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in reply to Miguel Afonso Caetano

Why do people use latest versions of Microsoft Office? The one that corresponds to Windows 7 still works just fine and has none of that shit.
in reply to Miguel Afonso Caetano

I'll make sure it's turned on while I test some VBA code to generate gigabytes of pseudorandom numbers and create a bunch of charts from them.
in reply to Miguel Afonso Caetano

What, exactly, isn't clear to people about "to improve Microsoft products and services, you grant to Microsoft a worldwide and royalty-free intellectual property license to use Your Content".
microsoft.com/en/servicesagree…

It's there. It's always been there. And no, you can't "turn it off".

"If you are a writer"? NO ONE should be using software with such an awkward clause in its license.

Like a landlord that comes to snoop in your stuff "to improve our housing facilities". Come on.

This entry was edited (3 months ago)
in reply to Valentijn Sessink

@Valentijn Sessink @Miguel Afonso Caetano So if I use Wordpad or Notepad, and save things exclusively to my computer and thumb drive, can they literally read the files on my computer? Does it matter what version of Windows I use? I have XP, 7, and 11. I recently read about telemetry, etc. being included in 7, but I can't imagine they could do this with XP. What if I use something like Jarte, or Notepad 2, which aren't made by Microsoft?
in reply to Valentijn Sessink

@valentyn I mean, what isn't clear about that is that people have been saying for years that "that's in every service's terms of service, it's boilerplate text" (which is approximately true) and "it doesn't mean anything" (which is *mostly* but not entirely true).

So this framing feels a lot like victim blaming to me. There *are* realistically no services that don't have this clause, and this exact same clause is used to deal with a legitimate legal issue (namely, vagueness about what constitutes a derived work in a network context), so arguing "well it's always been there and you should've noticed" really doesn't help anyone.

If you want to criticize something, that criticism is better aimed at the culture and legal environment that have allowed this boilerplate to persist for so long without scrutiny.

in reply to Miguel Afonso Caetano

Hey @libreoffice you might want to highlight this is happening when encouraging people to switch to LibreOffice?
This entry was edited (3 months ago)
in reply to FediThing 🏳️‍🌈

@FediThing Hey @libreoffice also while we're at it, I submitted a bunch of serious bugreports and I think I'm ready to pay someone for fixing them (unless it costs thousands of dollars), because I want to escape Microsoft products so bad but LibreOffice writer just has a bunch of bugs that make it impossible to produce large documents consistently.

Maybe some people will find this reply and respond. Thanks.

#libreoffice #writer #bug #bounty

in reply to Sheri Gulam

@vort3 Thanks for offering to fund developers! You can find them on this page, so try contacting them (or the ecosystem companies): documentfoundation.org/certifi…
Unknown parent

Human, because they've been using them since they first saw a computer and it's hard to change one's habits, especially if the end result of such a change is being able to do the same things you started with, just differently?
in reply to Miguel Afonso Caetano

I wonder how all the big corporations feel about having their secrets scraped?