Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 12th Oct 2012 11:35 UTC
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RE[5]: Selective tech amnesia
by UltraZelda64 on Sat 13th Oct 2012 15:30
in reply to "RE[4]: Selective tech amnesia"
Speaking for myself, I'd rather a company not be subtle about what they're doing. Better that I know precisely what I'm dealing with when I buy from someone as opposed to having something sneak up on me.
Everyone should know by now that this is the same company that found themselves fighting the U.S. government over monopolistic anti-trust issues just over a decade ago. So it should be pretty obvious, despite their recent sneakiness, that if you choose them they should to be monitored like a baby. That really makes them no different than a company that blatantly does is stuff.
I would go as far as saying that no matter what company you consider doing business with, always do a background check. After all--when was the last time anyone got a job at some company that didn't require a thorough background check on all of their potential employees? Trust works both ways.
I automatically do not trust any company until they've been proven. That solves things for the most part.
BTW, Apple can be pretty subtle too. It seems that they used to be even more subtle, but that was when they were smaller. It really seems like Microsoft and Apple are trading places in the way they pull off questionable moves.




Member since:
2008-07-15
Speaking for myself, I'd rather a company not be subtle about what they're doing. Better that I know precisely what I'm dealing with when I buy from someone as opposed to having something sneak up on me.