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'I Looked at All the Ways Microsoft Teams Tracks Users and My Head is Spinning' (zdnet.com) 81

An anonymous reader shares a report: As far back as June, Microsoft explained in somewhat legalistic terms that it's happily recording so much Teams activity for the benefit of employers and it's up to them what they do with it. Sample wording from Redmond's fine lawyers: "Our customers are controllers for the data provided to Microsoft, as set forth in the Online Services Terms, and they determine legal bases of processing." From what I could see, Teams hoovers up all your chats, voicemails, shared meetings, files, transcriptions, your profile details including your email address and phone number, and a detailed analysis of what you were wearing on the call. (I may have made up that last one.) Cut to September and Microsoft offered a little more about the Teams Activity Report (since updated). Here's a sentence that's unsurprising but still a touch uncomfortable: "The table gives you a breakdown of usage by user." Everything from how many meetings that user organized to how many urgent messages they sent is recorded. Separate numbers are given for scheduled meetings and those that were ad hoc. Even individuals' screen-share time is there. It's remarkably detailed. But, I hear you cry, is it detailed enough?

In October, then, Redmond offered "a new analytics and reporting experience for Microsoft Teams." (This was updated last week.) I confess that just staring at this made me swivel several times in wonder. Microsoft is measuring privacy settings, device types, time stamps, reasons why someone may have been blocked, and "the number of messages a user posted in a private chat." I know you'll tell me this is all normal. This is entirely what's to be expected in today's techno-marvelous world. Yet, as far as I could tell, employees don't have too much say in all this. They're forced onto a particular platform without much control over what that platform may record about them personally, with their employer being the potential beneficiary. I imagined an individual -- or even a whole team -- being summoned by their boss and told: "You didn't respond to 47 Teams messages last month." What do you say to that? "Well, I suspect those 47 messages were sent by brown-nosing halfwits who send as many Teams messages as possible, so their innate industry shows up on your Teams analytics reports."

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'I Looked at All the Ways Microsoft Teams Tracks Users and My Head is Spinning'

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  • Unsurprising (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Sebby ( 238625 ) on Monday January 18, 2021 @12:58PM (#60960260)

    "The table gives you a breakdown of usage by user." Everything from how many meetings that user organized to how many urgent messages they sent is recorded. Separate numbers are given for scheduled meetings and those that were ad hoc. Even individuals' screen-share time is there

    This is from a company that used to have (and still may have at some level) a review process that basically pitted employees against each other [linkedin.com] in their evaluations - it's not surprising that the exec-level mindset still exists and is reflected in their products.

    • Meanwhile (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Z00L00K ( 682162 ) on Monday January 18, 2021 @03:00PM (#60960830) Homepage Journal

      As a normal user there's no good way to copy a thread to a word document or save a chat to a file.

      • by Sebby ( 238625 )

        As a normal user there's no good way to copy a thread to a word document or save a chat to a file.

        This is actually a thing that drives me nuts with Slack - I use the macOS 'Use selection for find' (Cmd-E) function a lot to search for code referenced in discussions - and it doesn't support that (a basic function already setup for you in Apple's dev templates). I always end up having to go back and first copy, then paste the text I want to look up.

        Don't know (and don't want to) if Teams is as bad that way.

      • And the search 'functionality' in Teams is haphazard at best in my experience.

        As in maybe you'll find that comment, maybe you won't. Monday it finds it, Tuesday it doesn't. But it's not a bug, no no no.

    • Next thing you know you're going to tell me that Microsoft also allows employers to read company emails on their mail server!?!?! OMG someone call Orwell it's dog against dog, cat against cat.

      I also bet these scumbags pitting employee against employee look at timecards to see when employees showed up and left!

    • Re:Unsurprising (Score:4, Interesting)

      by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Monday January 18, 2021 @03:44PM (#60960984)

      it's not surprising that the exec-level mindset still exists and is reflected in their products.

