Microsoft sparks race row

QueEx

Rising Star
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Microsoft sparks race row
after removing black face from ad</font size></center>




race_blunder_605991a.jpg

Microsoft say that all four people responsible for editing the picture left the company some time ago



The Times (London)
Chris Ayres in Los Angeles
August 27, 2009


<font size="3">In the first picture, he is a smiling, grandfatherly black man, with salt and pepper hair and a smart grey suit. In the second, the suit remains, but the black man has become white, and a decade younger, with slicked-back hair. Yet not all is different: he still has a black hand.</font size>

“Empower your people with the IT tools they need,” reads the caption. But the use of tools to change the image — used in its original form to promote Microsoft’s business productivity software on its American website — has caused outrage.

In the original picture, the black man sits between a white woman and an Asian man. On the Polish version of the same website, there is not a black face to be seen. The two versions were widely circulated on the internet yesterday as it emerged that Microsoft had doctored the image to remove the black man.

No explanation for the change was given, but many believed that the image was “whitened” because Poland is one of the world’s most ethnically homogeneous countries. Almost 97 per cent of the population claim Polish nationality largely due to its radically altered borders after the Second World War.

Twitter users and bloggers were voicing their surprise and outrage yesterday. “In this day and age, this is shocking,” wrote one Twitterer, Barry McCauler, who goes by the nickname McBazza. “Unacceptable.”

Microsoft used its own Twitter feed to apologise. “We are looking into the details of this situation,” a company spokesman said. “We apologise and are in the process of pulling down the image.”

Later, a spokeswoman for Microsoft in Poland said that the doctoring was a “simple mistake” and was not racially motivated. The picture was taken in September last year, she said, and all four people responsible for editing it had left the company some time ago.

“We would really like to apologise,” she said. “We are a multiracial company and there isn’t a chance any of us are racist.”


http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/technology/article6811478.ece
 
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One Polish newspaper's reaction:
Perhaps the most influential national daily, Gazeta Wyborcza, had its say Wednesday in an article entitled "The Black Hand of Microsoft." Gazeta Wyborcza opted for a less than sympathetic tone. "The black man's face was removed digitally," wrote the paper, "but they forgot about his hand."​
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The full Polish reaction here.


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This should be in the same thread that the Loreal or Revelon thread that stated Black women couldn't work for them. Call it the corporate racist thread.
 
This is how affirmative action got rubbed in our faces. Before affirmative action, blacks were setting up shop and hiring other blacks thus spurring economic independence. After the advent of the policy, black personal business slowed, and white animosity heightened although white womanhood reaped the lion's share of its benefit. Due to the stigma of affirmative action, blacks are pressured to work thrice as harder than their white counterparts. And due to cronyism and other involving factors, blacks also stunt their upwardly growth in the corporate society.
 

So I take it there'll be no white people in the adds they'll be pushing in Africa then? :rolleyes:

probably will be. You know how we embrace white people.

But if I was making a product targeting Blacks, I would make one of the people Black. Same if I was targeting Indians, I would probably make on them an Indian.

Or women or whatever.
 
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