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I think this is a common practice nowadays until the regulations resolved it. Even Google chrome now asks if you changed the default search engine by mistake.


There is a difference between asking if you want to change something, and going and changing this something without the user consent.


There is a difference between asking, and constantly nagging until the user presses the wrong key by mistake one day.


Sure but Google didn't nearly get broken up by anti-trust regulation agencies for unfair competition with browsers. Microsoft did... in a fair world they'd be facing serious fines or an actual breakup this time as repeat offenders.




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