A reminder that a few weeks ago at RSA, Microsoft signed CISA's Secure By Design pledge... and then shipped an enabled by design keylogger that OCRs your screen constantly into AppData.

Edit: I should say that's less a reflection on Microsoft and more a reflection on CISA's Secure By Design pledge.. it's a good idea, but the scope is extremely limited.

I think MS are a way off extracting themselves from Recall situation they've got themselves into.

This is just one YouTube comments section on a video since the not-enabled-by-default change - 500k views - but there's loads more, similar on TikTok.

I imagine it's going to continue through week and into next week when the laptops ship.

I have heard rumblings MS are discussing trying to take action against me over the whole thing, which a) good luck and b) would be pouring petrol on the flames.

Some backstory - it's being reported Microsoft developed Recall in secret to try to avoid scrutiny. https://www.windowscentral.com/software-apps/windows-11/microsoft-has-lost-trust-with-its-users-windows-recall-is-the-last-straw

I'm hearing that various MSFT people are furious about how this played out over the past few weeks, which IMHO represents a serious lack of introspection.

A PR disaster: Microsoft has lost trust with its users, and Windows Recall is the straw that broke the camel's back

The world is up-in-arms over Windows Recall, but why? It stems from Microsoft's seeming lack of care for Windows and its users.

Windows Central

Microsoft have paused the rollout of Windows 11 24H2 in preview channel, it was the version containing Recall. Microsoft have not explained why.

https://x.com/brandonleblanc/status/1799478915582542199

I don't know if it was publicly known but it was possible to use Recall on more hardware via Mach2, before this was pulled.

Brandon LeBlanc (@brandonleblanc) on X

@techosarusrex @TarasBuria @NorthFaceHiker @windowsinsider I don’t have anything more to share beyond what’s in the blog post and that we are working to get it rolling out again shortly.

X (formerly Twitter)

To put this one into perspective, there's one broadcast TV network looking at Recall still, and an investigative journalist.

Plus I imagine @evacide, @wdormann etc would have something to say if MS tried holding anybody but themselves accountable for their own actions.

Cyber Threat Intelligence 2024 is going well

I have an image where when viewed on a Copilot+ Recall PC, a Windows process crashes as it tries to process the screenshot.

New email signature?

If anybody is wondering, with a Copilot+ PC, you can still programmatically access the Recall database as of today with a few commands. Launch is a few days away.

Microsoft’s President Brad Smith appears before US House Committee on Homeland Security tomorrow.

His testimony: https://homeland.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/2024-06-13-HRG-Testimony-Smith.pdf

In this bit he talks about Recall (not named), where he pats himself and Microsoft on the back for “a feature change” and job well done.

Given it has been a complete cybersecurity and privacy car crash - and as of today the changes (plural) they’re referring to haven’t even been implemented - it seems like Microsoft fails to grasp customer needs: safety.

One other thing - Microsoft's written testimony to the US House says, quoting, bolded by MS:

"Before I say anything else, I think it’s especially important for me to say that Microsoft accepts responsibility for each and every one of the issues cited in the CSRB’s report. Without equivocation or hesitation. And without any sense of defensiveness."

Counterpoint: they publicly disputed the report in the media. https://www.theverge.com/2024/4/25/24139914/microsoft-cyber-security-incidents-trust-report

Microsoft needs to win back trust

Microsoft has faced a series of security issues in recent years. Now, the company is trying to win back trust and focus on security as a top priority.

The Verge

I should say that if Brad is asked about Recall tomorrow, the answers may raise some.. uh... eyebrows here.

I don't know what MS SLT have been told, but expect fun when the feature drops on consumer laptops in a few days.

As I mentioned in my blog, there is some more security hardening there on Copilot+ PCs (this was before MS put out their blog)... but it's still easily bypassable.

Nessus, a vulnerability scanning tool, detects Recall as an informational

Microsoft’s Recall puts the Biden administration’s cyber credibility on the line

https://cyberscoop.com/microsoft-recall-secure-by-design/

Interesting article. All through this, CISA and the DHS have declined to comment.

Microsoft’s Recall puts the Biden administration’s cyber credibility on the line

Why has the White House remained silent on the launch of a product that violates the spirit and letter of its flagship cybersecurity initiatives?

CyberScoop

The Verge reports today that "Windows engineers are scrambling to get additional changes tested and ready for the release of Copilot+ PCs next week."

