● 01.10.14

●● ‘Former’ Microsoft Bloggers Like to Bash Google — But Never Microsoft — Over Privacy

Posted in FUD, Microsoft at 6:47 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Summary: Example of media moles and how they warp the discussion about technology companies

SEVERAL years ago we criticised Sarah Perez for spreading FUD about Microsoft’s competitors, such as Firefox. It took a little effort to see that the publication she wrote for was pro-Microsoft by design. But there is a simple explanation for it. Sarah Perez continues to smear Microsoft’s competitors [1] and as she used to work for Microsoft (blogging for the company while on the payroll, as her LinkedIn account reveals) it all makes a lot of sense. The sad thing is, she now writes for AOL (TechCrunch), so unless we shine light on this bias, it is likely to continue silently, unchallenged.

was pro-Microsoft by design
used to work for Microsoft

The ironic thing is, Sarah Perez once worked for the company that provides video/audio snoops without warrants, doing so liberally to the point where the Syrian Electronic Army (SEA) takes revenge [2-6] and seemingly accuses Microsoft of aiding NSA surveillance. To quote one article, “Syrian Electronic Army (SEA) has struck at Microsoft’s voice, video and chat network Skype and posted to its Twitter feed and blog.”

↺ company that provides video/audio snoops without warrants

Keep a close eye on Sarah Perez, just as we should keep an eye on other Microsoft moles (some current Microsoft staff also works for tech tabloid ZDNet at the moment). If they know they are being watched it limits their ability to smear the competition (without adding disclosures or making the editors unhappy for reducing the platform’s credibility). ZDNet (CBS) will continue to spread GNU/Linux FUD (latest example in [7,8]) because it has no credibility to maintain; it’s the Pravda is the tech world. Remember when TechCrunch was actually a seemingly reliable site (before AOL took over)? Well, to be fair, TechCrunch too accepted Microsoft bribes in order to embed Microsoft messages into the content of articles (this scandal goes years back), so Microsoft’s corruption of bloggers is a tradition and an official strategy, not a side effect. █

↺ tech tabloid ZDNet

Related/contextual items from the news:

New Gmail Feature Allows Anyone On Google+ To Email You & Vice Versa, But Opt Out Is ProvidedSkype’s Twitter account has been hacked and tarnishedSEA attacks Skype in NSA spying protestSyrian Electronic Army Goes After SkypeSkype Hacked By SEA: Syrian Electronic Army Protests Microsoft Involvement In NSA Spying ProgramsSyrian Electronic Army hacks Skype’s accounts to protest NSA snoopingWill Valve’s Steam Machines fail? 5 reasons why Steam Machines might fail

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