• circuscritic@lemmy.ca
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    1 month ago

    Even if you trust that one feature will actually be disabled, that was just one example.

    Do you really believe you can disable and remove all of the numerous data collection and spyware components that are baked into all aspects of the OS?

    I’m not saying no one should use Windows 11, but they should be honest with themselves about the trade-off they’re accepting.

    • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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      1 month ago

      Even if you trust that one feature will actually be disabled, that was just one example.

      The other one mentioned was the start menu ads. Those can also be turned off with a simple toggle in the settings. Finding this was as simple as Googling “turn off windows start menu ads”, it was the top result.

      Do you really believe you can disable and remove all of the numerous data collection and spyware components that are baked into all aspects of the OS?

      Yes. Because Windows is used by a lot of big giant corporations that would sue the hell out of Microsoft if it wasn’t possible to disable those features.

      • Richard@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        First of all, there are specialised Enterprise distributions of M$ Windows. Furthermore, what ground would any company have to sue M$ on what the latter put in their own operating system?

        • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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          1 month ago

          I work for a big giant corporation and plenty of its computers don’t run Enterprise Windows.

          A lawsuit would come in the case that Microsoft was lying about whether you could disable those features. Microsoft has put toggles for them into the settings, if it turns out that those toggles don’t actually disable the things they claim to disable then that’s where Microsoft is going to face legal issues. Do you really think Microsoft cares enough about the tiny portion of their customer base that’s going to change the default settings that they would risk that sort of lawsuit to “spy” on them?