Is AI the future, or just an , dangerously huge ? That's hard to say, but it's certainly a part of Microsoft's future; on top of pushing Copilot as [[link]] a of the Microsoft 365 suite and reportedly put AI to work, the tech giant is reportedly rolling out a new biometric collection setting that can only be turned off three times a year.
A yesterday relayed an editor's experience when he noticed that, after uploading a photo from his phone's local storage to Microsoft's OneDrive cloud storage, the privacy and permissions page noted an opt-out "people section" feature wherein "OneDrive uses AI to recognize faces in your photos to help you find photos of friends and family." When he went to turn it off, a disclaimer stated: "You can only turn off this setting three times a year."
It doesn't sound great, but users are speculating about what might motivate the restriction. Commenter on the Slashdot article AmiMoJo replied, "There might be a more [[link]] benign reason for it. In GDPR countries, if you turn it off they will probably need to delete all the biometric data … if people toggle it too often, it's going to consume a large amount of CPU time." Regardless, the choice to make it opt-out rather than opt-in is sure to raise eyebrows among privacy advocates.
I can't definitively say why the setting was rolled out this way, but it's hard not to feel like this is yet another surreptitious means for AI to corrode privacy standards and encroach where it's not always welcome. In a vacuum, it's thorny—but paired with the nascent prominence of Copilot, LLM chatbots, Microsoft's internal insistence on AI, and so on, it feels like another data point in a trend worthy of scrutiny.