      Products for enterprises are built on requested features. You seem to think MS is some kind of odd ball rather than a company whose mindset makes up a significant portion of corporate America. They build this functionality because it sells and because companies go out of their way to buy employee tracking tools. Some of it is useful, some of it is not, and some of it is just for bad managers who think its useful when it's not. In any case the point is the same, the product sells.

    • It was hilarious (Score:5, Insightful)

      by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Monday January 18, 2021 @05:20PM (#60961310) Journal

      This is from a company that used to have (and still may have at some level) a review process that basically pitted employees against each other [linkedin.com] in their evaluations

      I lived through Stack Ranking and all the horror it entailed, but for me it was hilarious because I was a contractor and it had no power over me. None, zero, zip, nada.

      My contractor buddies and I used to enjoy watching The Yearly Purge and the mountains of destruction it left in it's wake. It was so sweet to see the backstabbing and sabotage running wild.

      Occasionally (if you were unlucky) it resulted in your project being cancelled but most the time there were just fewer people at work the next Monday. :)

      But even if you did end up as collateral damage there were alsways 50 other gigs at Microsoft with open reqs and you'd be working again in a few days, just as fast as they could approve the paperwork.

      These people poured their hearts and souls into Microsoft and ended up getting booted for no good reason whatsoever. The crudest algorithm in the world (>) cost them their job. It was bullshit.

    • Interesting that you reference LinkedIn, or more accurately Microsoft LinkedIn, when they asked their employees to switch from Slack to Teams they got told where they could stick Teams. There was apparently open revolt in some groups.
    • While stack ranking is indeed bullshit, the irony of that link is that Zuckerberg and Ellison do in fact deserve below average and poor ratings.
  • I mean, was this fellow gullible enough to expect otherwise?
    • I mean, was this fellow gullible enough to expect otherwise?

      Well, given that Teams evidently "hoovers" up all of the things that you explicitly use it for, it's pretty clear the fellow is sensationalist. It's a chat program. By definition it holds your chats. It's a meeting program. By definition it holds your meeting. It's personal, so by definition it holds your profile including e-mail address and phone number (if entered).

      I mean... this is like complaining that Outlook "hoovers" up all of your e-mail, contacts, calendar items and ToDos. The only interest

  • by bobstreo ( 1320787 ) on Monday January 18, 2021 @01:04PM (#60960314)

    eye rolls, and when I have to bite my tongue when talking with marketing/sales people or managers who clearly have absolutely no idea what they're talking about...

  • by Anonymous Coward
    for more than a few minutes where I work, people start questioning. I'm running a mouse-jiggler program so I can go to the bathroom, go grab a snack, get the mail, etc..
    • > I'm running a mouse-jiggler program so I can go to the bathroom, go grab a snack, get the mail, etc..

      You might want to run a job search too.
      Ideally with a career plan, so your move is taking you in the direction of where you want to end up.

  • by vm ( 127028 ) on Monday January 18, 2021 @01:15PM (#60960380)

    then youâ(TM)ve got other issues. IT gathers & HR only uses this kind of data when HR needs to build a case against an employee thatâ(TM)s already having issues. If you happen to work for someone thatâ(TM)s going to micromanage you with this kind of data then you shouldnâ(TM)t be working for them in the first place.

  • "Our customers are controllers for the data provided to Microsoft, as set forth in the Online Services Terms, and they determine legal bases of processing."

    I.e. you clicked ok on 257 pages of tinyfont.

    See also "we require your phone number as an ultimate fallback for pw recovery and not because we use it as a pseudo-guid for you in a monster advertising database."

    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
      Meh, your name and number starting entering those databases the moment your phone company gave you the number.
  • Yet, as far as I could tell, employees don't have too much say in all this. They're forced onto a particular platform without much control over what that platform may record about them personally, with their employer being the potential beneficiary

    Employer dictates toolchain for benefit of employer, film at 11.

  • by boundary ( 1226600 ) on Monday January 18, 2021 @01:31PM (#60960462)
    Does it measure the number of molehills made into mountains?
    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )

      Does it measure the number of molehills made into mountains?

