Your argument from before is just that the user is not in full control.
Well, duh. That's not a reason to avoid every "private" feature in every product on the planet.
A failure in the system is still surprising. I could equally say "all software has bugs, so it's not surprising if your self-hosted solution leaks data". But that would be too dismissive, as you are being.
But to others (some are even in this thread!) it is both new and surprising. They unfortunately missed your 4 year old comment, but at least they get to learn it now.
Your argument from before is just that the user is not in full control.
Well, duh. That's not a reason to avoid every "private" feature in every product on the planet.
A failure in the system is still surprising. I could equally say "all software has bugs, so it's not surprising if your self-hosted solution leaks data". But that would be too dismissive, as you are being.
>Come on, this is not surprising.
Very cool that it is not surprising to you.
But to others (some are even in this thread!) it is both new and surprising. They unfortunately missed your 4 year old comment, but at least they get to learn it now.