aaron wall

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aaron wall

aaron wall

@AaronWall

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Somewhere beyond the sea Katılım Nisan 2023
3 Takip Edilen7 Takipçiler
Terry Van Horne
Terry Van Horne@terryvanhorne·
@RyanJones Not a co-incidence that all started as offline BRANDS with decades of EARNED user/Google Trust. However, I wouldn't be surprised if Forbes gets smacked hard in May!
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Ryan Jones
Ryan Jones@RyanJones·
Of course Forbes, USA today, Glamour, CNN, etc are doing affiliate spam. In a world where 90% of the results for a keyword like "best creatine" is affiliate spam though, users seem to click the "known" affiliate over the unknown SEO's website.
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Adam Demasi
Adam Demasi@hbkirb·
With the US v Apple antitrust lawsuit news (and it’s about time), I figured looking back to the last landmark antitrust case, US v Microsoft, would be useful to understand what might happen in the future. The problem: Microsoft owns Windows, and Windows is the only reasonable operating system any OEM (partners like HP, Dell, etc) can ship on a consumer PC. In other words, it’s a monopoly. Microsoft also owns Internet Explorer, and they saw the coming of the internet as a huge threat to Windows, unless they acted to keep control. They missed the deadline to release IE for Windows 95, so they bundled it for free with everything they could, including Office and Microsoft Plus! (often came bundled with home PCs). Worth noting Netscape was a paid product until this point. Windows 95 was revised twice with more extensive IE integration, the final 95 “C” and its bundled IE 4 changing it from a standalone program to a deeply-integrated core feature. It changed how Explorer windows worked entirely - they were now literally IE windows. It changed the desktop so you could add webpages to it (Active Desktop). One of those, enabled by default, was the Channels Bar, which linked to news orgs that paid to be listed. It also added hundreds of new APIs, not all of which had anything to do with IE. Now Microsoft was strongarming developers into distributing IE 4 for them, requiring their customers to have it installed for their app to work. On top of that, Microsoft’s OEM program changed its rules such that only the latest revision of Windows 95 could be preinstalled, the latest IE must also be preinstalled, and direct competitors to Microsoft flagship products (Netscape, WordPerfect, Lotus, etc) are not allowed. They also told OEMs to stop bundling their own simplified replacements of the Windows 95 desktop, and instead created Microsoft Bob, and we know how well that one went. At least with Windows 95, you had the option to use the retail “A” release and avoid IE. With Windows 98, IE 4 was preinstalled with all features enabled. Microsoft toned it down a notch with IE 5 in Windows 98 Second Edition, but the damage was already done. Does this sound familiar at all? Apple checks a lot of boxes similar to Microsoft here. You can see how a compelling case could be made that Apple doesn’t allow competitors to key features such as Safari and the App Store on iOS, doesn’t allow developers to use a payment service other than Apple’s own, doesn’t want developers to raise prices by 30% or disclose to users that 30% goes to Apple, restricts access to certain features only to developers that are favorable to them, and are known to retaliate against those they don’t like (see Spotify). It’s harder to argue because there’s millions of developers and customers being directly individually affected, rather than only a few dozen OEM partners, but it could be done. In other words, Apple restricts the user, because there is no middleman (the OEM) to apply restrictive contract terms to. The outcome: So what happened with Microsoft, and what could possibly happen with Apple? After being found guilty of monopolisation and illegal tying/exclusivity tactics, some of the usual legal back and forth of appealing and whatever, the DOJ and Microsoft agreed to settle, with the terms being: 1. Microsoft must allow OEMs to preinstall any software they want. 2. Microsoft can build “middleware” features into Windows, but OEMs must be able to uninstall them in favor of competitors’ offerings. 3. Microsoft must publicly release documentation for certain private Windows APIs introduced by IE. 4. Microsoft must not retaliate against OEMs that do things they don’t like (when it’s fully within their contract rights). 5. Microsoft was banned from making exclusivity deals with OEMs and developers. 6. Microsoft’s actions would be overseen by a committee for 10 years. I sure hope to see an outcome like this for Apple. It’s time to see them change, and their recent actions have only reinforced that they can only be made to change by force of the law, and constant oversight to keep them in line.
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Florian Glatz
Florian Glatz@heckerhut·
@ericmigi Want to see those who made fun of the EU the other week for fighting Apple's anti-competitive practices.
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Eric Migicovsky
Eric Migicovsky@ericmigi·
"Oh but Apple is going to do RCS anyway" What if they don't follow through - like Steve Jobs' promise to make FaceTime an open standard? External pressure like this is needed to keep Apple honest and in-line.
Eric Migicovsky tweet media
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Eric Migicovsky
Eric Migicovsky@ericmigi·
DOJ references Apple's stranglehold over texting on iPhones
Eric Migicovsky tweet media
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Eric Migicovsky
Eric Migicovsky@ericmigi·
Today, the US DOJ sued Apple for illegally creating a walled garden that traps users in the Apple ecosystem and stifles innovation of new apps/accessories. This is relevant to everyone in the US. It's a big deal. Full complaint: storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.usco…
Eric Migicovsky tweet media
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Luther Lowe
Luther Lowe@lutherlowe·
@MECEMike He hasn't held that job for almost a decade. He uses his Schmidt Futures title for everything now. I'm not even sure Google would be thrilled by the association since they sent him out to pasture after he put all the company's political chips on a Clinton win in 2016.
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Luther Lowe
Luther Lowe@lutherlowe·
@MECEMike I'm not weighing in on whether or not he should be invited. Other than having more voting power than Blackrock & Vanguard combined (from class B shares), he no longer has any formal role with Google. Schumer tagging him as Google brass shows they're confused or Schmidt's LARPing
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aaron wall
aaron wall@AaronWall·
@lutherlowe AI war drones are a form of information. If you disagree, please click this button and we will deliver an exciting surprise ASAP.
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Luther Lowe
Luther Lowe@lutherlowe·
A subtle but important tell in this document is that the Senate Majority Leader still considers Eric Schmidt to be a representative of & asset for Google. That's noteworthy given how active Schmidt is in everything from policy around U.S. military / science / AI / etc.
Maria Curi@m_ccuri

Full list for Schumer's AI insight forum:

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aaron wall
aaron wall@AaronWall·
@MicrosoftHelps I sent enough information for it to be actionable if you actually care. you guys have an expired security certificate on your site.
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Microsoft Support
Microsoft Support@MicrosoftHelps·
@AaronWall Hello, Aaron. We noticed your tweet, and we can see that you have question on the new browser setup page. It'll be helpful if you can send us a direct message to maximize character limitations. We'll be glad to assist in any way possible. -Mary
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B&S
B&S@_B___S·
"My son always texts to say he's on his way home. So I open the door, letting his 17 year old cat, and 16 year old doggo know that he's on his way. This is them waiting for him." 📷JonesMommy
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aaron wall
aaron wall@AaronWall·
I took great umbrage that none of the lists I saw rocked @cygnusseo's favorite tune (at least, outside of the Marlyn Manson catalog he celebrates from top to bottom). It made me so blue. youtube.com/watch?v=68ugkg…
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aaron wall
aaron wall@AaronWall·
looked up some of the most annoying songs ever ... sort of a top 10 bottom 10 type list after list. was casually playing through a curated selection of them for my daughter as my wife came and went, laughing at how bad the songs were. each worse than the last
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