The new Windows 10 Cloud, although leaked on the Internet, has not been formally confirmed by Microsoft. Of course, analyzes and complaints have already begun by users who have installed it and say that this is another version of the failed Windows RT.
Epic CEO and co-founder Tim Sweeney has even gone a step further by publicly stating on Twitter that Windows 10 Cloud is “ransomware”, a form of maliciousυ λογισμικού που κλειδώνει τα αρχεία των υπολογιστών ζητώντας ransom to restore access.
"Windows 10 Cloud is ransomware: Locks the Windows software you purchased and tries to make you pay to unlock it with an upgrade to Windows Pro", He mentioned in a tweet dated February 7.
"Firefox is blocked. Google Chrome is blocked. Google search has been blocked as a web browser search option. "OpenGL, Vulcan, OpenVR, Oculus VR have been blocked," he said.
Windows Cloud is ransomware: It locks out Windows software you have previously purchased and makes you pay to unlock it by upgrading to Windows Pro.
- Tim Sweeney (@TimSweeneyEpic) February 7, 2017
“Η Microsoft έχει κάνει μια τεράστια κίνηση ενάντια σε όλο το οικοσύστημα του PC: @Adobe, @Autodesk, #Valve, @EA, @Activision, @google, @Mozilla. Όλα έχουν μπλοκαριστεί. Τα Windows Cloud θα κλέψουν τη βιβλιοcase των παιχνιδιών του Steam για PC και θα σας ζητήσουν λύτρα για να σας τη δώσουν πίσω. ”
Microsoft is making a huge move against the whole PC ecosystem: @Adobe, @Autodesk, #Valve, @EA, @Activision, @Google, @Mozilla. All blocked.
- Tim Sweeney (@TimSweeneyEpic) February 7, 2017
Is true;
Windows 10 Cloud appears to be a Windows 10 OS version that focuses exclusively on the Windows App Store, just like the Windows RT that 2012 has released with Surface RT.
There is always the possibility that the upcoming Windows 10 Cloud will be offered to OEMs absolutely free to install on their devices, and this will help reduce prices. Microsoft is of course expected to offer an integrated upgrade capability that will allow Windows 10 Cloud users to upgrade to Windows 10 Pro and thus be able to use Win32 applications.
This is more or less what Mr. Sweeney criticizes, arguing that users should pay for the upgrade, calling Windows 10 Cloud "ransomware."
So we could say that it's not ransomware, but a way to offer cheaper Windows in the market if you're happy with apps that are only distributed through the Windows Store. Epic's CEO appears to be criticizing Microsoft's aggressive push for Universal Windows Apps, arguing that the company is actually trying to destroy the Win32 ecosystem by forcing users to switch entirely to the Windows Store.