• @remotelove@lemmy.ca
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      6 months ago

      They can leech all the data they want from my employer. I don’t give a fuck. Never use company assets for personal business as an addendum.

      Just be a little more careful with your own stuff, s’all.

        • Otter
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          6 months ago

          A lot of healthcare and education institutions use Outlook as well, so I wouldn’t be surprised if mental health or legal uses it too. There may be rules about what kind of client/student/patient information can be sent over email, and often there are healthcare/institution specific variants of the office suites which (are supposed to) meet regulatory requirements

          I think the other comment applies regardless. Do work things on the work device/account and let the workplace handle any other concerns. When it comes time to discuss alternatives, you can make a case for something else

          • @requiem@lemmy.world
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            176 months ago

            I mean it even harvests typing data and Outlook also includes calendars etc… It’s really bad.

            But yes, I just suggested a re-evaluation of the use of Microsoft Outlook to my company …

            • @essteeyou@lemmy.world
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              76 months ago

              What would you get them to use instead? I use Proton personally, but I doubt many companies are using it at scale.

            • @pound_heap@lemm.ee
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              26 months ago

              A company would use a Microsoft 365 plan that includes Outlook for Office 365, not a Windows Mail app. An the MS365 agreement would come with protections of company data from sharing with advertisers.

              In other words, I wouldn’t worry if my company used Outlook. But never log in to your private mailbox from a corporate device.

          • @Coasting0942@reddthat.com
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            36 months ago

            Cloud services who want the business of healthcare providers usually offer a separate service for customers who need enhanced privacy.

            Google etc have this option.

            Also Microsoft has “pay for enterprise control” for businesses. Businesses can pay for their data not to be collected or at least sent to a business controlled server.

        • @Lichtblitz@discuss.tchncs.de
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          146 months ago

          There are different versions of Outlook depending on your subscription. Companies that do things properly, never see the problematic, “free version” of Outlook. They have very fine control over the features and data collections they enable.

    • macniel
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      66 months ago

      pretty sure when you bring that up to your company, that another company will have access to internal communication, that they will do something against it. It’s a willing data breach.

      • 𝐘Ⓞz҉
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        86 months ago

        There’s no other company with all the required certification that can replace Microsoft office suite so all corporations are stuck with it and tbh nobody cares.

        • macniel
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          36 months ago

          Perhaps nobody in the US or in jobs with non-sensitive data cares about that. In the EU this could backfire hard against Microsoft.

        • @LemmyIsFantastic@lemmy.world
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          -36 months ago

          There are plenty of other services that have the compliance check boxes. Most of them are garbage, expensive, and don’t come with 5% of the other tools that MS does.

          There is a choice, and companies choose ms because it is best.

    • @Thrashy@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Worth noting that Outlook the Office suite component, and Outlook, the freebie mail client that comes with Windows, are not the same thing. They’re just named the same because yadda yadda executives yadda yadda name recognition yadda yadda brand synergy.

      Unless your employer is one of the very few that doesn’t provide Office to its users, this isn’t about the version you are required to use.

    • oce 🐆
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      36 months ago

      Corporations will just have a contract that guarantees no harmful use of their data and not care about the details. They just want the lines to be able to sue if there’s an issue in the future. And honestly, I don’t see the issue with companies agreeing to collect data on each other. The issue is with private life, which should never be shared on company tools.

    • Elven_Mithril
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      13 months ago

      well, as far as you use it just for your work, who cares, right? It’s the same as I’d never use Lastpass, my corp use it and even offered it for our personal use :D thanks, but no thanks! For personal use I would never use any microsoft solution.