Members of the Windows program Insider which will install the latest version previewς των Windows 10 θα βρεθούν συμμετέχοντες σε μια δοκιμή στις ρυθμίσεις απορρήτου που θα δούμε στο επόμενο λειτουργικό σύστημα.
In a post at blog of the company today, Microsoft Privacy Officer Marisa Rogers announced that today's version will include two new settings that will be part of the final version of the 1803 release released next month.
The Inking & Typing setting will provide handwriting recognition control, auto-completion, next word prediction and built-in Windows spell check.
The Find My Device setting will allow Windows to use location data to find a lost device.
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For some Insiders, αυτές οι οθόνες εγκατάστασης θα εμφανίζονται σε μια ενιαία λίστα ρυθμίσεων απορρήτου, παρόμοια με αυτή που χρησιμοποιείται στις τρέχουσες εκδόσεις των Windows 10. Σε αυτήν τη διαμόρφωση, οι προεπιλεγμένες επιλογές ορίζονται σύμφωνα με τις συστάσεις της Microsoft, με ένα διακόπτη που επιτρέπει αλλαγές σε μεμονωμένες ρυθμίσεις.
Clicking Accept will save all the settings at the same time.
However, other insiders will have to complete it procedure selecting a series of seven screens, each containing a single privacy setting.
In this configuration, the recommended setting is displayed with a dotted line, but the user must make the final selection for each and then click on Accept to proceed to the next screen.
Insiders will be able to provide information about both parameters by using the Windows 10 Feedback Hub application.
This test came about as there are two conflicting design considerations. The all-in-one option is less annoying, but it can force users to accept the default settings, which may not have happened if they had the option to read the settings one by one.
Privacy supporters prefer to prefer the second option, which requires the user to select each setting separately.
This option is also less likely to be criticized by European privacy regulators data, who have accused Microsoft of a “lack of consent” in privacy settings.
For example, French regulators filed a 2017 complaint about the ad ID used in Windows 10.
As part of a settlement, Microsoft has agreed to modify the installation process so that users are required to express their choice to enable or disable the ad ID before the installation is complete.