this post was submitted on 25 Apr 2025
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"But most significantly, Microsoft has made Recall a feature you must opt in to using rather than opt out of using, and it's possible to remove it completely."
Important bit
opt in for now.
"Whoopsie, we turned it on for everyone by accident after an update! We made a fucky wucky!"
😎 Me having set only security updates in my windows, after it tried to install the 24H2 update.
They will claim it's security based
If they want to pay 2-3 Billions to EU for breaking laws, let them. I will also make so money suing them.
Didn't they require one of these bigger upgrades to still get security updates? I thought I read something about 23H2 (or similar) not getting updates anymore.
"Whoopsie, turns out we lied and recall was enabled from the start and just pretended to be off" 😄🤷♂️
"we noticed you uninstall Recall. Probably just an accident. We reinstalled it in an unremovable way and enabled it for you. You're welcome!"
Edit: autocorrect
Most MS controversial features go through "opt in -> opt out -> mandatory" pipeline examples are Telemetry, Windows Live account, Spotlight (ui ads), etc.
This is good. There are probably some edge cases for this. I work in IT for some companies using industrial automation. Being able to roll back and watch what people do when errors or problems occur is a good feature. Similarly on high value servers I would like this as well.
Being able to turn it on is better than having to apply policies to disable. I don't see this as a big problem anymore.
I'm not sure if you understood the comment you responded to...
Good! In my opinion this entirely changes the feature to acceptable.
They will eventually change the default to "on."
At that time, my view of the feature will change to unacceptable. Until then, it is acceptable.