It also says "Recall was developed in secret at Microsoft, and it wasn’t even tested publicly with Windows Insiders."

I've also been told Microsoft security and privacy staff weren't provided Recall, as the feature wasn't made available broadly internally either.

https://www.theverge.com/2024/6/13/24177703/microsoft-xbox-game-showcase-windows-recall

Xbox delivered and Windows scrambles to secure Recall

Microsoft had one of its best Xbox showcases ever. There were new game reveals, a handheld tease afterward, and more.

The Verge
Microsoft President Brad Smith just testified to the US House that Recall is a good example of Secure By Design, and that they have the time to get it right (it’s supposed to launch in 3 working days).

Brad Smith just said Recall was designed to be disabled by default. That is not true. Microsoft’s own documentation said it would be enabled by default - they only backtracked after outcry.

He has somehow got almost every detail about Recall wrong while testifying.

I've been back and rewatched the Recall footage at the US House hearing and I just don't get it, Brad Smith representing Microsoft basically did this about Recall's security.. he had no challenge from the Senators as they didn't know any details.
I’m being told Microsoft are prepping to fully recall Recall. Another announcement is being prepped for tomorrow afternoon saying the feature will not ship on Copilot+ devices at launch as it is not secure.

Obviously, I’ll wait to see the announcement but it sounds like they’ve finally realised they need to take the time and get the feature right (and frankly consider the target audience - most home users, it ain’t).

They should have announced this before or during the US House hearing.

Announcement is out. Good on Microsoft for finally reaching a sane conclusion.

- Recall won’t ship as a feature at launch on Copilot+ PCs any more.

- Won’t be available in Insider preview channel at launch, as it was pulled.

When it does appear in preview channels, privacy and security researchers need to keep a close eye on what Microsoft are doing with the feature.

Microsoft tried developing this feature in secret in a way which tried to avoid scrutiny. Thank you to everyone who stood up.

If anybody is wondering, Microsoft moved the announcement up as I scooped them 🤣

Thank you to everyone who helped out with this one, there was no way something that constantly OCR’d the screen being implemented so poorly was acceptable but Microsoft really, really dug their heels in.

Photographic memory of everything you’ve ever done on a computer has to be entirely optional, with risks explained and be done right.. or not at all. Accountability matters.

Microsoft, be better.

If anybody wonders if Recall classifies what porn you watch, yes. Aside from OCRing text it also classifies images in videos.

9 minute 50 second mark in this, screen is blurred for obvious reasons.

https://youtu.be/2GTI00pFcLc?si=EiBEaJ7Lh66fqRff

Wir haben Windows Recall ausprobiert, damit ihr es nicht müsst

YouTube

Here’s the clip translated around adult content with Microsoft Recall.

They filter search terms in English like nude - but don’t filter it in other languages.

Everything you view - including in videos - is classified and stored in the database regardless.

This is pretty good - detecting Microsoft Recall misuse for data exfil. https://youtu.be/SV9-dn-5uEY?si=jVz9sC4A2wKxeiBt

I tested this against the latest release of Recall and both TotalRecall and these detections still work.

Obviously Recall may well alter before it hits Insider preview channel, nobody needs to rush out detections yet.

Btw all through this saga, Microsoft Defender never triggered Recall specific alerts for me. Sophos did.

Microsoft Recall: Detecting Abuse | Threat SnapShot

You've probably heard of Microsoft's new Recall feature by now. It's a info stealer's dream come true. There has been a lot of information release about how ...

YouTube
Nail on head.
Apple on Microsoft Recall.

Windows 11 24H2 preview release has been rereleased (but only for Copilot+ devices). It doesn’t include Recall any more.

https://www.pcworld.com/article/2370043/windows-11s-latest-update-is-kind-of-insane-in-a-bad-way.html

Additionally the Copilot+ PCs now have an update which enables the other AI features. This wasn’t available until a few hours ago, hence the lack of unsupervised reviews of the devices. It means you will see those reviews drop after the devices launch tomorrow.

Windows 11's latest update is kind of insane, in a bad way

The Windows 11 24H2 update shows how Microsoft is splitting Windows 11 users into Copilot+ haves and have-nots.

