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this post was submitted on 03 Oct 2023
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So? Sure you can't get rid of it but also you don't have to use it.
Despite what this article is trying to imply you're not actually forced to do any backups, so Microsoft are not seeing your information. Also it's probably be encrypted anyway, but who knows.
You don't have to use it, so this entire article is basically a big while load of nothing.
Lemme guess. You're against auto-updating, too?
Yeah? Obviously? If they roll out a update that fucks up your computer you're out of luck. Sure you should always have recent backups but it might be more time effective to wait till all the bugs are fixed.
Not even to mention that I should have the final say in what happens with a device that I brought and own.
Sick of auto updates fucking up your solution but too lazy to do your own backups? Boy howdy to I have the solution for you!
People do have control over their devices You have the control to not use the application.
Why should I waste hard drive space that I paid for to store a component that I neither require nor utilize? If I'm already on a machine that is pretty close to my drive limitations (and I am), why should I simply accept further reduction in my computer's capabilities?
This was the same argument Microsoft made about Internet Explorer during the antitrust lawsuit. Yet somehow, when faced with the possibility of a forced split, they managed to find a way.
Realistically, you're probably not utilizing a good 90% of your operating system's features on Windows. Is this backup crap good? No, but it's also a drop in a bucket.
Sure, but stuff like defrag, etc. are there for good reasons, and I'll be glad to have them if I ever do need them. Onedrive and Backup are literally only there to make Microsoft money, and having them on my system will never be of benefit to me.
By using Windows, you probably already opted in to these things from accepting their EULA. It's a shitty practice, but it's well within their purview.
It's also well within the users purview to complain about it... Also for people to figure out how to rip it out of a system as well.
What's in the EULA? That the software is installed, what are you complaining about exactly?
If you don't use the software it's irrelevant.
I'm not complaining about anything. I agree with you that it's irrelevant, just turn it off
I'm not trying to claim they aren't allowed to do it. The fact that it's legal doesn't make it right.
It might be a preview of whats coming though, MS would conceivably at some point move to a cloud based OS completely at some point
thats their plan they've stated elsewhere.
Pretty sure the next thing we'll see after 11 is cloud desktop, judging by the scuttlebutt
You should read EULA every once in a while.
With Windows10 you already accepted that they will collect and share data. What is good faith to them remains to be seen but as a rule of hand I don't trust them for anything. In short, yes... Microsoft is seeing your information.
Spoken like a true Stockholm syndrome Windows user.
I'm sorry I don't care about what you care about as much as you do.