Pelican Parts Forums

Pelican Parts Forums (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/)
-   Off Topic Discussions (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/)
-   -   How easy is it to spread disinformation (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/696528-how-easy-spread-disinformation.html)

porsche4life 08-18-2012 06:32 PM

How easy is it to spread disinformation
 
Interesting post about how some bloggers spread a very fake rumor about apple, and about how quickly it was picked up and spread across the internet. Just goes to prove how little critical thinking skills are used these days...

Day4 - How we screwed (almost) the whole Apple community

john70t 08-18-2012 06:42 PM

It's easy to introduce a false flag, then crush dissenting public review(free speech) with a retained legal firm or other means.

But yes, people are gullible.

Shuie 08-18-2012 07:45 PM

True story, I read about it on Facebook...

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1345035470.jpg

slodave 08-18-2012 07:47 PM

What?!? Lincoln invented the Internet?

RWebb 08-18-2012 07:48 PM

ever seen what gets posted in PARF?

Shuie 08-18-2012 07:51 PM

No. Thankfully.

Zeke 08-18-2012 08:05 PM

I saw a quote today but I've lost track of it. Something like:

Good news travels well, bad news travels fast, but rumors run at the speed of light.

That's not even close, but it will serve as an acceptable paraphrase.

DanielDudley 08-19-2012 04:30 AM

You can pretty much always figure out what the real truth is, if you are willing to travel a little further down the road. The trick to misinformation is finding the people who like it where you tell them they are.

Baz 08-19-2012 05:30 AM

Added to this equation is some people's penchant for drama....:rolleyes:

BlueSkyJaunte 08-19-2012 10:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Baz (Post 6921575)
Added to this equation is some people's penchant for drama....:rolleyes:

Apple fanboys and drama? Perish the thought!

spuggy 08-19-2012 03:21 PM

The points made here are good, regarding the lack of critical thinking and the credibility of information, purely because you're reading it on a computer/spreadsheet/them thar interwebs.

I'm not saying this isn't true (after all, it's why Snopes exists at all - the wide-spread gullibility of people who don't check their sources).

However, this is, I believe, a bad example to illustrate a valid point - because some things are unfortunately very, very, easy to believe.

Anti-tamper screws? Nothing new there - the first Compaq 386 Portable in the mid-80's was about the first time most folks had ever seen a torx fastener at all, much less used to hold a computer together...

In fact, the entire industry - and Apple is no exception (and perhaps somewhere near the top of the league table) - is no stranger to restrictive, anti-competitive practises designed to confound folks who mistakenly believed that, having paid good money for the darn thing, it now belonged to them and they could do what they liked with it....


Apple, at one time, used industry-standard drives (Seagates, actually). Nothing special about them. Same drives as everyone else. But they enforced a firmware check so that their computers would only recognise drives with Apple firmware. So you could only buy (lower capacity and higher priced) replacement drives from them. Using any drive without the magic string in the firmware meant it wasn't recognised/couldn't be used (at least, not without special drivers/tricks to fool the firmware into giving it a thumbs-up). Nice.

Apple aren't the only ones to do that trick - HP and Dell have both done it; the disk drive thing is kind of defensible for servers and enterprise-class disk arrays (where you can argue you need to be sure it's compatible and thus can be supported) - but for laptops and personal electronics? Not in my book.

(Dell at one time even used a power supply in certain desktops that used standard plugs and form-factor - looked identical to an industry power-supply of the time - but if you just blithely replaced the original power supply with a generic one, you'd blow the motherboard, because they'd re-wired some of the power lines into non-standard locations on an industry-standard plug...)

The 5th/5.5 generation iPods (the Video ones) are easy to open (once you've done it once or twice and have the correct tools - and thus you can replace an old battery, or upgrade to a Toshiba drive of up to 240GB (largest drive Apple ever offered in those was 80GB).

Apple evidently preferred that folks didn't replace their own batteries for $15 when they wore out, they'd prefer that they spring $100 a pop to them for it.

So the 6th generation ones (the "Classics") have a so-called sarcophagus clip - where the little metal tangs you need to release are covered - yup, specifically designed to prevent you releasing them. Thus, you have to pretty much render the back cover non-reusable to get it off (and the smart move it is to then snip off those metal clip covers on the replacement before fitting).


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 01:51 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website


DTO Garage Plus vBulletin Plugins by Drive Thru Online, Inc.