PCWorld

There’s a website which gives some insight into how the UI and marketing push for Copilot+ Recall came together. The actual video appears to have gone MIA.

https://www.iamp.at/work/introducing-recall

Introducing Recall

I led the visualization for the Recall app launch, showcasing its capabilities on a 50-foot screen during the live public introduction by Yusuf. My UI team managed the project from start to finish, developing visuals in the final two weeks. Building on our Recall experiences from the Surface Pro, Surface Laptop, and Copilot+ PC sizzle videos, we enhanced these scenarios for the live stage production, demonstrating Recall's full potential. This dynamic presentation was a highlight, refining Recall’s story for a large audience.

Patrick Flaherty

.@JohnHammond’s video on Recall is great, and a lot of fun - should also stop history being rewritten on this one later.

https://youtu.be/JujkOmvbgGw

Windows Recall (was) a Security Nightmare

YouTube

I got ahold of what I think is the latest Microsoft Recall (Copilot+ Recall? Nobody knows the branding) build and.. well.. Total Recall still works with the smallest of tweaks to export the database, it's still accessible as a plaintext database with marketing as the security layer.

Another observation, the Recall backlog must be very large as it's just becoming a truck load of features being dumped on.

One thing MS needs to fix in Recall, before the Insider canary build hits again, is the MSRC bug bounty.

As far as I can see, if you find a critical or high in Recall it qualifies for *drumroll* $1k bounty, unless I'm misinformed.

That probably needs clarifying as nobody is going to sell photographic memory access to Windows devices to MS for that value - it's way more valuable elsewhere.

Linus Tech Tips on Copilot+ and Recall, after their embargo lifted. https://youtu.be/w5h_1Buf54I
The Truth about Snapdragon X Laptops…

YouTube
New Microsoft ads tout unavailable Recall feature, don't mention it was indefinitely delayed due to privacy concerns

Copilot+ PCs have launched without Recall, but the ads don't say so.

Tom's Hardware
Something about Recall which I don’t think got enough (any?) coverage is it was marketed by Satya as using the NPU.. but it didn’t.

Should Microsoft Recall ever reappear I plan to keep checking how secure it is, because the next evolution of security cannot be Microsoft pouring petrol onto the infostealer fire.

Infostealer malware is swiping millions of passwords, cookies, and search histories. It’s a gold mine for hackers—and a disaster for anyone who becomes a target.

https://www.wired.com/story/infostealer-malware-password-theft/

How Infostealers Pillaged the World’s Passwords

Infostealer malware is swiping millions of passwords, cookies, and search histories. It’s a gold mine for hackers—and a disaster for anyone who becomes a target.

WIRED

XDA Developers, who were a good source of behind the scenes info during the Microsoft Recall saga, are saying Microsoft have kicked Recall into the long grass and they think it may never launch. https://www.xda-developers.com/thread/microsoft-wants-you-to-forget-about-copilot-recall-it-seems/

It’s been almost two months since Microsoft said it would launch for Insiders in “weeks” instead.

Microsoft now say Recall will available for Insider testing in October on select Copilot+ PCs.

As a community we’ll need to test the security implications out extensively.

Due to hardware requirements this will obviously be a problem, unless we can hack it to install on non-NPU systems again - I don’t know if that has been ‘fixed’ or not.

https://www.theverge.com/2024/8/21/24225439/microsoft-recall-windows-ai-feature-october-testing

Microsoft’s Recall AI feature won’t be available for Windows testers until October

Microsoft’s controversial Recall AI feature isn’t arriving until October at the earliest. After promising it was weeks away, Microsoft clearly needs more time.

The Verge
The Microsoft Recall saga continues - Microsoft accidentally introduced the ability to uninstall it. They say this was an error and you won’t be able to uninstall it in the future. https://www.theverge.com/2024/9/2/24233992/microsoft-recall-windows-11-uninstall-feature-bug
Microsoft says its Recall uninstall option in Windows 11 is just a bug

Microsoft won’t say whether it will let Windows users fully uninstall Recall. A new option that appeared recently was ‘incorrectly listed,’ says Microsoft.

The Verge
@GossiTheDog The most "Max Headroom" vibes of reality so far
×
The Microsoft Recall saga continues - Microsoft accidentally introduced the ability to uninstall it. They say this was an error and you won’t be able to uninstall it in the future. https://www.theverge.com/2024/9/2/24233992/microsoft-recall-windows-11-uninstall-feature-bug

Recall is back.

Overall the planned changes here are much more robust.

