Microsoft Might Crush Slack Like Facebook Crushed Snapchat (vox.com) 144
"Tech workers' favorite communications tool, Slack, is losing ground to its biggest rival, Microsoft Teams, which has copied its way into popularity," writes Rani Molla for Recode. "In other words, Slack has the same problem as Snapchat, which has suffered from its bigger rival Facebook's relentless appropriation." From the report: Slack's market share among the world's largest companies is mostly flat, adoption rates are declining, and a bigger portion of these companies indicate they plan on leaving the service, according to a new survey by market research firm ETR, which asks chief information officers and other leaders at the world's biggest organizations* where they plan to spend their company's tech budget. Meanwhile, Teams is seeing increased market share, relatively higher adoption rates, and low rates of defection, according to the data.
Slack, which is currently trading below its first-day opening price, has been beset both by smaller companies hoping to improve upon it and tech giants trying to copy and replace it. Microsoft, at one point, had even considered buying Slack. Instead, nearly four years after Slack's debut, Microsoft launched Teams, which has since adopted many of its competitor's functions, including the basic premise of creating an online office space for coworkers to collaborate and communicate. The situation was similar with Facebook, which after failing to buy Snapchat began to copy it, feature by feature. Facebook did this with impunity because it's not really possible to copyright what software does -- you can only copyright the code itself. Since products like Slack and Microsoft Teams or Facebook and Snapchat are built on different platforms, the code for each is likely distinct, so copying features is fair game.
Slack, which is currently trading below its first-day opening price, has been beset both by smaller companies hoping to improve upon it and tech giants trying to copy and replace it. Microsoft, at one point, had even considered buying Slack. Instead, nearly four years after Slack's debut, Microsoft launched Teams, which has since adopted many of its competitor's functions, including the basic premise of creating an online office space for coworkers to collaborate and communicate. The situation was similar with Facebook, which after failing to buy Snapchat began to copy it, feature by feature. Facebook did this with impunity because it's not really possible to copyright what software does -- you can only copyright the code itself. Since products like Slack and Microsoft Teams or Facebook and Snapchat are built on different platforms, the code for each is likely distinct, so copying features is fair game.
Re:Slack didn't... (Score:4, Informative)
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Huh, this thread is mostly complains about users not being able to mute people that are harassing them... Eh, the issue there is certainly not with slack I dare say...
Some others complaining about bots posting too much spam - again the problem is with that workplace, not with the software.
Re:Slack didn't... (Score:5, Informative)
This. We use Slack heavily at work, with over 60 employees in the immediate office (remote working is encouraged and available, but so is having a desk and a place in the office should you want it) and significantly more than that in other offices, and Slack is an amazing tool - it works extremely well for us.
One thing that Teams has over Slack however is the video conferencing - having used Teams briefly earlier this year, the video conferencing within a team is significantly better than Google Hangouts, Slack and Zoom (the other three I have tried in the same space). Teams did stuff like blurring my background, while Zoom wants me to replace it with a block colour (after I upgraded OSX of course... Teams didnt require me to do that) or get a green screen. Slacks video conferencing ability is just piss poor.
But as a chat system within a team, it works amazingly well for us.
Generally, if you are getting abuse at a work place over Slack, its the work place that is the problem - you would be getting that abuse in dozens of other ways if Slack didn't exist (and infact you probably are anyway).
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Exactly this.
"I'm being harassed in my workcenter. My boss refuses to do anything about it. The most obvious solution is to harass Slack via Twitter."
And to answer several rhetorical questions from that thread, Yes. If you're being harassed and your boss or HR isn't addressing it you should quit. And you should pursue all legal avenues on your way out.
Re:Slack didn't... (Score:5, Insightful)
this thread is mostly complains about users not being able to mute people that are harassing them... Eh, the issue there is certainly not with slack I dare say... Some others complaining about bots posting too much spam - again the problem is with that workplace, not with the software.
No, the problem is not with the workplace. Every large company has a "Chad". Chad is the guy in your team that is no good for nothing or just keeps bothering you with shit that you may care about, but not when you are focusing on something.
I want to be able to mute Chad, and only get notifications from people that really matter to me.
Every single piece of chat software that I have used in my 25 years of using chat software, has the option to ignore individual users. Slack refuses to do that. So fuck Slack.
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this thread is mostly complains about users not being able to mute people that are harassing them... Eh, the issue there is certainly not with slack I dare say... Some others complaining about bots posting too much spam - again the problem is with that workplace, not with the software.
