Dark Patterns from Google Workspace and Google Labs Flow

(workspace.google.com)

4 points | by legel 1 hour ago

1 comments

  • legel 1 hour ago
    I've been using Google Workspace for over a decade. Historically, after removing a user from your organization, it was always easy to migrate their data (e.g. Google Drive folders) to your own user. Suddenly, I recently had a nightmare experience where I needed to remove users no longer in my company, but I was unable to save their very important data. Google intentionally removed the feature in order to promote their new "Archive" user feature, where "data is safe" and you pay for it at continued unnecessary, extortionist rates.

    Separately, I just had another terrible interaction with my own data through Google Labs Flow. That is the site that is serving the latest Nano Banana image and Veo video generations. My takeaways on the quality and value and issues with those "world models" are for another time. Here I'm pointing out another unique "dark pattern" that product managers seem compelled to apply: "if you want us to save your data in a database, then you have to let us view that data and train models on it". It's ridiculous, either I can have my data automatically deleted and have sessions be completely "dumb", or I can submit my soul for eternity and "allow any reviewer to analyze".

    Beware, founders and developers relying on Google. Don't be surprised if you wake up with your data held hostage. Don't be surprised when you realize your intellectual property can either be deleted or stolen, but not simply saved.

    Thanks Google.