| You are continuing to speculate based on incomplete information. You are painting a picture, but really that’s all it is until we have more answers. You really don’t know what happened. > this never would have become a public issue if Dustin could have just spoken to someone on the phone at Apple and gotten his problem resolved right then over the phone Perhaps true. We don’t know for sure, but irrelevant to whether Dustin made bullshit statements. He could have made it public without that. > Which has a limit of 280 characters? What he wrote in those 280 characters turned to be total bullshit, completely unsubstantiated by anything He or Apple later said. That has nothing to do with the character limit. > I have to wonder what you think Dustin's goal is here? Do you think he's "out to get" Apple or something? You can follow the link I posted elsewhere in reply to Dustin himself. I don’t think it was his goal to harm Apple, however it is definitely some people’s goal, and by posting a false statement, he has created misinformation which such people readily exploit. > there was a massive failure of Apple customer service here No. This is just more speculation from you. As we have already established, you really don’t know what happened. > Why are you so committed to tearing down one person who experienced a problem that nobody should experience? Nobody is tearing anyone down. I’m just saying that we need to hear from him in order to understand what is happening. My response is to you drawing conclusions without waiting to hear from him. He provided incomplete and incorrect information and that has led people to draw faulty conclusions. It would help if he cleared this up. Even just saying “my bad, I was upset at having my account disabled and jumped to the wrong conclusion in my tweet” would help. Remember he doubled down later and made a second false claim about Apple’s policies. Why are you defending this anyway? Just because Apple can make press releases, why would you encourage the spread of false information here in this forum? The moderators do make effort to prevent that, but it takes a certain amount of community support too. It’s pretty simple - you made a list of questions which I agreed was reasonable, but that the clarification is clearly for Dustin to give now. The rest of this discussion stems from you drawing conclusions without waiting for him to reply. |
> incomplete information
> until we have more answers
> You really don’t know what happened.
> we need to hear from him in order to understand what is happening
> the clarification is clearly for Dustin to give now
zepto on the other hand:
> What he wrote in those 280 characters turned to be total bullshit
> he has created misinformation
> He provided incomplete and incorrect information
> made a second false claim
> the spread of false information here
You're talking out of both sides of your mouth. Are you actually waiting for more information from Dustin, or have you already made up your mind and are only waiting for an apology?
> which such people readily exploit
This is again an over the top description. Apple is doing just fine, raking in the money at record rate. Exploit? Exploit how? Dustin hasn't released a 0day security vulnerability here. Relax, Apple is going to be fine, you don't have to run with your musket to the front line to defend the company from certain death. If one Twitter user could actually do so much damage to Apple, if it were that easy to significantly hurt the company, then Apple would be out of business by now.
Even back in the 90s when Apple was "beleaguered", it wasn't internet commenters like you who saved Apple. It was Apple's own change in technology, business strategy, and leadership that saved Apple. You really don't have to go online and "protect" Apple. They are going to be ok. IMO the army of online defenders actually do more harm than good to Apple, because they make it appear like a religious cult. Public criticism of powerful entities is necessary. Some criticism will be accurate, some inaccurate, but in any case it's healthy. The worst scenario would be if individuals are afraid of ever speaking out about Apple or other corporations, for fear of the online mob, and being branded as a criminal, as is being done to Dustin. So many "he basically stole a MacBook Pro" comments, I want to scream.