>>> There are advantages and disadvantages to this for both the user and Microsoft.
>>There are no advantages for the user. This is a very bad thing being done to people.
>
>The advantage is that it (in theory at least) it should help to keep your computer stable by elimiinating "badly-behaved" software (there are *no* "badly-behaved" programs from any legitimate vendors. BTW, could I interest you in some beachfront property in Arizona with a lovely view of the Pacific? [Okay, it's not beachfront *now*, but it *will* be when California sinks into the ocean as predicted] ).
There are many other ways to do that (protect users from unstable software) which do not mandate Microsoft keeping a manifest of every software program you have on your computer.
What Microsoft is doing is trampling upon anonymity, the same thing Facebook has done with all those "like" buttons on every website -- they're web-bugs, tracking the pages you visit.
The freedom to use a computer how we want to (without others having details on the manner in which we do it) is being lost. Microsoft's goals are about stealing away those abilities we all enjoy today (at least partially, and in an ever-diminishing quality), and is about herding us into a model which flatly, and purposefully, removes that freedom.
It is about control. Nothing less.
I would never sacrifice that freedom for the off-chance that some piece of malicious software may cause me some inconvenience.
Previous
Next
Reply
View the map of this thread
View the map of this thread starting from this message only
View all messages of this thread
View all messages of this thread starting from this message only