Your airline ticket is STILL a bundle of rights. That’s legal fact. Your ticket is NOT a guarantee of carriage on a particular flight,
Well, that was going to be tested in court but it didn't get to a court judgement on whether a ticket could legally just be a bundle of rights or whether the consumer laws prevail.
In the end, there was a settlement with the ACCC (the $120milion settlement) and Qantas importantly agreed to no longer use "bundle of rights" as a legal defence regardless of whether a ticket has some bundle of rights...
In the view of many legal authorities, Qantas was in serious risk of being found to have engaged in misleading conduct regardless of the "bundle of rights defence".
......
Again, it is not whether UA was legally right about whether a window seat must be a window accessible seat or not. My point is that passengers have expectations - some reasonable and often unreasonable. I'm just pointing out that it is reasonable if sold a window seat, that the seat should have a window seat. This is of course different to an involuntary seat swop from a window seat to some other seat. In this case the airline asserts it's a window seat even though it's does not have a window. It's like ordering Fish and chips but not getting chips even though the menu says fish and chips or Boneless chicken and finding out that it has bones despite what you paid for.
While Qantas has strictly nothing to do with this, Using Qantas not selling window seats per se, it would go like this:
Passenger calling call centre: can you give me a window seat
Call centre: yes I've allocated you a window seat
Passenger then complains that the seat did not have a window but was a wall.
Call centre: sorry we don't sell window seats.
Most people understand absurdity.
An airline ticket being only a bundle of rights is absurd. A wall seat called a window seat is absurd.