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

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

Microsoft Recall is now available for testing.

https://www.theregister.com/2024/11/22/microsoft_recall_release/

It’s only available on Qualcomm Snapdragon-powered Copilot+ PCs. My feeling is we’re probably going to want to hook one up to the internet and hack RDP for unlimited sessions, to allow research - I’ll look into it.

I’ve been told Recall is eligible for bug bounty as part of the Insider programme. I think the process is supposed to be sandboxed so in theory (my reading) the payout limit should be $20k.

Now’s your chance to try Microsoft’s controversial Windows Recall ... maybe

Like its AI, this automated screenshotter and logger is a feature not exactly everyone wanted

The Register

Microsoft are rolling out Recall to users in Windows Insider (testing) before a wider rollout to all compatible systems.

It's definitely one to watch (and yes, I am) from a security point of view.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cj3xjrj7v78o

Copilot Recall: Microsoft rolls out AI screenshot tool

Recall had been dubbed a "privacy nightmare" but has made changes since its original launch was pulled.

BBC News

I've took a look at the past year of work Microsoft has done on Recall, which is due to roll out to compatible Windows devices soon

tl;dr it's much better from a security and privacy point of view. My partner managed to hack my Recall memory in 5 minutes to browse prior Signal discussions, by guessing my Windows Hello PIN.

There's a bunch of risks people who enable it need to understand.

https://doublepulsar.com/microsoft-recall-on-copilot-pc-testing-the-security-and-privacy-implications-ddb296093b6c

Microsoft Recall on Copilot+ PC: testing the security and privacy implications

Last year, Microsoft announced Recall, a feature which screenshots your PC every few seconds, OCRs the screenshots and produces a searchable text database of everything you’ve ever viewed or written…

DoublePulsar
I think the following groups should probably not enable Microsoft Recall
In depth with Windows 11 Recall—and what Microsoft has (and hasn’t) fixed

Original botched launch still haunts new version of data-scraping AI feature.

Ars Technica
One other Microsoft Recall observation, it records Citrix client sessions, even with anti-screen capture enabled.
Microsoft have announced, in a Friday night blog post, they are rolling out Copilot+ Recall to all compatible devices over the next month. https://blogs.windows.com/windowsexperience/2025/04/25/copilot-pcs-are-the-most-performant-windows-pcs-ever-built-now-with-more-ai-features-that-empower-you-every-day/
Copilot+ PCs are the most performant Windows PCs ever built, now with more AI features that empower you every day

Windows has always been the place where computing innovation happens first. This was the case when we introduced Copilot+ PCs las

Windows Experience Blog

Tabletop scenario for you:

Employee gets into a dispute with employer, leaves, had sensitive role. Employer revokes access, devices etc. Employee had logged in via BYOD to email, IM etc.

Due to Recall, employee walks away with 6 months of screenshots of everything she's ever worked on in a text indexed form - every email, chat, document, Teams call with video snapshots, transcripts of verbal calls etc - even if they set M365 to not store documents locally.

What does the employer do now?

Signal have rolled out an update to all users that stops Microsoft Recall from capturing Signal conversations.

I’ve tested this and it works. Brilliant work by the @signalapp team. 💪

They call on Microsoft to build better, as there was no standardised way as an app developer to do this. Because Signal is open source, now app developers have a template to protect their users from Windows.

https://signal.org/blog/signal-doesnt-recall/

By Default, Signal Doesn't Recall

Signal Desktop now includes support for a new “Screen security” setting that is designed to help prevent your own computer from capturing screenshots of your Signal chats on Windows. This setting is automatically enabled by default in Signal Desktop on Windows 11. If you’re wondering why we’re on...

Signal Messenger

I found an interesting Microsoft Recall issue with the latest version - Recall is enabled on my PC, but the tray icon (bottom right) saying it is running is missing.

Edit: after a reboot, it's back. I'll keep an eye on it. After the latest Windows Update the UI wasn't visible, but it was still recording.

Brave blocks Windows Recall from screenshotting your browsing activity

Brave Software says its privacy-focused browser will block Microsoft's Windows Recall from capturing screenshots of Brave windows by default to protect users' privacy.

BleepingComputer

The Register took a look at Microsoft Recall and found it captured personal information, such as social security numbers and such in its database.

