• mabeledo@lemmy.world
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      2 minutes ago

      How do you know?

      I cannot think of a single bug report coming from a non technical person that would be useful to debug an issue. The most they do is get you to know about a potential problem in the system, which most of the time boils down to user error. Telemetry is pretty much the only way to find the root cause, other than a lab reproducing the customer’s environment 1:1, which is both unrealistic and would still require telemetry to be remotely possible.

  • Alvaro@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 hour ago

    Telemetry is fine, it’s the abuse of it that is the problem.

    If a project is clear about it, takes the minimum necessary data, and anonymizes it, make a clear and reasonable retention policy, then I am all for it.

  • fonix232@fedia.io
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    3 hours ago

    I mean yeah, to some extent you’re right.

    But it is also due to telemetrics being helpful in diagnosing issues before users even report them, measuring their business effects, or even doing A/B tests to see how a new feature may affect the user experience.

    Problem is that companies realised this info can also be used for other purposes - such as, datamining the users - to create another lucrative revenue source…

    • kayazere@feddit.nl
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      20 minutes ago

      A/B testing without consent is unethical. This doesn’t fly in any scientific fields, yet the technology industry doesn’t think twice about experimenting on users without consent.

  • Cyv_@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    3 hours ago

    I dunno, it feels weird to have somebody act like the messages people send to support are supposed to result in good PR or some kind of benefit for them.

    It isn’t a PR outlet. It’s definitely not a community run beta testing/bug report line. It’s meant to be a point of contact for people who are likely already upset. The hope is that they come out the other end less upset, not happy they had a problem that support could fix. There is no winning, you aim to break even.

    Feels kinda like complaining that IT isn’t giving you tangible returns. They aren’t meant to. They exist to put out your fires and prevent more.

    Bottom line for me is, I don’t trust you. I don’t care what you claim telemetry is for, I assume that you are like any other business and want to make as much money as is possible, and that’s all the data will be used for. Selling it to whoever is interested. Dynamic pricing. Etc.

    Sorry, but that’s the world we live in.

    • ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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      3 hours ago

      I think he is saying that he thought providing good support will be appreciated by users but it’s not. People complain about not being able to reach support and companies using chatbots for everything and he thought that the though offering quality support will be seen as something positive by customers. Turns out it’s not. You can just as well let bots handle it because people will stay unhappy no matter what service you provide.

      The headline was invented by OP. The author is not really justifying telemetry. He’s just saying good support is worth less than he thought.

  • artyom@piefed.social
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    4 hours ago

    I get why they want telemetry a lot of the time. Of course it’s helpful. But often times you can’t trust them with that sort of information. I don’t have any problem sending a 1-time log to a trustworthy organization but how many of those are there? And that’s a big ask for a normie.

    Also Windows sends a ton of telemetry and its still shit.

  • Infernal_pizza@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    5 hours ago

    Telemetry exists to aid enshittification. Widely hated update that has loads of people complaining online but causes no change in usage? Keep it. Update causes dip in usage? Post generic “we hear your concerns” statement, backpedal slightly and try again in 6 months. Beloved feature is only actually utilised by 5% of your users? Get rid of it.

    • ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      4 hours ago

      Beloved feature is only actually utilised by 5% of your users?

      I mean, there is a pretty strong argument that if 95% of users don’t use a function, then it is not actually beloved and just more of a niche thing that the vast majority don’t care about.

      • ParlimentOfDoom@piefed.zip
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        49 minutes ago

        The core design philology of windows is cobbling together thousands of niche use case features and set ups that have accumulated from their all their previous versions. That’s why it’s so janky.

      • tabular@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        Move it out of core and into an optional extention.

        Of course if the code base respected user’s software freedom then others can maintain in your place.

        • ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 hours ago

          Yeah sure I’m not arguing it should be culled, just that calling a feature untouched by the vast majority of users beloved is incorrect.

      • forestbeasts@pawb.social
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        4 hours ago

        That 5% is 5% of the users who don’t turn the telemetry off.

        And if use of that feature is strongly correlated with the type of person who also turns off telemetry…

        – Frost

        • ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 hours ago

          That would just make it 5% of a vast majority, nearing 100%, so still only a small amount of users.

          I get what you’re saying, but when something is only used by the small demographic that is “power users”, it is not a beloved feature of the userbase as a whole.

        • Klear@piefed.world
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          3 hours ago

          That 5% is 5% of the users who don’t turn the telemetry off.

          So 5% of 99%. Still niche.

  • kayazere@feddit.nl
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    5 hours ago

    I think it is mainly happening because companies don’t want to pay for user research/studies and would rather try and make assumptions about how their software is used based on aggregate data collection.

  • 42firehawk@fedinsfw.app
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    5 hours ago

    Honestly the approach of telemetry for support makes sense. It’s why for my Fedora system I have telemetry enabled to a decently high level that I would be alarmed at with windows.

    Part of the reason is that it’s so easy to enable/disable that I’m comfortable with more since I know how much I am sharing versus needing to “guess” how much is still open. Another is just that I have respect for software that respects me, so I’m more likely to send something back to help the dev.

    The biggest tell for me in different areas is if data collection is presented as an opt in - even if it’s a screen you have to see and answer before use - then to me it’s a choice that I might want to make. If it’s there by default, it’s Spyware until proven otherwise, because I wasn’t told and the process foe removing requires prior knowledge.

  • tangeli@piefed.social
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    5 hours ago

    Most software companies I dealt with didn’t provide enough support for the helpfulness of customers/users to make a significant difference to the support they provided, and that includes Microsoft in the context of an ‘enterprise’ support agreement. The few companies that did provide significant support never once, across decades of experience, identified that they had used or were helped by telemetry collection.

    The telemetry collection may help them with product development, impact assessment and license enforcement. I never worked at one of those large vendors that does significant telemetry collection. Only the impact assessment might be considered relevant to support, though typically on a time frame irrelevant to any single support call.

  • pixxelkick@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    Its a bit of both.

    Absolutely, for sure, a decent amount of telemetry is for simply making decisions about what people actually use.

    “Should we improve (thing), or drop it and stop supporting it?”

    Well, lets just track how many people actually use it first for a bit and then decide.

    Youd be surprised how often users beg for features and then stop using them after 1 week lol.

    But sometimes a random feature you thought no one uses much turns out to be actually quite popular.

    This same goes for optimizing. Your highest traffic parts of your website are there you wanna focus the most on stuff being optimized to save money and improve user experience.

    Do a tonne of companies track stuff just to sell it as data for training AI?

    Yeah, they do. And its gross.

    But there is a huge amount of telemetry thats just developers wanting to genuinely improve the user experience, catch bugs, etc.

  • Fontasia@feddit.nlOP
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    6 hours ago

    No one at Microsoft gives a shit about what you are doing, they want to know what updates broke.