immi101: but with that argument you could remove 50% of the system setting dialogs, right? I mean I have a neat dialog to change my prefered DNS server or set a WINS server manually , but a dialog to set my update options is discarded because it is too advanced?
JMich: DNS and WINS addresses are needed much more often than the need to block updates. And while netsh is available, and quite useful if you need to do changes often, people still prefer to go with the network connection properties.
Should there come a time when the network interface is configured automatically, and changing it will cause problems more often than it will solve them, then yes, I do believe removing said dialogue would be the better choice. But with the current mess of IPv4 and IPv6, the changes are needed.
If you seriously believe this, I don't know what you're doing with your computer but it's not what 90% of people are doing with their computers.
It's become obvious that your use cases for PCs are pretty niche and your users likewise. That's fine, but you keep generalizing that to the wider range of Windows users and honey, you are wrong to do that.
MrPopo: What's it like to think that you're worth spying on?
Why do you think anyone cares specifically about spying on individual people?
No one cares about spying on individual people.
Everyone cares about recording everything they can get their hands on and feeding it into shopping recommendation AIs.
A company doesn't need to be targeting a specific user to be creepy and invasive. MS isn't trying to spy on any particular person, they're trying to spy on every single Windows users simultaneously. Gotta give them credit for the ambition, but I wish there'd been a bit more thought put into the ethical and security considerations.