They also found they could access it remotely using TeamViewer, using just a PIN.

https://www.theregister.com/2025/08/01/microsoft_recall_captures_credit_card_info/

Tested: Microsoft Recall can still capture credit cards and passwords, a treasure trove for crooks

exclusive: Our tests have shown there are ways to get around the promised security improvements

The Register

I still use Recall on my development laptop, and actually use the feature quite a lot through testing Recall... and yet, I've started to get regular engagement prompts to use it lately.

To me this strongly suggests people aren't actually using it in the wild as MS are trying to juice numbers via nudge prompts.

On a separate note I also got prompted to change my default browser to Edge (I use Vivaldi) and my search engine to Bing when switching on my laptop today 🤦

Microsoft are upselling security controls for Microsoft Recall, which allow orgs to limit what it records specifically - if the org pay for Microsoft Purview.

I’ve had a look at how this works under the hood, it is using undocumented features in Recall. https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/purview/dlp-recall-get-started

Microsoft is reviewing its Copilot+ integrations, and is saying internally that Microsoft Recall has failed.

https://www.windowscentral.com/microsoft/windows-11/microsoft-is-reevaluating-its-ai-efforts-on-windows-11-plans-to-reduce-copilot-integrations-and-evolve-recall

You won: Microsoft is walking back Windows 11’s AI overload — scaling down Copilot and rethinking Recall in a major shift

People familiar with Microsoft's plans say that the company moving to streamline or remove certain Copilot integrations across in-box apps like Notepad and Paint in 2026, after pushback from users.

Windows Central

So @xaitax has cracked Microsoft Recall, he's got access to the encrypted database and has automated dumping of screenshots and all text from screenshots.

I've looked at most recent Recall and yep, you can just read the database as a user process. The database also contains all manner of fields which aren't publicly disclosed for tracking the user's activity.

No AV or EDR alerts triggered, world's #1 in infostealer 😅

* you can just read it in plain text

@GossiTheDog @xaitax how long until this is surfaced in Viva Insights for managerial review?

@GossiTheDog @xaitax oh hey, the thing everyone said would happen

Haven't looked at it myself, is it a user process with just (I assume at the very least, even if only useful for telemetry) SeDebugPrivilege or similar or worse?

@spinnyspinlock @GossiTheDog Hi, I will post about it once MSRC looked through the case. Cheers.

@GossiTheDog @xaitax

are they working on microslop malware 12 yet?

@loganer no, the 10 version will be their last numbered vers... ups... @GossiTheDog @xaitax

@jt_rebelo @GossiTheDog @xaitax maybe they meant 10! or 10!!

(10! = 3628800, 10!! = 3840)

@GossiTheDog @xaitax i did dabble in reversing the new recall a while ago but didnt do much, i should have looked further into what the vbs ipc calls actually gated i guess

@GossiTheDog @xaitax

Neat! What could Possibly Go Wrong?

@GossiTheDog @xaitax What sorts of "all manner of fields which aren't publicly disclosed for tracking the user's activity" are we talking here?

Are these being inferred from the disclosed 'we screen-scrape you' mechanism; or is recall hoovering up other information from the target system in ways not disclosed?

@GossiTheDog #Alt4You #AltText
Twitter post on March 8th by @xaitax (@xaitax on the Fediverse)
"Invested some time again into Windows Recall. Microsoft redesigned the entire architecture with VBS enclaves after the original TotalRecall. Took a closer look at the new defenses. This time going through MSRC." Righ below, there's a screen capture of TotalRecall Reloaded running, this time through MSRC on Windows 11 25H2 (Build 26300.7939), extracting MS Recall data in 1 min 20 sec, from Screenshots, Thumbnails, OCR Text and Metadata (CSV) from Recall, without any encryption.
@xaitax @jt_rebelo @GossiTheDog what does VBS mean here?
please don't be visual basic script
@lambtor , @xaitax @GossiTheDog can explain it much better than me, but for once this VBS isn't that one, these are the Virtualization-based security (VBS) enclaves found on a software-based trusted execution environment inside the address space of a host application.
@GossiTheDog @xaitax so in classic Microsoft fashion, they've learned nothing.
@earthshine @GossiTheDog @xaitax "No, we're fucking doing it! Put it back."
@earthshine @GossiTheDog @xaitax We just had the same discussion today. The essence was: Microsoft took everything from AWS for Azure, redesigned it so it resembled the opposite from what Amazon had done. Voila, you get Azure.

