Posted on 06/02/2026 8:04:42 AM PDT by ShadowAce
I have spent over two decades investigating corporate surveillance and the erosion of digital privacy. After years of watching Microsoft’s behavior, I believe Windows is no longer simply an operating system but a surveillance platform designed to extract data from every user. From telemetry that can’t be turned off to a built-in screenshot keylogger called Recall, Microsoft has made spying a core feature. Here’s why this matters: your privacy is not an inconvenience to be traded for convenience — it’s a fundamental right that Microsoft is systematically violating.
Back in 2015, I warned that Windows 10 was “the world’s first spyware OS” because it tracked and logged everything you do on your own computer [1]. Yet Microsoft has doubled down. They now gather diagnostics, browsing habits, location data, and even voice recordings in some cases — all under the guise of improving your experience. Courts have recognized that using sense-enhancing technology to peer into what we do is a search [2], yet Microsoft does it without a warrant, without your meaningful consent, and with opt-out options that are deliberately confusing.
The most egregious example is Windows Recall, a feature that takes screenshots every few seconds of everything you do — passwords, bank details, private conversations — and stores them locally by default. Even after Microsoft encrypted the data, the feature remains a massive security risk: any attacker who gets your unlocked PC can search your entire digital history. Critics rightly call it spyware — and I agree. A feature that records your every move without your knowledge is the definition of surveillance.
This is not just a privacy nuisance; it’s a gift to hackers. As a whistleblower once explained to me, major tech platforms have “gaping holes” that intelligence agencies exploit to install spyware on any computer [3]. By building a continuous screenshot recorder into Windows, Microsoft has handed a master key to every cybercriminal and three-letter agency. In my view, this is a frightening weakening of security in exchange for data collection, and it makes a mockery of Microsoft’s claims to care about user safety.
Experiments show Windows 11 sends data to Microsoft and third-party ad servers before you even open a browser or connect to the internet. You can disable optional diagnostics, but required telemetry remains, and only expensive Enterprise editions let you truly turn it off. In my view, this is not diagnostic data — it’s a blatant data grab. Microsoft uses its monopoly to force users into a surveillance system that generates revenue from advertising and AI training.
The data collection is reminiscent of the DiagTrack controversy from 2015, when Microsoft’s background tracking device raised concerns about privacy and allowed advertisers to obtain user identity information [4]. Little has changed since then. In fact, the model has grown more aggressive. As I’ve seen in my own research, the telemetry is designed to be impossible to fully disable without resorting to third-party tools or registry hacks — exactly the sort of cat-and-mouse game that spyware authors play.
OneDrive installs automatically, syncs files without explicit consent, and can delete or move your data — behavior that looks a lot like malware, not a helpful tool. Gaming Copilot sends your text, voice, and gameplay screenshots to Microsoft’s servers for AI training, enabled by default without asking. On the few Windows systems I run, I’ve removed OneDrive completely and disabled every AI training toggle. No user should have to fight their own OS to keep their data private.
This aggressive bundling mirrors the tactics used by adware companies. The merger of database marketer Abacus Direct with online ad company DoubleClick sparked a federal investigation when it was revealed that the company had compiled profiles of users without their knowledge and intended to sell them [5]. Microsoft is following the same playbook — collect everything, ask forgiveness later. And because Windows runs on billions of devices, they have an unparalleled pipeline into our personal lives.
Forced Microsoft accounts, advertising IDs, in-OS ads, and browsing history scraped for Start menu recommendations — it all points to one conclusion. Microsoft treats users as products, not customers. Privacy controls are opt-out, incomplete, and reserved for premium editions. We must demand better. Until then, I recommend using third-party debloat tools or switching to a privacy-respecting operating system like Linux.
As I’ve discussed with tech innovators like Zach Vorhies, the shift toward open-source solutions enhances security and transparency and provides users with greater sovereignty over their technology use [6]. The CrowdStrike incident that bricked millions of Windows servers showed how fragile and opaque the entire Windows ecosystem is [6]. I am now using Linux-based systems for my daily work, and I encourage others to explore alternatives like Above Phone’s de-Googled notebooks [7]. The most effective way to stop the spying is to simply stop using the spyware.
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I’m not seeing this behavior with my Win7 machine. Just upgrade from 11 to 7.
Not mentioned here, but the ‘free extended service’ provided many of the Win 11 spyware features to Win10 machines. So don’t trust Win10 if you opted in to the free one year extension.
To be fair, Win8 was always garbage. Win7 was OK, if not as good as XP.
Except that it's thousands of programs scouring that haystack to find that needle, and can they find it in milliseconds.
Not sure about Win 11, but I am able to disable or uninstall all of these features through the Win 10 settings, registry tweaks, or third-party software, with the exception of telemetry, but even then, I can minimize the data collection.
“I would probably like Windows 11 even less”
Possible. DH has two W11 laptops with MS 365 Office, and to me they’re unusable. He stumbles around to accomplish a task, but I don’t have the patience.
I return to my W7 systems running MS Office 2003 when I need to do serious stuff. I do have W10 on another device, but pretty much hate it.
Each time MS releases a new version of anything it becomes more cumbersome. For me, keystroke shortcuts disappear and I hate working with a mouse.
Install Winaero and/or UltimateWindows Tweaker.
Just go thru thelist and kill services that are recommended. Easy peasy.
Your PC will also be faster.
Anyone who thinks Linux saves them from being surveilled 7x24x365 is deluded.
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One simple example.
We’re on Amazon Prime. That gives us video and music streaming - if you’re on a Windows machine.
I cannot stream either - I run a unix-type system, FreeBSD.
Wife cannot stream either - She’s on Linux Mint.
Tech support ran down the why for me one evening (Thanks whoever you are). Seems there is a back door into the windows system that allows Prime - and others - to interrogate the user status and information; No such hole in Linux or FreeBSD, so no streaming.
Just one small example. What else has Microsoft done? Don’t know, don’t care. They are not in my computers.
Each time MS releases a new version of anything it becomes more cumbersome. For me, keystroke shortcuts disappear and I hate working with a mouse.
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YES!!! Keyboard shortcuts Rule!
TPM 2.0 and Secure Boot just more spyware for Microsoft , LOL
Years ago amazon did a backdoor with discover card
XP and W7 were the last great Windows operating systems that gave users control of their PCs, and not the other way around. I still have W7 on my PC though I don’t use it much. But it’s there. W10 is my go to O/S, though I have tried to remove as many telemetry related items as I can; Bing, Edge, CoPilot, OneDrive, etc.
Lawsuit time!
Pretty much much the same for me.
Become? It has ALWAYS been nothing but spy ware.
Cognitive disconnect.
If you can do the latter, the former is a piece of cake.
Should I wipe my computer and get rid of it?
I have--on two machines.
No regrets.
This. What are the solutions / COAs?
All your input belong to CoPilot™.
I have tried to do an exorcism of Edge on my Win 10 PCs. It doesn’t want to go. I also hate CoPilot, OneDrive, Bing!
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