

Senate GOP throws cold water on House shutdown talk Marijuana rescheduling falls short of expectations on Biden Key House Democrat wants Senate rule change over Tuberville military holdĭeSantis defends fiery response to audience member: ‘I’m not gonna let. READ: Judge releases Fulton County grand jury report on 2020 Georgia election. South Florida city becomes state’s first LGBTQ sanctuary How Lindsey Graham escaped charges in GeorgiaĬould Trump be blocked from ballot? 14th Amendment raises eligibility arguments ĭurbin: Justices hitting Supreme Court’s reputation with ‘wrecking ball’Īppeals court rules government likely violated First Amendment in vaccine. “We have no further comment to make.”Ĭhristie hits Trump for Meghan Markle comments after skipping GOP. “We take note of Microsoft’s announcement,” a Commission spokesperson said. It’s not clear if the concessions will be enough to address the Commission’s concerns. “Today we are announcing proactive changes that we hope will start to address these concerns in a meaningful way, even while the European Commission’s investigation continues and we cooperate with it,” Microsoft’s vice president of European government affairs, Nanna-Louise Linde, said in a blog post.
#Microsoft to dowithout store software
Slack, owned by business software maker Salesforce, alleged that Microsoft was abusing its market dominance to eliminate competition - in violation of EU laws - by illegally combining Teams with its Office suite, which includes Word, Excel and Outlook. The investigation was triggered by a complaint filed in 2020 by Slack Technologies, maker of popular workplace messaging software. The announcement comes a month after the European Union’s executive Commission, the 27-nation bloc’s top competition enforcer, opened a formal investigation over concerns that bundling Teams with Office gives the company an unfair edge over competitors.
