|
|
|
|
|
by coldtea
2091 days ago
|
|
>Eh, I disagree. They stated "literally no one cares", but the fact that it's news and hit the front page literally means someone cares. No math involved. QED. Literally doesn't mean what you think it means. It's also a figure of speach. From the dictionary: literally (2): "used for emphasis while not being literally true" >It wasn't trivial if Microsoft cared enough to fix it in a few days, which is like light speed for Microsoft. Issues/holes/leaks on public servers almost always get fixed on a few days, whether it's Microsoft or whatever. You maybe compare it to OS/app patches, with is not the same case. >It's illogic though because those companies didn't get away with it. They just got a slap on the wrist for billions in profit. |
|
Wrong, and you're the one confused here:
https://www.merriam-webster.com/words-at-play/misuse-of-lite...
1) in a literal sense or manner : actually 2) in effect : virtually
They were saying "in effect, virtually no one cares". Even then, that's demonstrably wrong as shown above.
>Issues/holes/leaks on public servers almost always get fixed on a few days, whether it's Microsoft or whatever.
Wrong, places like Apple, Facebook, etc. typically fix customer leaking issues like this in hours, not days.
>You maybe compare it to OS/app patches, with is not the same case.
Not comparing, but even those are slow.
>They just got a slap on the wrist for billions in profit.
Many people indicted and jailed and billions upon billions of fines. Absolutely not a slap on the wrist.