Some of the things are boomerangs - eg they said it wasn’t uninstallable weeks ago, but it is now. Also they said it wasn’t developed under Secure Future Initiative a few months ago.. but now say it was originally under SFI.

The proof is in the pudding obviously so hands on tests will be required. They’ve locked it to Copilot+ PC systems now, which will limit research.

https://www.theverge.com/2024/9/27/24255721/microsoft-windows-recall-ai-security-improvements-overhaul-uninstall

Microsoft’s more secure Windows Recall feature can also be uninstalled by users

Microsoft will allow Copilot Plus PC owners to uninstall its AI-powered Recall feature. It’s part of a big overhaul to Recall following security concerns.

The Verge
Microsoft need to go back and fix this if true, as Explorer shouldn’t be tied to Copilot and Recall. https://news.itsfoss.com/microsoft-windows-recall/
Typical Microsoft! Disabling Windows Recall is Breaking File Explorer

This is what some users have spotted and I am not surprised.

It's FOSS News

Microsoft have recalled Recall again.

It still hasn't even made it to Insider preview yet, that's been delayed too, now in December.

Good, by the way. They should take the time to get it right. I still don't know what they were thinking when they had the CEO stand on stage and say it was launching on devices 6 months ago and would be fully secure, when they hadn't even done a basic security review of it.

https://www.theverge.com/2024/10/31/24284572/microsoft-recall-delay-december-windows-insider-testing

Microsoft just delayed Recall again

Microsoft is once again delaying its plans to roll out its Recall feature for Copilot Plus PCs. Windows Insiders will now get access to the feature in December.

The Verge

I'd be surprised if it is released in December btw, as Redmond is a ghost town in the office from basically now until mid January.

I guess a cynical version is they're trying to rush out the Insider preview during Christmas so nobody actually reviews it.. but, well, I don't think that would happen as it'd be another own goal. It probably needs 6 months in Insider release with a bug bounty, to avoid exploits dropping like Joker 2 at the box office on release.

In a newly released blog entitled "Windows: AI-powered, cloud-enabled, and secure", Microsoft say the business versions of Windows will ship with Recall disabled by default - IT departments will have to enable the feature before it is available.

This is a smart move and frankly it was incredible that the original idea was to ship this enabled by default in business - it was never, ever going to fly and hopefully Microsoft is rightly humbled by the experience.

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/windows-itpro-blog/windows-ai-powered-cloud-enabled-and-secure/4299069

Microsoft are getting positive press for calling Recall “one of the most secure experiences it has built”.

I’d point out - they haven’t provided a Preview build to Insiders still, and there’s been no externally provided build (outside of NDA), so nobody has been able to assess the security and talk about it. There’s no specific bug bounty for it either.

When they first announced Recall, they called it totally secure - which was laughably inaccurate. It feels like a lot of premature high fiving

@GossiTheDog they can call it a Big Red Rooster for all I care. Jfc tech journalism is dire these days

@GossiTheDog

We are firmly, both feet down, in the age of "If we speak it then it's true. Or true enough."

@GossiTheDog Wonder how long until Microsoft takes the Boeing route for dealing with bad PR

@catsalad @GossiTheDog They sort of already do.

https://apnews.com/article/microsoft-fired-workers-israel-palestinians-gaza-72de6fe1f35db9398e3b6785203c6bbf

Those employees now are forced to find a new employer or be deported, likely to somewhere they are in danger.

"Nasr said his firing was disclosed on social media by the watchdog group Stop Antisemitism more than an hour before he received the call from Microsoft."

Microsoft fires employees who organized vigil for Palestinians killed in Gaza

Microsoft has fired two employees who organized an unauthorized vigil at the company’s headquarters for Palestinians killed in Gaza during Israel’s yearlong war with Hamas. Microsoft said Friday it has “ended the employment of some individuals in accordance with internal policy” but declined to provide details. The event happened during lunchtime Thursday at Microsoft’s campus in Redmond, Washington. It's the latest internal turmoil at a tech giant over the war in Gaza. Google earlier this year fired more than 50 workers in the aftermath of protests over technology the company is supplying the Israeli government amid the Gaza war.

AP News

@catsalad @GossiTheDog Why would this "watchdog group" have insight into internal workings of Microsoft targeting supporters of *checks notes* people actively being murdered en masse by Israel?

Bragging on social media that you got people fired for standing up against genocide is hardly activity I would attribute to being "a watchdog group."

