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Microsoft Businesses The Almighty Buck

Microsoft is Testing Ads in WordPad in Windows 10 (betanews.com) 184

BetaNews: Over the years Microsoft has taken numerous controversial decisions with Windows 10, including installing sponsored apps, using the Start menu to advertise apps it thinks you might be interested in, and -- of course -- the various forms of data-collecting telemetry. Now it has been discovered that more ads could be on their way. A Windows researcher has uncovered ads in WordPad encouraging people to try out Word, Excel and PowerPoint online. News of the ads was shared on Twitter by Rafael Rivera, and it was met with a mixture of indignation and reluctant acceptance. Reaction was mixed because while some people saw little wrong with Microsoft advertising a free service rather than trying to encourage people to part with money, there was still a widespread feeling that it was an invasive move.
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Microsoft is Testing Ads in WordPad in Windows 10

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  • by Viol8 ( 599362 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @12:20PM (#59640888) Homepage

    MacOS for the desktop, Linux for everything else. You don't need Windows in your life whether you're a private individual or a corporation. Windows reached it peak with 7 when it was an acceptable OS, now its just sliding back into being junkware.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      MacOS for the desktop, Linux for everything else.....

      What's wrong with Linux as the desktop?

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        The main issue is that Linux office suites are 99% compatible. Not 100%... and that 1% can cause major issues.

        Oh, and Linux can't run business critical apps like QuickBooks.

        • by arsenix ( 19636 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @12:53PM (#59641068)
          In my experience, Windows runs much more reliably and smoother as a VM with minimal apps installed anyway. For years I ran Word and anything else that was mandatory windows in a VM. If you aren't browsing, have an airtight firewall, and install minimal software, Windows is much happier. Recently though almost everything is cloud/browser based anyway (Google docs, Quickbooks Online etc) so desktop OS hardly matters. I haven't booted my Windows VM in over a year at this point. Been running Linux exclusively on desktop for over 20 years for work and home. The last 4 or 5 I have barely interacted with Windows at all.
          • In my experience, Windows runs much more reliably and smoother as a VM with minimal apps installed anyway. Yes. I have even managed to make Windows Vista run okay by putting it on a starvation diet.

            Been running Linux exclusively on desktop for over 20 years for work and home. The last 4 or 5 I have barely interacted with Windows at all.

            In 2011, I managed to make a clean break from Windows and went Linux and Unix MacOS. Happy times. Then I bought a new piece of radio kit and the only software available was Windows based. So sadly I got a Windows machine. Amazingly enough, it's still awful Windows product. The less windows the better. The new machine is pretty stripped down, and no personal info is on it.

          • by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @10:12PM (#59643058)
            If you're using Scroogle Dogs or Quickbooks Online, kiss your God-given privacy goodbye. Go local or go home. Fuck the cloud, and fuck those who push others to use it,
        • The main issue is that Linux office suites are 99% compatible. Not 100%... and that 1% can cause major issues.

          Oh, and Linux can't run business critical apps like QuickBooks.

          And Microsoft offce isn't compatible with itself. Seriously though - what is that 1 percent incompatibility?I use Linux, Microsoft and MacOS versions of Apache Office and haven't found an incompatibility yet.

          I also use the plaform that has the software I need. But saying that Windows wins because Quickbooks is like saying that MacOS wins because Final Cut or the better Adobe Suite. It's null. I have to use Final cut So my desktop is Mac.Which also integrates perfectly with my iPhone and my new Jeep's inte

      • Maybe 2021 will be the year of the Linux desktop...

      • by mosel-saar-ruwer ( 732341 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @05:21PM (#59642184)
        > "What's wrong with Linux as the desktop?"

        That "Nouveau" crap simply doesn't work.

        Nor do the ostensible drivers from nVidia itself.

        Windows immediately finds the cards, installs the correct drivers, and you never have screen freeze.

        Whereas Nouveau gives you MAYBE fifteen minutes max between screen freezes.

        Nouveau is utterly unacceptable for serious desktop work.

