You are talking about the "vertical integration" argument. For this argument to fly, you need to show that the products are of a sufficiently distinct nature that one can legitimately be said to be leveraging strength in one market to enhance its position in another.Xisiqomelir wrote:Removability is a critical aspect of the legal question. Bundling, in and of itself, needn't necessarily be malicious but forced integration with insurmountable barriers to removal, especially in a market-dominating product, is a clearly intended to provide an advantage to the bundled product by leveraging the installed base of the market-leading product. If the integration can be shown to be gratuitous and for the sole purpose of suppressing competition in the bundled-product market, as it was in United States vs Microsoft, then the organization is at fault.
In other words, you have to show that an OS and the web browser are sufficiently distinct kinds of products to be considered separate markets. And I don't see how you can really make that argument. In many respects, Netscape was working on a time limit when they made that accusation in the 1990s because people increasingly view the web browser as a basic component. Sure, it's one that you can upgrade, but the idea of shipping an OS which is actually incapable of viewing webpages without add-on software would strike most people as completely absurd.
The scandal of IE was always the way it attempted to break web standards and subvert the web to become a Microsoft product. In other words, the interoperability argument, which is completely distinct from the integration argument. The fact that Windows came with a built-in web browser is just not something that strikes me as a reasonable basis of attack.
Ummm, there are a shitload of audio products on the market with a built-in CD player that is impossible to remove.If I might make my own HiFi analogy, the Microsoft equipment rack is one with every slot empty except for a CD player welded into the bottom. You are free to buy your own CD player (which won't explode through regular use), but you can't remove the Microsoft one. What's worse is that things don't have to be that way at all, since IE and WMA are computer applications, not electronic equipment.