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Microsoft’s new Word tests are a direct threat to Google Docs

New documents may land in OneDrive automatically soon, but the pivot sparks privacy concerns.

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Google Drive, iCloud, and OneDrive are open on a PC monitor.
Google Drive, iCloud, and OneDrive are open on a PC monitor. Alan Truly / Digital Trends

What’s happened? Microsoft is trialing ‘cloud-first save’ for Word on Windows, where the documents would be pushed into OneDrive automatically. Starting now for that Windows Insiders, the group that tests new features first, the changes make backup and cross-device access feel invisible, reports Windows Central.

  • The pilot only applies to brand-new documents, not the files you already keep locally.
  • It streamlines backup, sync, and version history so work travels cleanly across devices.
  • Previously, a new doc opened unsaved on your PC and asked you to enable OneDrive for autosave, this flips that order.

This is important because: This looks like Microsoft testing the waters before a wider push. But this is adopting the mechanism that’s used in Google Workspace, where cloud saving has always been the default.

  • Defaults mean far more user data on actual usage, which lets Microsoft model real-world adoption.
  • Feedback from Insiders, from opt-out rates to support tickets, exposes rough edges before general release.
  • Cloud-first files fit in the Copilot and OneDrive ecosystem, especially if documents live online, making it easier for Microsoft to connect its services.
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Why should I care? When Word defaults to cloud saving, some people may move sensitive drafts online without meaning to. That can be risky depending on policies, though once files live in OneDrive, the broader ecosystem often clicks.

  • You should decide what belongs in the cloud, from personal notes to early contracts that might be better off in a local folder or approved safe location.
  • Some users might also have worries about privacy compared to the relative safety of local saving.
  • However there are many benefits: you’ll have version history, quick sharing, and easier collaboration once everything is in the same place.

Okay, so what’s next? This is Insiders only (for now), and if you’re one of these and prefer saving locally, you can opt out.

  • When you save a new document, choose a local folder and set it as the default, or turn off autosave for new files. You can also set a local path as your default in Word’s settings later.
  • Expect Microsoft to tweak this based on feedback as it’s only a pilot.
  • This change feels like part of the tech giant’s broader shift toward connected services.
Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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