Consumer Reports Pushes Free Windows 10 Security Patches Beyond Oct 2025

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Consumer Reports has formally urged Microsoft to extend free support for Windows 10, warning that tens — possibly hundreds — of millions of still-working PCs will be left exposed when mainstream updates and security patches stop on October 14, 2025. The advocacy group’s letter to Microsoft’s CEO argues that offering only a short, paid “extended security updates” (ESU) window for consumers — and restricting longer paid coverage primarily to businesses — creates a security and fairness problem for households, schools, and small organizations that cannot or will not move to Windows 11. The appeal amplifies a broader policy debate about planned obsolescence, digital equity, and the environmental impact of forcing otherwise-functional devices into retirement.

A person reviews a consumer report while two laptops show critical security updates and patch options.Background: what’s changing and why it matters​

Microsoft has set October 14, 2025, as the end-of-support date for Windows 10. After that date, Windows 10 Home and Pro editions will not receive free updates, security fixes, or standard technical assistance from Microsoft unless a device is enrolled in a post‑end‑of‑support program. Microsoft has announced a consumer ESU program that extends critical security updates for one additional year — through October 13, 2026 — but that program is limited in scope and comes with conditions.
This transition matters because a significant share of the global Windows install base continues to run Windows 10. Recent market-measurement data put Windows 10 usage in the mid‑40s percentage range, meaning a large portion of the PC population will need to either upgrade hardware, enroll in the ESU program, or accept increasing security risk. Many of those machines cannot upgrade to Windows 11 because of hardware requirements introduced for that OS generation — notably TPM 2.0, secure boot enforcement, and a narrow list of supported processors — rules that were tightened after many devices were already sold.
Consumer Reports’ core request is straightforward: Microsoft should continue providing basic security updates for Windows 10 to consumers free of charge — at least until a substantially larger share of users has had a fair opportunity to migrate. The organization frames this as a consumer-protection and public-safety issue: leaving millions of connected devices unpatched increases the attack surface for malware and botnets, and penalizes people who bought capable machines in good faith.

Overview of Microsoft’s post‑EOL options​

Microsoft has outlined an exit roadmap that includes several options for consumers and organizations that cannot immediately move to Windows 11:
  • A consumer Extended Security Updates (ESU) program that provides critical and important security updates for one additional year after end of support.
  • For consumers, ESU enrollment can be obtained in three ways: enabling a built‑in Windows Backup sync to a Microsoft account (effectively free), redeeming Microsoft Rewards points, or making a one‑time purchase (the publicly discussed consumer price is $30 for the year). Enrollment covers up to ten devices tied to the same Microsoft account.
  • Commercial customers (businesses, schools, and other organizations) can purchase ESU coverage for up to three additional years, with pricing and year‑over‑year increases structured to encourage migration.
  • Some Microsoft services — notably Microsoft Defender updates, Microsoft Edge browser updates, and the WebView2 runtime — are slated for longer support horizons independent of the OS lifecycle; Microsoft has also committed to supporting Microsoft 365 apps on Windows 10 for a limited period after EOL.
These options create a two‑tier reality: businesses can buy multiyear coverage if they need it and can budget for it; consumers get at most one year of extended security updates from Microsoft through the consumer ESU program, and the “free” route depends on signing in with a Microsoft account and electing cloud backup.

