The biggest takeaways from the article are that trust is not a linear system. Businesses think that bad decisions erode trust but can be compensated for through perfectly calculated corrective actions once they begin to see that decline in trust. It should be most telling that they tried this shit at all. They only tried it because they thought you were too stupid to notice and would be meek enough to accept it and when you weren’t, they simply looked for another angle.
Second, it assumes that trust can ever be won back. And for the most part it can’t. I understand there are a myriad of issues that keep people tied to Windows, but I migrated to Linux. I learned the system and I made sacrifices with pieces of software I wasn’t able to completely replace, but I’ve made peace with that. I am comfortable where I’m at now and there is nothing, literally nothing that would ever see me return to Windows at this point.
I’m always thinking about this article, Breaching the Trust Thermocline Is the Biggest Hidden Risk in Business
The biggest takeaways from the article are that trust is not a linear system. Businesses think that bad decisions erode trust but can be compensated for through perfectly calculated corrective actions once they begin to see that decline in trust. It should be most telling that they tried this shit at all. They only tried it because they thought you were too stupid to notice and would be meek enough to accept it and when you weren’t, they simply looked for another angle.
Second, it assumes that trust can ever be won back. And for the most part it can’t. I understand there are a myriad of issues that keep people tied to Windows, but I migrated to Linux. I learned the system and I made sacrifices with pieces of software I wasn’t able to completely replace, but I’ve made peace with that. I am comfortable where I’m at now and there is nothing, literally nothing that would ever see me return to Windows at this point.
Too stupid to notice? No. Too meek to do anything about it? Yes! That sums up Windows users in a nutshell.