I don't think boycotting is going to do enough to make Microsoft understand what we look for in a console, and understand the kind of responsibility and fool-proofing is needed for the kind of technology they plan to use in the Xbox One.
What we need is an open letter, not one to Microsoft, but to Microsoft's shareholders. If we can explain the technology used in Xbox One, the responsibilities that are required for their use, and the consequences and serious concerns around it at a level they can understand, then perhaps they'll be more wary of Microsoft's decisions. Perhaps we can also persuade them to demand a shareholders' meeting with both the executive boards of Microsoft and its Xbox division, just so they can see just who these executives making these decisions are, how they react to the questions we have arisen, and why they have angered the community so much. It might just make them demand the firings of a few individuals who's made one too many mistakes and avoided their punishment...
What we need is an open letter, not one to Microsoft, but to Microsoft's shareholders. If we can explain the technology used in Xbox One, the responsibilities that are required for their use, and the consequences and serious concerns around it at a level they can understand, then perhaps they'll be more wary of Microsoft's decisions. Perhaps we can also persuade them to demand a shareholders' meeting with both the executive boards of Microsoft and its Xbox division, just so they can see just who these executives making these decisions are, how they react to the questions we have arisen, and why they have angered the community so much. It might just make them demand the firings of a few individuals who's made one too many mistakes and avoided their punishment...