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#211 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#212 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Classic tempus fugit. There's no way that red herring gets by a true scotsman. Caveat emptor ad hominem est. Five minute major for farcical fallacy flaunting.
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#213 | ||||||
Ex-Helpdesk Junkie
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() This seems to be a general trend with you, belaboring a point that no one ever disagreed with, as a form of deniability against having to actually defend your insinuations. Just to be totally clear: You told us to beware, "you are the product, not the customer", we told you "thanks, but we've known that since like forever, and Google is still our best buddy" because their business model is to give us what we want and charge us the data about that want, you keep on telling it to us, belaboring the point, and it ISN'T because you think Google is ![]() Right? http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/insinuate Take a look at number three. |
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#214 | |
Wizard
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Were you to say that every paying (with money) customer of Google either places an ad or pays for information to place an ad, then you would have gone into the territory of telling lies. As it is you like to hear yourself say "strawman" a lot, so you write hoping to use it against someone. Perfectly well knowing it was a setup (by you). |
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#215 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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I see, so quoting someone else claiming I said something, means I must have said something. Sigh, some things just don't seem to change. Some people just seem to love the strawman argument, and just can't stand it when it's pointed out what they are doing. Your defense is that you imagined that is what I must have meant, ergo, that is what I meant? Well, I can't be responsible for your imagination, but I am certainly the only correct source for what I meant, no matter how much you pound the figurative table about it. |
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#216 | |
Ex-Helpdesk Junkie
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But of course, we can go all day arguing over the difference between someone insinuating something while maintaining plausible deniability, versus the accusation of such via a strawman argument. At the end of the day, either spin is just as un/reasonable. You do love your strawman accusations, so I am hardly surprised to see another. Perhaps you can do your part by resolving to no longer make it so darned easy to misinterpret/misrepresent what you say, whether deliberately or by accident. ![]() Or we can continue to go in circles, of course. ![]() |
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#217 | ||
Wizard
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What you apparently meant to say, according to your own later post, is that: "if you are not paying for something, then you are the product, not the customer." I don't agree with this statement, but it is pointless to get into an argument about it. It obviously derives any semblance of coherence from this particular situation where Google sells the data it gathers, and can not stand as a general principle. Nevertheless, what is the relevance of being a "customer" or a "product"? Since you have not elaborated on this point, I can only guess, and do so at the peril of your future "strawman" allegation if my guess is not to your liking. Let us assume, for the sake of argument, that your statement is correct (though it is not). What difference does it make? Are you in fact implying that Google does not treat you as well as it would a customer? If so, in what ways? What point or points are you trying to make? Last edited by darryl; 10-13-2014 at 03:53 AM. |
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#218 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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What difference does it make? Go back and look at where I originally said it. "Amazon and Google are good for Amazon and Google. One thing to remember with Google, if you aren't paying for something, then you aren't the customer, you are the product. Google's customers are their advertisers, not the people who use Google. That's why they consistently try to force people to log in. It makes it easier for Google to track you and sell more detailed info to their consumers, i.e. the advertisers. " It's simply a statement which explains certain behavior by Google. There is much to like about Google, but I think that it is a mistake to think that Google, Amazon, Apple or any other large corporation does something out of the kindness of their heart. Many of Google's free apps come from various employee's Friday projects. Google has/had Friday projects not because it allows them to provide cool free apps, but rather because it allows them to keep their more creative programmers. The cool free apps is just a side benefit. Of course, it also gains them other non tangible things that benefits Google as a whole. Google is neither evil, nor good, they are simply a large corporation that has a certain culture which many people happen to like. |
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#219 | |
Guru
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#220 |
Wizard
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@pwalker8. I agree with your view that "it is a mistake to think that Google, Amazon, Apple or any other large corporation does something out of the kindness of their heart." I have said as much in my own past posts. Further, I think that most people here are realistic enough to share this view. With respect, this is not what I asked you.
You made the statement in your post @211 that "I simply said that if you are not paying for something, then you are the product, not the customer". After accepting your statement for the sake of argument only I concluded my post $217 with the questions: "What difference does it make? Are you in fact implying that Google does not treat you as well as it would a customer? If so, in what ways? What point or points are you trying to make?" If your post $218 provides answers to the questions I posed then I fail to see them. |
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#221 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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" ... Who are you kidding? Amazon and Google ARE good for their customers. They are that good that enough people hate them for being so good. Both having so many customers, the amount of the ones unhappy is huge, but the amount of happy customers is even bigger. ..." I was telling Duckytigger that he was not the customer. It's helpful if you consider the context of a comment before going into full attack mode or hurl yourself at a conclusion about that comment. |
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#222 | ||
Ex-Helpdesk Junkie
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And you ignored that and continued on your rant about ads, which is where the attacks and "hurl[ing] at a conclusion" started. This is beside the fact that multiple people (at least me and darryl) would like to know: Quote:
If a product is a customer by another name, does it smell any less sweet? |
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#223 | |
Wizard
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#224 |
Wizard
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Yes, I would like to know that as well. I did go to great lengths in trying to establish that I am indeed a customer. Even in the very weird view of money transforming me magically from product to customer. And yes, I am paying for some android apps. Why? I am not bothered by the ads that much, but sometimes the ad-free version has extra features.
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#225 |
Wizard
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@DuckieTigger. You are indeed a customer of Google, as am I and probably everyone else on this forum, at least in my view. pwalker8 obliquely raises some issues which could be worth discussing in their own thread, namely the consequences of Google's model of accepting payment in the form of information, and how they differ from the usual transaction where money changes hands. For what it is worth, however, I don't see that Google treats its search customers differently in any way which is material to this discussion, though I can think of some arguments to the contrary. As pwalker8 makes the distinction it would seem he does think there are differences in treatment which are material. I am simply curious what he believes these differences may be.
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