Why You Must Dump Microsoft NOW
Posted by XenokRoy 9 years, 8 months ago to Government
While this article has a great deal of truth within it (Microsoft is a big government spy) what it fails to mention is that so is Google, Yahoo and now with Steve Jobs gone I would bet apple.
Purely an observation on my part. The government (a few years back) filed a series of security warnings on many tech companies. When a tech company (facebook was first) changed privacy policies so that they could collect and share with the NSA the inquisitions against that company went away.
The only CEO to let the hearing about their security to actually happen before congress was Steve Jobs. He proved that peoples names and personal informaiton that could be used for billing was secure. When apple did get hacked they go pictures but could not get the credit card numbers, SSNs and other person info.
The point is after jobs died apple then adjusted their privacy notices as well.
While much of this article (extremely bias) is true there is no tech company I am aware of that has any significant user base that is not open to share its data with the NSA based on privacy agreements.
Does anyone know of one?
Purely an observation on my part. The government (a few years back) filed a series of security warnings on many tech companies. When a tech company (facebook was first) changed privacy policies so that they could collect and share with the NSA the inquisitions against that company went away.
The only CEO to let the hearing about their security to actually happen before congress was Steve Jobs. He proved that peoples names and personal informaiton that could be used for billing was secure. When apple did get hacked they go pictures but could not get the credit card numbers, SSNs and other person info.
The point is after jobs died apple then adjusted their privacy notices as well.
While much of this article (extremely bias) is true there is no tech company I am aware of that has any significant user base that is not open to share its data with the NSA based on privacy agreements.
Does anyone know of one?
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I worked for company 50 years ago and we were that was coerced into buying out a competitor that had completely blotched a US government job in a foreign country. They alleged antitrust against us to be ignored if we absorbed the criminal company that had paid off government inspectors to pay for work not done and materials that did not meet specifications. Others in the industry were making jokes about us being so stupid but we were keeping our CEO, who was a great man, out of prison on a fake charge. The world has not gotten better in 50 years, it has gotten worse. Until tens of millions are willing to sacrifice more than an inconvenience, this will continue.
I looked at making the Linux switch as well, but one of my favorite time burning things to do would have to go too.
This also avoids most of the information collection from my systems. Looks like 10 Home will make this required to keep the prying eyes out.
http://www.zdnet.com/article/windows-...
It wasn't easy for me to make the switch to Linux after I swore off M$ after XP, but today's good distros have overcome most of that. Linux is still not great for the gamers, but otherwise so many FREE and GOOD Open Source apps are included with the distros. I got my life back!
It also makes the patriot act something they can expire and not loose a drop of information on people in so doing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-10ew...
Not true. Nearly all others allow the user to decide not to update (in my experience.)
Disclosure: Not updating is the choice that I often make. Although that may not be the right choice for others, it is the right choice for me, and my systems have not suffered from exploits. If I ran a web server subject to exploits, I would not choose MSFT os for the server and I would keep security updated.
"A great deal of the decisions made with Windows 10 are of the 'damned if you do' and 'damned if you don't' variety. When we made Windows Update optional for home users --- users went years without updating their machines. As a result, an entire culture of remote exploitation, hacking, and bot-nets emerged. In Windows 10 (Home Edition only), updates are automatic. This is actually in line with nearly every other piece of software out there nowadays that auto-updates on launch.
When you encrypt people's cloud storage (remember, this is the free storage not the business storage) people have this great habit of losing their encryption keys and then calling up Microsoft expecting us to somehow let them in to their personal photos, data, etc, which are now gone forever. We decided to do what every other Cloud provider does and safeguard this. You can STILL encrypt your files and information using any other form of encryption -- and obviously if you lose THAT key -- you're on your own. Again, these are decisions made to service the 80% majority of home users. Apple/Google does the same thing."
(Their own words!) What that really means is, “We’ll listen in, record what you type, then store it or sell it as we see fit.”
I would add: and/or give it to the government goons
I wouldn't characterise MSFT as the author of the article does, but he makes valid points about the contract, and he suggests a free market solution.