While this is true today, it will be changing very shortly. We are full steam ahead and heads down on our migration to Google Cloud Platform. You can follow along on our progress if you'd like at https://gitlab.com/gitlab-com/migration
If you've seen Windows 10 (ads and telemetry) it's probably only fair to say that MS is also highly interested in end-user data and ads, just like Google.
Yet, their business model doesn't rely on my data and ad-targeting me.
Besides, from my experience, every software vendor is of course interested in telemetry. Otherwise, I don't really know which features my customers are using, and on which I should focus more.
> Which basically means, that all the people who hated the buyin from Microsoft are becoming part of the Google ad data warehouse?
Really? If you think that running your customer-facing web app on a certain cloud provider means that provider can inject content, why wasn't Amazon trying to sell me stuff related to the projects I was interested in that were hosted in Gitlab when Gitlab ran on AWS?
And if Google does to anything, Gitlab could just relaunch their containers on AWS (with EKS, or Fargate, or run K8s on bare metal hosts that AWS doesn't have any execution access on, e.g. i3.metal.).
I can see how this rubs people, but rationally, what difference would it realy make if they run on Google's or Amazon's infrastructure instead?
Even 'own servers' would still be hosted in some major data center, connectivity served by the same corporate telcos.
Using a company's service is not the same as being completely owned by them. Kind of a dumb little "gotcha!" to try and feel clever over. What? should we make sure a company we like isn't using Windows before using their services, too? or Office? Outlook?
If you check the history of README.md, you'll see that this process was initiated in December 2017 -- well before the GitHub acquisition announced this week.
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That's, uhm, reassuring to know...
Besides, from my experience, every software vendor is of course interested in telemetry. Otherwise, I don't really know which features my customers are using, and on which I should focus more.
Maybe I'm biased here.
Really? If you think that running your customer-facing web app on a certain cloud provider means that provider can inject content, why wasn't Amazon trying to sell me stuff related to the projects I was interested in that were hosted in Gitlab when Gitlab ran on AWS?
And if Google does to anything, Gitlab could just relaunch their containers on AWS (with EKS, or Fargate, or run K8s on bare metal hosts that AWS doesn't have any execution access on, e.g. i3.metal.).