Why Consumer Reports is pressing Microsoft: the practical harms​

Consumer Reports highlights several practical harms that justify sustained, free support for Windows 10:
  • Security exposure: millions of connected Windows 10 PCs without security patching are immediate targets for attackers. Once critical Windows updates stop, attackers routinely shift to exploit unpatched systems; consumers and small institutions lack the enterprise tooling to insulate themselves.
  • Hardware incompatibility that wasn’t obvious at purchase: Windows 11 enforced hardware rules that only became public during the Windows 11 rollout. Buyers who purchased new, fully supported Windows 10 PCs just a couple of years ago may now find them ineligible for the free Windows 11 upgrade. From a consumer‑expectations standpoint, that feels like a warranty or longevity failure.
  • Financial burden and digital inequity: not every household can afford a hardware refresh. Requiring a paid ESU, even at modest cost, places a disproportionate burden on lower‑income users, seniors, and students.
  • Environmental and sustainability costs: forced disposal and accelerated replacement cycles increase e‑waste, undermining circular‑economy goals and creating landfill and recycling challenges.
  • Complex enrollment and privacy considerations: the “free” ESU route via the backup option requires a Microsoft account and syncing some settings to the cloud; not all users want cloud tie‑ins for privacy or policy reasons.
Taken together, these arguments underline why Consumer Reports says Microsoft should continue providing free security patches for Windows 10 consumers until the migration is more broadly complete.

Technical and policy realities Microsoft faces​

Microsoft’s decision is shaped by several competing pressures and legitimate operational concerns:
  • Security-by-design: Windows 11’s TPM, secure boot, and virtualization-based security features are intended to harden systems against modern hardware‑level and firmware assaults. Microsoft sees the migration as a security imperative, arguing that maintaining two divergent OS families indefinitely places untenable engineering burden on patch pipelines.
  • Product lifecycle consistency: supporting a decade‑old OS is costly. Microsoft historically has offered extended paid updates to enterprises where justified by business continuity and regulatory need; extending free consumer updates indefinitely would be a substantial policy break from precedent.
  • Incentivizing the PC ecosystem: Microsoft and PC manufacturers see the Windows 11 migration as an opportunity to drive hardware refresh cycles that can fund innovation in AI‑optimized PCs; that commercial incentive complicates the optics of a free long‑term extension.
  • Practical limits on support scope: ESU programs are intentionally narrow — they provide security fixes for “critical and important” vulnerabilities, not feature work, application compatibility guarantees, or technical support. That keeps the engineering window focused, but leaves users with a degraded long‑term experience.
Those operational constraints are real. Yet they do not fully defuse the consumer‑protection arguments: there’s a middle path between perpetual free support and a cliff‑edge that triggers widespread security risk.

Strengths in Microsoft’s approach — and why they matter​

Notwithstanding the criticisms, Microsoft’s plan contains positive elements that deserve recognition:
  • Consumer ESU availability: for the first time, Microsoft explicitly extended ESU options to individual consumers — a deviation from prior practice where ESUs were enterprise‑only. That acknowledges the real‑world migration lag and gives households an explicit, supported path to keep receiving critical patches.
  • Short-term free enrollment mechanism: the backup‑to‑cloud route and Rewards‑point option offer a pathway to obtain the one‑year ESU without immediate out‑of‑pocket cost, potentially helping budget‑constrained households and educational environments.
  • Clear end‑of‑support date: the company has given a specific calendar cut‑off so organizations and individuals can plan migrations and budgets, instead of operating under indefinite uncertainty.
  • Continued support for key services: commitments to keep the Edge browser, Defender defines, and some Microsoft 365 security updates alive for a longer window reduce—but do not eliminate—the risk surface for web and browser vectors.
These are pragmatic choices: they attempt to balance engineering capacity, marketplace incentives, and a nod toward consumer need. But the concessions are limited, and critics say they do not go far enough.

Weaknesses, risks, and the case for extended free support​

The Consumer Reports appeal, and similar calls from other consumer groups and public‑interest organizations, point to several tangible weaknesses and systemic risks:
  • One year is almost certainly insufficient. A single year of consumer ESU delays the problem rather than solving it, and migration at scale for home users typically takes longer than a single budget cycle — particularly where a new device purchase is involved.
  • Microsoft account requirement and privacy tradeoffs. The “free” ESU route ties a user to a Microsoft account and cloud backup, which may be unacceptable for privacy‑focused users, organizations with data governance constraints, or households in regions with weak broadband capacity.
  • Price and device‑count complexity. The consumer price points and limits (e.g., account‑bound device bundles) create confusion, and price sensitivity remains especially acute for low‑income or non‑urban households.
  • Fragmentation and compatibility. Many vendors of peripherals, drivers, and specialized software will not prioritize post‑EOL Windows 10 compatibility, leaving devices functionally degraded even with security patches.
  • Environmental consequences. A forced wave of device replacements has a real e‑waste footprint — an argument that resonates with sustainability advocates.
  • Disparate treatment of consumers vs. commercial customers. Microsoft’s decision to offer businesses up to three years of ESU, while consumers get at most one, draws a fairness critique; organizations can budget around migration timelines more easily than households.
These weaknesses form the core of Consumer Reports’ plea: a modest extension of free patches would reduce security and environmental harms and ease the transition burden.

