They list peer to peer as a Windows vulnerability?! That makes about as much sense as saying me taking a sledgehammer to your computer is a Unix vulnerability.
It says a lot more than that. Google tracks and permanently logs your IP along with all the searches you have made. If you can't see the irony in a company that secrety logs your information speaking out against spyware then you need to google yourself up a good optometrist.
I think Penny Arcade hit the nail on the head in their article on the recently launched City of Heroes, when they said the game had plenty of depth, but lacked width.
That is the increasing problem with electronic games; they may be complex, but they lack any real sense of immersion. Goto area A, fight monster B, retrieve item C, rinse and repeat. It's the same formula we've seen a million times before, only with a shinnier wrapper and new kung fu grip.
They list peer to peer as a Windows vulnerability?! That makes about as much sense as saying me taking a sledgehammer to your computer is a Unix vulnerability.
It says a lot more than that. Google tracks and permanently logs your IP along with all the searches you have made. If you can't see the irony in a company that secrety logs your information speaking out against spyware then you need to google yourself up a good optometrist.
I think Penny Arcade hit the nail on the head in their article on the recently launched City of Heroes, when they said the game had plenty of depth, but lacked width. That is the increasing problem with electronic games; they may be complex, but they lack any real sense of immersion. Goto area A, fight monster B, retrieve item C, rinse and repeat. It's the same formula we've seen a million times before, only with a shinnier wrapper and new kung fu grip.