I mean.
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I mean. They're a USA company. Of course they would be required to follow the laws of the country in which they HQ. Did anyone think anything different?
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I mean. They're a USA company. Of course they would be required to follow the laws of the country in which they HQ. Did anyone think anything different?
Well pretty sure local laws here say that certain data should stay within the countries borders (like data from accounting firms) so I hope they also encrypted everything to prevent this carrot from accessing it.
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I mean. They're a USA company. Of course they would be required to follow the laws of the country in which they HQ. Did anyone think anything different?
This is what data sovereignty is for.
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Well pretty sure local laws here say that certain data should stay within the countries borders (like data from accounting firms) so I hope they also encrypted everything to prevent this carrot from accessing it.
It's encrypted, I'm sure. But I highly doubt it's e2ee. It's likely as the eula alludes to (end to server to end). So... accessible by MS.
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It's encrypted, I'm sure. But I highly doubt it's e2ee. It's likely as the eula alludes to (end to server to end). So... accessible by MS.
Their EULA can't break our national law, so it can still be e2e encrypted and not accessible by MS
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Their EULA can't break our national law, so it can still be e2e encrypted and not accessible by MS
While true, in the past, MS has shown us they don't care about national laws. I'm not saying they don't e2ee, I'm saying they might not be following this particular national law due to their own national laws. I don't know.
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While true, in the past, MS has shown us they don't care about national laws. I'm not saying they don't e2ee, I'm saying they might not be following this particular national law due to their own national laws. I don't know.
The party in between MS/Sharepoint and our laptops can E2E encrypt everything I am pretty sure, but yes you are right.