this post was submitted on 09 May 2025
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[–] MeaanBeaan@lemmy.world 20 points 2 days ago (2 children)

Correct me if I'm wrong here but a company can't dictate what you do on your own time on your own hardware, so I assume this simply affects work computers. Assuming thats the case I don't really see a problem here. I've never been able to download any applications at all on any work computer I've ever used short of apps the company itself uses.

Seems completely understandable to me to bar employees from using a competing service especially if there are genuine security concerns.

[–] paraphrand@lemmy.world 12 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Ever heard about software devs not being able to work on personal projects because all the code they produce, even off the clock is owned by their employer?

[–] ilmagico@lemmy.world 1 points 2 days ago

Hasn't been true for my past two jobs at least (US based), what I do outside of company premises / my own hardware and my own time is mine. They only own what was done on company's dime. Not saying it doesn't happen, but that's not my experience so far, and I'm not sure if would be legal.

[–] shiroininja@lemmy.world 5 points 2 days ago

I mean if It’s only for business machines I get it. If you want a proper silo where your ip and isn’t going to be stolen by an LLM, any organization should run an in house self hosted model that is trained on their own data and doesn’t pass data back to the upstream. That just makes sense. Especially if it just passes your work to your competitors.

I mean if we ever properly gleam information from LLMs, it’ll be the biggest source of leaks and whistleblowing ever created from video games to National security. Don’t use cloud hosted llms if you want privacy and security.