        And no, I have zero interest in getting a PhD in how to recompile a custom kernel so that my frigging proprietary graphics card drivers might actually figure out how to install themselves after maybe six months of 24x7 work on the frigging project.
        • Stop using closed-source nVidia. I'm happily running 3 4K monitors on my Linux box using an AMD Radeon Pro WX 5100 and the open source amdgpu drivers. Plug-and-play with KDE Plasma. Four workspaces (three screens per workspace), full 3D desktop effects, OpenGL 4.5, beta Vulkan when I'm feeling adventurous. Uptimes measured in months. Stop playing with your proprietary graphics card drivers and go professional.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by MilliMicro ( 6251190 )

      You don't need Windows in your life whether you're a private individual or a corporation.

      And are you going to convince every equipment manufacturer on the planet to write and possibly certify Mac/Linux packages? Not to mention that software often isn't an individual users choice, if Microsoft can convince the suits/IT department that Windows is the way to go then everyone in the organisation runs Windows/Office/whatever. We've plenty of hardware in the lab which flat out doesn't have Linux or Mac softwa

      • Sadly, I have encountered many lab devices that run Linux on the device but only Windows software to talk to the device. At least this seems to be changing. Now some of the newer devices run Linux and serve up a webpage that can be accessed by anything with a browser---but they are so slow.

        • It'll get better. More and more, a web interface seems to be the direction companies are heading.

      • Shrug. I was issued a Mac at my current job. The company standardized on the Google suite, so no Office incompatibilities between the Mac and Windows users. People who interface with the outside world may occasionally need Office, but they have to get special permission to install it. It's considered an extreme edge case.

        Windows is very difficult to get rid of completely, but some companies are chipping away at it.

        Mind you, although I use a Mac at work, I can't justify the cost for home. And as I said

      • You don't need Windows in your life whether you're a private individual or a corporation.

        And are you going to convince every equipment manufacturer on the planet to write and possibly certify Mac/Linux packages?

        Hey, the IT folks and coders are often worse than Rednecks at the corner garage getting into fiostfights arguing about their Fords and Chevies.

        The best example I can come up with is we were looking for a lot of high speed scanners to convert paper documents to pdf. We looked at a few units and invited some folks in to show us. One group brought in a nice unit, fast and we were just about sold. I then noted that we needed the Mac version of the software.

        "This is Windows only". I was surprised, since it

    • ironically, I'd suggest linux for the desktop if you're holding out due to games. Gaming on linux is actually pretty good right now.

    • Tell that to my Steam library.
    • by Kokuyo ( 549451 )

      I've been suffering under OSX for three years no. Please go fornicate with thyself.

      • by Viol8 ( 599362 )

        Suffering in what way? Its a perfectly good - if somewhat lightweight - unix with plenty of application support.

    • by UnknownSoldier ( 67820 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @12:59PM (#59641082)

      > You don't need Windows

      Unfortunately, "need" is not that simple.

      0. People don't want to change. They have Stockholm Syndrome.

      1. There are certain apps and games that only work on Windows. While Proton [wikipedia.org] is coming along nicely for gaming it still has a ways to go.

      2. People "need" their drugs. Until there is an equivalent MacOS and/or Linux software (and drivers) people will not switch.

      3. MacOS has its own set of problems. Personally, I use all 3: Windows, Mac OS, and Linux, but Windows does somethings better, while Mac OS does other things better. All you have done is replace one problem with a different set of problems.

      4. The most effective solution would be to set a date in the future say 2024, and everyone just ditches MS. That will NEVER happen due to people's laziness and apathy. While MS still has people using it's OS it will continue to exploit people -- that's been it's ENTIRE business purpose: To make money. Microsoft has ZERO respect for your time.

      • by bn-7bc ( 909819 )
        Not just stocholm syndrome , or killer app x needs windows, but thing us people don’t want to learn new stuff, the” wtf do I need to learn this shit, I just got conertable with win 10 grfo” sentiment its sadly a big thing, a lot if people just want to get task x y and z done in the way thay are used to, any change is to much change, They ar not stupid and might not be lazy, they just want to get work done other stuff
      • > All you have done is replace one problem with a different set of problems.

