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Microsoft Bans Employees From Using DeepSeek App

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    Funny how every time anyone talks about replacing capitalism everybody trots out the examples of innovation and competition as things we would lose. Meanwhile capitalists are over here doing their level best to sabotage innovation and buy or legislate their way out of competition so they can remain complacent in their dominant market position. 'Won't someone please think of the billionaires' is wearing kinda thin when they're actively undermining the purported benefits of their wanton exploitation and delivering nothing but stagnation and enshittification.

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    Correct me if I'm wrong here but a company can't dictate what you do on your own time on your own hardware, so I assume this simply affects work computers. Assuming thats the case I don't really see a problem here. I've never been able to download any applications at all on any work computer I've ever used short of apps the company itself uses.

    Seems completely understandable to me to bar employees from using a competing service especially if there are genuine security concerns.

  • Funny how every time anyone talks about replacing capitalism everybody trots out the examples of innovation and competition as things we would lose. Meanwhile capitalists are over here doing their level best to sabotage innovation and buy or legislate their way out of competition so they can remain complacent in their dominant market position. 'Won't someone please think of the billionaires' is wearing kinda thin when they're actively undermining the purported benefits of their wanton exploitation and delivering nothing but stagnation and enshittification.

    (Premise - suppose I accept that there is such a definable thing as capitalism)

    Because people praising capitalism understand it just as badly as people blaming it for all problems, usually.

    People blaming capitalism for everything then build a country that imports grain, while before them and after them it's among the largest exporters on the planet (if we combine Russia and Ukraine for the "after" metric, no pun intended). There's a common Soviet joke about Sahara, communism and deficits of sand. Or these people build a country which is "not capitalist" because there are no two corporations on its territory, only one, which is also the government, but its interactions with the rest of the world are like corporate b2b and their interactions with their citizens are like corporate cities in China. Or both. Or they don't build anything and don't react to grim reality, because it's more pleasant to whine about climate change when their chances at good future are being murdered much faster in the political and social field.

    People praising capitalism create conditions in which there's no reason to praise it. Like, it's competitive - they kill competitiveness with patents, IP, very complex legal systems. It's self-regulating and self-optimizing - they make regulations and do bailouts preventing sick companies from dying, make laws after their interests, then reactively make regulations to make conditions with them existing bearable, which have a side effect of killing smaller companies. It's voluntary - they intentionally create levers which mafias in control of governments use to introduce violent pressure as normal part of the system, thus slowly people owning huge chunks of economies are also members of ruling clans.

    That's the problem, both "socialist" and "capitalist" ideal systems ignore ape power dynamics. Both imply that humans act altruistically or in their own best interest in the framework of assumed moral borders. Except those borders don't exist. Such systems should be designed on top of the fact that jungle law is always allowed, similarly governments and people and ideologies and your friends lie to you more often than they say truth. You can't assume if you want to devise something with a chance to work.

  • Correct me if I'm wrong here but a company can't dictate what you do on your own time on your own hardware, so I assume this simply affects work computers. Assuming thats the case I don't really see a problem here. I've never been able to download any applications at all on any work computer I've ever used short of apps the company itself uses.

    Seems completely understandable to me to bar employees from using a competing service especially if there are genuine security concerns.

    Ever heard about software devs not being able to work on personal projects because all the code they produce, even off the clock is owned by their employer?

  • Ever heard about software devs not being able to work on personal projects because all the code they produce, even off the clock is owned by their employer?

    No, what a ultracapitalist dystopian scenario.

  • No, what a ultracapitalist dystopian scenario.

    Sadly, it’s not uncommon from what I understand.

  • Sadly, it’s not uncommon from what I understand.

    Canadian software developer here,

    It's really not. Contracts like that in Canada and US haven't been used widely in a long time.

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    One can get Deepseek R1 from many providers (including US hosts, or various other nationalities). Microsoft even has their own anti-CCP finetune, MIT licensed: https://huggingface.co/microsoft/MAI-DS-R1

    ...Banning the app is reasonable, and a tiny inconvenience for anyone who needs DS.

    In other words, this is a big nothingburger because V3/R1 are open models. The story would be different if it was (say) an API-only model like Qwen Max or GPT4o, where ultimately one is beholden to the trainer's servers.

  • Canadian software developer here,

    It's really not. Contracts like that in Canada and US haven't been used widely in a long time.

    Salaried american software developer here. While some large companies have moonlighting carve outs, by and large the rights to any of your work done outside working hours is at the employer's discretion.

    (I call out salaried because I think those clauses can vary depending on the structure of your employment)

  • (Premise - suppose I accept that there is such a definable thing as capitalism)

    Because people praising capitalism understand it just as badly as people blaming it for all problems, usually.

    People blaming capitalism for everything then build a country that imports grain, while before them and after them it's among the largest exporters on the planet (if we combine Russia and Ukraine for the "after" metric, no pun intended). There's a common Soviet joke about Sahara, communism and deficits of sand. Or these people build a country which is "not capitalist" because there are no two corporations on its territory, only one, which is also the government, but its interactions with the rest of the world are like corporate b2b and their interactions with their citizens are like corporate cities in China. Or both. Or they don't build anything and don't react to grim reality, because it's more pleasant to whine about climate change when their chances at good future are being murdered much faster in the political and social field.

