Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 15th Feb 2013 08:21 UTC
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No, no, no. Two wrongs absolutely do not make a right. If you believe they do, you should become a US politician. This is the kind of crap I'd expect to see in political ads: Well, they did it first, so we're going to do it right back to them. Don't drop down to their level, be better than that. Apple are pricks. Google are pricks. That doesn't mean I have to be a prick too.
I'm afraid you misread my intentions.
I didn't write a single word like that or mean that I'm OK with Google doing it. As an Android user, I most certainly am not!
What I meant is the journalists' double standard comes from the reputation that Apple has; Google has a better reputation and so the cognitive bias favours Google.
I'm simply trying to provide a sensible explanation for the phenomenon; not trying to provide excuses or defend Google.




Member since:
2008-07-15
It is a double standard, but it's not without a reason thanks to Apple's doing THEIR OWN MASSIVE SHARE of double standarding. Just one example of attitude is enough, like "we can borrow ideas shamelessly but everybody else borrowing from us is an IP thief and the we're seeing in court" "
No, no, no. Two wrongs absolutely do not make a right. If you believe they do, you should become a US politician. This is the kind of crap I'd expect to see in political ads: Well, they did it first, so we're going to do it right back to them. Don't drop down to their level, be better than that. Apple are pricks. Google are pricks. That doesn't mean I have to be a prick too.