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Europe to get Windows 7 without browser

Microsoft product specialist Arik Firman displays their newest Windows Live software during the International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas on January 8, 2009. Microsoft Corporation also debuted their newest Windows 7 software at CES. The 2009 CES opened to the public on Thursday and continues through the weekend. (UPI Photo/Tom Theobald)
Microsoft product specialist Arik Firman displays their newest Windows Live software during the International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas on January 8, 2009. Microsoft Corporation also debuted their newest Windows 7 software at CES. The 2009 CES opened to the public on Thursday and continues through the weekend. (UPI Photo/Tom Theobald) | License Photo

NEW YORK, June 13 (UPI) -- Citing antitrust concerns, Microsoft Corp., says it will release Windows 7 in Europe without its Internet Explorer Web browser.

The Windows operating system is on more than 90 percent of the world's computers, which breaches European antitrust rules, European Union regulators have said.

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Microsoft, instead, will offer Internet Explorer separately, Dave Heiner, Microsoft's deputy general counsel said in a statement on the company's Web site.

"This means that computer manufacturers and users will be free to install Internet Explorer on Windows 7, or not, as they prefer," Heiner said.

Windows 7 tentatively is scheduled for release in October.

EU regulators oppose Microsoft's bundling practices, where one piece of software is included free with another piece of software, which is sold, The Wall Street Journal reported Saturday.

In an antitrust ruling last year, Microsoft was fined for failing to provide competitors with technical information on its Media Player software, the Journal said.

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