The European Commission said it is concerned that the bundling of Teams with Microsoft 365 was disallowing choices for enterprises and giving Teams an unfair advantage over competing applications. Credit: IB Photography / Shutterstock Microsoft is facing an antitrust probe in Europe for bundling Teams with Microsoft 365. The European Commission — the executive arm of the European Union that governs regulations for its 27 member nations — said it is looking into a complaint that claimed Microsoft’s bundling of Teams with Office 365 was unfair. “The Commission is concerned that Microsoft may be abusing and defending its market position in productivity software by restricting competition in the European Economic Area (‘EEA’) for communication and collaboration products,” the Commission said in a statement. The bundling of Teams, according to the Commission, may grant Microsoft a distribution advantage by not giving enterprise customers the choice to include access to Teams when they subscribe to Microsoft 365. “Our members experience the same anticompetitive behavior in the cloud as the software giant uses its Microsoft 365 suite to drive up costs and limit customer choice,” Coalition for Fair Software (CFSL) Executive Director Ryan Triplette said in a statement. “This is Microsoft’s playbook — leveraging its monopoly power in one market to distort competition in another.” The complaint against Microsoft was brought by Salesforce-owned Slack in July 2020. The European Commission said it is launching the probe because it views remote communication and collaboration tools as indispensable aspects for many businesses in Europe. “Microsoft may have limited the interoperability between its productivity suites and competing offerings,” the Commission said, adding that these practices may constitute anticompetitive tying. An email sent to Microsoft seeking comments on the probe did not elicit a response. “Microsoft is leveraging its dominant desktop and productivity products to compel the adoption of not only Teams, but its other products offered throughout the cloud stack — including ActiveDirectory, Azure, OneDrive, and Defender,” Triplette said. In March, Microsoft offered to change its cloud computing practices to avoid a separate antitrust from the European Commission. The Commission had received complaints from European cloud companies that raised concerns over Microsoft charging customers more to run Microsoft software in non-Microsoft cloud environments. The European cloud firms called this a restrictive cloud licensing policy. In 2009, Microsoft faced similar action from the European Union for bundling the Internet Explorer browser with Windows operating system. The company had promised it would offer a choice of browser as part of its operating system but failed to keep its words, which led to the EU imposing a fine of over $600 million (€561 million) in 2013. Related content news AR/VR headset sales decline is temporary: IDC A steep year-on-year drop in global shipments in Q1 was the result of market in transition. By Paul Barker Jun 18, 2024 4 mins Headsets Technology Industry opinion Apple's cautious AI strategy is absolutely right It is via simple, friendly and optional functions that the great masses will be introduced to — and actually use — AI tools. By Marcus Jerräng Jun 18, 2024 5 mins Apple Generative AI news Varjo wants you to create photorealistic VR ‘scenes’ with your phone The Finnish VR headset firm said its Teleport device will lower the barrier for 3D content creation with an app that lets users create a virtual environment — without any training or special equipment. By Matthew Finnegan Jun 18, 2024 4 mins Augmented Reality Virtual Reality Vendors and Providers news analysis When it comes to AI, Apple is opening up for intelligence Apple is becoming increasingly open as its research teams cook up Apple Intelligence. By Jonny Evans Jun 18, 2024 4 mins Apple Developer Generative AI Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe