• edgyspazkid@lemmy.wtf
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    2 hours ago

    GUYS BUT NOW I CAN WORK EVEN FASTER AND EFFICIENT! I DON’T HAVE TO WORRY ABOUT SAVING BECAUSE EVERYTHING IS IN CLOUD! IT’S ALWAYS AVAILABLE! WINDOWS IS MOST USED SOFTWARE ON MARKET!

  • Dalin@lemmy.ml
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    20 hours ago

    The breaking point for me was when I was showered with Copilot+ pop-ups on every single hover. Let me fucking copy/cut/paste/format in peace. I never asked for any of this, and neither did any user of any level of expertise.

    Switched to OnlyOffice as it felt to perfectly answer my needs. There are still some quirks with non-UTF-8 documents, but you know what, I’d rather iron those issues out than be shoved a product I didn’t request nor need at every single interaction I have.

    I highly encourage anyone that hasn’t done already to explore alternatives to the M*crosoft Suite, if they haven’t done it by now. Every update is just the worst form of enshittification known to humankind. Can’t wait to have an intrusive slop AI agent tell me how to do my Maths in the Calculator app next.

    Let apps be just apps again 🗣️🗣️📢

  • Lka1988@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    20 hours ago

    Jesus christ. So glad I ditched MS. It’s like getting out of a cult - once you see it looking in from the outside, you finally realize how terrible it is.

  • Log in | Sign up@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    Some executive noticed that they can’t sell you larger cloud storage if you haven’t used it up.

    Then someone on the office copilot team said they wished they had access to more comprehensive data about what people write with office apps and the rest is history.

  • silt_haddock@lemmy.world
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    24 hours ago

    I would love to switch to LibreOffice (or similar) but I haven’t been able to find a way to get tables to work in the same way they do in Excel, and that’s a deal breaker for me. None of the suggested approaches come close to being able to select a range, press ctrl+t and immediately be able to filter/sort/lookup using column names from anywhere in the document. I use that feature dozens of times a day, and so does everyone in my circles that deals with financial data.

  • TheProtagonist@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    If you mind that Word documents are stored in the cloud by default, you need to modify the default setting

    …or just use some other app for your private documents and Word only for work-related stuff or such. I use Word/Office at work and have absolutely no issue with all the documentation being saved in the cloud. But for private stuff I would have to think twice if I want this.

  • ZMoney@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    This might be when I finally jump ship and go to Linux. I should do Mint, right?

    • Alaknár@sopuli.xyz
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      1 day ago

      They’d break SO MANY international and data security laws if they tried breaking into people’s OneDrive, it’d be hilarious to see the number of lawsuits they’d lose by default.

      • shneancy@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        they’re probably already doing that to a smaller degree, and slightly protecting themselves with an obscure clause in their TOS. besides, you only lose lawsuits if you get caught - and churning things through AI is a great way to erase any fingerprints that identifies stolen data

        • Alaknár@sopuli.xyz
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          24 hours ago

          they’re probably already doing that to a smaller degree, and slightly protecting themselves with an obscure clause in their TOS

          As soon as you find proof, you have literally free money up for the taking at any court.

          you only lose lawsuits if you get caught - and churning things through AI is a great way to erase any fingerprints that identifies stolen data

          That’s… not how any of this works…

          • shneancy@lemmy.world
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            19 hours ago

            an obscure clause in TOS won’t be a small print of an evil villain speech exposing their plot in clear wording. what it would be is something worded vaguely enough to make things seem like the end user technically agreed to what was being done, it could also be an “and” where you expected “or”, or an ommision of a specific thing… my point being - it’s always going to be a technicality that in case of a lawsuit would be a valid defence in the eyes of law

            it very much is how it works though? show me a lawsuit someone lost before they got caught commiting a crime. and how would you even go about proving that your unpublished documents were used to train AI? even an entire life’s work of one person is just a speck in the training data, it’s impossible to definitively prove your work was stolen and used to train an AI. besides there will always be plausible deniability that the AI just made shit up that happened to look kinda like what you once wrote

            • Alaknár@sopuli.xyz
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              12 hours ago

              an obscure clause in TOS won’t be a small print of an evil villain speech exposing their plot in clear wording. what it would be is something worded vaguely enough to make things seem like the end user technically agreed to what was being done

              That means nothing. Illegal terms can’t be enforced in contracts or terms of service.

              it’s always going to be a technicality that in case of a lawsuit would be a valid defence in the eyes of law

              No. Written law always takes precedence. If they spied on your data stored in OneDrive, they’d lose by default the moment the case hit the courthouse.

              As for your second paragraph: yeah, I agree. If they did that, the damage would’ve already been done. But it would kill the business once found out. The benefit is not worth the risk.

              For example: you’re saying that they would use it to train AI, right?

              They don’t train AI. They get a trained model from OpenAI.