The way the title is written out is pretty clear. It's that If you are looking for a paperweight (as in, getting your own because you don't have any), you can buy the Quest 2 and then simply act in a way so that your Facebook account gets locked. You, as a reader, are creating a causal, certain relationship (buy a quest 2, get your facebook account locked) where none exists. If the "looking for a Paperweight" wasn't there, I'd agree with you. Clickbait and misleading. As it's written? Sorry, but no. Nor does the content of the news post coincide with your extensively typed clickbait description. The title and initial sentences are also meant to be sarcastic in tone.
I'm all for constructive criticism, but I'm also all for convincing arguments. And I know how I wrote the title; how you read it, however, is out of my control.
Well, in all honesty both readings of the title are equally accurate, as the wording neither indicates nor denies the order of causality in the relation it describes. The sentence is truncated, meaning there's more room for interpretation left in it.
Reading this as
"Buy an Oculus Quest 2,
then (do something to) get your FB account locked" (which from what I can tell is what you intended to say) and
"Buy an Oculus Quest 2,
and they will lock your FB account"
are about equally reasonable readings of the title. The latter might be more of a vernacular reading (along the verbal rhythm of various "do/get A, and you'll also get B"), but it's not an unreasonable reading. Substituting "and" for "then" opens up the possible meanings of the sentence by quite a lot.
You made a political statement in reference and comparison to a piece of technology. Such was both seriously misguided and wildly inappropriate.
Discussing whether or not a company has the right to require a user account for you to use their product is an inherently political question.
Actually, that would be a very good legal precedent. People have the right to use their own property with or without the involvement of the manufacturer.
Let me quote myself, as it apparently bears repeating:
I wasn't commenting on whether or not it was a good thing. I said it's not going to happen. Which it isn't. Ever. I can't imagine any legal reasoning for why a service provider wouldn't be allowed to require registration to provide their service. The only feasible means of alleviating stuff like this is regulating what data they are allowed to collect and how they can use it, and then enforcing these rules strictly (after all, such measures would pay for themselves given the high likelihood of enormous fines).
The main objection here seems to be that the required account is a
Facebook account rather than an
Oculus account, which makes this a debate of whether we as a society should accept corporations to exist on a scale such as this or whether they need to be broken up due to their conglomerate nature putting unreasonable pressures on users.
And, again, you were saying this is not political?