From the Outlook Android app
They do infact value your privacy. Only to them it is of low value
WE VALUE YOUR PRIVACY!*
*no we don’t. not even a little.
No, I think they’re being literal. There is value that they want in your privacy.
- We value your privacy (in a twisted way)
- Our company’s value (increases with access to) your privacy
Or the idea of the title and text was to create a paradox like: The following statement is true. // The preceding statement is false.
797 partners? Might need to get tested haha
They do value your privacy very expensively!
Anything ran by Microsoft is a privacy concern (includes Windows, Teams, npm, GitHub)
npm?! Since when?
Looks like early last year. News to me, too
Yup. It’s privately held, not a community or non-profit-held registry.
I’d say they’re not lying. They do value your privacy. It’s making them, and 797 of their closest friends, a lot of money.
I respect that you want it to be a small birthday party.
Me and my 718 closest friends will be there…
Accept all, then block it with Adguard with HTTPS Filter enabled for that app
Why? What is the benefit?
Close the app and find another one.
What’s worse is when it’s accept all or manage preferences, and you manually have to turn off cookies for all 718 partners individually, every time you open the app.
Consent-o-matic automates that for you
So does uninstalling and not using it
There will be some lawsuit in the future somewhere in Europe. And the judge will rightfully rule that you can’t get an “informed consent” from your users for 800 tracking companies just by letting them click a button with dark patterns.
Europe for sure. USA? Better chance of the president smoking rock at the state of the union. Land of the fee and all that.
That’s why F-Droid exists.
They spelled “violate” wrong.
The correct syntax for embedding images is:
![title](link)
[title] is technically [alt text] for readers and vision impaired, so the title should be more of a description of the image.
“We respect your privacy to the extent the law requires us to. Maybe.”
Imagine applying to private university and reading their privacy policy, where they clearly say, how they get your private information from third parties and share all info with third parties. And when you ask administrator, how can i prevent them from doing that, they say, that they do not share/get info from/to thirdparties. Bravo
Sounds like an easy lawsuit