Business Microsoft Recall screenshots credit cards and Social Security numbers, even with the "sensitive information" filter enabled

Source / Archive

Microsoft Recall screenshots credit cards and Social Security numbers, even with the "sensitive information" filter enabled
Despite promising to filter personal data out, Recall still captures it.
By Avram Piltch, last updated 3 hours ago


Microsoft’s Recall feature recently made its way back to Windows Insiders after having been pulled from test builds back in June, due to security and privacy concerns. The new version of Recall encrypts the screens it captures and, by default, it has a “Filter sensitive information,” setting enabled, which is supposed to prevent it from recording any app or website that is showing credit card numbers, social security numbers, or other important financial / personal info. In my tests, however, this filter only worked in some situations (on two e-commerce sites), leaving a gaping hole in the protection it promises.

When I entered a credit card number and a random username / password into a Windows Notepad window, Recall captured it, despite the fact that I had text such as “Capital One Visa” right next to the numbers. Similarly, when I filled out a loan application PDF in Microsoft Edge, entering a social security number, name and DOB, Recall captured that. Note that all info in these screenshots is made up, but I also tested with an actual credit card number of mine and the results were the same.

1734073327287.png

I also created my own HTML page with a web form that said, explicitly, “enter your credit card number below.” The form had fields for Credit card type, number, CVC and expiration date. I thought this might trigger Recall to block it, but the software captured an image of my form filled out, complete with the credit card data.

1734073364844.png

On the bright side, Recall refused to capture the credit card fields when I went to the payment pages of two online stores – Pimoroni and Adafruit. In both cases, it only captured either the screens before and after the credit card entry form or a blank form.

1734073391877.png


So, when it came to real-world commerce sites that I visited, Recall got it right. However, what my experiment proves is that it’s pretty much impossible for Microsoft’s AI filter to identify every situation where sensitive information is on screen and avoid capturing it. My examples were designed to test the filter, but they’re not fringe cases. Real people do put sensitive personal information into PDF forms. They write things down or copy and paste them into text files and then key them into websites that don’t look like typical shopping sites.

I asked Microsoft for a comment and the company responded by pointing me to part of its blog post on the Preview Recall, which states:

“We’ve updated Recall to detect sensitive information like credit card details, passwords, and personal identification numbers. When detected, Recall won’t save or store those snapshots. We’ll continue to improve this functionality, and if you find sensitive information that should be filtered out, for your context, language, or geography, please let us know through Feedback Hub. We’ve also provided an option in Settings that we encourage you to enable that will anonymously share the apps and sites you prefer to be excluded from Recall to help us improve the product.”

So the company is promising that Recall will get better at filtering out sensitive information over time. But how much better it will get and how many holes will still remain is an open question.

How Recall Works

Recall’s purpose is to provide searchable memory of all your computer activity, to become your one-stop digital memory. So the feature, which is only available on Copilot+ PCs, takes screenshots of everything you do on your PC, arranges those pictures in a timeline, and makes them searchable using natural language search. If you forgot what website you were visiting when you were considering buying a red sofa, you can search “sofa” and it should pull up a picture of the exact page you were on. Because it’s AI-powered, it also reads the text within images and lets you copy it.

The concern with Recall is that it’s keeping a digital record of everything you do and, no matter how secure, the record is there for bad actors to find. When Recall first appeared in Insider Builds last spring, researchers noticed that it wasn’t encrypting the screenshots it captured and was storing its database as plain text. The company responded to the negative press attention by pulling Recall from Insider builds and promising to bring it back only after some security upgrades.

The new version of Recall is now opt-in rather than opt-out – I got prompted to enable Recall immediately after installing the Insider Build. The pop-up prompt appeared as soon as my laptop rebooted after the updated.

1734073474071.png

Recall has a “sensitive information filter,” which is enabled by default and it appears to actually be encrypting the data it captures. It also requires you to use a Windows Hello login every time you open the timeline-like Recall app.

1734073506837.png

While I couldn’t immediately tell how good the encryption was, I did try and fail to open both the database file and what appeared to be the screenshot files. The database file appears to be called ukg.db (this is what it was called in the spring Recall release) and it’s located in the C:\users\[your username]\AppData\Local\CoreAIPlatform.00\UKP\{some number} folder. In the spring, when it was unencrypted, researchers were able to open this file and read the data inside, using an app called DB Browser (SQLite). However, now I couldn’t open it.

1734073537961.png

The screenshots appear to be files in a subfolder called AsymStore. I couldn’t open those either and I tried to open them as PNGs, BMPs or JPGs. Perhaps hackers will figure out how to open these files, but as far as I could tell, a typical user can’t open them outside of the Recall app.

1734073562966.png

The only way I could view Recall screenshots was by using the Recall app to either search my timeline or browse it. Every time I opened the Recall app, I was asked to use a Windows Hello facial login. And the first time I opened the app, it insisted that I set up a Windows Hello biometric login using either my face or fingerprint. However, Windows Hello also allowed me to log in with a 4-digit PIN.

1734073589902.png

So, if a bad actor has access to your computer and knows your PIN, they could view Recall bypassing the biometric security checks. They don’t even need physical access to the PC. I was able to access the Recall app and view the timeline on a remote computer by using TeamViewer, a popular remote access application.

1734073613231.png

You could argue that chances are someone won’t be remotely accessing your desktop without your permission. You could also take solace in the fact that Recall seems to filter out shopping pages from its captures (at least in the instances that I tested). But all you need is the right confluence of events and your personal data, anything from your Social Security number to the username and password you use for your email, could be available to a hacker.
 
Last edited:
I don't get why people are scared to try Linux? Is it fear of being wrong?

My elderly, tech illiterate family member was using an old laptop for youtube and browsing the internet. Windows forced an upgrade and the laptop couldn't handle it. Relative said "I'm sick of bill gates, get him off my computer".
I tried linux for the first time (ubuntu) and it was a piece of piss. I taught him command line code so he could VPN, use Steam, use Brave and viola, his laptop runs like a dream and he ain't ever going back.

for 99% of people, Linux is all you need. It's quick as well.
 
3 pages of Linux sperging but nobody has made a joke about how Microsoft Recall is the funniest name they could have selected for a shitty privacy hazard that has been wantonly unleashed upon the public and should be walked back immediately for doing damage
 
  • Like
Reactions: Just Hamsters
My elderly, tech illiterate family member was using an old laptop for youtube and browsing the internet. Windows forced an upgrade and the laptop couldn't handle it.
I just install Mint and say "this is the newest windows, it looks like this now" for friends and family members that only use a browser/youtube/spotify/whatever. No one suspects a thing. Just remember to make desktop shortcuts for the relevant apps!
 
If you forgot what website you were visiting when you were considering buying a red sofa, you can search “sofa” and it should pull up a picture of the exact page you were on
Man if only there was literally any other way to see what websites you'd been on. Alas such a thing is impossible and so I am forever doomed not to buy something I clearly didn't care enough about in the first place.

This is the very definition of a solution looking for a problem, except the solution is somehow even more fucking retarded than any possible problem it might solve.
 
Man if only there was literally any other way to see what websites you'd been on. Alas such a thing is impossible and so I am forever doomed not to buy something I clearly didn't care enough about in the first place.

This is the very definition of a solution looking for a problem, except the solution is somehow even more fucking retarded than any possible problem it might solve.
I bet at least one architect brought this up at a planning meeting, and a whole teams call full of pajeets bobbed their heads and all said in unison "yes yes very good".

Then they all went and made recall anyway.
 
Its when someone creates a bullshit nonsense thing to justify doing something, rather than fix a real problem or admit they have no real value to add to the company.
Enshittification. A completed product is one for which there is no more (or minimal maintenance) work. As a result, creating software that just werks is actually contrary to your objectives as a paid developer. As a result you start breaking shit to charge for solutions to problems that didn't exist earlier, as it justifies your continued development.
 
Bullshit. I have a 12900k and 64 gigs of ram. Windows 11 moves at lightspeed. It doesn't know what to do with all this overhead. Get better hardware scrub.
Touch grass, faggot. Linux loads web pages and youtube videos quicker than windows. Keep sucking bill gates shrivelled cock.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: urr13 account
The problem with "switch to Linux" is that some programs that may be needed for work, depending on the industry the person is in, are sometimes only available on windows and doing a VM is a big ask to normies who just want a version of windows that isn't filled with bloatware/spyware.
 
Back