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Microsoft responds to YouTube app removal demand
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The following comments relate to this news article:
article published on 16 May, 2013
Microsoft has responded to a demand from Google Inc. to remove its updated YouTube app from the Windows Phone Store.
Google sent Microsoft a cease and desist letter, ordering it to remove the YouTube app from the Windows Phone Store. A recent update to the app violated the terms of the YouTube API, because it intentionally cuts out advertisements and cuts straight to the video.
Google ... [ read the full article ]
Please read the original article before posting your comments.
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Mysttic
Senior Member
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16. May 2013 @ 08:24 |
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Leave it to MS: when you steal our IPs and tech we'll demand you to stop, but when we try the same, we'll beg to negotiate.
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dEwMe
Senior Member
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16. May 2013 @ 09:06 |
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Who has a windows phone anyway? Literally no one I know has anything other than Cr@pple or @ndroid. I know there are some out there but where?
Yeah see what happens if you touch MS revenue...lol
Just my $0.02,
dEwMe
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 16. May 2013 @ 09:08
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Bozobub
Senior Member
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16. May 2013 @ 10:34 |
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M$ may insist that Google need to "come to the table", but the bald truth here is that they will lose any court case miserably. If I was a Google exec, I'd just chop off any access to Youtube by the offending app; we'll see how long M$ sits at that table.
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 16. May 2013 @ 10:35
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Senior Member
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16. May 2013 @ 11:25 |
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Always thought that Google would become MS's biggest competitor.
...Ok, so maybe that was a no-brainer haha.
Its a lot easier being righteous than right.
DSE VZ300-
Zilog Z80 CPU, 32KB RAM (16K+16K cartridge), video processor 6847, 2KB video RAM, 16 colours (text mode), 5.25" FDD
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Senior Member
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16. May 2013 @ 14:39 |
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I hope to see the day when nobody care about $M or Cr@pple.
$GOOG is putting all their services together for "free" and it seams finally working well.
Live Free or Die.
The rule above all the rules is: Survive !
Capitalism: Funnel most of the $$$ to the already rich.
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 16. May 2013 @ 19:08
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Morreale
Senior Member
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16. May 2013 @ 23:57 |
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I've got a Windows Phone. I don't mind the lack of ads.
Glad someone's keeping these apps up to date.
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Senior Member
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17. May 2013 @ 00:09 |
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Thank Crikey for Adblock Plus/Edge
Its a lot easier being righteous than right.
DSE VZ300-
Zilog Z80 CPU, 32KB RAM (16K+16K cartridge), video processor 6847, 2KB video RAM, 16 colours (text mode), 5.25" FDD
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GernBlan
Junior Member
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17. May 2013 @ 19:51 |
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There's a Windows Phone? When did that happen?
:D
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Senior Member
5 product reviews
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17. May 2013 @ 22:47 |
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Originally posted by Mrguss: I hope to see the day when nobody care about $M or Cr@pple.
$GOOG is putting all their services together for "free" and it seams finally working well.
That's because Larry Page doesn't have the mentality of a brick like Balmer does at Microsoft. When you see the product track history of Microsoft, I can see why Larry said that about Microsoft, and imo he's not wrong about it. Microsoft has products but are too short lived to gain any traction in the long run..
Chance prepares the favored mind. Look up once in a while and you might learn something. - BLUEBOY
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magictown
Newbie
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20. May 2013 @ 08:51 |
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Well Im an advocate of Windows phone but only since it reached 8. I now can only recommend it to my clients as.. well.. It just works... interfaces well with Skydrive and Win8 on the desktop/laptop. I had been an Apple iPhone fan for years until the 5 came out and just do not like Android, not that I dont try it day to day!
Every time I show a new Windows phone to someone and show what it is capable of they say "why havent I seen this" or "why does everyone buy iphones/Samsungs" - Its all in the hype I say. 2 weeks of getting used to it then you wont want to go back.
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GernBlan
Junior Member
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20. May 2013 @ 11:03 |
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Uh huh. 75% mobile market share for Android and 95% of that being Samsung isn't hype -- it's just fact. Now Apple, they've always just been about hype, but that's changing.... to Android.... NOT Windows, which barely... BARELY... beat out the epic failing Blackberry for market share.
I've been able to do everything business related on Android for years now, and I'm a career network engineer setting this up for people who typically get confused using their DirecTV remotes. The problem is a valid version of Windows Phone is very late to the game, and completely unnecessary. Who wants to switch mobile OSes at this point in the game?
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 20. May 2013 @ 11:08
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magictown
Newbie
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20. May 2013 @ 12:12 |
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I did. Fiends and work colleagues are changing... eventually after a lot of complaining :)
Most are scared to change away from those top sellers and you can understand why they are apprehensive, if everyone around them thinks they're so great! - I had convinced one collegue to go for the Nokia Lumia 920. Then they posted on Facebook what they were doing, guess what? eveyone comments, "NO, don't do it your'll regret it" stay with us iPhone and Galaxy users, we are the cool ones :)))
But here at my work (I run an IT consultancy), people do make that change when they can see others using and enjoying Windows phone.
They are happy now that they've switched.. in the end. There is usually an alternative to a major app. that was only available on the others. I suppose I did the Waze app. but that might change now that Facebook have bought it but I can live without it.
I agree, it is late to the game but also a game changer perhaps.
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GernBlan
Junior Member
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20. May 2013 @ 15:31 |
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If I, and most anyone else, changed to Windows Phone this late in the game, I would literally lose hundreds of dollars in apps. I was forced to lose a similar investment when Palm thought it smart to force longtime PalmmOS users over to WebOS, as Palm followed the similar upgrade path as Microsoft, abandoning longtime users along the way when simply upgrading a version of their OS.
Currently, if anyone is going to make a switch it will be from Apple to Android (or even Android to Apple), but most people would not see any sense (or cents) in switching to Windows Phone when MS is such a tiny player in the game and a track record of not making their OS backward compatible even for their existing customers.
One word professional prediction on whether or not Windows Phone will even overtake the smaller market share of Apple: Never.
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