Microsoft
is to remove a feature from Internet Explorer that required users to activate
certain interactive features on a website.
Prior to April 2007, the features functioned without any user interaction.
The changes were made in an effort to
circumvent
a patent owned by
Eolas and the
University
of California.
Microsoft agreed in August to pay $521m to
settle the patent
dispute.
"Microsoft has now licensed the technologies from Eolas, removing the 'click
to activate' requirement in Internet Explorer," said Pete LePage, a senior
product manager at Microsoft, on the company's
IE
Blog.
"Because of this, we are removing the 'click to activate' behaviour from
Internet Explorer."
Microsoft plans to release the update by December, when users can download an
optional Automatic Component Activation Preview.
The general public will receive the update by April 2008 through Automatic
Update in Windows.
The Eolas patent regulates how objects can be embedded into the HTML code of
a web page. The patent does not affect JavaScript applications, Netscape or
Firefox.
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