Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-09-27 19:00:59| Engadget

The condemnation of Microsoft's Recall feature for Copilot+ AI PCs was swift and damning. While it's meant to let you find anything you've ever done on your PC, it also involves taking constant screenshots of your PC, and critics noticed that information wasn't being stored securely. Microsoft ended up delaying its rollout for Windows Insider beta testers, and in June it announced more stringent security measures: It's making Recall opt-in by default; it will require Windows Hello biometric authentication; and it will encrypt the screenshot database. Today, ahead of the impending launch of the next major Windows 11 launch in November, Microsoft offered up more details about Recall's security and privacy measures. The company says Recall's snapshots and related data will be protected by VBS Enclaves, which it describes as a "software-based trusted execution environment (TEE) inside a host application." Users will have to actively turn Recall on during Windows setup, and they can also remove the feature entirely. Microsoft also reiterated that encryption will be a major part of the entire Recall experience, and it will be using Windows Hello to interact with every aspect of the feature, including changing settings. "Recall also protects against malware through rate-limiting and anti-hammering measures," David Weston, Microsoft's VP of OS and enterprise security, wrote in a blog post today. "Recall currently supports PIN as a fallback method only after Recall is configured, and this is to avoid data loss if a secure sensor is damaged." When it comes to privacy controls, Weston reiterates that "you are always in control." By default, Recall won't save private browsing data across supported browsers like Edge, Chrome and Firefox. The feature will also have sensitive content filtering on by default to keep things like passwords and credit card numbers from being stored. Microsoft Microsoft says Recall has also been reviewed by an unnamed third-party vendor, who performed a penetration test and security design overview. The Microsoft Offensive Research and Security Engineering team (MORSE) has also been testing the feature for months.  Given the near instant backlash, it's not too surprising to see Microsoft being extra cautious with Recall's eventual rollout. The real question is how the the company didn't foresee the initial criticisms, which included the Recall database being easily accessible from other local accounts. Thanks to the use of encryption and additional security, that should no longer be an issue, but it makes me wonder what else Microsoft missed early on.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/microsoft-explains-how-its-tackling-security-and-privacy-for-recall-170059383.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

10.12Petco accidentally exposed heaps of customer information
10.12CloverPit, a Balatro-style game with a grungy slot machine, hits iOS and Android on December 17
10.12Apple's Studio Display is $230 off right now
10.12MasterClass subscriptions are 40 percent off for the holiday season
10.12Projectors won us over in 2025
10.12Kindle Scribe Colorsoft review: A very particular set of skills, for a price
10.12EU pledges 90 percent cut to carbon emissions by 2040
10.12Instagram will let you control which topics its algorithm recommends
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

10.12Leon to close stores and cut jobs in restructure
10.12Petco accidentally exposed heaps of customer information
10.12Five ways in which parenting skills will boost your leadership
10.12CloverPit, a Balatro-style game with a grungy slot machine, hits iOS and Android on December 17
10.12The iconic Oreo is getting a sugar-free twist. What to know about the new cookies coming to the U.S.
10.12Apple's Studio Display is $230 off right now
10.12MasterClass subscriptions are 40 percent off for the holiday season
10.12Projectors won us over in 2025
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .