Kiwon
08-26-2009, 05:05 AM
There's a worldwide recession. Microsoft can't afford to shoot a new photo. :)
Actually, I think it's called demographics. Poland has about 3% minorities.
Now if a Polish company exchanged a white head for a black one in advertising for their products in the US would anyone even notice?
http://www.foxnews.com/images/555796/1_61_a320.jpg
Microsoft Edits Black Man Out of Photo, Apologizes
LOS ANGELES — Software giant Microsoft Corp. is apologizing for altering a photo on its Web site to change the race of one of the people shown in the picture.
A photo on the Seattle-based company's U.S. Web site shows two men, one Asian and one black, and a white woman seated at a conference room table. But on the Web site of Microsoft's Polish business unit, the black man's head has been replaced with that of a white man. The color of his hand remains unchanged.
The photo editing sparked criticism online. Some bloggers said Poland's ethnic homogeneity may have played a role in changing the photo.
"We are looking into the details of this situation," Microsoft spokesperson Lou Gellos said in a statement Tuesday. "We apologize and are in the process of pulling down the image."
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,542901,00.html
Actually, I think it's called demographics. Poland has about 3% minorities.
Now if a Polish company exchanged a white head for a black one in advertising for their products in the US would anyone even notice?
http://www.foxnews.com/images/555796/1_61_a320.jpg
Microsoft Edits Black Man Out of Photo, Apologizes
LOS ANGELES — Software giant Microsoft Corp. is apologizing for altering a photo on its Web site to change the race of one of the people shown in the picture.
A photo on the Seattle-based company's U.S. Web site shows two men, one Asian and one black, and a white woman seated at a conference room table. But on the Web site of Microsoft's Polish business unit, the black man's head has been replaced with that of a white man. The color of his hand remains unchanged.
The photo editing sparked criticism online. Some bloggers said Poland's ethnic homogeneity may have played a role in changing the photo.
"We are looking into the details of this situation," Microsoft spokesperson Lou Gellos said in a statement Tuesday. "We apologize and are in the process of pulling down the image."
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,542901,00.html