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houseplant | 1 year ago

in all kindness, you're such an incredibly niche example of actual usage of this, that only proves it should've been opt-in instead of opt-out. I don't need to know what my tabs were 3 months ago. I don't need to treasure my precious history of browsing amazon for vacuum cleaners.

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hnpolicestate|1 year ago

There are two types of computer users in this world. 1 billion tabs forever and BleachBit obsessives.

I get anxiety if I don't restart my devices daily.

zamadatix|1 year ago

I'll agree they are an incredibly niche example of actually using this... but only because ways to do this right now are incredibly niche. The rest remains to be seen.

If there hadn't been decades of normality of browsers storing history then people, particularly those in tech circles, would absolutely flip their shit if it were announced as part of Edge. There would be mass revolts on these forums if it would sync with the cloud. It makes measuring how popular a concept would be difficult as what is niche today and what is wildly unpopular with tech folks today may or may not have any relation whatsoever to what will be popular with users in the long term.

ChicagoDave|1 year ago

I have Malwarebytes installed and block all trackers in Edge and on my iPhone.

The idea of recording my activity on my laptop is something I could see being useful in a business where I’m billing non-stop and this feature would automatically generate invoices.

But on my personal laptop? I really can’t think of a single legitimate scenario.

More importantly, I think Microsoft should be demonstrating what use cases it envisions outside of potentially generating LLM training data.

SebastianKra|1 year ago

It is ~opt-out~.

EDIT: I meant opt-in.

phito|1 year ago

Surely all the computer illiterate people will disable it and not get spied on then, right, right??