      Yes, in private preview now and scheduled for GA by the end of the first half of the year. It was in development a long time and supposed to ship in late 2020 but due to a miscommunication, the dev team spent ages working on AI and photogrammetry algorithms before everyone realized they were not supposed to be trying to measure breast size from teams video. Woopsie!

  • I started a new job around the middle of last year where we use Teams, and one of the first things I did was look up how much information was visible from the system, turns out it was less than I expected, the contents of private chats are even protected. It's a dedicated work PC that I don't really do anyhing non-work-related on for security reasons and so far there's no hint that management cares about the Teams stats.

    • so far there's no hint that management cares about the Teams stats

      Yet. You are just one micromanager away from it. My non-profit org is getting teams this year. I have no doubt that it will be used against staff at some point, if only at the urging of a board member with "corporate" experience. Never mind that despite COVID and many staff working remotely, programming and fundraising continue with only a relatively minor drop-off in attendance as programs shifted to online and fundraising improving.

    • Lucky, our department has got in trouble for stuff we have put in Teams, and at least 2 people have been fired over it.
    • I'm just not seeing the outrage here. We use it specifically to track what was communicated in field support. Everyone knows we're using the actual content of chats to track how well we handle certain situations. And we actually have a record of how much time we spend on support activities, which we can take back to management.

      I just don't understand this mentality of using a company's provided tools for private, sensitive conversations. I grew up in a time when chat was something you did face-to-face

      • You think they're analyzing mail and chats... and not who leaves to "take a walk" together? This is 2020, your phone does facial recognition to sort pictures according to who is in them, their security cameras do too.
    • Same. I'm still going to use teams with the assumption that my boss can (but probably doesn't) read my messages.

    • My company is much the same, careful to make sure to maintain a balance between archiving paperwork ("when did we discuss this?") and making sure everyone on the system knows that legally, even off topic discussions are archived and could be subpoena'ed in worst case scenarios (if, say, a customer sues for libel and claims we were trash-talking him). We are also drilled in that company equipment should not be used for private surfing for the same reason, that you should not have sensitive info like personal

  • by Murdoch5 ( 1563847 ) on Monday January 18, 2021 @01:38PM (#60960490) Homepage
    Why does anyone trust Microsoft? Microsoft put a keylogger inside Windows 10 that can turn itself on without notice and that is a black box on what it collects. Microsoft doesn't care about the safe or private handling or your data and it's collection, it wants to show the world, much like Google, how much data can be collection and how little security can be associated with that data.

    Oddly enough people are almost proud that they make use of Microsoft products, to spite the known and very real threats to their privacy. When people started wearing badges of pride surrounding how much data they hand over to corporations without a second thought for what's going to be the end us of that data, the industry took notice and just decided to run as far and hard with that collection as it's possible to do.

    Companies collect so much information that they require AI systems to sort that data and analyze it, just so they know what data they're missing and can collect that also. Very few people care about their digital rights, and it's not going to get better without governments stepping in and passing laws to stop them, which thanks to kick backs is never going to happen.

    If companies are going to collect data, we may as well put statements of our disapproval inside of that data and of course lots irrelevance!
    • by UnknowingFool ( 672806 ) on Monday January 18, 2021 @02:26PM (#60960686)

      Microsoft put a keylogger inside Windows 10 that can turn itself on without notice and that is a black box on what it collects.

      Keylogger is so 2000s. For my perspective, Microsoft being so modern has put all sorts of spyware in addition to a keylogger into Windows 10. And they have embedded these things deep in the core of Windows so they cannot be removed. For example the two I know of are Cortana and Text Input Application. These seem innocuous until the ramifications of how they work is explained.

      Cortana which MS has tried to market as a Siri counterpart is tied to every search functionality and cannot be removed from Windows. While you can "disable" it, it will still run in the background. MS says it does not send all your searches to them but that can change. Also while settings say you supposedly can limit Camera and Microphone access, Windows core components may be able to access it without permission or settings options. You can see Windows host process (Rundll32) access your microphone at times. I would not put it past MS to have Cortana listening all the time with the ability to turn on your camera when it wants.

