[–]JesTheRed0 points
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I'd definitely go with "intentionally misleading" in this case. They've been telling everybody forever than it's going to be totally free, supported forever, and on and on, but realistically there's no way a company traded in public is going to go backwards to a venture capital "we don't make profit yet" model. I've believed from the onset that MS was being intentionally misleading, but I expected they'd wait until a few hundred million people were stuck before asking for credit card information.
[–] JesTheRed ago
I'd definitely go with "intentionally misleading" in this case. They've been telling everybody forever than it's going to be totally free, supported forever, and on and on, but realistically there's no way a company traded in public is going to go backwards to a venture capital "we don't make profit yet" model. I've believed from the onset that MS was being intentionally misleading, but I expected they'd wait until a few hundred million people were stuck before asking for credit card information.