Skip to main content

A new test shows Microsoft Recall’s continued security problems

Recall screenshot.
Microsoft

Microsoft is currently previewing its latest version of Recall to Windows Insiders on Snapdragon-, Intel-, and AMD-based Copilot+ PCs — and the topic on most users’ minds is security. The company updated its security and privacy architecture for the feature in September, but, according to tests run by Tom’s Hardware , it still might not be good enough.

The new version of Recall includes a sensitive information filter that’s supposed to detect when there’s information like credit card numbers and Social Security numbers on the screen. If it detects them, it will avoid taking a screenshot. When Tom’s Hardware put this filter to the test, however, it failed in a number of situations.

Recommended Videos

It seems that right now at least, Recall is best at detecting standard checkout pages where people input their payment details — and as for everything else, it’s not very good. Recall captured card numbers and passwords typed into a Notepad window, Social Security information on a PDF loan application, and payment info typed into a simple HTML page.

Microsoft recall capturing credit card info.
Tom's Hardware

Granted, these tests were designed to push the limits — but the filter probably ought to work in more than a single situation. Microsoft made sure not to promise any particular results, however. Its blog post on the updated architecture simply says the sensitive content filtering “helps reduce” the number of passwords, national ID numbers, and credit card numbers being stored in Recall.

In response to the Tom’s Hardware tests, the company pointed out that it plans to “improve this functionality” and encourages people to send examples to the Feedback Hub. Because the discourse around Recall is all about security, there really is no room for mistakes.

If you’re going to make a feature that screenshots everything everyone does on their PCs, you’ve got to make it airtight. We’ll see in the coming weeks if Recall’s encryption and everything going on under the hood is as secure as Microsoft claims it is . Hopefully, the company can get things sorted before its time for the larger rollout.

Willow Roberts
Willow Roberts has been a Computing Writer at Digital Trends for a year and has been writing for about a decade. She has a…
Windows 11 is getting a lot of new features, here’s how to check if your PC qualifies
Copilot+ PC laptop.

In a Windows Insider blog post, Microsoft announces some exciting new features coming to Windows 11, including Reading Coach integration, improved Voice Access, and AI-enhanced Search. These upgrades are part of preview build 26120.3872 in the Beta channel. However, some upcoming features will only be available on Copilot+ PCs, a new category of AI-powered devices that run on Snapdragon (ARM-based) chips.

Beyond the features highlighted in this preview, more Copilot+ features are already on the horizon. For example, Microsoft recently confirmed that Recall, which raised privacy concerns, is coming to Windows 11 in build 26100.3902 (KB5055627), now available in the Release Preview Channel. That means it's just one step away from general release and likely to arrive soon on eligible Copilot+ devices.

Read more
Copilot is Microsoft’s cue to redeem Windows and edge past macOS
The new Surface Laptop 13 on a white table.

There is always going to be a big divide between macOS and Windows. Much of it has to do with the functional disparities that are deeply ingrained at an OS-level. Or if you dive into the heated community debates, you will see it broadly as a battle between seamlessness and flexibility.

Gaming remains the guiding star for Windows adherents. A handful of highly specialized niche industry tools also remain locked to the Microsoft platform. On the other hand, macOS fans swear by the fluid software, plenty of firepower options in the M-series silicon era, and fantastic hardware.

Read more
AI can do a lot of things but it can’t make games — or even play them yet
Claude playing Pokemon on Twitch.

As AI tools improve, we keep getting encouraged to offload more and more complex tasks to them. LLMs can write our emails for us, create presentations, design apps, generate videos, search the internet and summarize the results, and so much more. One thing they're still really struggling with, however, is video games.

So far this year, two of the biggest names in AI (Microsoft and Anthropic) have tried to get their models to generate or play games, and the results are probably a lot more limited than many people expect.

Read more