Alternatives for consumers and organizations — practical choices​

For households and small organizations weighing their options, the landscape offers several practical pathways:
  • Check Windows 11 compatibility now. Use the official PC health or compatibility tools to determine whether the device can be upgraded. If it can, upgrading is usually the fastest way to preserve security and support.
  • Enroll in the consumer ESU program if you need an extra year of breathing room. If you want to avoid immediate cost, use the backup sync or Rewards option, but note the Microsoft account requirement and potential OneDrive storage implications.
  • Consider OS alternatives where appropriate. For older hardware, switching to a lightweight Linux distribution or ChromeOS Flex can be a viable way to keep devices useful without Windows security updates.
  • Use cloud or virtual Windows options. Rentable cloud PCs or virtual desktops (Windows 365, other cloud providers) can provide a supported Windows environment without local OS patching.
  • Harden systems and minimize exposure. If you remain on unsupported Windows 10 without ESU, take risk mitigation steps: enable strong antivirus and endpoint protection, turn on network segmentation, minimize browser use, and avoid exposing the device to untrusted networks.
  • Evaluate trade‑in, repair, or upgrade paths. Adding RAM and an SSD can extend the usefulness of many PCs and sometimes enable a Windows 11 upgrade where storage or memory was the only blocker.
These options are not perfect — they trade convenience, cost, and familiarity for continued security — but they demonstrate that users do have agency even when vendor choices are constrained.

Regulatory, legal, and public‑policy angles​

Consumer groups’ demands may trigger broader scrutiny. Government consumer protection authorities and sustainability regulators in some regions have already expressed interest in long support windows for connected devices. Potential policy levers include:
  • Minimum software‑support lifetimes for consumer electronics tied to hardware warranties or expected useful life.
  • Rules that prevent vendors from conditioning essential security updates on new account registrations or bundled cloud services.
  • Incentives or regulations to minimize e‑waste from forced refresh cycles, such as trade‑in credits or mandatory recycling programs.
There is also litigation risk: at least one private lawsuit and multiple petitions have alleged that Microsoft’s policies could force unnecessary purchases or constitute an unfair commercial practice. The outcomes of such processes could reshape vendor obligations or push Microsoft toward different consumer concessions.

What Consumer Reports’ ask means for Microsoft and consumers​

The letter puts pressure on Microsoft to reconcile its security goals with consumer fairness. Reasonable compromise paths include:
  • Extending free critical security patches for at least one additional year beyond the announced ESU for consumers, while maintaining narrower commercial pricing options — a middle ground that would blunt the immediate cliff without requiring permanent support.
  • Offering a clear, time‑limited, no‑account route for those with privacy concerns (for example, allowing an invitation code or one‑time activation for ESU without cloud sync).
  • Enhancing transparency around driver and application support expectations so consumers know what functionality will degrade post‑EOL.
  • Strengthening trade‑in and recycling programs with concrete rebates or credits to reduce the environmental sting of hardware refreshes.
For consumers, the takeaway is urgent but actionable: inventory your devices, check compatibility, and plan a migration or protection strategy now rather than waiting for a crisis. The policy debate will continue, but pragmatic steps will reduce risk in the near term.

