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Comment Re:Freemium at its best (Score 1) 204

Facebook DOES care about it's users.

It's users (i,e, the customers) are the advertisers. You people are not the customers, you're the product.

Enabling payment like this means suddenly you are the customer too, and maybe they might care about you.

If you don't like this model, you picked the wrong social network.

Comment Re:Not again! (Score 1) 194

This was more of a problem in the past because nobody had anybody elses source code, so cross pollination of code didn't happen and competing implementations were more often incompatible.

While I still don't like like random new things appearing outside the standards without good reason, doing it in an open source application is much less of a problem.

Comment Re:correlation (Score 1) 383

The more important correlation, that's perhaps harder to measure, is between "DRM whiners" and those who didn't play the game at all. I'm talking about those who wanted to play the game, but neither want DRM nor illegal copies.

The reason that's more important is because it represents a lost sale, so the games companies should care. Any statistic about pirated copies is unimportant because those versions don't have DRM anyway.

Comment Re:I don't want physical copies anymore (Score 1) 361

I don't particularly care about physical copies either, but I do want the right to sell my purchase to others or give as a gift (just like I can with books, cds, dvds, etc.)

I also want to be able to do whatever the law allows, not what some technical system controlled by the industry allows, and that includes future changes to the law. In short: NO TECHNICAL RESTRICTIONS ARE ACCEPTABLE.

Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft bids $44.6B for Yahoo (cnn.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Software giant Microsoft said Friday it had made an unsolicited offer to buy Internet search engine operator Yahoo with a cash and stock bid worth $44.6 billion. The $31-a-share offer represents a 62 percent premium for shareholders above the closing price of Yahoo stock on Thursday, Microsoft said in a statement.
Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft offers $44bn for Yahoo

99luftballon writes: Microsoft has but in an offer for Yahoo for $44.6bn, a 62 per cent mark-up on the close of business share price on Thursday. The move smacks of desperation and getting it past the regulators would be a major hurdle. Can anyone else hear the sound of chuckling in Mountain View?
Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft Offers $44.6 Billion for Yahoo (yahoo.com)

slas6654 writes: Microsoft Corp. has pounced on slumping Internet icon Yahoo Inc. with an unsolicited takeover offer of $44.6 billion in its boldest bid yet to challenge Google Inc.'s dominance of the lucrative online search and advertising markets.

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