@GossiTheDog @xaitax if this isn't the final nail in the coffin to #BanWindows and espechally #Windows11 from any #IT then IDK what else would be sufficient…

@GossiTheDog @xaitax so doing a cron job with a regular screen shot and then encrypting that with an RSA key only known to the local AI is more secure than the Microslop crap. And that's only 4 lines of code if you are bad at coding.

@gunstick

the ol' "go away or I shall replace you with a small shell script" seems fitting here 😆

@GossiTheDog @xaitax

@GossiTheDog @xaitax who uses windows nowadays? I just use to play videogames (until)
@GossiTheDog Did they ever ask anyone if they wanted it? The massive bellends.
@GossiTheDog so the thing most people are asking copilot is “how do I get rid of you” 
@GossiTheDog
What's the business term for "lol"
@saucerlost @GossiTheDog 'anticipated market correction' perhaps?
@saucerlost @GossiTheDog "Good point. Let's discuss it in a meeting"
@GossiTheDog I‘ll believe when I see it.
@GossiTheDog too many people were calling it slop. That's the only possible explanation.

@GossiTheDog

I'm shocked! Shocked to learn that a poorly designed and badly implemented feature that no-one asked for is not doing well 🙄🤦‍♂️

Edit: Added the meme as it seems more than relevent given current world events 😕

https://youtu.be/vxnpY0owPkA

Shocked that gambling is happening - Casablanca (1942)

YouTube
@GossiTheDog Guess that means they'll cancel their nuclear powered data center plans, right?
...
Right?
@GossiTheDog no way, no more Copilot buttons?!
@GossiTheDog I do wonder how much of this can be attributed to the Linux gaming shift Steam has shown. We all love to think we're the cause but you can never really tell, can you?
@GossiTheDog apparently the Linux/MacOS share dropped again, so people went back to Windows already 😂
@GossiTheDog I assume they take a step back to find a way to make it worse more subtle.

I believe it when it is actually gone.

@GossiTheDog

Hopefully cooler (or saner) heads prevail and they stop trying to insert AI into everything, and actually focus on things like making the Windows start menu not React. (Even we all know this probably will never happen)

@GossiTheDog

Microslop also need to stop AI vibe coding Windows 11 and re-employ skilled programmers to look over the AI slop it created to get Windows 11 stable, so it stops having critical bugs every update.

@GossiTheDog lol, the headline... "you won" - yeah, I won when I fucked Windows 11 off into the bin where it belongs. I have to thank Microsoft though, I never would have found a better computing experience had they not tried to cover Windows in slop, ads and telemetry.
@GossiTheDog Too little, too late. Damage has been done.
@GossiTheDog Microsoft keeps copying Apple's strategy of forcing features to user but they lacking Apple's clout and fanbase they keep failing in that.
@GossiTheDog they feed us poison so we buy their cures

@GossiTheDog
So MS has gone full protection racket then.

Nice data you got there! Would be a shame if someone... recalled it...

@thechris they've been running a protection racket for a long, long time.

@GossiTheDog this feels a lot like… a protection racket? They’re selling orgs ways of protecting against a broken product no one wants that’s hard to opt out of.

Nice data you’ve got there, it’d be a shame if something “happened” to it

@GossiTheDog it's called Administration as a Service, or AaaS,.

It's pronounced A$$$$.

@GossiTheDog Microsoft upselling solutions to problems caused by their own design decisions, is it?
@GossiTheDog This seems like a good idea. Allow enterprises to leverage their MIP labels and other things in Purview to control Recal. I like it.
I bet it is a part of the E5 or higher skus.
@GossiTheDog Will one of you clever developers please create a nice web managed, locally hosted Desktop Linux MDM so we can start to tempt businesses away from Windows? Not a cobled together ansible/samba mess, but something robust and easy to use. Ideally it would be open source, but even if it's not, there is a real gap in the market here.
@GossiTheDog they give you the foot gun for free, the they sell you bulletproof shoes.
@GossiTheDog Aside from the obvious anticompetitive potential; 'recall' seems far too dangerous to have undocumented behavior; especially when complexity has a nasty habit of meaning scope for vulnerability.
@GossiTheDog Didn't they get yelled at a year or so ago because of some breach of government systems that didn't get caught because they were charging extra for event logging or something? Kinda feels like if somebody is paying for your product, they should get the whole product, not just bits and pieces.
@GossiTheDog Wow, this is shitty, even for Microsoft.
@GossiTheDog but *of course* this was just an excuse for an upsell
@GossiTheDog that’s a very fancy way to design a ransomware.
@GossiTheDog Sounds like an extortion racket.