Submitted via IRC for Bytram
Windows 10 can carry on slurping even when you're sure you yelled STOP!
A feature introduced in the April 2018 Update of Windows 10 may have set off a privacy landmine within the bowels of Redmond as users have discovered that their data was still flowing into the intestines of the Windows giant, even with the thing apparently turned off. In what is likely to be more cock-up than conspiracy, it appears that Microsoft is continuing to collect data on recent user activities even when the user has explicitly said NO, DAMMIT!
First noted in an increasingly shouty thread over on Reddit, the issue is related to Activity History, which is needed to make the much-vaunted and little-used Timeline feature work in Windows 10.
Introduced in what had previously been regarded as one of Microsoft's flakiest updates – prior to the glory of the October 2018 Update, of course – Timeline allows users to go back through apps as well as websites to get back to what they were doing at a given point. Use a Microsoft account, and a user can view this over multiple PCs and mobile devices (as long[sic] you are signed in with that same Microsoft account). The key setting is that "Send my activity history to Microsoft" check box. Uncheck it and you'd be forgiven for thinking your activity would not be sent Redmondwards. Right?
Except, er, the slurping appears to be carrying on unabated. The Redditors reported that if one takes a look at the Activity History in the Privacy Dashboard lurking within their account, apps and sites are still showing up.
(Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Friday December 14 2018, @06:01PM
I've mentioned that in a sideways manner a couple of times. Basically, Microsoft is going to cache, or "back up" everything on your computer to their own cloud. Sure, you'll have your local cache, but Microsoft will be able to "restore" anything you might lose due to - shall we say "environmental" circumstances?
Supposing that you draft a hateful letter to your spouse, during a nice hateful episode of bickering. Then you delete it. Then - she happens to die some time later. Wanna bet that draft of your hateful letter doesn't surface? For purposes of privacy, we need not even consider how murderous a person you might be, or how the spouse died, or even how long after you drafted that letter, and we certainly need not consider that you and the spouse solved all of your problems after your hateful episode. It only matters that you drafted a hateful letter, then the spouse died. Microsoft will know, and they may well contact your local prosecutor. All without any human intervention, of course, because - ALGORITHMS!!!