Microsoft's 'Recall' Feature Will No Longer Be a Default Setting Due to Security Concerns
        
        
        
        Microsoft's controversial new AI Recall feature will no longer be activated by default for Windows users, the company announced.
Recall, which was unveiled  in May and is currently in preview, records every action taken by a user to help create more personalized  queries in its AI-powered Copilot. While the new feature has been designed to  improve the Copilot experience, some in the security community began to express  possible concerns. 
In an  article posted to Medium (soft paywalled), security expert Kevin Beaumont  broke down how, with just a few lines of code, Microsoft's newest Copilot feature  could allow attackers to steal a user's entire PC usage history.  In his analysis, he said that, while the new  feature would be useful to many, Microsoft's security track record would make  this feature too risky for public use.
"I think it's an interesting entirely, really optional  feature with a niche initial user base that would require incredibly careful  communication, cybersecurity, engineering and implementation. Copilot+ Recall  doesn’t have these," Wrote Beaumont. "The work hasn’t been done  properly to package it together, clearly."
Responding to feedback from Beaumont and others, along with  disabling the feature by default, Microsoft said it is adding an additional  "enrollment" level to use the service and enhancing Recall's security  with "just in time" decryption, which uses Windows Hello Sign-In  Security (ESS).  
It also laid out the current security settings for the Copilot feature. Recall,  locally stores and processes snapshots without relying on Internet or cloud  connections. These snapshots are never shared with Microsoft or other entities,  and per-user encryption ensures privacy even on shared devices.
 According to Microsoft, users will  be clearly notified when Recall is saving snapshots, with icons visible on the  taskbar and system tray. Digital rights managed content and InPrivate browsing  data are excluded from snapshots.
 Finally, users can manage their  snapshots with options to pause, filter or delete them at any time, maintaining  control over what is saved. For enterprise users, IT administrators can disable  the snapshot-saving feature, but cannot enable it on behalf of users.
 Microsoft  also said the line of Copilot+ PCs, also announced last month, will come with additional  security features, including hardware-level baked-in security, Microsoft Pluton  security processor and Windows Hello ESS turned on by default. 
"We are on a  journey to build products and experiences that live up to our company mission  to empower people and organizations to achieve more, and are driven by the critical  importance of maintaining our customers’ privacy, security and trust. As we always do, we will continue to listen  to and learn from our customers, including consumers, developers and  enterprises, to evolve our experiences in ways that are meaningful to them," wrote Pavan Davuluri, corporate vice president, Windows + Devices.