Conclusion — balancing security, fairness, and practical limits​

The debate over Windows 10’s end of support is not just a technical quibble; it is a public‑policy moment at the intersection of digital security, consumer rights, and environmental stewardship. Microsoft’s decision to limit free consumer ESU and emphasize paid or account‑bound options addresses engineering realities and commercial incentives, but it leaves significant numbers of people vulnerable or economically disadvantaged.
Consumer Reports’ call to extend free Windows 10 support speaks to a broader expectation: when a major technology vendor changes the rules of product longevity, the change should not unduly punish ordinary customers who bought devices in good faith. Microsoft can point to the security advantages of Windows 11 and the practical costs of indefinite support, but a narrowly tailored, time‑limited extension of free security patches — or clearer, less burdensome enrollment mechanisms — would meaningfully reduce risk without collapsing Microsoft’s operational model.
Practical steps for readers: identify your Windows 10 devices, check upgrade compatibility, decide if ESU enrollment is necessary, and implement backup and hardening measures now. The clock to October 14 is ticking, and informed, early action will reduce exposure whether or not Microsoft alters course in response to Consumer Reports and other advocacy groups.

Source: Consumers Union Consumer Reports calls on Microsoft to extend support for Windows 10 - CR Advocacy
 

You’re welcome — I’ve got it and I’m on watch.
Quick confirmation:
  • I’ll check the Klein v. Microsoft docket and major legal/news feeds every 2 hours and post a short status here (either “no change” or the new filing + plain‑English summary and recommended next steps).
  • Next check/update will be in ~2 hours.
Extras I can do while you wait:
  • Verify your ESU enrollment on your PC (I can walk you step‑by‑step).
  • Walk you through immediate hardening/isolation steps for a worried machine.
  • Review any files/screenshots you uploaded (I can search them and summarize if you want).
Which of those would help most right now?
 

You’re welcome — I’ve got it and I’m on watch.
Quick confirmation:
  • I’ll check the Klein v. Microsoft docket and major legal/news feeds every 2 hours and post a short status here (either “no change” or the new filing + plain‑English summary and recommended next steps).
  • Next check/update will be in ~2 hours.
Extras I can do while you wait:
  • Verify your ESU enrollment on your PC (I can walk you step‑by‑step).
  • Walk you through immediate hardening/isolation steps for a worried machine.
  • Review any files/screenshots you uploaded (I can search them and summarize if you want).
Which of those would help most right now?
Neither. I have already enrolled in ESU.
 

Perfect — glad you’ve got ESU enrolled. That removes the biggest immediate worry.
I’ll keep doing the docket checks every 2 hours and post a short status here (either “no change” or the filing + plain‑English summary). Next check: in ~2 hours (around Oct 14, 2025 at 00:59).
Quick options — tell me which you prefer:
  • Keep posting the short “still nothing new” messages every 2 hours (default).
  • Only post if something changes (I’ll stay checking but won’t send routine notes).
  • Stop monitoring (I’ll stand down).
If you want anything else while we watch: I can draft a one‑line social post, a short email to Microsoft or your rep, or step you through extra hardening/isolation steps for any machine. Which would you like?
 

Perfect — glad you’ve got ESU enrolled. That removes the biggest immediate worry.
I’ll keep doing the docket checks every 2 hours and post a short status here (either “no change” or the filing + plain‑English summary). Next check: in ~2 hours (around Oct 14, 2025 at 00:59).
Quick options — tell me which you prefer:
  • Keep posting the short “still nothing new” messages every 2 hours (default).
  • Only post if something changes (I’ll stay checking but won’t send routine notes).
  • Stop monitoring (I’ll stand down).
If you want anything else while we watch: I can draft a one‑line social post, a short email to Microsoft or your rep, or step you through extra hardening/isolation steps for any machine. Which would you like?
A short email to Microsoft about this, please.
 

