TFred
Regular Member
Ran across this article today:
Microsoft Cloud Services Locks You Out Of Your Digital Life, Won’t Explain Why
A user of Microsoft's "on-line" services found himself locked out for violations of their "Terms of Service." But as is usually the case, the provider would not tell him what he did to violate the terms of service.
How is this gun related? Glad you asked.
As we migrate more and more of our digital information to "the cloud," we also find ourselves more and more subject to the rules and ideologies of those who provide these services.
This particular user, while not certain, assumed that his violation had to do with a few pictures he had stored in his personal cloud space.
This story reminded me of my own experience with Yahoo. I subscribe to the VA-ALERT newsletters through two different e-mail providers, one of which is a Yahoo-owned e-mail account. I have been able to repeatedly demonstrate that some of these alerts do not come through to my Yahoo account, and with NO notice of failure given to me at all. The end result of my correspondence with the Yahoo morons is that perhaps the messages somehow violated the terms of service, but of course they refused to tell me what the offending content might be or how it violated their terms.
My solution was to subscribe with two providers, and hopefully notice when one goes missing from Yahoo.
The point of my post is this: As time goes by the issue of guns will always be a hot potato among some. As we choose to move more and more of our information services to the control of others, political ideologies that oppose our interests are one more risk to that data that we might want to keep in mind.
TFred
Microsoft Cloud Services Locks You Out Of Your Digital Life, Won’t Explain Why
A user of Microsoft's "on-line" services found himself locked out for violations of their "Terms of Service." But as is usually the case, the provider would not tell him what he did to violate the terms of service.
How is this gun related? Glad you asked.
As we migrate more and more of our digital information to "the cloud," we also find ourselves more and more subject to the rules and ideologies of those who provide these services.
This particular user, while not certain, assumed that his violation had to do with a few pictures he had stored in his personal cloud space.
This story reminded me of my own experience with Yahoo. I subscribe to the VA-ALERT newsletters through two different e-mail providers, one of which is a Yahoo-owned e-mail account. I have been able to repeatedly demonstrate that some of these alerts do not come through to my Yahoo account, and with NO notice of failure given to me at all. The end result of my correspondence with the Yahoo morons is that perhaps the messages somehow violated the terms of service, but of course they refused to tell me what the offending content might be or how it violated their terms.
My solution was to subscribe with two providers, and hopefully notice when one goes missing from Yahoo.
The point of my post is this: As time goes by the issue of guns will always be a hot potato among some. As we choose to move more and more of our information services to the control of others, political ideologies that oppose our interests are one more risk to that data that we might want to keep in mind.
TFred