Products that aren't designed for Windows XP or Windows 2000

Anti-Windows Catalog

We practice what we preach at Pan-Am Internet Services

Search Products By:


The CBC warns us about business as usual

Written by Gordon Fecyk, 7/7/2009

If you are a typical CBC website reader, you would tend to blame Internet Explorer for everything from your dead Xbox 360 to your dead pet goldfish.

SOME DAYS, RANTING IS HARD. It's tough to find a good topic that's going to catch a reader's sense of humour and make them think about something.

And other days, a rant just falls into your lap.

Take today's dire warning, for example. The CBC urged Canadians to follow complicated instructions to protect themselves from a not-yet-fixed vulnerability in Internet Explorer. Again. And again. If you are a typical CBC website reader, you would tend to blame Internet Explorer for everything from your dead Xbox 360 to your dead pet goldfish.

But when a reasonable person sits back and looks at the CBC's history on this topic, a distinct pattern emerges:

  • Every flaw is described as an "Emergency."
  • Every flaw is "still not fixed."
  • Every report comes with the same, tired old advice.
  • Every flaw gets patched, sometimes before the story gets published.
  • Every flaw report comes with no means to prevent exploits before the fact. And finally:
  • Every flaw ends with no lasting harm to the Internet, its users, or to Microsoft.


IN OTHER WORDS the CBC is reporting business-as-usual on the Internet. All that really changed over the past two years is the CBC commenting system, allowing Apple fanboys and Linux fanatics to pump themselves up only to deflate rapidly. It's a chronic case of premature enunciation, usually found in religious nuts and politicians.

If you're a Windows user and you're panicking over the doom and gloom of the Internet found only on CBC, here's a glimmer of hope. Based on two years and forty-two Google hits, the CBC can tell us this:

  • Internet Explorer is still here.
  • The Internet is still here.
  • Microsoft is still here.
  • Before-the-fact protection is still here. And finally,
  • You are still here.

At the end of the day, that's all that matters.

Related Links:

Editor Log On:
Sign up to get an editor account.

Username:

Password:

[Catalog Home]


Resources:

Links

Downloads

Product Roundups

What is the Anti-Windows Catalog?

Help for New Editors

Frequently Asked Questions


Recently Edited Categories:

Computers, Notebook

Media, Video

Game, Role Play

Scanner, ID Cards

Hospitality

Browse All Categories


Recent Commentaries:

The More Things Change, The More They Stay Secure

The devil you know, versus the Adobe you don't

Paying for things we get for free?

Jump! Jump! Jump! Jump! Or, Windows 8: Get Over It

Don't Fear the Start Screen

Browse All Commentaries


Pan-Am Home Page Valid HTML 4.01! All trademarks are property of their respective owners.