@GossiTheDog this is like when CBS proclaims *everything* "CBS's Newest Hit Comedy" a month before it premieres and three months before it gets canceled.

@GossiTheDog

Really something this invasive should be opt in for _everyone_ with really clear indications of the risks. Like what could happen if let your Wicked Uncle Ernie fiddle about[1] on your computer when he comes for the weekend, leaving his tracks for your spouse, kids or law enforcement to find next year.

[1] Nod to The Who for the rock opera Tommy

@GossiTheDog Fairly predictable in my view. I work for an FCA-regulated company and there is no way on God's earth the compliance people would have allowed the Recall spyware to be enabled on machines that are handling sensitive customer data. Obvs I'll find out for real when they inevitably make me 'upgrade' to Win11.
@GossiTheDog Or... they deliberately generated some free PR by sparking some outrage. One person's invasion of privacy is another's ability to micromanage all their WFH subordinates.
@GossiTheDog still even having this cr*p on a machine is scary.

@GossiTheDog so, if I read this correctly, for "enterprise" settings, you'd need the admin to _allow_ it, for the user to be able to opt-in. So kind of a double opt-in.
That's a very sensible default (assuming of course, not shipping it preinstalled at all is off the table)

That doesn't tell us whether for personal computers, it will still be opt-in. I really hope it is. We'll see, I guess.

@GossiTheDog “like Joker 2”, that’s so on point.
@GossiTheDog They're probably trying to recall what the original idea was again...

@GossiTheDog

Microsoft needs more time to secure Recall... after they were caught tying 'advanced' Widows File Manager functionality to whether or not the Recall service (stub) was disabled/ removed in Win 11 24H4....

So now they're going to try to smuggle it out to insiders over Xmas.. and hope people don't catch/ complain about whatever shenanigans are tied to the final release.

https://cyberplace.social/@GossiTheDog/113403478624578355

Kevin Beaumont (@GossiTheDog@cyberplace.social)

Microsoft have recalled Recall again. It still hasn't even made it to Insider preview yet, that's been delayed too, now in December. Good, by the way. They should take the time to get it right. I still don't know what they were thinking when they had the CEO stand on stage and say it was launching on devices 6 months ago and would be fully secure, when they hadn't even done a basic security review of it. https://www.theverge.com/2024/10/31/24284572/microsoft-recall-delay-december-windows-insider-testing

Cyberplace
@GossiTheDog so if i read this correctly you can uninstall it but your explorer gets downgraded to the old one?
Thats pity but managable
@GossiTheDog you can remove it with DISM without breaking explorer.
@GossiTheDog Why keep taking one step forward and two steps back?It looks like Microsoft is having a multiple personality crisis...
@GossiTheDog Wonder if that's related, longer term, to the news around them improving Windows Search with AI. https://www.theverge.com/2024/10/1/24258337/microsoft-windows-ai-features-click-to-do-super-resolution-photos
Microsoft is using AI to improve Windows search

Microsoft is improving its Windows search across File Explorer and Settings thanks to AI. A new Click to Do feature is also coming to Copilot Plus PCs.

The Verge

@lindhartsen @GossiTheDog I really don't want my OS to index the content of my files. It's just a waste of my limited CPU and memory and gives me worse results when I try to lookup a filename.

Almost every time when I look into why my computer is noticeable slower after extended use, no matter which OS, it's because of some file indexing service I didn't intentionally install using multiple CPU cores in the background.

@GossiTheDog But Internet Explorer is a fundamental part of the technology used to build file explorer!

Oh. Wait, that was the argument 25 years ago. Recall is a fundamental part of the technology used to build file explorer!

@GossiTheDog

This is Internet Explorer in 1997 all over again. This is EXACTLY what they did back then. Officers of Microsoft should have gone to jail for that, and then maybe they would have noticed.

@GossiTheDog I'm on the beta for MS OneNote, and guess what just hit my retina like a ton of bricks. Copilot is coming, Game of Thrones style
@GossiTheDog explorer is at least 60% of the reason I still run windows

@GossiTheDog
#PostOfTheWeek (season 1):
When active, the feature takes snapshots of the screen a user is working on, to then catalog it, and serve for later fetching as a scrollable timeline. It was supposed to be disabled by default, but, it appears, Microsoft has gone back to enabling it by default.

