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June 26, 2001 Microsoft Proceeds With Controversial Smart Tags On its website, Microsoft shows an example of a news story on MSNBC.com where the smart tags have converted the text for "Honeywell" into a link (represented by a dashed underline) that takes the user directly to Honeywell's website, to a stock quote and to other information about the company. This means that text on any webpage -- including new stories, articles, author's book excerpts, online fiction, book reviews, resumes, databases, etc. -- could be turned into a SmartTag link without the permission or knowledge of the creator of the content. Supposedly, website publishers can include a meta tag in a webpage that prevents the SmartTags from being displayed. Unfortunately, for publishers, the meta tag must be placed in the code of every single individual webpage on the website, a burdensome process for most publications. This is the tag: <meta name="MSSmartTagsPreventParsing" content="TRUE">
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