    People praising capitalism create conditions in which there's no reason to praise it. Like, it's competitive - they kill competitiveness with patents, IP, very complex legal systems. It's self-regulating and self-optimizing - they make regulations and do bailouts preventing sick companies from dying, make laws after their interests, then reactively make regulations to make conditions with them existing bearable, which have a side effect of killing smaller companies. It's voluntary - they intentionally create levers which mafias in control of governments use to introduce violent pressure as normal part of the system, thus slowly people owning huge chunks of economies are also members of ruling clans.

    That's the problem, both "socialist" and "capitalist" ideal systems ignore ape power dynamics. Both imply that humans act altruistically or in their own best interest in the framework of assumed moral borders. Except those borders don't exist. Such systems should be designed on top of the fact that jungle law is always allowed, similarly governments and people and ideologies and your friends lie to you more often than they say truth. You can't assume if you want to devise something with a chance to work.

    (Premise - suppose I accept that there is such a definable thing as capitalism)

    I'm not sure why you feel the need to state this in a discussion that already assumes it as a necessary precondition of, but, uh, you do you.

    People blaming capitalism for everything then build a country that imports grain, while before them and after them it’s among the largest exporters on the planet (if we combine Russia and Ukraine for the “after” metric, no pun intended).

    ...what?

    What does this have to do with literally anything, much less my comment about innovation/competition? Even setting aside the wild-assed assumptions you're making about me criticizing capitalism means I 'blame [it] for everything', this tirade you've launched into, presumably about Ukraine and the USSR, has no bearing on anything even tangentially related to this conversation.

    People praising capitalism create conditions in which there’s no reason to praise it. Like, it’s competitive - they kill competitiveness with patents, IP, very complex legal systems. It’s self-regulating and self-optimizing - they make regulations and do bailouts preventing sick companies from dying, make laws after their interests, then reactively make regulations to make conditions with them existing bearable, which have a side effect of killing smaller companies.

    Please allow me to reiterate: ...what?

    Capitalists didn't build literally any of those things, governments did, and capitalists have been trying to escape, subvert, or dismantle those systems at every turn, so this... vain, confusing attempt to pin a medal on capitalism's chest for restraining itself is not only wrong, it fails to understand basic facts about history. It's the opposite of self-regulating because it actively seeks to dismantle regulations (environmental, labor, wage, etc), and the only thing it optimizes for is the wealth of oligarchs, and maybe if they're lucky, there will be a few crumbs left over for their simps.

    That’s the problem, both “socialist” and “capitalist” ideal systems ignore ape power dynamics.

    I'm going to go ahead an assume that 'the problem' has more to do with assuming that complex interacting systems can be simplified to 'ape (or any other animal's) power dynamics' than with failing to let the richest people just do whatever they want.

    Such systems should be designed on top of the fact that jungle law is always allowed

    So we should just be cool with everybody being poor so Jeff Bezos or whoever can upgrade his megayacht to a gigayacht or whatever? Let me say this in the politest way I know how:

    LOL no.

    Also, do you remember when I said this?

    ‘Won’t someone please think of the billionaires’ is wearing kinda thin

    You know, right before you went on this very long-winded, surreal, barely-coherent ramble? Did you imagine I would be convinced by literally any of it when all it amounts to is one giant, extraneous, tedious equivalent of 'Won't someone please think of the billionaires?'

    Simp harder and I bet maybe you can get a crumb or two yourself.

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    kolanaki@pawb.socialK
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    Forgive me for not explaining better. Here are the terms potentially needing explanation. Provisioning in this case is initial system setup, the kind of stuff you would do manually after a fresh install, but usually implies a regimented and repeatable process. Virtual Machine (VM) snapshots are like a save state in a game, and are often used to reset a virtual machine to a particular known-working condition. Preboot Execution Environment (PXE, aka ‘network boot’) is a network adapter feature that lets you boot a physical machine from a hosted network image rather than the usual installation on locally attached storage. It’s probably tucked away in your BIOS settings, but many computers have the feature since it’s a common requirement in commercial deployments. As with the VM snapshot described above, a PXE image is typically a known-working state that resets on each boot. Non-virtualized means not using hardware virtualization, and I meant specifically not running inside a virtual machine. Local-only means without a network or just not booting from a network-hosted image. Telemetry refers to data collecting functionality. Most software has it. Windows has a lot. Telemetry isn’t necessarily bad since it can, for example, help reveal and resolve bugs and usability problems, but it is easily (and has often been) abused by data-hungry corporations like MS, so disabling it is an advisable precaution. MS = Microsoft OSS = Open Source Software Group policies are administrative settings in Windows that control standards (for stuff like security, power management, licensing, file system and settings access, etc.) for user groups on a machine or network. Most users stick with the defaults but you can edit these yourself for a greater degree of control. Docker lets you run software inside “containers” to isolate them from the rest of the environment, exposing and/or virtualizing just the resources they need to run, and Compose is a related tool for defining one or more of these containers, how they interact, etc. To my knowledge there is no one-to-one equivalent for Windows. Obviously, many of these concepts relate to IT work, as are the use-cases I had in mind, but the software is simple enough for the average user if you just pick one of the premade playbooks. (The Atlas playbook is popular among gamers, for example.) Edit: added explanations for docker and telemetry
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    ... robo chomo?