reply to post by Choronzon
I know what you mean. Thanks for telling me & others about that. I don't like Microsoft (or IBM) because it's managed by Nazis/Zionists, and
they're helping the criminal-government, which has waged a war on our civil-liberties.
CIA and Google Team Up Again For More Spying

Google is supplying the software, hardware and tech support to US intelligence agencies who are in the process of creating a vast closed source
database for global spy networks to share information.
Google is selling storage and data searching equipment to the CIA, the FBI, the National Security Agency, and other intelligence agencies, who have
come together to build a huge internal government intranet.
Google is also providing the search features for a private Wikipedia-style site, called Intellipedia.
"We are a very small group, and even a lot of people in the federal government don’t know that we exist," said Mike Bradshaw, who leads Google’s
federal government sales team and its 18 employees, yesterday to the San Francisco Chronicle.
The government supply arm of Google has also reportedly entered into a number of other contracts, details of which it says it cannot share.
Google’s partnership with the intelligence network is not new. As we reported in late 2006, An ex-CIA agent Robert David Steele has claimed sources
told him that CIA seed money helped get the company off the ground
Speaking to the Alex Jones Show, Steele elaborated on previous revelations by making it known that the CIA helped bankroll Google at its very
inception. Steele named Google’s CIA point man as Dr. Rick Steinheiser, of the Office of Research and Development.
"I think Google took money from the CIA when it was poor and it was starting up and unfortunately our system right now floods money into spying and
other illegal and largely unethical activities, and it doesn’t fund what I call the open source world," said Steele, citing "trusted individuals"
as his sources for the claim.
"They’ve been together for quite a while," added Steele.
Late last year, new programs of internet monitoring were announced by a freshly created department branch of Homeland Security called the National
Applications Office
The prison industry in the United States: big business (ie: Microsoft/IBM)
or a new form of slavery?

Who is investing? At least 37 states have legalized the contracting of prison labor by private corporations that mount their operations inside
state prisons. The list of such companies contains the cream of U.S. corporate society: IBM, Boeing, Motorola, Microsoft, AT&T, Wireless, Texas
Instrument, Dell, Compaq, Honeywell, Hewlett-Packard, Nortel, Lucent Technologies, 3Com, Intel, Northern Telecom, TWA, Nordstrom’s, Revlon,
Macy’s, Pierre Cardin, Target Stores, and many more. All of these businesses are excited about the economic boom generation by prison labor. Just
between 1980 and 1994, profits went up from $392 million to $1.31 billion. Inmates in state penitentiaries generally receive the minimum wage for
their work, but not all; in Colorado, they get about $2 per hour, well under the minimum. And in privately-run prisons, they receive as little as 17
cents per hour for a maximum of six hours a day, the equivalent of $20 per month. The highest-paying private prison is CCA in Tennessee, where
prisoners receive 50 cents per hour for what they call “highly skilled positions.” At those rates, it is no surprise that inmates find the pay in
federal prisons to be very generous. There, they can earn $1.25 an hour and work eight hours a day, and sometimes overtime. They can send home
$200-$300 per month.
There are forum-threads where that device is mention, on this website:
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Feds: We will search through your laptop files at the border
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Microsoft device helps police pluck evidence from cyberscene
Microsoft seems to be a front company for IBM (owned by Nazis/Zionists):
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How IBM helped the Nazis IBM and the Holocaust
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IBM And Nazi Germany, Researcher Has New Documents On World War II
IBM's Open-Source Lovefest

IBM is now the giant standing between Linux and what the open-source community sees as a Microsoft front company bent on destroying their free
paradise
[edit on 3-5-2008 by ChadAndrewATS]