to...@tuxteam.de Wrote:

> This is a pattern which I like to call "emergent evil". Most likely
> nobody does it on purpose, yet it happens often enough to annoy
> competing ecosystems. Magic!

HAHAHAHAHA (with capital letters)... As far as I remember, Microsoft (Windoze) 
used to annoy Linux users since long time ago... Installing Windoze disables 
Linux to boot... NTFS was cryptic for years with no tech specifications of the 
filesystem, a mystery so for many years Linux developers were unable to create 
a driver to access such partitions, in fact I remember that in the past it was 
only possible to mount as read only... Aaahhh and the recent damn habit of 
locking NTFS partitions so other operating systems are unable to use them... 
And I am not very sure, but I remember that in ancient versions, installing 
Windoze wiped out the entire hard disk removing all operating systems before 
installation...

I hate Windoze as an operating system but some programs and games are cool... 
And there is a fact: THE ONE WHO HITS FIRST, HITS TWICE (translated from 
spanish). Bill Gates was pioneer of the graphical environments (when computers 
had simple text terminals) and further graphical operating systems. It is a 
very selfish attitude but today virtually he's one of the most rich men in the 
world, so (fair or not) he can do whatever he wants 😆

________________________________
From: to...@tuxteam.de
Sent: Wednesday, November 25, 2020 9:11 PM
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: NTFS partitions can't be mounted

On Wed, Nov 25, 2020 at 03:47:12PM -0500, Stefan Monnier wrote:
> > Microsoft changes the system required to kill the fast-boot every so often,
> > almost surely to make it difficult for users of Linux to access Windows from
> > the Linux system.
>
> That seems highly unlikely: it's a tiny number of users, and not only
> they're not a threat but annoying them won't bring any benefit to MS.

This is a pattern which I like to call "emergent evil". Most likely
nobody does it on purpose, yet it happens often enough to annoy
competing ecosystems. Magic!

Cheers
 - t

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