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Most people not only aren't concerned, they'll be completely unaware of it.
Doesn't mean it's still not a horrible idea. I trust corporate decision making on things like this about as much as a fox in a hen house.
These kinds of "features" seem completely insane to me.
I hope for the sake of those who use Windows it can be disabled, never "accidentally" enabled on updates/upgrades, and never made a feature that cannot be turned off. That goes for all similar features in other operating systems in the future.
I'm guessing it will be enabled by default, so you have to know about it to turn it off in the first place?
I imagine the system will be like the thousands of cameras on the Microsoft Campus or any major store or office building or even your home which are always on and recording but erase or overwrite the content after a few days and the real purpose is to be able to go back and uncover or reconstruct an issue that occured if it became a major problem.
The difference is those cameras are in public or the workplace, and I don't own them control them. I don't have any security cameras inside or outside of my home.
Those cameras also don't have access to or see my passwords, nor do they have access to any of the data I have on my person, like in my wallet.
I own my computer and the data I create on it, so I should have total say in what gets archived, backed up, encrypted, or uploaded to the cloud from it.
I realize many people have no qualms about giving up their privacy or the continually approaching world of Big Brother and 1984, but I will continue to fight it as long as I can.
Might be a good idea to run a 'deep scan' by your antivirus:
FBI Takes Down Massive Global Army of Zombie Computer Devices The botnet, which was spread across more than 190 countries, enabled financial fraud, identity theft and access to child exploitation materials around the world, according to a statement issued on Wednesday by FBI Director Christopher Wray. Other violations tied to the botnet included bomb threats and cyberattacks, likely leading to billions of dollars in victim losses, according to a statement from the Department of Justice.
The botnet was tied to more than 613,000 IP addresses located in the US, authorities said.
i have aol mail. i have aol calendar. i see aol calendar has ical, goog, outlook calendars checked. for months i get messages i have to update outlook. i think i need a paid msft program. i have not been able to update outlook or aol.
today in aol calendar i hit arrow to go to june from may. i get "your calendar is temporarily out of date." that message is from yahoo. i hit try again and am sent back to may calendar. i found something. it asked for yhoo username, password. i haven't known nor used for many years.
Developing an AI-powered threat to security, privacy, and identity is certainly a choice, but it’s one that Microsoft was willing to make this week at its “Build” developer conference.
On Monday, the computing giant unveiled a new line of PCs that integrate Artificial Intelligence (AI) technology to promise faster speeds, enhanced productivity, and a powerful data collection and search tool that screenshots a device’s activity—including password entry—every few seconds.
This is “Recall,” a much-advertised feature within what Microsoft is calling its “Copilot+ PCs,” a reference to the AI assistant and companion which the company released in late 2023. With Recall on the new Copilot+ PCs, users no longer need to manage and remember their own browsing and chat activity. Instead, by regularly taking and storing screenshots of a user’s activity, the Copilot+ PCs can comb through that visual data to deliver answers to natural language questions, such as “ Find the site with the white sneakers,” and “ blue pantsuit with a sequin lace from abuelita.”
As any regularly updated repository of device activity poses an enormous security threat—imagine hackers getting access to a Recall database and looking for, say, Social Security Numbers, bank account info, and addresses—Microsoft has said that all Recall screenshots are encrypted and stored locally on a device.
But, in terms of security, that’s about all users will get, as Recall will not detect and obscure passwords, shy away from recording pornographic material, or turn a blind eye to sensitive information.
“Note that Recall does not perform content moderation. It will not hide information such as passwords or financial account numbers. That data may be in snapshots that are stored on your device, especially when sites do not follow standard internet protocols like cloaking password entry.”
With Recall, a CEO’s personal laptop could become an even more enticing target for hackers equipped with infostealers, a journalist’s protected sources could be within closer grasp of an oppressive government that isn’t afraid to target dissidents with malware, and entire identities could be abused and impersonated by a separate device user.
In fact, Recall seems to only work best in a one-device-per-person world. Though Microsoft explained that its Copilot+ PCs will only record Recall snapshots to specific device accounts, plenty of people share devices and accounts. For the domestic abuse survivor who is forced to share an account with their abuser, for the victim of theft who—like many people—used a weak device passcode that can easily be cracked, and for the teenager who questions their identity on the family computer, Recall could be more of a burden than a benefit.
For Malwarebytes General Manager of Consumer Business Unit Mark Beare, Recall raises yet another issue:
“I worry that we are heading to a social media 2.0 like world.”
When users first raced to upload massive quantities of sensitive, personal data onto social media platforms more than 10 years ago, they couldn’t predict how that data would be scrutinized in the future, or how it would be scoured and weaponized by cybercriminals, Beare said.
“With AI there will be a strong pull to put your full self into a model (so it knows you),” Beare said. “I don’t think it’s easy to understand all the negative aspects of what can happen from doing that and how bad actors can benefit.”