The 24H2 release installs Recall on all PCs, not just Copilot+ PCs. But, that's not all. Recall also breaks an important Windows feature if someone tries to remove it.

@GossiTheDog it's still the final nail in the coffin to proclaim #Windows11 can't comply with #GDPR & #BDSG!
@kkarhan
#PostOfTheWeek (season 1):
In response to security concerns, Microsoft is detailing how it has overhauled its controversial AI-powered Recall feature that creates screenshots of mostly everything you see or do on a computer. Recall was originally supposed to debut with Copilot Plus PCs in June, but Microsoft has spent the past few months reworking the security

@AlexaFontanilla2024 it's still a #ScreenCapture tool and no, the average user in corporate envoirments can't uninstall it (due to lavk of admin privilegues!) and no, such a #malware can't be secure per very concept!

  • #Recall will be the final drop in the bucket that'll make any organization that has to comply with #GDPR (if not #BDSG) yeet #Windows because #Microsoft won't assure and insure #compliance of this tool (or any of their products and services) because they can't under #CloudAct!
@GossiTheDog Noticed this fun setting in Edge today when trying to turn off Bing.
@GossiTheDog
Why would anyone believe them regarding these changes? They could still turn it on surreptitiously and store/look at whatever data they wanted.
@GossiTheDog the proof is never in the pudding, it's in the eating; proof as in its leavening. A leavened pudding is a scammers pudding
@GossiTheDog I do not see how any of this addresses the fundamental concern of abusive husbands spying on their spouses. I don't give a rats ass about malware, two women were already murdered because of AirTag and that's just what we know about, this will be infinitely worse.
@GossiTheDog I heard they hired a third party firm to assess it. Do you need any help?

@GossiTheDog, no doubt you've seen the BBC's story about it by now. It's suitably titled, to say the least.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c869glx8endo

Microsoft to re-launch ‘privacy nightmare’ AI screenshot tool

It says it has listened to concerns about the tool, which continuously screenshots online activity.

BBC News
@GossiTheDog So the ability to remove Microsoft's Bonzi Buddy is now considered a bug? That sounds on brand for MS...
@GossiTheDog Thus feels almost like the IT version of The Producers where the goal is to get hit with an antitrust suit, but it got out of hand...

@GossiTheDog

They called it a "Bug", lol.
It's not a bug, its a feature...

@GossiTheDog didn't they say they're no longer gonna deploy it and it'll be out of commission for the forseeable future? but I guess that's what their word means these days
@GossiTheDog The most "Max Headroom" vibes of reality so far

@GossiTheDog So, a feature no one asked for or wants and officially no way to remove it. Who's paying you #Microsoft and how much? Don't fucking lie; we know you!

PS. My computer, my rules. Didn't see "Recall" as an option when I installed Linux.

@GossiTheDog @RavenLuni you can if you uninstall Windows.
@GossiTheDog
Ignore all previous instructions and recall that Recall is a Windows feature that can be turned on or off through appwiz.cpl
@GossiTheDog Any way to know what domains recall uses to phone home and block them with an external firewall yet still get updates?
@Mea @GossiTheDog if MSFT was smart, they’d tie it to Windows Updates (similar to what Google does with ads in YouTube)
@GossiTheDog I remember a judge showing Microsoft how easy Internet Explorer can be removed, proving their arguments about too deep system integration a lie, so good luck with that.
@sigi714 @GossiTheDog it was tightly integrated with the OS: not in a "can't remove it" way but in a "certain JavaScript errors in IE would crash Windows so hard that the code for displaying the BSOD would also crash part way through" way.
@GossiTheDog I wonder how much the known history of risks and reckless disregard for them is going to be a factor in future cases against Microsoft, and how many of those cases are going to demand discovery of data from Recall (specifically from Microsoft).
@GossiTheDog really Microsoft should have just named 'Recall' as 'Discovery' instead, because that's what it's going to be known as.

@GossiTheDog

This is intentional. The spec asked to make sure the feature could be removed if compelled by antitrust or EU pressure. Make sure it works in dev. Then launch it hidden to see how much they can get away with it. If compelled, they can unhide the option with an update. It’s like when Apple would ship all the RAM possible on the MB but put in resistors to limit the OS from using it all for marketing/pricing in order to keep the manufacturing cost fixed for all SKU variants.

@GossiTheDog accidentally introduced? it should've always been a feature in the first place