Off-Prem

Channel

Microsoft tells partners unbundling Teams is a 'compromise' with the EU

Meanwhile, Zoom boss calls on US authorities to consider adopting Europe's breakout policy


Microsoft has told its partner community that unbundling Teams from its Microsoft 365 and Office 365 suites was a compromise – an alteration to the language it used when announcing the change.

Microsoft decided to unbundle its comms client after the European Commission launched an investigation into whether bundling Teams with Microsoft's flagship productivity bundles represented "anticompetitive tying or bundling."

The Windows colossus blinked and decided to offer versions of its suites without Teams before the Commission's investigation ended. At the time Microsoft's blog stated: "We believe these changes balance the interests of our competitors with those of European business customers, providing them with access to the best possible solutions at competitive prices."

But in a document [PDF] marked "Partners Only" that The Register was able to download from Microsoft without entering channel partner credentials, the software giant offers adifferent explanation: "… these changes are a compromise intended to address concerns raised with the European Commission while limiting disruption for customers, partners, and sellers."

The document also suggests the current unbundling may not be the end of the matter.

"In our view, customers can realize the greatest value by purchasing the full Microsoft 365 suite including Teams," the document states, adding "We will continue to cooperate with the Commission and remain committed to finding solutions that will address its concerns while limiting disruption for customers and partners."

One of the questions in the document is "If this licensing model is so good for customers, why isn't Microsoft offering it worldwide?"

Microsoft doesn't answer its own question – but Zoom CEO Eric Yuan thinks US regulators should.

Speaking at the Goldman Sachs Communacopia + Technology Conference on Tuesday, Yuan was asked about the impact of Europe's decision on Zoom's bottom line. "You should ask that question to the FTC as well," he replied, referencing the US competition regulator.

Yuan's reg-walled remarks on competition continued with a little homily comparing two basketball players, one of whom scores an extra point for each basket. Yuan thinks he's only getting two points per shot, and that unfair competition means an unnamed rival gets three.

Yuan also told the conference that Zoom has spent the last few years building video collaboration, phone, team chat, whiteboard, meeting scheduling, email, and calendar functionality into its client. Then he expressed his desire that "Ultimately we would like end users to stay within the Zoom client and get most of their work done."

Which suggests Yuan isn't opposed to all software bundles – just those that make his job harder. ®

Send us news
17 Comments

Microsoft turning away AI training workloads – inferencing makes better money

Azure's acceleration continues, but so do costs

Is Microsoft's AI Copilot? CoPilot? Co-pilot? MVP creates site to help get it right

When you say 'team' do you mean 'Teams' or a SharePoint 'team site'? Letmecorrectthatforyou.com explains the difference

Microsoft accused of 'greenwashing' as AI used in fossil fuel exploration

Activists press Redmond to come clean on ‘material reputational, legal, and operational risks’

Microsoft accuses Google of creating a lobbying front called 'Open Cloud Coalition'

Seemingly dissatisfied with CISPE settlement, new UK-centric cloudy industry group calls for end to 'restrictive licensing'

Microsoft reshuffles execs in Europe, Middle East and Africa unit

UK CEO becomes EMEA president after taking on role in Brit industrial strategy

Putin's pro-Trump trolls accuse Harris of poaching rhinos

Plus: Iran's IRGC probes election-related websites in swing states

Microsoft says its Copilot AI agents set to tackle employee tasks in November

Let bots manage your supply chain? What could possibly go wrong?

Windows Themes zero-day bug exposes users to NTLM credential theft

Plus a free micropatch until Redmond fixes the flaw

Productivity suites, Exchange servers in path of Microsoft's end-of-support wave

Less than a year to go – is your enterprise ready for the change?

Microsoft says tougher punishments needed for state-sponsored cybercriminals

Although it also reaffirmed commitment to secure-by-design initiatives

Ransomware's ripple effect felt across ERs as patient care suffers

389 US healthcare orgs infected this year alone

Western Digital wasn't the only one - Windows 24H2 update bluescreens Asus systems

Microsoft blocks updates to avoid giving admins another headache