        What he said. I use Windows and OSX on the desktop (and we're forced to use Windows for some back end services) and they each have their own problems. With Apple, you don't just have problems with the OS, you also have enforced retirement of the hardware, which is why I don't use it at home.

      • by Waccoon ( 1186667 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2020 @02:42AM (#59643458)

        0. People don't want to change. They have Stockholm Syndrome.

        Bullshit. It's Linux that doesn't want to change.

        Linux has been around for decades, which is an eternity in the computer industry. During that time, Apple has recovered from the brink of disaster, Linux blew it in the netbook market, and Google has risen to take over the web, the mobile market, and is on the cusp of potentially challenging Windows in the near future. If Linux hasn't been able to foster a large community after all that time, then that means it sucks and people don't like it. Period. Anything else is just excuses.

        This isn't the 1980's anymore. The industry is mature and people know what they want. Linux just fails to recognize those needs and blames it all on user error, manufacturers' drivers, and Stockholm Syndrome. Every time I've tried Linux in the last decade, I'm disappointed how many issues from the 90's are still a problem today, and various Linux zealots insist that those problems don't exist and I'm just making shit up. Yeah... no thanks.

    • by mschaffer ( 97223 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @01:20PM (#59641170)

      Mac OS is simply not the panacea you think it is. Also, the hardware tax for Mac OS is quite salty.
      The problem is that there is not a one-size-fits-all desktop OS solution and Windows, Mac OS, and all of the Linux desktops just aren't there yet, but they are what we are stuck with for now.

    • Great! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by DogDude ( 805747 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @02:11PM (#59641358)
      You don't need Windows in your life whether you're a private individual or a corporation.

      Great! When can I get the Mac version of our mission critical software?
      • You don't need Windows in your life whether you're a private individual or a corporation.

        Great! When can I get the Mac version of our mission critical software?

        And *that's* the reason, as a Mac user at work, I have a Windows box hidden under my desk.

    • Regrettably, at this time, for certain kinds of audio and video editing, Windows is sometimes the best option--if you are not a Mac user. That is changing. With DaVinci Resolve, Lightworks (as frustrating as that program is) and even Blender, you can edit in Linux. The caveat is if you are running a budget type machine for editing with modest CPU and graphics card. The high-high end (like Hollywood) uses Linux for compositing and editing. However, for proprietary graphics drivers (with OpenCL), the Linux on
    • MacOS for the desktop, Linux for everything else. You don't need Windows in your life whether you're a private individual or a corporation. Windows reached it peak with 7 when it was an acceptable OS, now its just sliding back into being junkware.

      Except that, I can't justify the premium price for brushed metal, and I don't fit in with the glassy-eyed Mac culture.

      Really, since we do most things in a browser these days, Linux on the desktop (Mint, actually) meets most of my needs. The only exception being Adobe Creative Cloud, and I can't justify owning a Mac just for that. So I have a Windows box, purchased used. But I probably won't be using Wordpad anymore.

    • I want linux, but it can't run League of Legends without triggering the anticheat system eventually (triggering it once means a permaban btw)

      I'm sure there are a lot of games with the same issue

    • by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @04:15PM (#59641912) Journal

      MacOS for the desktop, Linux for everything else.

      If I _could_ run MacOS on my desktop I might agree with you but MacOS only runs (legally and reliably) on Apple hardware. Ten years ago that was not a problem but for the past ~6 years Macs have been overpriced junk with dodgy keyboards, expensive gimicky features, lack of useful ports and, for the MacPro (until very recently) 6-year old hardware priced as if it were new. I dropped macs for PCs about 3-4 years ago and while MacOS was a great desktop I paid ~$1k less for a Dell laptop with better specs. Windows Linux Subsystem is the saving grace for Windows 10 and while MacOS is better it is not worth paying an extra $1,000 and suffering crap hardware.

    • Fuck paying the Apple tax. Now with their hardcore battle against repairs I will never own another apple product.
  • by fred6666 ( 4718031 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @12:22PM (#59640900)

    As long as they remove WordPad from Windows and make it an optional (not installed by default) application (maybe available through their store).

    But I don't want any ads inside Windows. They are selling this product. It should be ad-free. They could also make a free, ad-supported version of Windows if they want to but that's not the case actually.

