May 1,
2006
New Microsoft Browser Raises Google's Hackles
By STEVE LOHR
The New York Times
With a $10 billion advertising market at stake, Google, the fast-rising Internet star, is
raising objections to the way that it says Microsoft, the incumbent powerhouse of
computing, is wielding control over Internet searching in its new Web browser.
Google, which only recently began beefing up its lobbying efforts in
The new browser includes a search box in the upper-right corner that is
typically set up to send users to Microsoft's MSN search service. Google contends
that this puts Microsoft in a position to unfairly grab Web traffic and
advertising dollars from its competitors.
The move, Google claims, limits consumer choice and is reminiscent of
the tactics that got Microsoft into antitrust trouble in the late 1990's.
"The market favors open choice for
search, and companies should compete for users based on the quality of their
search services," said Marissa Mayer, the vice president for search
products at Google. "We don't think it's right
for Microsoft to just set the default to MSN. We believe users should
choose."
Microsoft replies that Google is misreading its intentions and actions.
It says the default settings in the browser, Internet Explorer 7, are easy to
change. And it says the product was designed with consumers and many partners
in mind — even though it might not be to the liking of Google, the leading
search engine.
"Whatever behavior happened in the past,
the guiding principle we had is that the user is in control," said Dean Hachamovitch, general manager of the Internet Explorer
group.
Companies often talk with antitrust officials, and the talks do not
imply that an investigation is imminent. But they do indicate that Google is
pursuing every option in its escalating rivalry with Microsoft, which has
already led to some public battles.
Last December, Google outbid Microsoft to remain the primary search
service on America Online, paying $1 billion and taking a 5 percent stake in
AOL. Last year, Microsoft sued Google to stop a star computer scientist and
manager at Microsoft, Kai-Fu Lee, from working on search technology at Google.
The suit was settled, and Mr. Lee runs Google's operations in
The browser that set off the latest dispute has been in development for
some time, but Microsoft first made it available to the public for downloading
last week in a test version. It is the first new release of Microsoft's browser
in five years. A final version is expected to be released this summer and will
be included in Microsoft's new operating system, Windows Vista, which is
scheduled for release next January.
The focus of Google's concern is a slender box in the corner of the
browser window that allows users to start a search directly instead of first
going to the Web site of a search engine like Google, Yahoo or MSN. Typing a query and hitting
"Enter" immediately brings up a page of results from a designated
search engine.
That slice of on-screen real estate has the potential to be enormously
valuable, and Microsoft is the landlord. Internet Explorer 7 is the first
Microsoft browser to have a built-in search box, while other browsers like Firefox, Opera and Safari have had them for some time.
Google estimates that the boxes, when available, are the starting point for 30
to 50 percent of a user's searches, making them a crucial gateway to the
lucrative and fast-growing market for advertisements that appear next to search
results.
Microsoft has lost some ground in the browser market in the last year,
mainly to Firefox, which is a Google ally. But
Microsoft still holds more than 80 percent of the market. And Internet Explorer
7 is expected to be extremely popular because it is an improvement over
Microsoft's previous browser, and because Microsoft will promote downloads of
it and include it in Windows Vista.
That gives Microsoft the potential to use the browser to steer
substantial traffic, and business, to MSN and away from rivals. MSN handled 11
percent of searches in the
Microsoft insists it has no intention of deploying its browser as a
weapon in the search wars. But Google suspects otherwise.
In meetings beginning last year, Google told Microsoft of its objections
to the company's plans to set MSN as the default search engine in Internet
Explorer 7, according to Ms. Mayer of Google. Yahoo raised similar objections
in a meeting with Microsoft last year, according to a Yahoo employee who was
briefed on the conversation. Yahoo declined to comment last week beyond a
statement: "We would be concerned about any company's attempts to limit
user choice or change user preferences without their knowledge, and believe
others would share that concern."
With its objections unresolved, Google took the matter to antitrust
authorities in Europe and the
In Europe, where Microsoft is challenging an antitrust decision against
the company for its past behavior, the European
Commission has already made inquiries about Microsoft's plans for
Google has informed the European antitrust authorities of its worry that
"Microsoft's approach to setting search defaults in Internet Explorer 7
benefits Microsoft while taking away choice from users," said Steve
Langdon, a spokesman for Google.
Google would not say specifically what it has discussed with American
antitrust officials. "We have spoken to the Justice Department generally
about our business and the importance of preserving competition in the search
market," Mr. Langdon said.
A Justice Department spokeswoman declined to comment.
The best way to handle the search box, Google asserts, would be to give
users a choice when they first start up Internet Explorer 7. It says that could
be done by asking the user to either type in the name of their favorite search engine or choose from a handful of the most
popular services, using a simple drop-down menu next to the search box.
The Firefox and Opera browsers come with
Google set as the default, but Ms. Mayer said Google would support unfettered
choice on those as well.
Microsoft replies that giving users an open-ended choice could add
complexity and confusion to the browser set-up process, while offering a few
options would be arbitrarily limiting.
Instead, those wanting to pick a new search-box option in the new
browser need to click through a menu with options like "Get Search
Providers," which links to a Web page with six search engines including
Google and 16 "topic search" sites, from Amazon to MTV to Wal-Mart.
Mr. Hachamovitch, who led Microsoft's browser
team, said MSN was not always the default search in Internet Explorer 7. When
downloaded, the new browser inherits the settings from the old Microsoft
browser, version 6. But the search default in that program was based on a
feature called AutoSearch that Google says was not
widely used.
Mr. Hachamovitch said Microsoft's user
research and early reviews indicate that it is easy to change the default
setting. "People seem to be O.K. with what we're doing," he said.
Google counters that claim with a study it sponsored that was conducted
by Tec-Ed, a research firm. It found that only a third of users could master
the four-click process to change the default.
Whether Microsoft's treatment of the search box will have an impact on
the search market is uncertain. From an antitrust perspective, harm to
competition is the litmus test, not just swinging a sharp elbow or two. There
are many ways people get to search engines other than through a search box —
for example, by typing google.com in the browser or making it their home page.
"Assume that everything Google says is true; the question then is
whether Microsoft's conduct is really going to have a serious effect on
Google," said Andrew I. Gavil, a law professor
at Howard University. "Obviously, Google thinks that it will."
Google is now a rich, powerful company in its own right,
far larger than the browser pioneer Netscape Communications was when Microsoft
set out to dominate the market it had created in the 1990's. In 2001, after a
lengthy trial, a federal appeals court held that Microsoft had repeatedly
violated antitrust laws as it tried to stifle the challenge from Netscape.
Later, Microsoft reached a settlement with the Justice Department that freed
personal computer makers from some restrictions Microsoft had placed on their
use of software and services that compete with its own products.
When Internet Explorer 7 begins to be loaded on new machines next year,
computer makers like Dell and Hewlett-Packard will be free to determine what
search engines and other sites they feature in the browser's Web guide and
search box.
That promises to be valuable screen real estate indeed, especially the
coveted spot as the preferred search engine, which the computer makers are
likely to sell to the highest bidder. Google and Yahoo have deep pockets, but
no one can match Microsoft's spending power. "People will be bidding
aggressively to get in that space," said Mr. Hachamovitch
of Microsoft. "And that's a good thing."
John Markoff contributed reporting for this
article.