this post was submitted on 07 Jun 2024
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[–] [email protected] 90 points 5 months ago (5 children)

“The ability to disable the…feature during the setup process…” does not mean opt in, that means opt out.

Knowing windows setup, you need to click customize during the setup process and then go through several setup pages before you’re presented this option (or have to dig into additional/advanced settings to find it).

Most people won’t do this, won’t know how to do this, or will receive the pc with the initial setup complete and won’t know if this is on or off.

[–] [email protected] 51 points 5 months ago (2 children)

And even if you find it, it will have an idiotic and obscure name, like “advanced history experience” or something absolutely nondescript

[–] [email protected] 32 points 5 months ago

Also when you try to disable it they will use all sorts of dark pattern pop ups to dissuade you from disabling it.

[–] [email protected] -2 points 5 months ago (1 children)

The exact wording, which, again, is in the article you didn't bother to read before posting, is "Quickly find things you've seen with Recall. Recall helps you find things you've seen on your PC when you allow Windows to save snapshots of your screen every few seconds".

Seriously, I don't even like the feature. I will absolutely turn it off, just like I did Timeline, and I expect it'll be gone in the next version, just like Timeline was.

But I did look at the stupid article before posting. So there's that.

[–] [email protected] 12 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (1 children)

So, are we done berating everybody passive-aggressively with just a sprinkle of condescension? Because maybe, just maybe, I was making a remark about the general practice of Microsoft to hide stuff behind nondescript bullshit names (especially in non-English versions where the English bullshit name gets translated literally most of the time, which yields even more nondescript results).

Maybe, just maybe, you chose the wrong comments to act up on “PeOpLe NoT rEaDiNg ThE aRtIcLe” when all that was posted about was inconsequential stuff about the precise clicks needed to turn a feature off that's not even in the respective menus yet. So this is not someone talking bullshit because they misunderstood the headline about a murder case or something.

All that was said was about practices Microsoft has abused into oblivion: Hiding stuff behind obscure menus and hiding stuff behind obscure names. The comments made were a persiflage of exactly that.

Maybe, just maybe, the precise placement and wording in a menu that doesn't even exist yet is a topic inconsequential enough that people will not read the tenth article about the general subject (Copilot becoming “opt-in”) to make sure they wouldn't miss this super irrelevant point to the story. A point which you guessed from screenshots that haven't reached production yet (even if they are likely to go into production as shown, it can still change), so your condescending attitude is based on wobbly grounds.

There are tons of articles where people post absolutely wrong and quite absurd stuff because they didn't read the article. Some of them even matter (politics, world events). So let's criticize people when they don't read through actually important articles before posting, and agree that it's okay to not read the exact article posted on unimportant sidenote stuff if one knows about the thing in general. Because if I'd be only allowed to comment on the article posted itself, I wouldn't need Lemmy, I could just comment on the site that posted the article in the first place.

Besides: You did notice that you commented on two different people, yes? Because you sure sounded like you didn't read the usernames before commenting and thought you always replied to the same guy.

[–] [email protected] 34 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

not to mention they are known to re enable telemetry on systems after updates.

i doubt this will be any different.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 5 months ago (1 children)

This is the screen the user is presented during setup.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 5 months ago (2 children)

Even without all the invasion of privacy implications, I'm skeptical it would even work. Source: 20 years of "Windows is checking for a solution to the problem" that has never worked even once.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 5 months ago (1 children)

I've actually had those troubleshooters work for me several times in recent years. Mostly fixing networking issues.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 months ago (1 children)

I guess for the basic stuff I do when I've had programs crash I've never seen it do anything, but nice to know it's not completely useless

[–] [email protected] 5 points 5 months ago

Frankly, this is one of the areas I'm most looking forward to seeing what integrated AI can do for Windows. A couple of months ago I was having trouble with getting my printer to work and what I ended up doing was taking a screenshot of the printer settings and pasting the literal image of the screen into Bing Chat to ask it what I was doing wrong. It was able to parse my settings out of the image and figured out what I needed to change to make the printer work.

Having a troubleshooting AI like that that can actually "read" the entire state of my machine would be great.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 months ago

They've fixed an otherwise aneurism inducing audio problem a few times for me.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 5 months ago (2 children)

There is a screenshot of the opt-in screen in the article. There is no default, just two buttons to say yes or no.

I swear, outrage should only be allowed based on the amount of work one is willing to put in before expressing it. If you don't do the reading, you don't get to be publicly angry. It'd save us all so much trouble.

