Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 14th Nov 2011 23:06 UTC
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RE[3]: Never been so happy to be wrong!
by JAlexoid on Wed 16th Nov 2011 06:44
in reply to "RE[2]: Never been so happy to be wrong!"
Except, they didn't pull out of China.
Well... They made sure that they don't have to adhere to Chinese "political speech" laws. That's a big deal.
Sometimes it's better to deal with the guys who you know will knife you in the face (Facebook, Apple, Microsoft) instead of the guys that will knife you in the back (Google).
Your assumption that the first three companies have one knife is not true. Google at least has the knife only to your back and a smile in your face. The others have a knife in your face and in your back.
RE[3]: Never been so happy - now wait just a minute!
by jabbotts on Wed 16th Nov 2011 15:40
in reply to "RE[2]: Never been so happy to be wrong!"




Member since:
2005-07-06
- releasing source code to their operating system for free, under no obligation. The Nook Tablet and Color and Kindle Fire are great examples of how this can work against Google - Android devices that make no payment to Google and do not come with access to Google's Android Marketplace, or Google's proprietary apps.
Nothing to say here.
You clearly aren't actually in Silicon Valley. Of the 5 "compared to" companies you listed, only 2 of them would be considered Silicon Valley companies (Apple and Oracle). There are dozens of major Silicon Valley companies that haven't sued over patents. That's not a very high bar to leap over here.
Are you forgetting the Buzz debacle? Street View Wifi sniffing? At least Facebook is up front about how much they don't care about privacy.
Lots of companies have this, I'm not exactly sure why this makes them better than any of the others.
Right, the Verizon carve out is very principled.
Except, they didn't pull out of China.
Because most of what you listed is marketing fluff. They believe in net neutrality but they'll live without it on wireless networks to keep Verizon happy. They're big on privacy except when they're stealing data on wifi networks. They're "open", except when for one reason or another it's inconvenient right now. Sometimes it's better to deal with the guys who you know will knife you in the face (Facebook, Apple, Microsoft) instead of the guys that will knife you in the back (Google).