It's not part of the content area, but above it. The browser decides what it paints in its window. And apparently Microsoft thinks pushing an ad above a competitors page is a good idea.
To the people who care, it's another reminder on why they don't trust Microsoft. For the rest, it's just another ad. Disregarded.
Edit: I find the term "inject" in the article's title to be misleading, because it sounds like doing HTML injection. It's more shoving than injecting.
To the people who care, it's another reminder on why they don't trust Microsoft. For the rest, it's just another ad. Disregarded.
Edit: I find the term "inject" in the article's title to be misleading, because it sounds like doing HTML injection. It's more shoving than injecting.