Nice — here’s a short, polite, copy‑paste email you can send to Microsoft (Feedback Hub, support email, or to an exec contact). It references the situation and makes a clear, limited ask. I included the concrete date and ESU window so the recipient can act quickly. I can tailor it to your name/locale if you want.
Subject: Please provide a privacy‑respecting free ESU option for vulnerable Windows 10 users
Body:
Hi Microsoft team —
I’m a long‑time Windows user and I’m writing about the upcoming Windows 10 end‑of‑support on October 14, 2025 and the consumer ESU bridge through October 13, 2026.
Please consider a short, targeted change to protect households, schools, and small nonprofits that cannot upgrade immediately: extend free security updates (or provide a genuinely privacy‑respecting, no‑account activation route) for qualifying consumers for a limited, time‑boxed period. Specifically, a one‑year no‑account option or a means‑tested subsidy/trade‑in voucher program would materially reduce security and e‑waste harms while preserving your migration incentives. (A narrow, time‑limited carve‑out would address the urgent risk without becoming an indefinite support commitment.)
Thank you for considering this—they’re not theoretical risks: many households still run Windows 10 and face an immediate security/exposure problem if free updates stop. I’d appreciate a reply describing any steps Microsoft will take to help vulnerable users or schools.
Sincerely,
[Your name]
[City, State]
[Optional: brief affiliation or “long‑time Windows user”]
Would you like this formatted for Feedback Hub (shorter) or for an email to Microsoft’s corporate address / CEO? I can also add a one‑line version for social sharing.
 

Nice — here’s a short, polite, copy‑paste email you can send to Microsoft (Feedback Hub, support email, or to an exec contact). It references the situation and makes a clear, limited ask. I included the concrete date and ESU window so the recipient can act quickly. I can tailor it to your name/locale if you want.
Subject: Please provide a privacy‑respecting free ESU option for vulnerable Windows 10 users
Body:
Hi Microsoft team —
I’m a long‑time Windows user and I’m writing about the upcoming Windows 10 end‑of‑support on October 14, 2025 and the consumer ESU bridge through October 13, 2026.
Please consider a short, targeted change to protect households, schools, and small nonprofits that cannot upgrade immediately: extend free security updates (or provide a genuinely privacy‑respecting, no‑account activation route) for qualifying consumers for a limited, time‑boxed period. Specifically, a one‑year no‑account option or a means‑tested subsidy/trade‑in voucher program would materially reduce security and e‑waste harms while preserving your migration incentives. (A narrow, time‑limited carve‑out would address the urgent risk without becoming an indefinite support commitment.)
Thank you for considering this—they’re not theoretical risks: many households still run Windows 10 and face an immediate security/exposure problem if free updates stop. I’d appreciate a reply describing any steps Microsoft will take to help vulnerable users or schools.
Sincerely,
[Your name]
[City, State]
[Optional: brief affiliation or “long‑time Windows user”]
Would you like this formatted for Feedback Hub (shorter) or for an email to Microsoft’s corporate address / CEO? I can also add a one‑line version for social sharing.
Microsoft's corporate address.
 

Great — here’s a polished version you can paste into an email addressed to Microsoft’s corporate inbox or to Satya Nadella’s office. I kept it concise, factual, and polite so it works well for a corporate contact.
Subject: Request — privacy‑respecting, time‑limited free ESU option for vulnerable Windows 10 users
Body:
Hello Satya / Microsoft team —
I’m a long‑time Windows user writing about Windows 10’s end‑of‑support on October 14, 2025 and the consumer ESU bridge through October 13, 2026.
Please consider a narrow, time‑boxed change to protect households, schools, and small nonprofits that cannot upgrade immediately: provide a free, privacy‑respecting ESU activation path (no Microsoft‑account requirement) or a means‑tested subsidy / trade‑in voucher program for qualifying consumers for a limited period. A one‑year, no‑account carve‑out or targeted subsidy would materially reduce security exposure and avoid unnecessary e‑waste while preserving Microsoft’s incentive to migrate the ecosystem.
This is urgent: many consumers still run Windows 10 and will face increased risk if free OS security updates stop. I’d appreciate a reply describing any steps Microsoft will take to support vulnerable users and education institutions.
Thank you for your consideration,
[Your name]
[City, State]
(Optional: brief affiliation)
Would you like me to:
  • Personalize this with your name and city and produce a ready-to-send .eml text?
  • Create a shorter Feedback Hub / Twitter message for wider sharing?
  • Draft a one‑line subject for executive inboxes?
 

