Alifatisk 11 hours ago

> Microsoft also argued that its Ireland subsidiary was in charge of 365, and therefore jurisdiction fell to Ireland. The authority rejected that argument, and decided it was Microsoft US that made the decisions

Them trying to use their subsidiary as a option to get away with this proves that they knew they were at fault. It's sad that we're stuck with their ecosystem for office work, this is what happens when a company gets monopoly. They can do this because there is no true competitor

The day I find a good replacement for Win10 and the Office suite. I'm packing my bags!

  • itopaloglu83 10 hours ago

    The last privacy act in the US, the Video Privacy Protection Act (VPPA) of 1988 wasn’t passed to protect public interest, but because someone leaked the rental history of a Supreme Court nominee. This shows us where the priorities lie.

  • trenchpilgrim 7 hours ago

    Honestly for desktop computers, the mainstream Linux distros are pretty great these dyas. (Laptops are a mixed bag depending on the hardware, and there's no direct replacement for Office so you probably still need a Windows VM or WINE.)

    • ndriscoll 5 hours ago

      For educational purposes, libreoffice should be a full replacement for office. You don't need to worry about compatibility if you just decide that students and teachers will use it. Kids aren't using whatever advanced features of Excel that F500 accountants need. They just need to learn the basics of spreadsheets and e.g. what $ does when referencing a cell (something I had to teach one of my gen-z colleagues the other day anyway). They don't need VB to sync with ADP or whatever.

      Similarly Linux with KDE and productivity software should be fine for schools. You don't need games or the latest commercial CAD or Adobe stuff or whatever other DRM filled software unless you are in a university course for that.

    • kryllic 4 hours ago

      While I agree with the other comments regarding LibreOffice, for a more Microsoft experience, I cannot recommend ONLYOFFICE enough. It is very interoperable and familiar, and I find it a lot more pleasant to use over LibreOffice at the moment.

    • munchlax 6 hours ago

      LibreOffice works just fine.

      It even has ribbons if you want that sort of thing.

      • philipallstar 6 hours ago

        It's not really fine. It just doesn't look very slick, at least in my experience, and I am a user of it. I can imagine most people just being unimpressed with the superficial issues with it and uninstalling it.

        • john01dav 2 hours ago

          Having an ugly UI is not a good argument for paying obscene quantities of money for spyware that doesn't even support all OSes.

          • hulitu 14 minutes ago

            > Having an ugly UI is not a good argument

            Especially when you look at Windows 11, Android or iOS. _That_ is ugliness.

      • trenchpilgrim 6 hours ago

        LibreOffice is fine if your org is all in on it. It is not a drop in replacement for existing use of Office, especially Excel; it's analogous to suggesting replacing existing Python scripts with Matlab or Visual Basic.

kosmiccoder 6 hours ago

Tell us something new. Almost all software companies are tracking us or our activities, it`s just a matter of when it gets caught.