      Text Input Application is another seemingly innocent core component with larger ramifications. The description says it is the on screen keyboard for touch screens. Like Cortana even if you have no use for it, it is always running and cannot be disabled. Thus it is can be always monitoring your screen even if your screen is not a touch one. Here's where the nefarious implication: Most application inputs are designed around the idea of focus, tabs, or windows. If you are playing a game, key strokes and mouse clicks in game are not copied to your browser in another monitor. However if you have an always-on screen monitor for a touch screen, it should ignore focus and could capture all your screen and mouse clicks. I could be totally wrong about this but I do not like the implications.

    • Is it really as hidden and obscure as you claim?

      https://www.techadvisor.co.uk/how-to/windows/how-disable-hidden-keylogger-in-windows-10-3639643/

    • Chicken little nonsense. This has nothing to do with MS collecting and selling user data, this is about your EMPLOYER collecting data about their EMPLOYEES actions. Everything is logged, always has been. You have no right to privacy at work.
    • Why does anyone trust Microsoft?

      Sorry is this a trick question? You're talking about a specific service provided here to organisations. It's an advertised feature that you can look up this information on your employees.

      Microsoft doesn't care about the safe or private handling or your data and it's collection, it wants to show the world, much like Google, how much data can be collection and how little security can be associated with that data.

      Good analogy given how in both MS and Google's case neither has shown to have exposed user data en mass in the past.

      Oddly enough people are almost proud that they make use of Microsoft products, to spite the known and very real threats to their privacy.

      You have a very angry end user consumer view of this relationship. Corporate privacy is protected by very lengthy legal contracts. You as Joe Blow's Windows 10 Home Ream The Customer Edition are getting a ver

      • I'm talking about Microsoft in general, across all of their platforms and software. Take any pick from Microsoft, for instance Microsoft Office 365 and compare it to another product in the same space, Libre Office, and see which one handles your data with more transparency and openness. Factor in extra bonus points for products that allow you to shutdown data collection, something you can't do in many of Microsoft's products and give negative points to any license agreement which requires a law degree befo
    • It is not a bug it is a feature.

      Users of Team and other Microsoft products are NOT its customers. If your employer paid for the Microsoft products, the company will serve the interests of the employers.

      And employers think this is a good idea. [youtube.com] So they demand it. They want to know how many minutes the employees were "not productive"

      Managers who know how to measure productivity measure productivity. Managers who cant measure butt-on-seat time. Now Microsoft is saying not only butt-in-seat time but also

    • I am proud about using microsoft products in the work environment because its well supported and you can always find a crowd sourced solution when you are stuck. Its easy, people know it, people learn it in schools. When hiring new employees, there is less training..

      This is what matters to companies and IT departments. Not your privacy at work. You have no privacy at work. They aren't paying for that. Privacy of customer data, and good security, they will pay money for. But protecting your data from your ow

  • by magamiako1 ( 1026318 ) on Monday January 18, 2021 @01:44PM (#60960514)
    If you're scared of this, wait until you see what your company can do with their EDR solution!
    • Yeah this. Whoever wrote TFA seems to think companies haven't tracked their user's ever click since the first network account was created.

  • by roc97007 ( 608802 ) on Monday January 18, 2021 @01:44PM (#60960520) Journal

    ...wonders how much it takes to make his head spin. Maybe his head spins easily?

  • "I Looked at All the Ways Microsoft $x Tracks Users and My Head is Spinning"

  • Any large corporation tracks all its users with a fine-toothed comb. There are many reasons for this:

    * Effectiveness. When you have a lot of users, you need to make sure that the tools you give them are effective. You need to be able to measure if they're actually useful, if they're solving problems, etc, or if they're creating them. You have to have data to do this. You can't stop every single employee every day and ask them 100 questions. And anyway it's unreliable. You need to look at the data.

    * Efficien

    • "* You literally don't have a right to privacy while doing your work."

      So an employer can demand that you strip naked and submit to a cavity search while you're actually performing your assigned duties in order to ensure you aren't stealing company pens and paperclips?

