Monday, September 17, 2007
Yahoo's Moral Decline
The following is not news, but it is my moral duty to make an observation in this direction.
Lately, I have noticed that Yahoo has hit a moral low. The fact that Yahoo's "Featured" displayed the headline: "Emmys best dressed" makes me ponder on their desperate position in the fight for web-search supremacy. Likewise, their OMG features as well as their the9 internet TV channel are other examples of their despicable strategy to attract more users. Such a strategy, namely appealing to the base desires of the populace, is simply shameful, as it induces the mobs to indulge in such banalities.
Gone are the times when Yahoo used to be a respectable website serving one purpose: an index of other websites. But then again, what is Yahoo if not a brute that represents the vices of man?
Ave Google!
Lately, I have noticed that Yahoo has hit a moral low. The fact that Yahoo's "Featured" displayed the headline: "Emmys best dressed" makes me ponder on their desperate position in the fight for web-search supremacy. Likewise, their OMG features as well as their the9 internet TV channel are other examples of their despicable strategy to attract more users. Such a strategy, namely appealing to the base desires of the populace, is simply shameful, as it induces the mobs to indulge in such banalities.
Gone are the times when Yahoo used to be a respectable website serving one purpose: an index of other websites. But then again, what is Yahoo if not a brute that represents the vices of man?
Ave Google!
The Wallstadt Review