Microsoft Pays Bloggers to Tout MS Slogan
Stony Stevenson writes "In an effort to inject Microsoft's latest slogan, 'People-ready business', into popular usage (and no doubt raise its Google page rank), Microsoft asked a passel of A List Bloggers to write blurbs on what this meaningless phrase means to them. Michael Arrington, Om Malik, Fred Wilson, Richard MacManus and a handful of others happily agreed to churn out some mush for Microsoft, which it later used in banner ads. What it really meant to these guys was income. Redmond paid the bloggers for every user who clicked through to the PRB microsite. That caused other bloggers, lead by Gawker chief Nick Denton, to rightfully question their ethics. A spitball war has been raging ever since."
Any blogger that supports their site through ads is making money through a marketing campaign. You can even pay Google to put other peoples' ads on your site for you. What's wrong with that?
Good god, it's like a competition on the back of a pack of corn flakes: "Write an essay on how you feel about the word "Crunchy!", and win a trip to Paris!"
True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
I wonder how much of this thing goes on that we *don't* hear about.
Looks like it worked - allready mentioned on slashdot!
There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
So Microsoft paid bloggers per click to advertise for them?
Where's the scandal here? There's no mention of Microsoft forcing these guys to say that they weren't being paid, and doing something like this is up to the personal ethics of the individual blogger, surely?
"It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien
A whore will fake an orgasm for you, if you pay for it.
Oh, and astroturf isn't real grass.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
There's a whole profession of people writing text for advertisement.
What IS moraly wrong is presenting it as a personal opinion; that's verbal prostitution. Publishing it on the web would be indecent exposure.
Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
Could this have been a part of Microsoft's plan. Seems to me that this controversy will help them much more than the original paid-for blogs.
Can't wait for someone to register the domain
To me, 'People-ready business' represents a new low in catch-phrase marketing. We all know 'can you hear me now', a stoned man saying 'dude we're getting a Dell', 'works out of the box' and the Vegemite song sucked. But new levels are being reached, requiring of extending the "int catchphrase_rating" to "long int catchphrase_rating". These levels are being reached by the one and only, Microsoft.
/Waits patently for check
For a while now, Microsoft has been looking for a way to make money. Their business has been dying down not due to competition, but due to sheer lack of anything to sell. So comes Vista. With it's color-coded file explorer, OSX ripoff interface and Vista-only-for-no-real-reason DX10, they were sure they were saved.
This was not the case.
The hotcake Vista was predicted to be turned out more to be a segway, and (while ducking from flying chairs) the marketing department had to come up with a way to sell this new steaming turd. Enter 'people-ready business'.
I am not personally sure what this is intended to mean. Are they attempting to sell a business that is ready for people to use? Doesn't Mcdonalds fall into this category? Or is it an attempt to make people ready for a business? If so, what business? Microsoft?
Has Microsoft finally admitted to being the Borg? Is the next tag line, "lower your shields and prepare to be boarded"?
Who knows. This blogger is unsure.
Great Intellect...
I'm not a huge fan of Microsoft, but last I checked they weren't having a problem with their Google page rank, so I do doubt that that was part of their "People-ready business" blog campaign.
Surely the Slashdot crowd has some ideas of their own as to what "people-ready business" might mean?
Business ready to fleece the people?
If we're talking Vista, maybe it means business with some people-sized holes where the customers should havebeen inserted?
----------------------------------- My Other Sig Is Hilarious -----------------------------------
Sources report Slashdot was popularized a new term "Money-ready bloggers", a term coined to discredit unetical bloggers who choose topics based on money bounties.
unfinished: (adj.)
brought to you by Carl's Jr.
Seastead this.
A people-driven business leverages collective synergy with a quality-driven approach that focuses on delivering key objectives. It is quite obvious, actually.
(The BS bingo blurb is courtesy of the DailyWTF)
What would happen if all Slashdotters started linking People-ready bussiness to Linux' Wikipedia page?
So, these A listers say the slogan when tearing it apart. I'm sure this still benefits Microsoft to some degree, at least where Google ranking is concerned.
The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
you mean it wasn't before??? or are they trying to say anything that's not Microsoft isn't
Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
Next time some blogger makes a fuss about not being treated like "real" journalists just point them to the Cringley/McKraken articles.
They will be treated like journalists when they can demonstratte some ethical and professional resposibility.