    • by BAReFO0t ( 6240524 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @12:43PM (#59641022)

      Well, if would have ever taken a look at your contract / license agreement, you have seen that it isn't a product at all, and it never was.
      They are selling *licenses*. That is a contract that you will be told a secret (the software), if you promise to keep that secret.
      Which is silly, since they could not tell if you didn't. (And I have researched this down to the literal physics.)
      But acting as if it was a product .... always was bullshit, ... and licenses prove they know that.
      Software development is a service. Software *itself* is not anything.
      If a painter paints your wall, and you paid him, which is a service too, then you don't sign a license, nobody is banned from seeing said wall, and most importantly, nobody ever needs to pay the painter to use that wall ever again. Nor will anyone be called a sea-faring rapist thug if he doesn't pay up that protection money.

      And here lies the culprit: They are transitioning to *software* as a service, instead of software *development* as a service, like it should be.
      They still want to limit the usage of the software they were alread paid to make! They seriously expect you to keep paying and paying. Nevermind that Windows barely needed any new features since a loong time ago, and what is added nowadays, is nearly exclusively added to justify further payments.

      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        Not really, MS would like you to pay them to fix the bugs and security vulnerabilities they built into the software.

    • One thing you could do is just never run it.
    • by leonbev ( 111395 )

      To be honest, WordPad is a horrible application and Microsoft probably should recommend alternative products to use instead of it.

      That said, it would be nice it worked like the EU mandated Browser Ballot, where they needed to offer several options. If you don't want to pay for Word, perhaps LibreOffice is more to your liking?

    • Gotta throw shade at OnStar/Chevrolet. The phone application for remote start/unlock/locate is now a monthly subscription AND has ads in the app. It should be one or another. Fuck them.
    • Do people still use Wordpad? On any new Windows box, right after I download Firefox, I download Textpad. I thought everyone did this.

  • ... are we?

    Coming soon: Windows, Free2Play edition?

    Meanwhile I see more and more "average users" and old people that casually tell me they have "Linux" too. (Well, not really GNU/Linux, but systemd/Linux, but I'm taking it.)

    Bye bye Windows. I hope your dick falls off. [youtu.be]

    • There were old rumors that Microsoft wanted to go to a subscription model. The rumors at the time said that you would need to pay X dollars a month for access to Windows or your computer would revert to minimal access. Depending on the rumor you listened to, it was everything from no internet access to locked out entirely. Perhaps the rumors were true, but they are going to show ads in apps unless you pay your X dollar a month subscription fee.

      • Oh, it's not Windows, but they are already doing that with the only reason for Microsoft to exist, Office.
        • by gtall ( 79522 )

          No, Winders is there to serve Internet Explorer. Many sites still require that damn thing. If you ping them, they'll swear they are sworn to support Winders. What they mean is that some knucklehead wrote their software to depend upon IE and that knucklehead left the building long ago and damned if they can figure out how it all works.

      • the software as a service smells a lot like ransomware, the only difference is the creeps that want your money let you know ahead of time they are using extortion to extract money from you
      • by LostMyAccount ( 5587552 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @01:54PM (#59641284)

        I think it's inevitable that they will make desktop Windows some kind of subscription, probably tied into Azure for everything so its synchronized and you can login from anywhere.

        How long (or if at all) it will run without network access would probably be tied to the subscription tier. I would guess the cheapest tiers would just be VMs in the cloud with no local access, and high-end enterprise would run locally indefinitely and be cloud synced, too.

        You could put a lot of IT out of work and cut costs if a "new" computer was just a login and a prioritized sync from the cloud, pulling down data as-needed to run apps or access files. Roaming profiles on steroids.

        Plus MS could nuke all the VDI competitors at the same time, since such a system could also use baked-in templates for specific organizations.

        My question is whether they will ever face anti-trust action for something like this, or whether they will point to Linux or MacOS and claim there are other options/no too much MS control over the desktop.

