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By Woody Leonhard | InfoWorld /Posted on June 18, 2014

 

Michael Arrington -- founder of TechCrunch (which made him notorious), CrunchFund (which made him rich and notorious), CrunchPad (which died in flames), and a long-standing Internet presence and opponent of paid blogs -- received an interesting email, which he posted yesterday on Uncrunched. The mailer claimed to be willing to pay Arrington to write a blog endorsing Microsoft's embattled Internet Explorer browser using #IEbloggers as a tag. As Arrington exclaimed,

 

InfoWorld/ full read here/ http://www.infoworld.com/t/web-browsers/microsoft-allegedly-paying-bloggers-promote-ie-244557
You can lie on the Internet but you can't lie to the Internet 🙂
Now this I find incredibly humorous... IE is now considered so incredibly bad or unsafe that they have to PAY reviewers to try it LOL!!!

 

Microsoft of course has issued a denial that it wasn't really from them stating "This action by a vendor is not representative of the way Microsoft works with bloggers or other members of the media. The program has been suspended.""

 

The real question is: was that program suspended due to embarrasment?  Or was this attempt at purchasing good reviews merely an unusually funny attempt at phishing somehow?
It reminds me of all the silly reward schemes the create to get people to use Bing.  If you have to pay people to use your search engine...
The best use for IE: To download Firefox or Chrome!
@

This is exactly what I use IE for. After reinstalling OS, the first thing I do is download FF from IE. And then goodbye to IE. One can measure the downfall of IE by the news that MS is paying bloggers to promote IE. Simply pathetic.

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