• corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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    5 days ago

    not 1. or 2. (while I don’t have very high opinions of Microsoft, I don’t think they’d voluntarily break the promise because way too much money from other huge corporations goes their way).

    Microsoft can and does promise what the customers want. When the warrant comes - and we’ve seen stupider warrants from the current “administration of never-ending firsts” - they can shrug and say “it’s the law. Sorry.”

    So Microsoft’s promise, given the cloud act, is made while they KNOW they can’t uphold it; and with a team of lawyers looking it over, they know this going in. The US gov can most definitely grab your data from a US company’s servers on Irish soil, for instance, as that’s specifically why the USCloud act was enacted.

    Want to see what Mark has on his mind going into the next NAFTA meeting? NSA no-tell warrant to raid Outlook or AWS-CA1 or azure and it’s all his. Tesla need a leg-up against Rivian? Same. Facebook wants to know what Germany has in store for privacy? Go check all their email.

    OVH at least structured to ensure no warrant can legally compel release of data.