No, the problem is not with the workplace. Every large company has a "Chad". Chad is the guy in your team that is no good for nothing
I need to point out that you've used a double negative, you've just told us that Chad is good for everything.
Good on Chad.
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Wow.
The response is basically "fuck you you must work in a prefect workplace".
Become Tiny Speck Again (Score:1)
When Microsoft crushes Slack, maybe they will revive their old company Tiny Speck and revive their MMO game called Glitch.
We can hope.
Microsoft teams? (Score:1)
Seriously I know way more startups replacing slack with discord. I haven't heard of a single one replacing slack with Microsoft Teams.
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I guess you're too fucking stupid to read that the parent comment was complaining about Slack owning your data. There's not much difference if MS is the one that owns your data, so please don't comment if you don't even understand the issue.
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Quoting myself elsewhere:
"Microsoft has PCI compliant and secured compartments as well as strong contractual assurances of certain data handling practices being implemented, data retention, etc. Slack has none of that and as a bonus every plugin you install sells your data to each vendor."
That is the issue.
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"Yeah the data is vulnerable in Slack. It's also vulnerable in any Windows Server by virtue of being a Windows Server and by virtue of every Windows Server admin being a complete and total moron."
All true but it doesn't change that Microsoft has PCI compliant and secured compartments as well as strong contractual assurances of certain data handling practices being implemented, data retention, etc. Slack has none of that and as a bonus every plugin you install sells your data to each vendor.
If you are going
Re:Microsoft teams? (Score:5, Insightful)
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We replaced Slack with Mattermost so we could self-host. We have no interest in MS Teams at all.
The worst part of switching was people complaining about the name. "Slack" is so much easier to say...
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I did the same at one point for my own team until the company adopted Teams and we had to drop it. You still have to be careful though extension and plugins tend to ship your data out in the same manner as they do on Slack. No third party integrations, ever!
Re:Microsoft teams? (Score:4, Insightful)
The company I work for has chosen teams over slack. The reasoning is pretty simple... no corporate security policy should allow slack. Period. Ever. Slack treats private corporate information the same way that Facebook or Android treats user data. That might not be your biggest concern on an open source project but it is a pretty serious concern.
The way slack treats information just using it for any project at my organization would send enough confidential information to third parties that we would be obligated to notify clients and shareholders of a breach.
Here an example that might come up at my wife's former employer using a persistent group chat to coordinate work flow:
"Hey Jean, I've got John Smith. He has missed payments but they were just on medical and student loans and I know we don't really care about those. Can you check file #5587987987 for an exception on a first bike purchase?"
Normally fine but now you've got a PCI violation because it was said on Slack and Slack isn't hosted and secured by your company, isn't certified as PCI compliant, and doesn't even have so much as an agreement to keep your data confidential. Oh and because of the way slack works, that breach was probably spread to a dozen plugin/extension vendors as well. Slack touts a built in mechanism for cross site scripting exploits as a feature and not a bug!
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Re: Microsoft teams? (Score:2)
You work at a small company, I presume?
Say it ain't so! (Score:5, Insightful)
OMG. You mean that the guys who packaged and wrote a wrapper around an IRC server aren't going to become the world's next billionaires? This is insane.
Disclosure: I use Slack.
Many unexpected billionaires (Score:3)
Well, the guys that created an easier to use news feed became billionaires (Facebook). As did the ones that built a slightly better search engine (Google). And at a local level, ones that just built a better bug tracking system (Atlasian).
Slack was hot. All the cool kids were using it. It was all over the in-flight magazine which drives C-level decision making.
That said, I get enough email as it is. If I need something urgently or to have a conversation I go for a walk or use a telephone -- but rarely
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"slightly better search engine"
Wha? Google didn't win because it was a better search engine, it wasn't even better than the best available at the time which was altavista. Google won because they took all the not search bullshit off the page. Slowly but surely Google has gone the other direction since then but they've killed the competition and the differences are less noticeable with faster internet speeds. Go back to a 28.8k dialup or an expensive lightning fast 56kbps modem and load aol/yahoo/altavista v
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Did google even have page rank on open? Certainly nobody was talking about it for quite some time but no it didn't give better results for most things at first because Altavista didn't just dumbly count keywords. Google has improved over time and it took a good six months to a year after I discovered it before the results were consistently better and I stopped dual searching. People switched because Google took all the ads and crapware off the page. They called it "minimalist" and "clean" but it ad free fas
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Wait.... (Score:5, Insightful)
You're saying that a company whose only product is a piece of fairly simple software can face competition from other companies pretty easily? Maybe such companies aren't worth billions of dollars?
