If you ignore all the fast and loose they play with privacy, sure
I'm not ignoring it, I just never heard about it. Got some articles/examples?
It’s not an aggressive push if you ignore the part where they repeatedly use the foot in the door technique where they first promise they won’t do something, and then later do it anyways.
Can't comment because I haven't seen the original announcement. Are you sure it wasn't to the tune of "it will be available for Business" and then people extrapolated that to mean "it will never, ever, ever-ever even remotely touch the 'civilian' accounts"?
They claim it is optional but they just shove a pop-up in your face about AI
Ah, yes, recommending new features, the Hitler of XXI c's IT.
Come on now...
while misleading you about how it works
Please elaborate.
it predictably leads to many users thinking it’s off but being surprised when they find it turned on without them realizing it it’s not much consolation
I mean... Yeah, they added the button instead of having the user toggle a switch for the button to appear. But, as I'm reading it, it's not the feature that is "on" or "off" in the sense that you seem to see it. It's not "'on', therefore it's doing something behind the scenes". It's "on" as in: "the button is visible, and if you click it, you can start interacting with it, but it does nothing unless you tell it to do something". I may be wrong, of course, but I wouldn't discount the entire company on the basis of a Reddit comment.
How do you figure that works? The server somehow corrects your spelling mistakes without reading the email containing the spelling mistake?
If you ask Scribe to correct spelling mistakes, then the prompt contains the email you asked it to correct, that seems fairly obvious. It doesn't, however, "read your mailbox", because it can't.
Was it, though?
That's a pretty non-neutral way to present things, considering nothing like that happened in said tweet.