Why the 'Raspberry Spy' Blunder is a Lot More Serious and Profound Than the Corporate Media is Willing to Acknowledge
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2021-03-06 16:05:48 UTC
- Modified: 2021-03-06 16:09:58 UTC
Video download link
Summary: As this video points out, the ongoing series by Gavin L. Rebeiro is justified by the fact that the 'Raspberry Spy' Foundation continues to work with and some might say for Microsoft; it sold out millions of customers
JUST over a month ago we broke the story about the 'Raspberry Spy' and more than a month since then we're still covering the subject -- an issue that has not yet been taken seriously or tackled in any meaningful way by the 'Raspberry Spy' Foundation (or RPF).
When we discovered the blunder over a month ago and turned it into a major scandal (lots of articles and videos about it since then) we worried about the misuse of data collected by Microsoft from millions of devices, bearing programms such as
EDGI in mind. An associate of ours who suggested a fix said that "everyone so far has been distracted by privacy threat posed to individuals; Microsoft only attacks certain key individuals, everyone else is ignored; the real threat is that Microsoft will send a team to the institutions it detects through this programme: Did
RPF just sell out the schools?"
It
did, by virtue of helping Microsoft interject proprietary software and surveillance into classrooms. Instead of becoming a 'Trojan horse' for computing freedom today what we have is a Trojan horse for Microsoft. It all started in later January, back when the 'Raspberry Spy' Foundation secretly planted the malicious code. Here we are in March and there's no sign of regret or rollback. This is why some have gone as far as wiping the OS from their 'Raspberry Spy'.
⬆