• Microsoft Viva

    From Mike Powell@1:2320/105 to ALL on Fri Dec 30 10:14:00 2022
    At work, we use Office 365 which, of course, includes Outlook 365 which we
    use for our office email.

    Each morning, I receive at least one message from a service called
    Microsoft Viva. Apparently Outlook looks through my calendar for that day
    and then tries to match up meetings with emails I have received, and this message tells me what it has found. Also, once a week, I will get a second email that usually includes some brief facts about how long it takes me to answer emails, on average, and additional info about the days I have the
    most meetings, etc.

    At the bottom, there is a link where I can opt out.

    Right under that is a note that says the following:

    For people in Canada:
    This is a mandatory service communication.

    Then it gives them a link where they can adjust their settings for "other communications."

    I am curious as to why, if I were in Canada, these messages from Microsoft
    are mandatory? I am assuming there is some law behind it. I thought it
    was an odd message. :)

    Mike


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  • From Ward Dossche@2:292/854 to Mike Powell on Fri Dec 30 23:17:44 2022
    Mike,

    I thought it was an odd message. :)

    Odd people, odd messages ... they worship the king of another country ... what to expect... 8-)

    \%/@rd

    --- DB4 - MidniteSpecial
    * Origin: Many Glacier - Preserve / Protect / Conserve (2:292/854)
  • From August Abolins@1:396/45.29 to Mike Powell on Fri Dec 30 22:14:00 2022
    Hello Mike!

    Each morning, I receive at least one message from a
    service called Microsoft Viva. Apparently Outlook looks
    through my calendar for that day and then tries to match
    up meetings with emails I have received, and this message
    tells me what it has found. Also, once a week, I will get
    a second email that usually includes some brief facts
    about how long it takes me to answer emails, on average,
    and additional info about the days I have the most
    meetings, etc.

    OMG, they just activated all those meeting/email matchings,
    brief facts, and stats?

    Something like that would make me furious.



    At the bottom, there is a link where I can opt out.

    Right under that is a note that says the following:

    For people in Canada:
    This is a mandatory service communication.

    THAT is certainly strange for disallowing Canadian users to opt
    out. I'd simply opt out of such MS product!

    I use MS Outlook 2007 (local to my PC). It is quite good
    enuff, even if it is considered 15 yrs old.


    I am curious as to why, if I were in Canada, these
    messages from Microsoft are mandatory? I am assuming
    there is some law behind it. I thought it was an odd
    message. :)

    Maybe you can find more about that matter elsewhere, but since
    I'm not a 365 or cloud Outlook user, I am not affected.

    --
    ../|ug

    --- OpenXP 5.0.51
    * Origin: Age Doesn't Matter Unless You're a Cheese (1:396/45.29)
  • From Mike Powell@1:2320/105 to AUGUST ABOLINS on Sat Dec 31 10:15:00 2022
    Each morning, I receive at least one message from a
    service called Microsoft Viva. Apparently Outlook looks
    through my calendar for that day and then tries to match
    up meetings with emails I have received, and this message
    tells me what it has found. Also, once a week, I will get
    a second email that usually includes some brief facts
    about how long it takes me to answer emails, on average,
    and additional info about the days I have the most
    meetings, etc.

    OMG, they just activated all those meeting/email matchings,
    brief facts, and stats?

    Something like that would make me furious.

    As a Canadian, you'd be very furious. :D I can set a rule to make them go
    to junk or "other" so it is not a big deal. I am guessing a Canadian user
    could do the same, since they cannot opt out.

    On rare instances, they are actually helpful.

    Mike


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  • From August Abolins@1:396/45.29 to Mike Powell on Sun Jan 1 09:59:00 2023
    Hello Mike!

    On rare instances, they are actually helpful.

    But.. they are still taking the privilege of scanning email
    content, making AI decisions as to what is associated with
    what, meter your usage, under the guise of helpfulness.

    It just feels wrong to me.

    --
    ../|ug

    --- OpenXP 5.0.51
    * Origin: Age Doesn't Matter Unless You're a Cheese (1:396/45.29)