Visual Studio Code
Contents8
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| Basic Information | |
|---|---|
| Release Year | 2015 |
| Product Type | Software |
| In Production | Yes |
| Official Website | https://code.visualstudio.com |
Visual Studio Code is a cross platform text and code editor developed by Microsoft for Windows, Linux, macOS and web browsers.
Consumer impact summary
Overview of concerns that arise from the conduct towards users of the product (if applicable):
- User Freedom
- User Privacy
- Business Model
- Market Control
Add your text below this box. Once this section is complete, delete this box by clicking on it and pressing backspace.
Freedom
The source code is available on GitHub under the MIT License. However, the binaries published by Microsoft are licensed under the proprietary "Microsoft Software License" and ships with closed-source modifications, similar to how Google ships Chromium, their open source browser and Chrome, their flagship, proprietary browser built on top of Chromium but with various closed source modifications.
Alternative, fully open source forks exist, such as VS Codium.
Market Control
Visual Studio Code (Also known as VS Code) is widely used upon, with over 50 million developers using it as of May 15th, 2025.[1] Due to the software being open source, users may switch to other forks such as VS Codium if they are not happy with Visual Studio Code's features.
Incidents
Telemetry enabled by default
Microsoft's proprietary build sends telemetry data by default[2] which goes under Microsoft's Privacy Statement. It has to be disabled manually by setting telemetry.telemetryLevel to off in the user settings.
Blocking extensions for third-party forks
In April 2025, Microsoft pushed an update to the "C/C++" extension for Visual Studio Code (an extension that adds functionality such as better syntax highlighting) that introduced functionality that would intentionally disable the extension if it detected that it was running inside of a third-party fork of the editor,[3] displaying an error message that says:
"The C/C++ extension may be used only with Microsoft Visual Studio, Visual Studio for Mac, Visual Studio Code, Azure DevOps, Team Foundation Server, and successor Microsoft products and services to develop and test your applications."[4][5]
See also
References
- ↑ https://developer.microsoft.com/blog/celebrating-50-million-developers-the-journey-of-visual-studio-and-visual-studio-code (Archived)
- ↑ "Telemetry". VS Code Documentation. Archived from the original on 19 Dec 2025.
- ↑ Claburn, Thomas (2025-04-24). "Devs sound alarm after Microsoft subtracts C/C++ extension from VS Code forks". The Register. Archived from the original on 18 Feb 2026.
- ↑ "VSCodium issues". "Microsoft C/C++ Extension appears to no longer support unofficial forks of VS Code". Archived from the original on 5 Apr 2025.
- ↑ "Cursor issues". "Has the VSCode C/C++ Extension been blocked?". Archived from the original on 25 Jun 2025.