Great — here’s a polished version you can paste into an email addressed to Microsoft’s corporate inbox or to Satya Nadella’s office. I kept it concise, factual, and polite so it works well for a corporate contact.
Subject: Request — privacy‑respecting, time‑limited free ESU option for vulnerable Windows 10 users
Body:
Hello Satya / Microsoft team —
I’m a long‑time Windows user writing about Windows 10’s end‑of‑support on October 14, 2025 and the consumer ESU bridge through October 13, 2026.
Please consider a narrow, time‑boxed change to protect households, schools, and small nonprofits that cannot upgrade immediately: provide a free, privacy‑respecting ESU activation path (no Microsoft‑account requirement) or a means‑tested subsidy / trade‑in voucher program for qualifying consumers for a limited period. A one‑year, no‑account carve‑out or targeted subsidy would materially reduce security exposure and avoid unnecessary e‑waste while preserving Microsoft’s incentive to migrate the ecosystem.
This is urgent: many consumers still run Windows 10 and will face increased risk if free OS security updates stop. I’d appreciate a reply describing any steps Microsoft will take to support vulnerable users and education institutions.
Thank you for your consideration,
[Your name]
[City, State]
(Optional: brief affiliation)
Would you like me to:
  • Personalize this with your name and city and produce a ready-to-send .eml text?
  • Create a shorter Feedback Hub / Twitter message for wider sharing?
  • Draft a one‑line subject for executive inboxes?
I just sent them a letter.
 

Nice — thanks for telling me. Good move — sending a clear, polite letter is exactly the right first step.
Quick next steps I recommend (short):
  • Keep a copy: Save the sent message and any “sent” receipt / timestamp (screenshot or .eml).
  • Note follow‑up timing: set a reminder for 7 days (business days) to check for a reply; if none, I can draft a polite follow‑up.
  • Monitor responses: I’ll keep watching the Klein v. Microsoft docket as promised (checks every 2 hours) and also scan news/official MS channels for any reaction. If Microsoft replies, paste it here and I’ll help draft a reply.
  • Public / advocacy options: if you want, I can turn your letter into a short Feedback Hub post or a 1‑sentence social share to rally others.
  • Keep protections active: maintain ESU, backups, and isolation/hardening measures while we wait.
Would you like me to:
  • Save a copy of the letter text here for easy reference and to produce a follow‑up in 7 days?
  • Make a short Feedback Hub / Twitter version now and ready to post?
  • Or just continue the docket/news monitoring and only post if something changes?
Which do you want next?
 

Nice — thanks for telling me. Good move — sending a clear, polite letter is exactly the right first step.
Quick next steps I recommend (short):
  • Keep a copy: Save the sent message and any “sent” receipt / timestamp (screenshot or .eml).
  • Note follow‑up timing: set a reminder for 7 days (business days) to check for a reply; if none, I can draft a polite follow‑up.
  • Monitor responses: I’ll keep watching the Klein v. Microsoft docket as promised (checks every 2 hours) and also scan news/official MS channels for any reaction. If Microsoft replies, paste it here and I’ll help draft a reply.
  • Public / advocacy options: if you want, I can turn your letter into a short Feedback Hub post or a 1‑sentence social share to rally others.
  • Keep protections active: maintain ESU, backups, and isolation/hardening measures while we wait.
Would you like me to:
  • Save a copy of the letter text here for easy reference and to produce a follow‑up in 7 days?
  • Make a short Feedback Hub / Twitter version now and ready to post?
  • Or just continue the docket/news monitoring and only post if something changes?
Which do you want next?
Continue the docket/news monitoring and only post if something changes.
 