Not that all journalists are perfect but they do lose thier jobs when they get caught red handed.
Anyway all the best blogs are deeply personal, opinionated, and, do not pretend to be journalism.
Old COBOL programmers never die. They just code in C.
So that's what Paris was screaming about as they dragged he off to jail!
ccalam - acoustic versions of new songs.
At least they're not doing it themselves... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zipatoni
Assume I was drunk when I posted this.
This part has "PR shill" written all over it. No tech would write this.
The slashdot editors might want to pay a little more attention to the stories they accept. I'll admit that this one is hardly the worst, but it's less visible than normal, which makes the story almost believable (instead of the guerilla marketing campaign it in fact is)
Every expression is true, for a given value of 'true'
> passel of A List Bloggers
I thought the collective noun was "a crock of bloggers".
I'd be happy to clarify what "people-ready business" means to me.
Money for nothing, pix for free
Try Pretty Ridiculous Business.
Ready to restrict people with hideous DRM and milk them for every cent they'll spend. Ready to take on slogans from the people at large because their own ad execs can no longer stomach the BS long enough to produce a slogan.
These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
the parent comment is right on the money...
Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
TechCrunch wasn't much fun in the very early days. We were mostly talking to ourselves because readers were scarce. But as the site grew and more readers came along, things got exciting. The discussion in the comments to each blog post was as or more compelling than the actual news we were reporting.
It looks like Michael Arrington got confused. He's written his MS assignment about Slashdot instead of his site!
== Jez ==
Do you miss Firefox? Try Pale Moon.
Like you say, there are bills to pay. So there's no problem if Microsoft want to pay these people as writers to write pieces for them on a particular topic. The problem starts when those pieces end up as content in a place which is normally home to opinion. The value of opinion pieces all lies in their honesty. If you think you're reading opinion when you're really reading an advert, you're being misled. And that's bad.
Most of the time when celebrities do ads for money there's no conflict with their actual profession. In fact since they're often actors it's just another script to them.
Soylent Green is 'People-ready business'!
Might I suggest that we all blog the term People Ready Business, and link it to www.ubuntu.com or our www.apple.com our our favourite decent provider of software, and someone who deserves the publicity. A bit like all the tags for VISTA on amazon marking it as DRM Filled, Buggy, Bad Vista etc..
Seeing as how Slashdot is Taco's blog, and it has a multitude of advertisements with Microsoft slogans all over it, I fail to see a huge difference.
Taco is putting MS slogans and advertising material all over his site for money, the only thing different is that I wouldn't consider it astroturfing, while I do think blogging about "What MS bullshit means to me personally", is.
This is what I challenge everyone. Let's make some copy (text) about what 'people-ready business' means to us, and by that I mean slam Microsoft rightfully so for putting small companies out of business, etc.
Then post an exact copy of that text on every blog, forum and community we can find. Link to it everywhere. Have that be the #1 hit in every search engine. When people search for Microsoft and "People-Ready Business" let them find exactly Microsoft represents.
http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
Things I have learned about making my business people-ready:
- Running around naked is not good.
- Shades are very important.
- I can not kill or lethally wound people for no good reason.
- If a human will not believe, peel off hand.
- I can't say "negative" and "affirmative". I gotta say "no problemo" or "hasta la vista" or "chill out". Or randomly permutated combinations.
The Terminator
Microsoft paying people to say they like its stuff? A new low, even for Bill.
Whats the harm in yelling 'Computer, end program!'? You could be living in Star Trek! Go on.. give it a try.
What Microsoft did was an obvious and blatant violation of the Word of Mouth Marketing Association ethics code. The bloggers should have publicly criticized these Microsoft tactics instead of going along with them.
People ready business, People ready business, People ready business, People ready business. There we go, $15.30
839*929
To me, "people-ready business" means your standard enterprise advertisement crap, whose success seems to be measured in the number of times the word "business" is mentioned.
I was about to say 13256278887989457651018865901401704640, but it appears this number is private property.
And there's a little sentence at the bottom that says something about them being compensated for their time or being a paid spokesperson or something.
The Farewell Tour II
Somebody who posted something uncomplimentary about blogs and bloggers on Slashdot, yet not only did they not get modded Off-topic, Troll or Flamebait, but actually made it to +4 Insightful!
