I still have to hear from anyone in the business of commercial and enterprise IT who would have asked for this feature, or could describe a credible use case for this feature (besides MS' use case of harvesting personal and private information for their own purposes). The resounding feedback seems to be: If there was a value, it would be more than cancelled out by the very real risk of nefarious usage, either by internal or external actors.
I had windows updates in the past and... they didn't reset anything I did. back then they used to, but as a windows user... they bearly do it. I still hate recall tho
I just saw on the net that they are not releasing recall with the arm windows this year. they didn't cancelled, but delayed. still great tutorial man! :)
MS will most likely keep restarting it, especially during updates, any guesses how long before you can’t turn it off. Only good thing is that they have restricted the number of computers that can have it. God bless corporate stupidity.
@@Britec09 Hrmn I disabled Copilot by a policy and it keeps coming back as wincrap resets the policy with an update. If they want it running it will run regardless of what you do so it will be the same with Recall as that's just too juicy of spyware to pass up.
@@Britec09I pine for the days when we didn't have to jump through a bunch of hoops, do this do that, just to disable things that shouldn't exist in the first place.
You keep saying "data" but typed "date" in the HKCU DWord. As I continued to watch, I saw that under HKLM, you pasted instead of typing and this time it did say "data".
Hi Brian, thanks for the video. It's great that it's possible to turn off Recall in a simple way. Yes, I've written a lot about the Windows Recall feature, and I personally think the Recall feature should be removed from Windows 11. I definitely think that many users will not use the Recall feature, and I think companies won't either. Take care, Brian, and have a nice evening.
We cannot trust M$, it's known that disabling a service is not a guarantee that it will stay disabled after an update. Also, it is so much work to disable a useless and unsafe thing that no one asked for, and it may be enabled again in any update. Maybe the users could use a script to automate it in every reboot or logout, i don't know if anyone created a script to do it.
and even if such script was created, how can it be ensure the script will not install some malware? the average joe will not understand the script's language, so there is no way they can check to ensure the script doesn't do something bad.
@@JeffSherlock You must be an American in love with the CIA. President Harry Truman regretted creating the National Security Act stating that he wouldn't have done that if he had realized that the CIA would become the "American Gestapo".
Hi Brian, nice video as usual. I have a request for you brother, please make a video on "How to make installed programs available for all the users on the PC? For ex. I have installed MSI Afterburner on my PC, but when my son logs in, he cant find that and he installs it again from his login thinking its not installed. Its creating hell lot of messup. There are hundreds of programs like this and I can keep creating shortcuts for them and then make it available in user/public desktop folder 1 by 1. Pls tell me if there is a better way to implement it. Like all shortcuts of installed programs will automatically added for all other user's desktops & start menu etc?" I tried searching a lot for many days, n now finally asking you as a trusted source. I recently have installed Win 11 as per guidence in your videos (Debloated Version) and I dont want to perform useless things told by other youtubers n messup the new installation. Please make a video on it, take it as a request. I am sure this probles is being faced by many viewers of yors too Thanks in advance. TC brother. 🙏
I created an ISO using autounattend, but I'm not sure if it worked properly. I did it via USB stick on Rufus with NTFS. It installed okay, and the PC name was correct, as was the password, so I assume I'd done it right, but the copilot button is in the search menu (Task bar magnifying glass menu). I followed the steps on this video, but the 'Microsoft' Key (in the part where getting rid of the button is) is missing. This must be because I'm on a local account. How do I get rid of it?
Windows 10 does not have Recall, but Win10 gonna be outdated next year. Win10 should go abandonware, and all the previous ones too, so we can keep up old computers alive.
@@Lynne76 You can keep using Win10 pass next year, but you wont be able to activate new serials anymore, is the trick. I am planning to check as many oldie computers into Win10 next year as i can afford.
I just wonder whether Microsoft was not just moving towards a kind of Time Machine, in a different way than the one you can see on Apple’s computers. Otherwise, these snapshots made every 3 seconds would just be made to force you to purchase RAM and disks. What do you think? Many thanks for this very interesting video.
I don't want that, I want to preemptively avoid that thing from landing on my SSD in first place. I can't stress how much I want to dodge that cursed thing.
How much lighter would a Windows install be if it didn't include all of this crap that no one asked for and no one wants? The effort one has to go to strip a default Windows install back to something that is functional and without the bloat and spyware is titanic.
Too late. Trust has forever disconnected customers who are leaving in droves, and are changing to other more secure OS. There are plenty of alternative, just need patience with adoption.
There is another solution that will fix any and all Microsoft spying forever: Switch to Linux and be happy! I want an OS that protects me from spyware, not a spyware that pretends to be an OS.
