Microsoft’s
Recall
feature,
which
creates
screenshots
of
mostly
everything
you
see
or
do
on
a
Copilot
Plus
PC,
has
been
mired
in
controversy
ever
since
it
was
announced
earlier
this
year.
After
security
researchers
found
that
a
pre-release
version
of
the
Recall
database
wasn’t
encrypted,
Microsoft
moved
to
delay
the
feature
and
overhaul
it
with
a
big
focus
on
security.
Recall
still
isn’t
even
available
to
test
yet
on
Copilot
Plus
PCs,
but
some
good
old
fashioned
fear,
uncertainty,
and
doubt
is
spreading
about
Microsoft
supposedly
secretly
installing
it
on
the
latest
version
of
Windows
11.
IT
manager
and
YouTuber
Chris
Titus
first
discovered
that
Microsoft’s
latest
update
to
Windows
11,
version
24H2,
has
references
to
Recall
that
confusingly
make
it
seem
like
it’s
enabled
in
the
operating
system.
“Recall
is
getting
installed
on
every
single
system
in
24H2,”
claimed
Titus
in
a
YouTube
video
that
claims
Recall
is
mandatory.
“More
so...
it
is
a
dependency
in
File
Explorer.
That
should
alarm
a
lot
of
people.”
I
saw
the
YouTube
video
and
immediately
started
looking
into
what
was
going
on.
Microsoft
has
been
very
clear
that
Recall
will
be
an
optional
experience
once
it
returns,
and
even
that
it
can
be
fully
uninstalled
by
users.
So
why
would
a
Recall
feature
look
like
it’s
enabled
on
24H2
installs?
“Ever
since
the
Recall
security
fiasco
in
summer,
all
insider
and
production
builds
lack
Recall
completely,”
explains
Windows
watcher
Albacore,
in
messages
to
The
Verge.
Albacore
created
the
Amperage
tool
that
allowed
Recall
to
run
on
older
Snapdragon
chips.
The
references
we’re
seeing
in
current
installs
of
24H2
are
related
to
Microsoft
making
it
easier
for
system
admins
to
remove
Recall
or
disable
it.
“Ironically,
Microsoft
going
out
of
its
way
to
make
[Recall]
removal
easier
is
being
flipped
into
AI
/
spying
/
whatever
hoaxes,”
says
Albacore.
Microsoft’s
blunt
removal
of
Recall
over
the
summer
appears
to
have
led
to
some
bugs
in
how
the
feature
appears
and
is
controlled.
Users
of
Titus’
Windows
Utility
had
reported
crashing
issues
with
File
Explorer
if
the
Recall
feature
was
disabled
for
new
installs
on
Windows
11,
version
24H2.
An
uninstall
option
for
Recall
also
appeared
in
September,
and
Microsoft
called
it
a
bug
before
later
revealing
that
Windows
users
would,
in
fact,
be
able
to
uninstall
Recall.
Recall
isn’t
part
of
Windows
11,
version
24H2
“Microsoft
has
an
ungodly
complex
and
long
winded
system
for
integrating
development
changes
into
a
mainline
build,
parts
of
the
optional-izing
work
were
most
likely
not
merged
at
once,
and
thus
produce
crash
loops
in
very
specific
scenarios
that
slipped
testing,”
explains
Albacore.
I
asked
Microsoft
to
explain
the
references
to
Recall
appearing
in
24H2,
but
the
company
would
only
reinforce
once
again
that
Recall
is
an
opt-in
experience
and
you
can
remove
it.
“The
preview
of
Recall
for
Copilot
Plus
PCs
has
not
yet
been
made
available
to
Windows
Insiders,”
says
Brandon
LeBlanc,
senior
product
manager
of
Windows,
in
a
statement
to
The
Verge.
“However,
information
on
Recall
shared
in
David
Weston’s
blog
from
September,
including
confirmation
that
Recall
is
an
opt-in
experience
and
that
users
can
also
remove
Recall,
remains
true.”
Fears
around
Recall
being
secretly
installed
or
enabled
in
Windows
11
have
now
spread
across
YouTube,
with
many
videos
offering
up
ways
to
“remove”
the
feature
that
isn’t
even
present
in
Windows
11
version
24H2.
“Recall
is
implemented
by
the
AIX
user
experience
package,
and
in
all
current
builds
the
package
is
simply
a
stub,”
says
Albacore.
We’re
now
waiting
on
Microsoft
to
release
Recall
to
Windows
Insiders,
something
it
promised
to
do
in
October,
so
that
security
researchers
can
test
Microsoft’s
latest
changes
and
see
how
the
opt-in
and
uninstall
processes
work.
With
just
a
few
days
left
until
November,
Microsoft
is
cutting
it
fine
if
it’s
going
to
release
a
preview
of
Recall
in
time.
(Originally posted by Tom Warren)
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