According to Microsoft’s documentation, a user can only change the setting to enable or disable the new People section three times a year.

  • Null User Object@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    You don’t need to know why anyone wants to do a thing to advocate for their freedom to do it.

    You don’t know why they might want to do this thing. I also don’t know why they would want to do this thing. The difference is, I 👏 Don’t 👏 Care 👏. My opinion of their reason to want to do it is irrelevant to my advocating their freedom to do it.

    And that’s all I’m going to say on the subject. If you can’t understand that basic fact, then I don’t know what else I can say.

    • FreedomAdvocate@lemmy.net.au
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      22 hours ago

      I don’t care either though, I’m just asking why to try to understand the argument people like you are making.

      The feature is a yes/no option, and it has no downsides for the user. It costs you nothing, it doesn’t affect performance, it doesn’t need extra privacy permissions or anything. I’m just trying to understand why anyone works firstly turn it off if it defaults to on, and then secondly why they would then turn it back on, then back off, and so on. Maybe there’s something I am missing about it that I don’t know? Maybe there’s something buried in the fine print?

      Some when did trying to get more of an understanding become so offensive to some people?

      It’s like if my health insurance said “we’ve just added elective surgeries to your plan at no cost. You can opt out/in up to 3 times a year” - I genuinely can’t see a reason why anyone would opt out once, let alone 3+ times a year, and so far no one has even attempted to give a reason why anyone would.

      Unlike you, clearly, I like to learn things, especially about what makes people tick. I’m also a big believer in if you can’t explain your reasoning for your decision logically then you must have arrived at your decision illogically.