      With so many ignorant, powerless drones willing to submit to any indignity in order to brown-nose their way up the corporate ladder, no wonder your country is such a mess.

      • Every citizen is protected by the the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which prohibits unreasonable searches. Searching your person would be unreasonable since the company does not own your person. Searching company equipment and company software is entirely within their rights. Only naive idiots think they have privacy rights while using someone else's equipment.
        • I agree with you that the post you replied to is silly.
          Perhaps they were being ridiculous on purpose.

          It's also worth noting the the constitution of the US federal government describes how the US federal government is constituted. When it says the president is elected on a Tuesday in November, it means the president of the federal government, not the president of your company. The federal constitution creates the federal government and describes what the federal government can and cannot do. The Texas Con

          • Constitutional rights and restrictions apply to the governmnet, not to private corporations. If I work for a diamond mine and as part of my employment contract, I am subject to strip searches, that is legal. Should be the same for prison guards but they have unions.

            Kind of weird how we can't keep drugs out of maximum security prisons but we think we can keep them out of the country.
  • How dare they use the information I give them to make money.

    Seriously, how to people expect this stuff to get paid for?
  • by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Monday January 18, 2021 @02:08PM (#60960632) Homepage

    This is how the conversation goes:

    Boss: "You didn't respond to 47 Team Messages."

    Me: "Pick one of those 47 at random."

    Message: "Just a reminder, please get X by 4:30." sent at 4:15.

    Me: If you check my message sent at 3:50, you will see "X is done." Do you feel it necessary to go through more of the 47 messages that were sent solely to make their metrics look good, or are you satisfied that I am doing a superb job?"

  • If your boss is going to determine your performance solely from analytics, then they probably don't know exactly what you do. A good boss know what thier employees are doing with or without analytics. If you have a bad boss maybe it's time for a new job

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      If your boss is going to determine your worth through analytics, great, just game the analytics.

      If you'd like to do something more meaningful with your life than game analytics, quit.

      I highly recommend quitting. It's very rewarding.

  • This is just going to cause big problems in the workplace, make good employees look bad, bad employees look good, cause managers to run around screaming "chicken little", cause more mistakes amongst employees who are more focused on looking good in the stats than getting the job done properly, ad nauseum.

    This whole making people operate as precice machines fantasy is really what all this is about. Except like all attempts at 'utopia' throughout history, this too will crash and burn, and likely take

  • name a single M$ product that doesn't track you LOL
  • by Anonymous Coward

    as to how deep they will sink to get your data.
    At my office we use Teams but IT mandated months ago that we had to use a VM for all Teams work. They supplied us with a VM to use. Anyone caught not using the VM is warned and if they do it again, they are fired.
    We use all sorts of VM's for 'stuff' because of worries about slurping. We went to an MS-365 only VM last November.

    We work on stuff that is sensitive to our industry and we really don't want anything to get to our competitors.

    Once our management gets w

    • "Once our management gets wind of this, they might just pull the plug on MS once and for all. They are really the pits."

      So make sure they get wind. They shouldn't be using Windows anyway if they care about security. That's like fire-walking in a gasoline-soaked jock strap.

  • I can't figure out why anyone is surprised by this. Did you know that your company has a log all of your emails to? And a record of your phone calls?! SHOCKER!!! These facile privacy arguments are a waste of everyone's time. This has nothing to do with MS collecting data for anyone other than your employer.
  • All Office 365 products have been indexing and serving up documents, chats, etc since Delve. Search technology applied to document management and unified communications. Of course Outlook has similar features. People can search stuff, what's the big deal? If they have a real problem with me being present at all times they can find someone else who deliver under their constraints. Otherwise they can let me do my work without the hassle.
  • The have the absolute maximum amount of say they should be allowed: They can agree to this, or they can find another job. I hear McDonald's is hiring.

  • Optimization Company? Get the Promotion you deserve! Only $29.99 if you are one of the first 100 to sign up...
  • "Teams hoovers up all your chats..."

    Aaaah yea... it's a chat program.

    You enter data into the thing. They store your data.

    Where's the story?

E = MC ** 2 +- 3db

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