Microsoft Calls Off OneDrive Photo-pocalypse (gizmodo.com) 12
After Microsoft recently imposed storage limits for photos in a user's OneDrive account, Microsoft has now reversed course after receiving a barrage of backlash. From a report: In August, Microsoft announced that photos in a user's OneDrive Gallery and in each of their saved photo albums would count separately toward the company's cloud-based limit of five gigabytes, according to Neowin. The update was expected to roll out on October 16, which would force some users to encounter storage ceilings as the extra data was added to their OneDrive, preventing additional files from syncing. Customers were surprised by the abrupt policy change, so surprised in fact that the company caved to user backlash and recently announced that the change was no longer on the table.
"On August 31, 2023, we began to communicate an upcoming update to our cloud storage infrastructure that would result in a change in how OneDrive photos and photo albums data is counted against your overall cloud storage quota," Microsoft said in an email to customers, which has also been posted to the company's Support page. "This change was scheduled to start rolling out on October 16, 2023. Based on the feedback we received, we have adjusted our approach, we will no longer roll out this update."
"On August 31, 2023, we began to communicate an upcoming update to our cloud storage infrastructure that would result in a change in how OneDrive photos and photo albums data is counted against your overall cloud storage quota," Microsoft said in an email to customers, which has also been posted to the company's Support page. "This change was scheduled to start rolling out on October 16, 2023. Based on the feedback we received, we have adjusted our approach, we will no longer roll out this update."
not really (Score:2, Insightful)
Just pull a Comcast: (Score:3)
...make image loading gradually slower and slower so people gradually stop wanting to use it for photos.
If storage was a problem... (Score:5, Insightful)
...maybe they should have made it opt-in instead of installed and active by default, resulting in millions of users unknowingly uploading the contents of their computer to the cloud?
=Smidge=
Reap what you Sow? (Score:4, Insightful)
What's the actual complaint here?!?
"I was stupid and let something predictable happen to me and now I am mad at my stupid?"
5gb limit? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Next they'll probably try ... (Score:2)
Re: Next they'll probably try ... (Score:2)
No problem (Score:2)
I'll just store all my photos as in-line objects in Word documents.