Even more surprising considering the things they said were mostly true and factual, which is usually cause for bitter Slashdot bloggers with mod points to send such posts off into negative integer oblivion.
Oh and it's true: not even your Moms read your blogs. They just say they do. Sorry.
We're seeing too much of that on Slashdot these days, not just the astroturfers posting their messages, but endless bombardment of MS-oriented slashvertisements in place of real articles. Sometimes it's several content-free articles per day apparently posted just to keep MS in the headlines. How about easing up on that and getting back to technology?
None of the negative coverage is getting through, such as a 30% return rate for the Palladium testbed, so that suggests that Slashdot is a participant (willing or unwilling) in spreading that movement's marketing churn.
A moratorium on MS churn, whether slashvertisements or otherwise, even one day a week or one week a month would do wonders to improve Slashdot. Let's leave political parties like MS on the sideline and re-focus on technology.
Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
To me, it sounds like MS is getting ready to milk its customers in ways unprecedented. And not only its customers, but the people. I thought that's the state's prerogative?
I'd sue.
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
And of course, in Soviet Russia it would be "business ready people". Umm... wait a minute, that sounds more like the "in the free world" part of the joke... But that would mean that the original buzzphrase is for the "in Soviet Russia" part...
Oh my God! MS is turning communist!
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
"What's wrong with that?"
Well everything. They should have disclosed it for starters. If you see a banner, you know it is an ad, same with those noxious google and other links, there is no question that it comes from a paid source.
The bloggers are guilty of greed and ethical lapses to the point that they should be shut down. There is no excuse for doing this, period.
MS is even more guilty for paying them to do this, knowing that it was unethical to do, it is even more unethical to support. I would go on a rant about MS and unethical behavior, but that is old hat by now.
What it comes down to in the end is that MS destroyed several bloggers in a cynical attempt to subvert the journalistic process, but I am not so sure any of the blogs could be considered journalism. Those involved knew full well what they were doing, and can't hide behind any weasel words or excuses. It is greed over ethics, pure and simple.
The people who took that money can never be trusted again, they should pack up and go home. MS isn't trusted at all, and while it is wishful thinking, I hope they will pack up and go home as well for inflicting MeII on us.
As a writer myself, I would hope my boss would fire me if I ever even brought this kind of bribery up, much less did it. I am pretty sure he would which is why I work where I do (The Inquirer FWIW).
-Charlie
Whoa there. This is not a case of "M$ is ebul!!!11one", but a case of proper journalism in blogging. When respected blogger take money to blog (positively) about something, things go wrong. It's kinda the same as reading a payed-for review in a magazine: it's bound to sound positive.
Now, placing ads on your site is something completely different. It's clearly not part of the bloggers opinion, nor is it hard to distinguish it from the real news you're reading. In this case, the line is not blurred, it's simply gone.
Free beer is never free as in speech. Free speech is always free as in beer.
There is a code of ethics to "blogging?" This is news to me. Last I checked a [web]log was nothing more than an overgrown .plan file in terse, difficult to read, poorly laid out style. What people should stop doing is considering blogs a source of authoritative info. Just like how wikipedia isn't authoritative, neither are random websites/blogs.
That said, wtf does PRB mean anyways? people ready, as opposed to?
Tom
Someday, I'll have a real sig.
Please wake me up when someone creates a google-bomb with the phrase "People-ready business".
Soylent Green was a "People-Ready Business"
It might confuse search rankings and introduce a new spin on the phrase, thereby making the original phrase tainted?
AndyH
the obvious . . . . but WHO are these people and WHY do they matter??? I mean has blogging reached the point where there are blog celebs? and if it has, oh wow, another Hollywood, just what the world needs.
Cornflakes, cornflakes, cornflakes, cornflakes, cornflakes, cornflakes, cornflakes, cornflakes, cornflakes,
Hang on...
Corn...flakes!
lameness filter
It's always insightful to reverse a slogan and see what it means. Non-people ready business? People not ready business. People ready non-business?
So the slogan is just a restatement of the normal situation. It's spin.
And just wait to see what kind of censorship waits if you dare to spread the truth that France does not exist, or that the moon landing never took place!
(Captcha: nonsense. How appropriate.)
Why would someone google for the phrase "People Ready Business"?
After all that "unready business" we've had to put up with for the last 10 000 years of human civilization...
