Ryanair is Closing the Web with Microsoft Silverlight
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2008-09-01 21:51:56 UTC
- Modified: 2008-09-01 21:51:56 UTC
Another airline bites the digital ashtray
Ryanair seems to have been getting a little chummy with Microsoft recently. It's quite the rarity, but a concerning one nonetheless.
The recent [4432 door-shutting] at the Democratic National Convention left a lot of GNU/Linux users very bitter. The same
goes for football and the Olympic games [
1,
2,
3]. Microsoft is using Silverlight to put a "no entry" sign on several Web sites, just as it used to do with ActiveX, which
Novell still supports.
Ryanair seems to have recently approached Microsoft with the aim of 'un-opening' its Web site, making it closed and obscure by design and by choice. An
article was published about this today.
Travolution understands that Microsoft and technology provider Navitaire have been asked to “proactively eliminate” screen scraping of the Ryanair site, primarily by blocking block access from other sites.
A spokesperson confirmed that the airline would attempt to block as many sites as possible – mirroring a strategy by Directline Insurance in the UK which claims its products cannot be found on any price comparison website.
Perhaps it's related to something we were alerted about over the weekend. Reader
maxstirner told us yesterday that "
Ryanair requires silverlight!!"
Was this part of the arrangement? This must not be the future of the Web or even tiny portions of it, which Microsoft wishes to also saturate with DRM (as
part of the specifications even).
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Comments
max stirner
2008-09-02 09:19:34
john roborts
2008-09-10 16:19:03
valter
2008-12-17 17:45:00