Windows Recall AI snapshots stored in an unencrypted SQL file in appdata. Apparently. Already there is scripts to install it on unsupported devices.

MUST DIE
Windowses.jpg
 
but people take not to take privacy violations very lightly.
lol lmao
microsoft and similar companies have been violating their customers privacy for decades and no one cares
People that mock others for using Windows XP in the 2020s because "it is unsafe" can go suck a bag of cocks.

I'm sticking with XP.
it is 100% unsafe unless you really know what you are doing. you dont need all the spyware features on windows 10 and you dont get 10000 vulnerabilities you need to patch
 
At what point do you just create a list with the names and photos of the people in charge of greenlighting the decisions for these companies? As long as they are able to hide between a massive conglomerate they can shift all accountability on some fall-guy.
 
Q. Are Microsoft a big, evil company?
A. No, that’s insanely reductive. They’re super smart people, and sometimes super smart people make mistakes. What matters is what they do with knowledge of mistakes.
The question, faggot, is "are microshit evil?" not "are microshit smart?". They can be both smart and evil.
 
Alphabet agent or trusted forum fren? Who are you??

Also why is it 100% unsafe? Figure it may be an interesting post to read.
Not a glownigger but I do cybersecurity as a career.

XP is old and EoL. Microsoft isn't patching vulnerabilities like they do for 10 and 11. So unless you are taking the time to patch them all yourself your machine is extremely vulnerable. XP has been EoL for over a decade now and the amount of malware and exploits that exist and work is staggering. Look at this site. Any exploit published/updated after the XP EoL in 2014 could potentially affect your machine.
I'm not saying you shouldn't run XP, but you need to be way more careful than running 10 or 11. I personally use Windows 10 LTSC. AFAIK some government agencies get patches and updates from microsoft for XP, but its for legacy systems that the government pays good money to get updates for.
 
Anyway, I wouldn't mind a recall-like system if it had better security and ran 100% locally. Could be useful. Leave it to Microsoft to come up with a good idea then kill it with horrible implementation. MS (and the AI industry in general) should be making a shift to models that are intended to be ran on individual local high power dedicated AI servers. I imagine there's lots of companies who want to use AI products but are wary because they are online.
The companies are already moving towards lower power local desktop AI bullshit which is fine but it usually just means integration with cloud AI services rather than truly 100% local software.
 
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