| > I don't even know why I should care. If MS crawl some web pages I've written and AI gets slightly smarter by reading them Crawling public web pages is a separate issue⁰ – by putting something online you aren't explicitly agreeing to any of MS's policies, at least in the eyes of the law. This is the same for anyone crawling public content not just MS. This privacy policy covers all the content you might use MS apps and services for, i.e. where you are¹ automatically agreeing to MS's policies: OneDrive, potentially any local-only documents in Office, code in VS and other tools, perhaps anything stored on your PC running Windows. > I don't even know why I should care. If you don't use any MS products or services, and no products/services you do use are backed by MS's services, then you don't need to care personally. Or indeed if you do but consider everything you output or otherwise work on to be public domain. Otherwise, maybe it is something you should form an opinion on? ---- [0] time to switch my robots.txt files to “User-agent: *
Disallow: /” – though it is very likely already too late for any existing content [1] except where limited by law that you can afford to argue with MS's legal team over |
Now you could argue, what if I have documents with secret ideas or valuable IP that I don't want the AI to helpfully explain to others? That's definitely a valid concern! But for consumer uses, if it learns to draw better hands by looking at my holiday photos or whatever, then I don't see the problem.