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soared 1 days ago [-]
That support quote is from an LLM. If you have any escalation paths (twitter, or this thread lol) there may still be a way to change it back.
xtiansimon 8 hours ago [-]
> “That support quote is from an LLM…”
I don’t know what support calls their digital support systems (let’s call it “the script”), but that quote sounds very familiar—-support person following a script don’t have the access, or authority to effect change.
What’s more, if the old way is deprecated, the people with authority don’t want you to change back. There is no path to reverse the change in the hands of support.
Even if it was literally the case this is a chat response, I see no difference with most human-support CSRs.
That’s not how business is run these days—-at least that’s my experience with SaaS for small businesses.
nikanj 24 hours ago [-]
Hacker News front page remains the one true support channel for all larger tech companies. The official channels stonewall you, but HN reaches people who can actually help
porridgeraisin 20 hours ago [-]
Famous debacle cursor had with their LLM support a while back:
(I work at Cursor) Sorry about this, we should have made this more clear. The new privacy mode is needed because we have to store some state to enable running agents in the cloud. If you don't want to use cloud agents, you can continue using the legacy privacy mode. Currently the mobile app requires this new privacy mode and won't work without it. We're pushing an update right now to make this more clear in app and can help you get reverted back to the legacy version on the support thread.
zkldi 20 hours ago [-]
Hi leerob,
Where is the support thread?
I have ticket T-D95851 at the moment, if you could get someone to resolve it. I do not want to use cloud agents.
Thanks
zk
leerob 16 hours ago [-]
Will do. On it.
jmuguy 1 days ago [-]
The mobile app is kind of pointless anyway, imo. It cannot start an agent session on your computer, it can only be "handed off" an existing session from your computer. I don't use Cloud Agents, because for some reason they can't connect to our Linear instance. So I was only interested in using the mobile app as a proxy for my home system.
LatticeAnimal 1 days ago [-]
It is surprising that they went this route instead of the Claude-code route. The cloud agents are significantly more limiting.
conartist6 1 days ago [-]
That's about the level of respect the tech industry has for users
matheusmoreira 23 hours ago [-]
> I honestly don't understand how it's legal
The legality is irrelevant since as consumers we don't have the time or the money to sue them for it. And even if one of us somehow do have both, we probably agreed to binding arbitration with the firm they pay anyway.
sbmsr 1 days ago [-]
Wow - same happened to me earlier today and was bummed. Glad to see a public place to flag this.
HeyMeco 1 days ago [-]
Yeah fell into the same trap. Super annoying
jklm 1 days ago [-]
Happened to me too, incredibly dark pattern
cmdrmac 1 days ago [-]
This bait-and-switch with privacy is what annoys me. I get that if the software was completely free, you are the product. But if I'm paying, why can I not have a privacy policy that actually benefits me - the user?
matheusmoreira 22 hours ago [-]
Your payment is just a signal that you've got disposable income. You're paying to make yourself an even more valuable product for them to sell.
klibertp 1 days ago [-]
You're probably not paying nearly enough? IDK, but pricing in tech is stretched on both ends (either way too cheap, or incredibly expensive) so much that it's hard to say anything for sure just because one is a "paying customer".
throw1234567891 1 days ago [-]
> You're probably not paying nearly enough?
What are the real prices then? What is the “privacy price”?
Some hundreds of thousands of dollars for a computer capable of local inference with GLM 5.2.
cmdrmac 23 hours ago [-]
Fair point. I'd add on that the company should explicitly spell out strong privacy as a feature then and charge more. Saying that "we won't use your data for training", but then not really meaning it is a bit disingenuous. How I interpret that statement may not necessarily align with the company (i.e., what kind of training?).
sunaookami 23 hours ago [-]
Did LLM companies pay everyone for the code and text they stole?
matheusmoreira 22 hours ago [-]
No, they just reached some absurd token settlements that made a mockery of all other copyright enforcement victims.
One would think dozens of SWAT officers would rappel down helicopters and storm the mansions of these big tech CEOs in order to bring them out in cuffs and serve zillion dollar fines on behalf of the so called rights holders. Kim Dotcom got destroyed while AI companies got a slap on the wrist.
boudra 24 hours ago [-]
For folks are looking for an open source alternative that respects your privacy, see Paseo (disclaimer: I am the maintainer)
mosbyllc 10 hours ago [-]
Right now, all large-model companies are competing to attract users. There’s no time to stop and consider user security and needs, lol.
LoganDark 1 days ago [-]
Similarly, the Claude app for iOS tries to force you through a mandatory onboarding where you're required to set your account name among other things. I've never needed this to use the CLI or the web app so I have no idea why they think they need it on iOS. There's seemingly no way to bypass this, so on iOS I've had to use Claude in Safari. Ridiculous.
ninininino 17 hours ago [-]
I've been trying the iOS app today and its missing all of my active sessions from my laptop but has tons of old, no longer valuable sessions. And I enabled every 'show X' option/filter. Hope the app improves.
sanju3026 13 hours ago [-]
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Mona1 5 hours ago [-]
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DanLemmon 14 hours ago [-]
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Mona1 23 hours ago [-]
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sleepybrett 1 days ago [-]
surprise! the ai companies that stole every conceivable copywritten work to train their models doesn't want you to be able to have any privacy either.
doublescoop 23 hours ago [-]
But they sure seem awfully worried about other companies distilling their models. The irony is rich.
dbalatero 1 days ago [-]
I suspect that while they prefer you to give up all your data, what's even more likely is they are moving fast and breaking things at a rate unseen before, and not enough conversation is happening in design phases where someone can flag that "Hey if you add this new prompt it might break an important user contract you forgot about."
In either case annoying still.
sleepybrett 1 days ago [-]
just another line in the context. 'Make sure the customers have at least the same level of privacy protection that they currently have.'
rekttrader 1 days ago [-]
Elon’s invisible hand strikes again.
MetaWhirledPeas 23 hours ago [-]
The company was acquired days ago. You think this was implemented since then?
I don’t know what support calls their digital support systems (let’s call it “the script”), but that quote sounds very familiar—-support person following a script don’t have the access, or authority to effect change.
What’s more, if the old way is deprecated, the people with authority don’t want you to change back. There is no path to reverse the change in the hands of support.
Even if it was literally the case this is a chat response, I see no difference with most human-support CSRs.
That’s not how business is run these days—-at least that’s my experience with SaaS for small businesses.
https://old.reddit.com/r/cursor/comments/1jyy5am/psa_cursor_...
Where is the support thread?
I have ticket T-D95851 at the moment, if you could get someone to resolve it. I do not want to use cloud agents.
Thanks
zk
The legality is irrelevant since as consumers we don't have the time or the money to sue them for it. And even if one of us somehow do have both, we probably agreed to binding arbitration with the firm they pay anyway.
What are the real prices then? What is the “privacy price”?
It might be higher now.
One would think dozens of SWAT officers would rappel down helicopters and storm the mansions of these big tech CEOs in order to bring them out in cuffs and serve zillion dollar fines on behalf of the so called rights holders. Kim Dotcom got destroyed while AI companies got a slap on the wrist.
In either case annoying still.