Microsoft non-pologizes for misleading judge, seizing No-IP's DNS


Yesterday, Microsoft convinced a judge to let it take over No-IP's DNS service, shutting down name service for many websites, in order to stop a malware attack. Today, the company fake-pologized.

Microsoft's PR mailout says that "some customers" experienced "temporary" loss of service but that everything was fine now; shortly after, the company's PR emailed journalists again to say that things were still massively screwed up. It blamed the whole mess on a "technical error," but when you look at what the judge believed about No-IP when the order came down, it's clear that the "technical error" was a gross overstatement of both No-IP's involvement in Microsoft's woes, and the best way to sort them out.

Microsoft Insists That No-IP 'Outage' Was Due To A 'Technical Error' Rather Than Gross Abuse Of Legal Process [Mike Masnick/Techdirt]

(Image: Sorry on Australia Day-sky writing, National Apology Day , National Sorry Day 2014 "such unthinkable theft", butupa, CC-BY)