@@ShadowzGSD Which fantasy exactly are you speaking about? Have you ever tried Linux? If so, when was that and how was your experience? Since Linux is open source, you are guaranteed that there will never be any spyware activity like the constant spying by microsoft since even if someone would implement anything like it, others would soon detect and remove it. That is not a fantasy, that is a fact.
@@deml-e1m1 When have you tried gaming under Lunux? You do know that the steam deck is running on Linux and that gaming on Linux became much easier and most games run flawlessly, some even better than under Windows?
The sad thing about this whole topic is users shouldn't have to be jumping through hoops to protect their privacy on their PCs
I still have to hear from anyone in the business of commercial and enterprise IT who would have asked for this feature, or could describe a credible use case for this feature (besides MS' use case of harvesting personal and private information for their own purposes). The resounding feedback seems to be: If there was a value, it would be more than cancelled out by the very real risk of nefarious usage, either by internal or external actors.
Criminals, terrorists, commies,
Thank You very much for sharing your expertise regarding this subject.
There are almost no Windows Copilot+ machines out in the wild.
I don't think they have released yet.
Nobody asked for this. It should have to be something that you have to download on their website.
YESS!! now I no longer have to worry about this, even if it's disabled in settings...
Until the next update? 😅
@@omarvasquez6851 Well I'd certainly hope not 🤔
I had windows updates in the past and... they didn't reset anything I did. back then they used to, but as a windows user... they bearly do it. I still hate recall tho
I just saw on the net that they are not releasing recall with the arm windows this year. they didn't cancelled, but delayed. still great tutorial man! :)
MS will most likely keep restarting it, especially during updates, any guesses how long before you can’t turn it off.
Only good thing is that they have restricted the number of computers that can have it. God bless corporate stupidity.
You cannot restart once disabled with a policy
@@Britec09 Hrmn I disabled Copilot by a policy and it keeps coming back as wincrap resets the policy with an update. If they want it running it will run regardless of what you do so it will be the same with Recall as that's just too juicy of spyware to pass up.
@@kevinsteinman8967 Group Policy's will not be reset.
@@Britec09I pine for the days when we didn't have to jump through a bunch of hoops, do this do that, just to disable things that shouldn't exist in the first place.
You keep saying "data" but typed "date" in the HKCU DWord. As I continued to watch, I saw that under HKLM, you pasted instead of typing and this time it did say "data".
Your video is really helpful and informational. Thank you.
You are so welcome!
Thanks Again!
Any time!
Hi Brian, thanks for the video. It's great that it's possible to turn off Recall in a simple way. Yes, I've written a lot about the Windows Recall feature, and I personally think the Recall feature should be removed from Windows 11. I definitely think that many users will not use the Recall feature, and I think companies won't either. Take care, Brian, and have a nice evening.
You to mate
Commercial break at 1:04 regular programming resumes at 1:31
Good Job Britec..😀
Thanks! 😁
Thanks for that tip Sir 👍.
No problem 👍
should i do it on win 10 as well?
nice one cheers
Thank you! Cheers!
I just unistalled it with Revo uninstaller
We cannot trust M$, it's known that disabling a service is not a guarantee that it will stay disabled after an update. Also, it is so much work to disable a useless and unsafe thing that no one asked for, and it may be enabled again in any update.
Maybe the users could use a script to automate it in every reboot or logout, i don't know if anyone created a script to do it.
and even if such script was created, how can it be ensure the script will not install some malware? the average joe will not understand the script's language, so there is no way they can check to ensure the script doesn't do something bad.
Would running a virtual machine inside windows work ? Or will recall take snapshots of this... Like a dual boot with a Linux machine
thank you
Great video Brian! People have to wonder if Windows 11 is just a product of Microsoft or of in reality, Microsoft-CIA?
Stop the "CIA" garbage.
@@JeffSherlock You must be an American in love with the CIA. President Harry Truman regretted creating the National Security Act stating that he wouldn't have done that if he had realized that the CIA would become the "American Gestapo".
more likely Microsoft-NSA
@@jerrymcg3199 It could be part of any number of alphabet soup agencies, but President Harry Truman regretted forming the CIA in retrospect.