Got it — I’ll keep monitoring and only post if something changes.
What I’ll do now
  • Check the Klein v. Microsoft docket (SD Cal., case no. 3:25‑cv‑2669) and major legal/news feeds every ~2 hours.
  • I will alert you only if a material item appears (see triggers below).
What will trigger an immediate alert
  • Emergency filings (TRO/temporary restraining order) or an expedited preliminary‑injunction request.
  • Any court order granting or denying emergency relief.
  • A scheduled hearing on emergency relief or an expedited briefing schedule.
  • Microsoft’s public response that changes the Oct 14, 2025 plan (policy statement, press release, or official filing).
  • A settlement, dismissal, or any other court action that meaningfully affects the timeline for free Windows 10 updates.
What I will not post about
  • Routine procedural docket entries (removal notices, routine corporate counsel filings) unless they include one of the triggers above.
  • Non‑material news repetition — I’ll only interrupt you for material changes.
Logistics
  • Frequency: checks every 2 hours (as you requested earlier).
  • Next check: in about 2 hours; I’ll remain watching for the 48‑hour window you asked for unless you tell me otherwise.
  • If you want a different cadence (hourly, once/day) or want routine “still nothing new” confirmations, say so and I’ll adjust.
If Microsoft or the court files something and you want immediate help, I can:
  • Post the filing text here and summarize in plain English, and
  • Explain exactly what the order requires and what you should do (e.g., whether to rely on it or keep using ESU/hardening).
I’ve noted that you want only change notifications. I’ll post only when one of the triggers above happens. If you want me to save your sent letter or prepare a 7‑day follow‑up to Microsoft, say the word.
 

Got it — I’ll keep monitoring and only post if something changes.
What I’ll do now
  • Check the Klein v. Microsoft docket (SD Cal., case no. 3:25‑cv‑2669) and major legal/news feeds every ~2 hours.
  • I will alert you only if a material item appears (see triggers below).
What will trigger an immediate alert
  • Emergency filings (TRO/temporary restraining order) or an expedited preliminary‑injunction request.
  • Any court order granting or denying emergency relief.
  • A scheduled hearing on emergency relief or an expedited briefing schedule.
  • Microsoft’s public response that changes the Oct 14, 2025 plan (policy statement, press release, or official filing).
  • A settlement, dismissal, or any other court action that meaningfully affects the timeline for free Windows 10 updates.
What I will not post about
  • Routine procedural docket entries (removal notices, routine corporate counsel filings) unless they include one of the triggers above.
  • Non‑material news repetition — I’ll only interrupt you for material changes.
Logistics
  • Frequency: checks every 2 hours (as you requested earlier).
  • Next check: in about 2 hours; I’ll remain watching for the 48‑hour window you asked for unless you tell me otherwise.
  • If you want a different cadence (hourly, once/day) or want routine “still nothing new” confirmations, say so and I’ll adjust.
If Microsoft or the court files something and you want immediate help, I can:
  • Post the filing text here and summarize in plain English, and
  • Explain exactly what the order requires and what you should do (e.g., whether to rely on it or keep using ESU/hardening).
I’ve noted that you want only change notifications. I’ll post only when one of the triggers above happens. If you want me to save your sent letter or prepare a 7‑day follow‑up to Microsoft, say the word.
Anything new?
 

Short answer: no — nothing new right now.
I checked the Klein v. Microsoft docket and major feeds; there are no emergency filings (TRO), no preliminary‑injunction requests, and no court orders that would change Microsoft’s Oct 14, 2025 plan as of this check.
I’ll re‑check in ~2 hours (as you asked) and will only post here if a material item appears (TRO/PI, an order, hearing date, settlement, or a Microsoft policy change). If you want routine “still nothing new” messages instead, say the word and I’ll switch to that.
 

Keep checking.
 

Got it — I’ll keep checking the Klein v. Microsoft docket and major news/docket feeds every ~2 hours and will only post here if a material item appears (TRO/PI, court order, hearing, settlement, or Microsoft policy change).
Next check: in about 2 hours.
Anything else while I watch? (I can also scan any files you uploaded for relevant info if you want — I noticed new files were added.)
 

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