I'm shocked.
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Microsoft isn't the tiger they once were. Mostly, they imitated other people's stuff through a half dozen or more major revisions, then maybe got it right if they were paying attention and it didn't break much.
They didn't lead cloud, but they did invest and it wasn't hard to gain marketshare because AWS has had their fingers in their ears forever and like Jobs did, played specifically to a fawning crowd.
Slack has an ecosystem, yes, other decent apps, some of them pretty cool. Microsoft wants some of that lo
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"Microsoft wants to make you one more added license construct. Teams will never be really free, as in works-anywhere-on-anything."
Lacking those legal constructs makes Slack a non-starter for any large business because where it doesn't violate government regulation outright it opens gaping security holes. Slack is a worse data siphon than FB and unlike personal bullshit on FB leaking the data that Slacks leaks from a company is grounds for numerous lawsuits.
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Slack makes no pretenses. Their ToS are pretty clear. Yes, there are those that will do dastardly things, and Microsoft will try to take a more ostensibly secure path which will be riddled with the same QA problems they already have.
All the PR in the world doesn't have enough corks to plug the problems that Microsoft faces. Their dominance is still huge, and they face the fate of mundane eras as the world moves past them. The same can be said for Google. Even Apple has become mundane.
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"Slack makes no pretenses. Their ToS are pretty clear. Yes, there are those that will do dastardly things, and Microsoft will try to take a more ostensibly secure path which will be riddled with the same QA problems they already have."
Yes they are pretty clear and they are a problem. I'm sorry but some people aren't picking a fun tool to use in their mom's basement. They have to answer in court for their decisions and follow government industry compliance regulations. They can't do business without a secure
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I don't doubt the security compliance and audit needs of organizations. Most do it badly, in my experience. That's not to vanquish the goal, instead, to say that Slack doesn't make the pretense of absolute compliance, then fail with regularity.
Should Slack tighten up? IMHO, certainly. I advise all who use it that it's swiss cheese, and not unlike Facebook in many ways. My experience also says that Slack is vastly faster to respond to problems that violate its sense of ToS and has far better QA and trust for
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"I don't doubt the security compliance and audit needs of organizations. Most do it badly, in my experience. That's not to vanquish the goal, instead, to say that Slack doesn't make the pretense of absolute compliance, then fail with regularity."
See you are already confused about the purpose of security compliance and audits. The purpose isn't to do them well or secure anything (at least not before there is egg on your face but since everyone is getting breached it really isn't much egg) the purpose is to b
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Didn't say that Slack shouldn't worry, and that the marketsize for Microsoft is huge. This said, their developer programs have waned, and they don't understand ecosystems well.
Microsoft once solidly owned servers, domains (still the most used directory service in AD), and enslaved thousands of OEMs to make Windows the first and only choice on desktops and laptops. Some of this mentality remains.
The debacles that Microsoft constantly goes through as a function of horrific QA, regression testing, and simple b
Re: I had an insightful post saved (Score:2)
I did too, but I don't remember which of the 500 channels it's in, and the relentless flood of cat pictures and constant "lol, ikr?" posts would make it impossible to find regardless.
Teams is no substitute (Score:2, Insightful)
Teams is a miserable copy of Slack - many companies switch to it because they're already using MS and its integrated and comes with an Office 365 sub but it lacks the simplicity and "just works" functionality of slack.
would switch back in a heart beat and I make sure to bitch about it whenever possible.
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Teams also does other things. Teams, for example, provides a storage for files and similar. Yes, the file store is a pretty facade over SharePoint, nothing more, but it is something. There's a (simple) on-board per-channel wiki. There's real-time skype-like[1] audio and video chat (including multiple people.) Embedded tabs of other services. Integration (to some degree) with MS Planner. Oh, and does Slack offer PSTN (phone network) integration? (I honestly don't know.) Organisational information (pu
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Used both extensively. All those features in teams that aren't pure chat-link (wiki, files, onenote, etc) are a real pain to use collaboratively, and every time you use one, you'll use your current scroll position in a chat if you aren't at the bottom already. The UX issues are astoundingly bad in teams. Trying to get info for a teammate or direct them to info from another group/team is maddening because of such things. It feels like every single non-chat feature, including search, was bolted on afterwar
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Teams, for example, provides a storage for files and similar.
So does Slack.
There's a (simple) on-board per-channel wiki.
I'm sure that's super heavily used. Slack has a channel purpose which is probably about as much as anyone would ever read.
There's real-time skype-like[1] audio and video chat (including multiple people.)
