Even in a world of ever-increasing employee tracking,вредно ли порнография Microsoft knows it went too far.
The company announced Tuesday that, following widespread backlash, it will scale back recently announced additions to its suite of Microsoft 365 products. They let employers track employees' digital actions in granular detail under the guise of workplace efficiency.
Dubbed "Productivity Score," the tool was announced via blog post in October, but gained notoriety in late November when Wolfie Christl, a researcher and privacy advocate, called attention to some of its more odious capabilities.
"Employers/managers can analyze employee activities at the individual level (!)," wrote Christl on Nov. 24, "for example, the number of days an employee has been sending emails, using the chat, using 'mentions' in emails etc."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
We're talking about a lot of potential employee activities to monitor. Microsoft 365 (previously Office 365) includes access to such commonly used applications as Outlook, Excel, Word, and PowerPoint.
As Forbes reported in late November, with Productivity Score there are "73 pieces of granular data about worker behavior employers have access to, all associated with employees by name in a handy dashboard, according to Microsoft's own documentation."
Notably, even at launch Microsoft seemed aware that Productivity Score might be controversial.
"Let me be clear," wrote Jared Spataro, Microsoft 365's corporate vice president, in the initial October blog post, "Productivity Score is not a work monitoring tool."
And yet, as Tuesday's backtracking makes clear, there was — at the very least — the public perception of serious employee-monitoring potential with Productivity Score.
"During preview, we added a feature that showed end-user names and associated actions over a 28-day period," reads Tuesday's blog post, also by Jared Spataro. "In response to feedback over the last week, we're removing that feature entirely."
Spataro goes further, writing that "we're modifying the user interface to make it clearer that Productivity Score is a measure of organizational adoption of technology — and not individual user behavior."
SEE ALSO: How to check if your boss is monitoring your every keystroke
Importantly, Spataro makes clear that "feedback" — like, perhaps, a scathing Twitter thread from privacy advocate and author Corey Doctorow — contributed to the changes announced Tuesday.
"We appreciate the feedback we've heard over the last few days and are moving quickly to respond by removing user names entirely from the product," write Spataro. "This change will ensure that Productivity Score can't be used to monitor individual employees."
If only someone, maybe even someone high up at Microsoft 365, had considered that possibility before designing an entire product around that very thing.
Topics Cybersecurity Microsoft Privacy
Best gaming laptop deal: Get the Asus ROG Zephyrus G16 for $520 offUS considers blacklisting CXMT to curb China’s chip progress · TechNodeBest portable power station deal: Save 40% on the Jackery Explorer 100 PlusSony China refutes recent reports of smartphone withdrawal in China · TechNodeUS considers blacklisting CXMT to curb China’s chip progress · TechNodeAMD's customized AI chip for Chinese market fails to secure US approval: report · TechNodeOnline merchants offer AIBilibili expects to achieve operating profit in Q3 as more creators engage in liveHonor to debut its first AI PC, the MagicBook Pro 16, next week · TechNodeClaritin deal: Get $12.50 off at Amazon The Good, the Bad, and the GOP How much plastic does it take to kill a sea turtle? Best headphones deal: Take 47% off the Marshall Major IV headphones at Amazon Elon Musk's pot A Contemporary Novel SpaceX books its first passenger to fly around the moon Fleur Jaeggy’s Mourning Exercise The new black Apple Watch Ultra 2 is already on sale Patriots vs. Jets 2024 livestream: How to watch NFL for free Best earbuds deal: Get the Google Pixel Buds A
0.1535s , 8109.921875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【вредно ли порнография】Enter to watch online.Microsoft waters down 'productivity score' surveillance tool after backlash,