People-ready business on Ubuntu linux! means a lot to me. People-ready business on Ubuntu linux! is what I say to everyone. People-ready business on Ubuntu linux! is my slogan. People-ready business on Ubuntu linux! is the way I live my life. People-ready business on Ubuntu linux! rocks the house.
I could've made this way funnier.
--- We need more Ron Paul!
Do you think Microsoft is the first company to pay for placements. Companies pay other forms of media for favorable reviews and the such. Now that blogging is becoming an ever more important aspect of amateur media, why shouldn't they get some of the perks too? (I'm not saying that I would do this myself, but we shouldn't crucify those that want to take a little bit of Microsoft's money. If they don't do it, someone else will!)
Q.E.D. --> http://www.weaselwords.com.au/index3.htm
Oh wait, its microsoft, therefore it must be bad. Oh how very sheeplike.
The big deal is not that of the masses vs. Microsoft, as you so eloquently put it, but of this hippie-B*S* idea that if you blog, you best be putting your own thoughts down on that text-area widget. That's been one of the tacit rules of blogging, and to say that your thoughts were bought is the blogging equivalent of saying you'll name your first-born kid after some product for money. Whether you agree that this is an acceptable practice or not is entirely up to you, but understand there is a lot of people out there who view the blog as some sacred confessional that shall not be besmirched with bought-and-sold thoughts. That is the real problem with Microsoft, or any companies ad campain.
What's wrong with that? Well, just that they're pretending to be genuinely interested in the possibilities of something, but instead are making money. It's called a lie.
I think the problem is that people can now use the Firehose to influence which stories we see. And since most people don't check the firehose too often, it can be (and maybe is being) influenced by the MS and Apple fans. That to me partly explains why we have been seeing too many of these stories lately. More interesting (and obscure) stories just don't pass muster.
Freedom is not worth having if it does not include the freedom to make mistakes. - Mahatma Gandhi
No, I'm New Here
And now.... Slashdot is helping Microsoft get the phrase "people ready business" out there, by posting a story about it, and using the phrase "people ready business" in the article... and, no doubt, numerous people will put "people ready business" into their replies to the article about "people ready business", thus, adding the number of times "people ready business" is on a single page...
I for one, will not help contribute to this meaningless mentioning of the phrase "people ready business" in slashdot, which is helping microsoft get it's phrase "people ready business" higher up in google's rankings, and into people's heads...
That's all I have to say about that....
ps..... "people ready business"
The above comments are not guaranteed to make sense to anyone other than the author...
News Flash: Bloggers accept money to promote products and brands.
Another news flash: So do radio DJs, actors, video game companies, advice columnists and virtually everybody else who has a large number of readers/listeners. Hell, there's been some product placement in newspaper comics lately.
Comment of the year
Whenever I hear the term "People-Ready Business", I suddenly remember that My Linux is Ready.
There is no reasonable defense against an idiot with an agenda
:wq
This might be a freudian slip from the PR deparment about Vista. It makes it look like an inequation; people - ready != buisness
Carbon based humanoid in training.
I think the Registers take on this is quite amusing. It references this older Register article, which contains prior art. I wonder if they patented it?
Wait you mean a blogger's comments aren't what they really think? SAY IT ISN'T SO!
Some people are pissed at MS, some are pissed at the bloggers, but I cannot understand why this is surprising to anyone. Blogging is just another advertising vehicle. For some reason people out there think blogs are unbiased sources of The Truth(tm). Blogs are carefully (or sometimes not-so-carefully) crafted marketing vehicles designed to sell you something without it looking like they are selling you something. Keep that in mind.
Actually, come to think of it, EVERY communication can be considered someone selling you something. Sometimes it's a product, other times it's an concept.
Si hoc legere scis nimium eruditionis habes
"I'm the Secretary of State... brought to you by Carl's Jr."
"Why do you keep saying that?"
"'Cause they pay me every time I do! It's a really great way to make money. If you're so smart why don't you know that?"
N4st0r, trixx0r h0bb1tz0rz! Th3y st0l3 0ur pr3c10uzz!
But I do not go to work for some bunch of scum sucking pigs just because I could earn more money than I currently do. Instead I work for a company that I find agreeable.