    • I wouldn't object to it if there was a free, ad-sponsored version and a paid version with no ads but what we have now is paid with ads. That's unacceptable but since most people keep using Windows I guess Microsoft sees no reason to be good.
  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @12:34PM (#59640964)
    ... going to become more of a billboard than an OS sooner than later. It looks to me as if Microsoft has held back the monetization of the desktop in order to avoid scaring away many of the Windows 7 conversions. Now that the Windows 7 EOL has come and gone, Microsoft sees no problems with putting more and more ads in front of Windows 10 users. Of course, Microsoft will probably say that the users want the ads. If that were really the case, then make the ads "opt in."

    .
    I have three more PCs to over to Linux, then I won't care about the Windows 10 disaster any longer...

    • Don't get me wrong, I like youtube on my Roku, but it is indeed getting to be like a billboard. They are cramming ads into every square inch of it.

      I guess that is what you get, when ads pay for the service.

    • ... going to become more of a billboard than an OS sooner than later.

      Based on a single story on a single app advertising another app of which there are maybe 4 in Windows which do it once and then not again?
      I wish I could get rid of a billboard with a click of a button and have it never come back.

      I mean it's a dick move to show the advert but then instantly claiming Windows is going to become more of a billboard than an OS is a slippery slope fallacy that borders on satirical absurdity.

  • Wow, I didn't even know that was still around. I haven't ran WordPad in at least two decades.

    Regarding ads in apps, I can't say I'm surprised. Commercial software developers are *desperate* for revenue and when the subscription model (thanks Adobe!) isn't an option or just doesn't cut it, then in-app advertisements will be the next step. I wouldn't be surprised if the most commonly used dialogue boxes in Windows, such as File Open, Save, Save As, or Quit foist an ad upon the user ("Before you click Save, wo

  • by UnknownSoldier ( 67820 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @12:51PM (#59641052)

    Microsoft continues to demonstrate it has ZERO respect for users or their computers.

    It also doesn't help that we have idiots like this:

    Using an Ad Blocker Is Unethical [inc.com]

    I thought Idiocracy (2006) [imdb.com]was suppose to a political satire not a documentary!

    --
    Can we just Ban Advertising already? Companies "visually pollute" our social environments while profiting off personal data.

    • So is spying on your users and selling their privacy.

      Pot, meet kettle.

      • So is spying on your users and selling their privacy.

        Pot, meet kettle.

        I see privacy notices all the time saying "We value your privacy", and all I can think is "because we make lots of money selling it".

    • Microsoft has huge amount of respect for the users of IT's computers

        they are it's advertisers - you just bought the computer, what makes you think you own it...
       

    • Actually, from an ethical perspective, inc.com is correct that ad blockers do all those things. What **he's** not ethical about is that most people don't use ad blockers or NoScript just to avoid advertising but more to avoid ad delivered malware. He talks about a site's ads coming from "actual content owners" when the bulk come from 3rd parties.
  • Reaction was mixed because while some people saw little wrong with Microsoft advertising a free service rather than trying to encourage people to part with money

    I feel like this really becomes a question of whether an installed-by-default program counts as "part of the operating system", which you purchased, vs. a freebie that you didn't.

    Personally, I think it's part of the OS and, therefore, should not be an advertising platform. Same with the Start Menu.

  • I like how it says try the online version.
    You can try, and then the online version will have similar ads.

    Just shows that modern software makers are out of ideas and don't want to admit it.
    All that's left for them to do at this point seems to be just QA.
  • I know Word. I know Notepad. But what is that WordPad you're talking about?

  • Windows 7 runs very nicely as a virtual machine in Ubuntu (free) using VirtualBox (free).

    I don't see any reason why I would install Win10 on anything I own. If it becomes impossible to continue using Win7 because other software becomes incompatible with it as time passes, I will move entirely away from Windows.

  • This is Windows we are talking about - you know who is behind it, and what it is that you are getting.
  • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @01:26PM (#59641182)

    Nobody needs that MS crap.

  • by FudRucker ( 866063 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @01:31PM (#59641192)
    it will be microsoft turning ms-windows into spamware,
    the year of the Linux desktop is getting closer than ever
  • by brunes69 ( 86786 ) <[slashdot] [at] [keirstead.org]> on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @01:52PM (#59641276)

    This is called a "nudge" in design parlance. They are trying to nudge the user to migrate to Office 365.

