I disagree. Marketing does not have to be in everydamnblogpost.
It's just annoying ;-)
While they attempt (and apparently succeed) to make you believe that exploiting Chrome is exceptional and it's such a super high security program:
The bottom line is, 2 guys showed up with a complete remote exploit of Chrome. And there are more exploits that are obviously unreleased, and some that will get released each year.
That is the true bottom line.
So again, while the article is nice and clear, the exploit is a good pony job as well - the marketing behind it makes the read annoying. It's a trend and it's not just Google. You even justify is as if marketing was a required thing to have and if you don't try to do it, you're just missing out. Well, I digress.
The only place I see some rhetoric is the second sentence of the first paragraph, the second paragraph, and the first sentence of the second to last. It's tame: it emphasises the exploit being very involved, which is well supported by the rest of the report. Everything else is necessary detail that describes the progression of the exploit from Pinkie Pie's point of view.
Your contributions, on the other hand, are much more content-free, being mostly value judgements against Chrome's PR or the supposed overconfidence of their programmers. And while you do brush on more technical matters, you do so by name-dropping products rather than being informative and describing the relevant security property.
It's just annoying ;-)
While they attempt (and apparently succeed) to make you believe that exploiting Chrome is exceptional and it's such a super high security program:
The bottom line is, 2 guys showed up with a complete remote exploit of Chrome. And there are more exploits that are obviously unreleased, and some that will get released each year.
That is the true bottom line.
So again, while the article is nice and clear, the exploit is a good pony job as well - the marketing behind it makes the read annoying. It's a trend and it's not just Google. You even justify is as if marketing was a required thing to have and if you don't try to do it, you're just missing out. Well, I digress.