I know alot of people who try and pass on the responsiblity for what they do at work to management, and I tell them what a load of crap that is too. If you don't like what you do then find a better job, even if it does involve a pay cut. Otherwise you are complicit in whatever misdeeds you might be asked to perform at work. And don't tell me that if someone said 'here, have lots of money and all you have to do is write some blog entries', you'd say no. Not if the money were good. I wouldn't. Then you have no morals, but why do you find it so hard to believe that some of us do have a moral code which we value as such an important part of who we are that no amount of money would justify tearing it up and putting it in the bin.
And before you talk about how I have never been desperate enough, guess again. To get my current job involved me relocating a long way at considerable inconvenience to take a cut in salary.
I think I am probably in the minority in this otherwise the world would be a better place, but I am very unlikely to change in this regard. The only thing I can think of that might change my outlook would be watching my kids starve, but seeing as I have spent years in the past doing dead end jobs, I know I could return to this and still earn a not too dissimilar wage. Ethics are easy if your wealthy, but.. Actually, I think the opposite is true. Since I have never been wealthy, I have never been in situation where I got used to having alot of money to spend. Once you get used to having a large amount of money at you disposal (or your wife does) it is much harder to go back to being closer to the breadline.
This also makes it easier when looking for work as my salary demands are lower. This does not mean I am bad at my job or that I value my work less. It simply means that I get other satisfaction from my job apart from just getting a monthly wage. I think it actually means I take far more pride in the code I produce. This argument should not really come as any surprise to people who use Linux as this is built and maintained on similar, non-monetary values.
I dont read
...there is a lot of people out there who view the blog as some sacred confessional that shall not be besmirched with bought-and-sold thoughts. Yeah, and they're often called "bloggers". They're the ones that want all of the authority of legitimate journalists without any of the responsibility.I'd say there was far more Apple astroturfing. However, that just might be the editors pandering to a userbase that is historically pro-Apple products rather than a concerted campaign. I have my doubts though, there has been an iPhone article on the front page for months now, tying along nicely with Apples huge campaign on the phone.
I want to karma whore AND I have to give Microsoft some love for this nice laptop. Wow, can you imagine a beowulf cluster of people-ready businesses? In soviet russia, people are business-ready! natalie portman, naked, petrified and people-ready in a bowl of hot business. I'm people-ready, you insensitive clod!
Ugh. The most effective way to disrupt Microsoft's astroturfing attempts is to subject them to merciless ridicule, turn the entire program into a punchline. Developers developers developers developers.
Kwisatz Haderach
Sell the spice to CHOAM
This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
It makes me feel good that the term "A List Bloggers" makes me laugh and this list of people (Michael Arrington, Om Malik, Fred Wilson, Richard MacManus) made me say "who?"
Fuck you "blogosphere"
Nonsense. No such "legal requirement" exists. It's an ethical requirement. Short of things like libel and sedition, you can print / say what you want, your motivations or who is paying you is not legally relevant.
If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
Have you actually read what these bloggers wrote?
Who cares? They're bloggers. If you want news, go to a journalist. If you want stream-of-consciousness from some random person, go to a blogger. Smart people do not get credible information from blogs.
I don't respond to AC's.
Hollywood has done this for years. Radio stations accept favors to play new tracks. Candidates accept lobbying money. And now, bloggers get paid to churn out more pulp about some pulpy, ambiguous slogan (Might as well be "Peristalsis-ready business").
This is capitalism. If you don't like it, be up front and start talking alternatives. I think most of the thinking population is on the line about this one, so maybe some good will come of it. In my view, hacking, OSS, etc. are all anti-capitalist endeavors, whether recognized by their participants as such or not.
Anti-Globalism
Click here to get to their "post your own story" page. http://peopleready.federatedmedia.net/prpost
"I knew my business was people-ready the day I dumped all Microsoft products and switched to linux. No more worries about people complaining about viruses in emails or attachments, no more rebooting."
The response page:
" Thanks!
Thanks for posting! We'll give your post a quick once-over and get it up on the site shortly. "
Somehow, I'm skeptical.
Kevin Smith on Prince
Wasn't the old Microsoft slogan "Your potential, our gain."? I thought that was pretty self-explanatory.
Here's a chance for RedHat or other Linux company to come out with "business-ready computing" (or computers).
Prior to this slashdot there might have been like 12 bloggers who would have come up on "people ready business" however the biggest bang for the buck was when MS got slashdot to post it! Now people-ready business is the bomb baby. Google will love it!
