The Internet as the Greatest Library in Human History—and Its Contradictions

This essay argues that the internet stands as the greatest library in human history, while also exposing the structural flaws of Windows and the suppression of Ken Sakamura’s TRON revolution.

This passage frames the internet as humanity’s greatest library while sharply criticizing Windows’ vulnerabilities and the historical suppression of Japan’s TRON initiative.

2017-06-22
What the internet has brought about may be described as a monumental achievement, for in essence it is the greatest library in the history of humankind.
There is, however, a grave flaw. Because Bill Gates, a greedy fool, crushed the TRON revolution created by Ken Sakamura, a product of Japan, and allowed Windows to dominate the world, the countless defects inherent in this software have been exploited. As a result, contamination by despicable villains—those bearing the DNA of a nation of “bottomless evil” and “plausible lies”—has never ceased.
Bill Gates, having become the wealthiest man in the world, should realize that before donating most of his fortune to foundations he himself controls—whether out of hypocrisy or for tax purposes—his true duty is to make Windows completely flawless.
If he does not, then the many manufacturers Japan proudly offers the world, Ken Sakamura himself, and the Japanese people as a whole will never find peace. It is about time he understood this.

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