With desktop sharing and screen markup like Slack also has while you are on an audio or video call? That all works with a Teams mobile app?
Embedded tabs of other services.
I've not used
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How did SharePoint become a file store? I feel like Teams is just another layer of smog over existing Microsoft products.
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But by all your logic you presume somebody WANTS to use O365, or any other microsoft product.
I've been mostly Microsoft free for over a decade, and it's been very pleasant. As much as I dislike Google's privacy practices, gSuite is bar none a better product than O365--I was at a company last year who was stuck on O365, and they didn't realize how much pain they were in, and how much they were missing.
No thanks, and I'm glad to leave it behind. Teams? How successful was Microsoft with their Skype acquisit
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And Slack is a miserable copy of IRC.
Don't fear the command line.
I mean, Christ, this is Slashdot, have we forgotten our roots?
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Having used IRC for nigh on 20 years, I much prefer Slack these days - IRC lags behind it in many ways, so it amuses me when people say shit like "its just a copy of IRC". Well, IRC is just a copy of any one of the dozens of things that come before it, but IRC users never cared about that, so why should Slack users care about IRC?
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Nobody ever paid a billion dollars for IRC.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
And MUT wasn't the only BBS chat system around at the time.
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Oh IRC, I remember waiting until 5AM for two split servers to rejoin to take over a channel - those were the days before the +ts patches.
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On the contrary, I've worked at two firms now that have switched from Slack to Teams and on both occasions it's simply because of both the fact Teams does more and has better integration coupled with the fact Teams is cheaper for the majority of businesses given that it comes included with Office which is still far and away the most popular office suite across the globe.
So the fact is, people can either use Slack with it's free tier and suffer incredibly tight restrictions like a 10 app limit, or they can p
My what now? (Score:2)
As a tech worker, please don't group me in with the mouth breathers who worship slack.
Teams will be just another Skype (Score:3)
MS a Copycat? (Score:2)
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I mean, both are news aggregators in the tech space. It would be strange if there wasn't a ton of overlap.
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I say “no thanks” to either one (Score:5, Funny)
If I’m gonna slack off at work, I’m gonna do it right - by reading Slashdot, like God Intended.
Slacks growth is self limiting (Score:2)
No decent sized company would agree to use a product that they can't host internally. Mattermost has a much better future for this reason. And there are dozens of others.
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Moving from a Slack company to a Mattermost one was horrible! Mattermost looks like someone wrote it in VB6 after a 10 minute conversation with someone else that watched someone using slack once!
And Teams isn't great, but at least its better than Mattermost and Skype for Business.
Well (Score:2)
Snapchat is alive and well. FB is not a threat. (Score:1)
Wherever I go, I look around to see what apps people are using, and it's almost always Snapchat.
Sure there are some users of FB, Instagram, then a bit less of WeChat and Whatsapp, but Snapchat seems to be the leader at least for people under 30
FB is "dead man walking."
thought: (Score:3)
What goes around... (Score:1)
Looks like Slack copied everything from HipChat. Now people are crying about Teams copying from Slack.
ITS A CHAT APP! AOL had this back in the early 90s! These things take about 1 - 3 months to write from scratch!
Its like I am taking crazy pills over here.
M$ Teams - fixed width characters (Score:1)
```This will be fixed width
as will this
but this won't
```until I do this again
Slack Teams (Score:2)
Slack memory footprint (Score:2)
My biggest complaint is how Slack, which basically looks like an IRC program where you have some channel and some private messages with people, takes more than 1GB of RAM?!? ircII took a few kilobyes in the 80s and did the same thing, minus emoji?
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Slack is so bad in that regard that it is often given as an example of what not to do.
The usual response from Electron supporters when someone tells them that their framework is bloated is "not all Electron apps are like Slack".
It kills me how a multi-billion dollar company whose only product is a chat system care so little about optimization. It is not about being able to make it run on a toaster, even though it could with a lot of effort. It is just about spending a small part of the ridiculous amount of
Microsoft Teams (Score:1)
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IRC (Score:2)
Can't we just extend IRC a little bit and retake this market with an open standard?
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IRCv3 can be a start : https://ircv3.net/ [ircv3.net]
Need an inter-operable standard (Score:2)
We've got an issue between Comms wanting to use Webex Teams as our company standard and Productivity wanting to use Microsoft Teams. As 'conversations' become more ubiquitous, it shouldn't matter what client you're using. I can read my email in Thunderbird, Outlook, or Roundcube. Group conversations shouldn't be any different.