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worddepress | 1 year ago

More charitable is that the user thought it would do X and it ended up doing Y. They may have even been happy with X even, if they knew that was going to happen, because the whole thing would have been less confusing.

> I'm at a little bit of a loss here. I totally understand sending me encrypted emails if I've gone through the steps to set the CNAME that indicates that I want to do that, but it doesn't seem like that's how the service works. As far as I can tell, the act of uploading a OpenPGP-compatible key seems to trigger their service to send it as an end-to-end encrypted message.

A similar example is how Windows changed their OS to require a PIN, which can be a password if you figure how to. It then asks you for this when doing completely unrelated to your OS online stuff sometimes, like some of the weird flows to do with using Teams or whatever, and I am not expecting it was asking me for my PC pin because it before that just asked me for my Online username. It is a UX issue.

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