    This is likely because they plan to EOL Wordpad and stop investing in it. Once a critical mass of users stops using Wordpad and moves to Office 365, they don't have to spend money supporting it anymore.

  • by kwelch007 ( 197081 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @01:59PM (#59641298) Homepage

    M$ did do something really right...Active Directory has no direct competitor in the marketplace. Yeah, you can kind of fake it with SAMBA, etc., but it really only fully works well with Windows at the endpoint.

    I look forward to the day that there is an open solution on par with that sort of enterprise management.

    • ^ this guy knows what he's talking about

    • You're better off using a Single-Sign-On protocol like SAML 2.0 where you can administrate accounts through a website like Okta, OneLogin, or heck you could just use your GSuites account as an Identity Provider.

      Sucks that you still need to use Active Directory to splice into your windows account logins but if you don't actually need that you can stick to web only services.

    • M$ did do something really right...Active Directory has no direct competitor in the marketplace. Yeah, you can kind of fake it with SAMBA, etc., but it really only fully works well with Windows at the endpoint.

      I look forward to the day that there is an open solution on par with that sort of enterprise management.

      AD has no competitor in the marketplace because its the only directory service that would ever work with Windows. MS is never going to allow third parties to horn in on "their" business, if they can help it. Since directory services need hooks into the OS kernel to work well, and 95%+ of businesses have substantial Windows install base, its game over for any potential competitor.

  • Software nobody uses or should be using anymore is suggesting what few remaining users are left should use better software... We now call these "ads"

  • Doesn't surprise me (Score:4, Interesting)

    by HalAtWork ( 926717 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @02:26PM (#59641424)

    On the Xbox they have advertising all over, even if you buy all of the paid subscriptions applicable for the system (i.e. Xbox Live, GamePass, whatever else).

    Microsoft just likes advertising, and people who use their products put up with it, so it's easy for them.

  • by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @03:03PM (#59641596) Journal

    Tell me again why I should PAY for an operating system that forces ads on me?

    Jesus Christ, Microsoft really has no shame. It's all about monetizing everything no matter who it pisses off or how shitty it makes their products. They know we don't want to see ads, and they just don't give a fuck.

    Also, I'm totally 100% sure that if a malicious ad infects my system, Microsoft will fix it and pay me for damages, right? RIGHT?

    I am SOOOOOOOOOOO glad I switched to Linux. It's been just over a year and I will never, ever go back.

  • How wonderfully ironic that would be.
  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @03:35PM (#59641736)
    The ad shown in TFA says, "Use Word, Excel and Powerpoint for free online." but if I'm using WordPad locally, what make them think I need/want to use those three, much bigger and more complex, apps and online no less -- even for free. I'm using WordPad and probably for a reason. If nothing else, this is poor product placement that will generate more negative feelings than people flocking to online Office apps.
  • There is just no way in he77 that I will ever go to Windows 10. The control M$ has over "your" computer is just unreal.
  • by twocows ( 1216842 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @03:43PM (#59641770)
    LibreOffice and, to a lesser extent, AbiWord, are a bit too far in the Microsoft Word direction. Metapad/Metapad LE, Notepad2, and Notepad++ are a bit too far in either the notepad or source code editor direction. WordPad splits the middle, being a properly lightweight text editor (executable is 4MB on 1803) but with some rich text editing features that you don't get in all the notepad clones. It's also built in to almost every version of Windows, which is convenient.

    Anyone know of any good alternatives? The only thing I can think of is maybe ReactOS has their own version that I could just grab and use on Windows installs, but I haven't checked.
  • I've had windows 10 for approximately 9 months now and have never seen an advertisement. My wife updated her laptop long before that and still no ads.

    I guess my question is who is being targeted?
  • ... the year of Linux on the Desktop!

    Nah, just kidding!

  • to add to the pi-hole blacklist.

    More than one, most likely. Everyone should use pi-hole. Hopefully advertisers will get the message - the consumer (private, corporate, or govt) pays for the bandwidth, and they have the right to decide what comes down that pipe.

    You want my attention for your latest gadget or service? Make me an offer, and we'll negotiate.

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