They could provide a recovery string/file through the GUI which would be normie-friendly to backup and restore, or make a simple email-verified account system to manage your aliases (including free user data mining for Anydesk).įirst, it wouldn't be suddenly, and second, the only issue would be that you get an expiration message next time you start Anydesk after 6 months of hibernation. Sure, but it's trivial to do so in a normie-compatible way, that's why it's bad implementation. The only way one can manage aliases is by getting their own space That is true but even for business users in AD which have links to an account, you dont get the ability to manage them really. Ironically, now that they introduced a proper user account system in 7.1 (linked to an email address), they killed off the only feature it would ever be useful for. Which can lead to completely different issues when an alias is suddenly on someone else. Well I guess ne of those is easily found in any help someone can read and the other likely is not.Įven the "bloat" is entirely Anydesk's choice - nothing is stopping them from freeing up aliases which haven't connected to the network within 6 months or so I agree that that's way beyond the capabilities of a normie, but then again so is finding out that you have to right-click the number to set the alias, so it's kind of a non-issue. Well you do have to prove somehow that it's your alias
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