Frankly I was looking for a much bigger response to my confession such dark secrets....
And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
I've never heard of software designed for the use of cats or whales, although I'm sure it would mk an awesome article to read.
Microsoft put the "sucks" in "success".
You think bloggers are journalists.
People who blog for a living can't afford to sell their reputation. Working with M$ is kind of like driving the car while someone robs a bank.
Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.
*Microsoft paid me $100 to post this.
You do act like a M$ PR drone, but I doubt your effort earn you more than $5/hour. Talk is cheap.
Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.
"come and see the violence inherent in the [open-source] system...help, help, i'm being repressed..."
nice try
I agree. I have only recently started moderating and I while I have dutifully meta-moderated etc., the firehose leaves me confused.
Twice now I have gone in there and tried to make sense of it or contribute, but it's no fun, and it's somehow both confusing and dull at the same time. I am not sure exactly *what* is wrong with the process or the interface, I just know it's an uncomfortable, irritating experience to try to do it. Possibly it's to do with the stories not having been categorised before you see them.
Slashdot needs a better system for picking articles IMO.
Those using pirated Tinysoft signatures(TM) are a real threat to society and should all be thrown in jail.
They were looking for people with established identities in popular forum websites to use that identity to post on behalf on their clients, making it seem like a spontaneous post from an unaffiliated third party.
It's like trolling, but for money.
You can't take the sky from me...
"Peep-Hole Ready Business".
How else are they going to keep an eye on you?
"Trademarks are the heraldry of the new feudalism."
But it's not like these comments are showing up in the blog's themselves. They are appearing on a SEPARATE site.
It's a paid commercial endorsement. On a site clearly separate. No one should be mad at the bloggers - they should just demand that Microsoft make it clearer that the site is publicity/advertising for a product.
TRHOnline - Staggering Towards Brilliance
I say we make sure that people know that a People-Ready business means you take it up the rear via a nice Google bomb. Or a People-Ready business means you astroturf. Or whatever.
.cx is dead, I forgot what the new one is, and I have no intention of googling this from work...
And feel free to substitute the actual link. I think that
From ye olde wikipedia:
Yeah, yeah, it talks only about radio. But it is the definition for payola. So do we have the same law for other media channels?
And now we have Microsoft paying for blog space. So, you say? Well I don't think it would be such a problem until you stop and think of how other bloggers have consistently maintained to the world that their blog and the material contained in it is protected by free speech, and in many sites, also to fall under consideration as journalism.
I'm sorry, you cannot have both. Either you're a schill for a company and identify yourself as such, or you refuse payments. Is there a law to prefent or that or protect the consumer [reader] of tainted blogs? We won't know until a case comes to trial.
After much tweeking, the best I was able to come up with was,
"Vista Sucks"
Hm. Even sort of rhymes with 'business' if you say it the right way.
-FL
I knew you could.
Can you say "moron "?
Anybody who would put their name to a typically stupid Microsoft phrase like "Where do you want to go today?" (to hell, if you use any Microsoft product!) or "people-ready business" (businesses run by chimpanzees, which certainly fits Microsoft!) is not only a shill but a moron.
Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
Although strong journalistic ethics is always a good thing, does this issue really affect slashdotters? I mean, who here actually reads Windows-centric blogs anyway?
Marnex Products
M$ software isn't even computer-ready?
and / or "the naive". The whole idea of "this new consciousness" is laughable. Hint: the only difference between most of them and LiveJournal is owing their own domain name. LJ never had this much credibility - I don't see what a $6 domain name from GoDaddy automatically imparts.
I agree with everything you just wrote, and that never happens to me here. I wish I had points to mod you up.
Your comment is awaiting moderation.
I hope you shills are "new-@#$^hole ready"
From ______ on June 28th, 2007 at 2:18 pm"
My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
Those of us who have blogs but have not been paid are urged to create hyperlinks around the term "People Ready Business" with a href of http://goatse.cz/.
The flag just makes more sense than the constitution. - Judas Gutenberg
I think you and I approach this from different standpoints.
Bloggers are not journalists. They are not spokesmon. They are not attorney generals. They are guys who own websites and start with zero credibility. They work to earn that, and if they destroy it, then it's their prerogative. Their words do nothing to change the face of the world.
"It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien