows without Windows Media Player like they had to in the EU, and as we can see, Microsoft is still providing Internet Explorer with Windows in the US.

This new Chinese investigation is one of many probes through out the country. Foreign companies such as Qualcomm and German car maker Daimler AG’s (DAIGn.DE) luxury auto unit Mercedes-Benz have experienced similar probes into business practices. These investigations raise red flags over concerns the Chinese government may be trying to give Chinese companies an advantage.

What do you think of this new investigation? Do you think China is over stepping their boundaries? Do you think Microsoft deserves this investigation? Let us know in the comments below!

Further reading: Antitrust, China, Microsoft

Share this article:
Tags:
Antitrust China Microsoft
Previous Article Microsoft secretly yanks TechNet product keys Next Article Ashampoo Photo Optimizer 5.0 Beta released

Related Articles

Users Modify RTX 5090 Lightning Z Hardware to Unlock MSI’s Restricted 2500W BIOS

Users Modify RTX 5090 Lightning Z Hardware to Unlock MSI’s Restricted 2500W BIOS

April 9, 2026

Intel Arc GPUs Finally Run Crimson Desert After Driver Update, But Issues Remain

April 9, 2026

NVIDIA N1 SoC Leak Shows First AI Laptop Motherboard With 128GB RAM

April 9, 2026

Leave a Comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • Users Modify RTX 5090 Lightning Z Hardware to Unlock MSI’s Restricted 2500W BIOS
  • Intel Arc GPUs Finally Run Crimson Desert After Driver Update, But Issues Remain
  • NVIDIA N1 SoC Leak Shows First AI Laptop Motherboard With 128GB RAM
  • GTA 6 rumor claims creator economy could turn players into millionaires
  • NVIDIA Shader Cache Change Arrives With DDU 18.1.5.1 Update

Recent Comments

  1. XxRIVTYxX on Intel Says It Tried to Help Before Crimson Desert Dropped Arc Support
  2. Gaurav Kumar on Chrome Prepares Nudge to ‘Move Tabs to the Side’ as Vertical Tabs Near Release
OnMSFT.com

The Tech News Site

Categories

  • Windows
  • Surface
  • Xbox
  • How-To
  • OnPodcast
  • Gaming
  • Edge
  • Teams

Recent Posts

  • Users Modify RTX 5090 Lightning Z Hardware to Unlock MSI’s Restricted 2500W BIOS
  • Intel Arc GPUs Finally Run Crimson Desert After Driver Update, But Issues Remain
  • NVIDIA N1 SoC Leak Shows First AI Laptop Motherboard With 128GB RAM
  • GTA 6 rumor claims creator economy could turn players into millionaires
  • NVIDIA Shader Cache Change Arrives With DDU 18.1.5.1 Update

Quick Links

  • About OnMSFT.com
  • Contact OnMSFT
  • Join Our Team
  • Privacy Policy
© 2010–2026 OnMSFT.com LLC. All rights reserved.
About OnMSFT.comContact OnMSFTPrivacy Policy