That's very poor and arrogant answer about not support these libraries
since many commercial third party applications rely on them whether they
are "ancient" or not.  By not including the libraries or having some
package available for them you're basically telling users to fend for
themselves or switch to a distro that has such support.

Ubuntu is not going to garner any commercial support if you refuse to
support commercial applications that use those libraries, it's that
simple. I expected this type of behavior from someone like Microsoft or
Adobe, but not from Ubuntu.

-- 
libstdc++5 removal breaks non-ubuntu applications
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/431091
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