Hi Brian, nice video as usual. I have a request for you brother, please make a video on "How to make installed programs available for all the users on the PC? For ex. I have installed MSI Afterburner on my PC, but when my son logs in, he cant find that and he installs it again from his login thinking its not installed. Its creating hell lot of messup. There are hundreds of programs like this and I can keep creating shortcuts for them and then make it available in user/public desktop folder 1 by 1. Pls tell me if there is a better way to implement it. Like all shortcuts of installed programs will automatically added for all other user's desktops & start menu etc?" I tried searching a lot for many days, n now finally asking you as a trusted source. I recently have installed Win 11 as per guidence in your videos (Debloated Version) and I dont want to perform useless things told by other youtubers n messup the new installation. Please make a video on it, take it as a request. I am sure this probles is being faced by many viewers of yors too Thanks in advance. TC brother. 🙏
I created an ISO using autounattend, but I'm not sure if it worked properly. I did it via USB stick on Rufus with NTFS. It installed okay, and the PC name was correct, as was the password, so I assume I'd done it right, but the copilot button is in the search menu (Task bar magnifying glass menu). I followed the steps on this video, but the 'Microsoft' Key (in the part where getting rid of the button is) is missing. This must be because I'm on a local account. How do I get rid of it?
Do these instructions apply to Windows 10 as well? I feel like my PC has been slowed down lately and I suspect its Copilot.
on your first key the dword was DisableAI"Date"Analysis... i guess that was a typo and it should be "Data", right?
Yes, DisableAIDataAnalysis
Please could you tell me if windows 10 will have this. Thank you. 😊
Windows 10 does not have Recall, but Win10 gonna be outdated next year.
Win10 should go abandonware, and all the previous ones too, so we can keep up old computers alive.
@@mazz85-
Thank you, This is a new laptop and I followed Brian's video and took it to Windows 10 because of the Bitlocker, i hate Windows 11 😊
@@Lynne76 You can keep using Win10 pass next year, but you wont be able to activate new serials anymore, is the trick.
I am planning to check as many oldie computers into Win10 next year as i can afford.
I just wonder whether Microsoft was not just moving towards a kind of Time Machine, in a different way than the one you can see on Apple’s computers. Otherwise, these snapshots made every 3 seconds would just be made to force you to purchase RAM and disks. What do you think? Many thanks for this very interesting video.
I'm glad it'll be off by default. I don't have high storage and can't upgrade. I don't have enough money to buy much more than basics
so data or date?
Remember when it used to be "My Computer" ?...now its "This PC"...they think they own your equipment and want total control over it...screw them
dose this work for windows 10 home also
Doubt it, as I'm sure it's only for Win 11. And you need lots more HDD space...lots.
Yes @01:34 Britec explains it all by doing it through the registry editor.
Say goodbye to Windows... Recall Windows 2000, XP, 7. Ahh yes.
😂
Windows 95 computer made by I think intel. Wish I still had that PC.
At 3:02, didn't you mean Data NOT Date?
Pretty soon its going to be "say goodbye to Windows"
Say goodbye? We never even say Hi to that shit at the first place 😂 Get it out
permanently disable w$ recall and co-pilot using the command below:
c:> format c: /X /Y
Now just need to learn how to completely remove it from Windows
I don't want that, I want to preemptively avoid that thing from landing on my SSD in first place. I can't stress how much I want to dodge that cursed thing.
I don't trust in a simple slider which "disables" the snapshot function, let's be honest.
Eh Brian.... you always seem to sneak a pretty girl in your thumbnail so guys would click.... sneaky sneaky....
how about totally uninstalling both, that would be more helpful.
MicroSh*t it's moving in North Coreea ?
Eram sigur ca cineva le va da treburile peste cap....nu poti bate pe cineva fara sa fi si tu batut...
How much lighter would a Windows install be if it didn't include all of this crap that no one asked for and no one wants? The effort one has to go to strip a default Windows install back to something that is functional and without the bloat and spyware is titanic.
If they move in, i'm moving out 🤔☺
How do you back up the registry @Britec09?
Disable, *wink wink*
Too late. Trust has forever disconnected customers who are leaving in droves, and are changing to other more secure OS.
There are plenty of alternative, just need patience with adoption.
👍👍make faster on pc
Make what faster?
Better way is to just install Linux
There is another solution that will fix any and all Microsoft spying forever: Switch to Linux and be happy! I want an OS that protects me from spyware, not a spyware that pretends to be an OS.
linux its not same for gaming 😔
go away, this video is not about Linux fanboys and their fantasies.
no hate, bro 😄
@@ShadowzGSD Which fantasy exactly are you speaking about? Have you ever tried Linux? If so, when was that and how was your experience?
Since Linux is open source, you are guaranteed that there will never be any spyware activity like the constant spying by microsoft since even if someone would implement anything like it, others would soon detect and remove it. That is not a fantasy, that is a fact.
@@deml-e1m1 When have you tried gaming under Lunux? You do know that the steam deck is running on Linux and that gaming on Linux became much easier and most games run flawlessly, some even better than under Windows?