For the record, the feature was always optional, as per the original announcement. Presumably the change is it is now part of the setup flow where it was going to be a settings toggle instead.

Which is, incidentally, how this used to work the first time Windows had this feature, back when it was called "Timeline" in Windows 10.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 5 months ago (1 children)

The screenshot doesn’t show preceding flow to reach it, but I did miss the “requires windows hello to enable” bit, which does suggest that wherever it is, it would have to be opt-in.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

It doesn't because that's one of the four or five screens during the initial Windows setup where you opt in and out of all the other spyware features. They all look the same and are prompted in sequence. Unless they're doing something very weird you absolutely have to make a choice on each of them and they are unskippable otherwise.

I mean, you don't have to know, if you don't know Windows you don't have to recognize them. But if you do it's pretty obivous, so you... you know, could have asked or looked it up.

Or gone through the link, because come on, you didn't. You were obviously just reacting to the headline.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago (1 children)

The problem with MS is how they change these things in the future. It may be a clear choice now, but they will find a way to make it easier to "accidentally" opt in, or they'll simply change it to an opt-out. They've been doing this sort of bullshit for quite some time now.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago (1 children)

They really haven't. Their onboarding flow has included this exact type of forced option for advertising data, location data and bug reports for what now? A decade, give or take? They have a very specific design language for these.

Plus, and I keep reminding people of this and they keep forgetting, they already made this feature once. It was on Windows 10, it was called Timeline, everybody turned it off and they never did much to change that, instead just adding a less intrusive offline version of it and ultimately removing it by the launch of 11 until... well, now.

What I don't understand is why you guys are so set on this specific list of grievances. You don't need to dismiss the improvements they are making. They are improvements and they are a good thing.

If you are set on rooting for or against OSs (and why would you, stop it, that's weird) you can instead just point out that... well, the feature itself is still garbage. Even with a default opt out, even assuming it's fully secure. It just covers no valid use case, unless you're starring in Memento II. It remains a security vulnerability because social engineering and shared computers are a thing. It is exactly as dumb and useless as Timeline was, and there's a reason nobody remembers that happened. The lack of AI search really, really isn't why that failed.

You don't need to come across as a paranoid conspiracy theorist making up slippery slopes to keep criticising this about the things they are actually fixing. There are plenty of valid issues with it at a fundamental design level they are not changing. Being so wildly speculative about the eeeeevil corporate MS lying to us just makes the criticisms sound less valid when the actual thing they are doing is still pretty useless at best, and most likely really bad.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Look, I use Microsoft products. I have since PC-DOS became MS-DOS. You are plain wrong. Just look at the whole fiasco where MS is practically forcing users to tie their windows license to an account. It used to be easy to circumvent, nowadays it's hidden like Waldo. They constantly do this shit. Stop shilling for corporations.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago

It is amazing to live in a world where pointing out that a feature is a trainwreck is "shilling for corporations".

That's the part I just don't get. Why you guys need people to be in denial or toeing a certain line, facts be damned. It's not enough to be critical, people have to be critical at all times, of all things in the exact way everybody else is.

The account crap is not a valid counterexample. Windows 11 (Home, at least) was always explicitly presented as requiring an account. The methods to install without it were always an usupported workaround. It does suck that they went the Apple path and traded up-front price for data mining, I would absolutely prefer the alternative on principle, even if I was already logging in on Win10 for work reasons. If there was a natively compatible Windows alternative without this requirement I'd default to that. My Windows installs have most of the related features disabled, where I can do that. I just recently got to a place where I can disable OneDrive now and I am incredibly happy about it, since we're talking about it.

But it's not a slippery slope, it's them gradually closing the unsupported loophole that was keeping some people from flipping out about it as it becomes clearer that vas majority of user are, in fact, logging in with a MS account.

This is a datamining feature that is immediately unpopular and they are actively backtracking on it. There is clear precedent for this exact same functionality and it didn't go that way. That's not shilling, that's just how reality worked last time this happened. Literally this. The same feature implemented in a very similar way.

Again, there is plenty of legitimate stuff to complain about here. A lot of it is terrible even after the changes to opt-in and security. You don't need to make up a fictional future scenario where they un-fix the stuff they are fixing. You can dislike the fixed version for actual, good reasons without having to sound like a weird online cultist.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

Remember when making a Microsoft cloud account was optional during Windows installs, and it was trivia to skip/opt out?

Pepperidge Farm remembers.

They are 100% going to do the same thing here.