Microsoft Still Pretends to be “Open” for and to Government Contracts
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2010-04-05 21:00:48 UTC
- Modified: 2010-04-05 21:00:48 UTC
Summary: Supported by its own press and advanced by other regular allies, Microsoft comes equipped with required marketing themes to inject proprietary software into governments, under the guise of "open"
A FEW weeks ago we debated Microsoft's attempts to make governments more dependent on its proprietary software. It is usually dressed up with all sorts of misused words and marketing jargon (marketing people abound) like "open", "choice", and "cloud". This type of nonsense is being pushed by the 'Microsoft press', which is currently casting proprietary software as "open". It's that same old thing which Microsoft MVP de Icaza is a big fan of even though NASA serves as a cautionary tale about the impact [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]. To Microsoft, "open" often means Windows-only. Is the US government going to be duped, given access to Microsoft's inaccurate information and publicity stunts?
In order to entrap the government and take away invaluable data (e.g. patient data of citizens), Microsoft
has already recruited top lobbyists. Microsoft hired a top gun from the FDA to help gain control of medical records. Microsoft's Steve Aylward, the General Manager for U.S. Healthcare, was mentioned in
this previous post and now we find him
"Lead[ing] World-Class List of Speakers at Upcoming ShareFEST Conference" (also
here). This is part of
Microsoft's continued attempts to dominate US healthcare (data, not just software).
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