TotalRecall Reloaded exposes Windows Recall security gap

Security researcher Alexander Hagenah has released an updated tool called TotalRecall Reloaded that reveals weaknesses in Microsoft Windows 11's Recall feature. Despite Microsoft's security overhauls, the tool can intercept user data after Windows Hello authentication without needing administrator privileges. Microsoft maintains that this does not represent a vulnerability.

Two years ago, Microsoft introduced Recall as part of its Copilot+ PCs, a feature designed to track PC usage via screenshots for easier recall of past activities. Initially criticized for storing unencrypted data, Microsoft delayed its rollout and improved security: data is now encrypted, accessible only via Windows Hello, turned off by default, and better at excluding sensitive information like financial details. However, Hagenah argues that while the Recall database itself—protected by a VBS enclave—is 'rock solid,' the AIXHost.exe process handling data lacks similar protections. 'The vault is solid. The delivery truck is not,' he wrote on the tool's GitHub page. The TotalRecall Reloaded tool injects a DLL into AIXHost.exe, allowing it to capture screenshots, OCR text, and metadata once the user authenticates. It can also access recent screenshots, database metadata, or delete the entire database without authentication, and continues intercepting even after Recall closes. Hagenah reported the issue to Microsoft's Security Response Center on March 6; the company classified it as 'not a vulnerability' on April 3. A Microsoft spokesperson stated, 'We appreciate Alexander Hagenah for identifying and responsibly reporting this issue. After careful investigation, we determined that the access patterns demonstrated are consistent with intended protections and existing controls, and do not represent a bypass of a security boundary or unauthorized access to data. The authorization period has a timeout and anti-hammering protection that limit the impact of malicious queries.' Apps like Signal Messenger, AdGuard, and Brave Browser have implemented workarounds to exclude their content from Recall.

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Illustration of Meta's data leak involving employee tracking program, showing a computer with data spilling out.
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Meta pauses employee tracking program after data leak

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Meta has paused its Model Capability Initiative after sensitive employee data was exposed internally. The program tracks workers' keystrokes and mouse movements to train AI models. Company officials said they are investigating the incident.

Microsoft has alerted users that hackers are targeting password reset processes to breach accounts. The activity is attributed to the group Storm-2949.

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A newly published zero-day exploit allows attackers with physical access to bypass BitLocker encryption on Windows 11 devices in seconds. The attack, named YellowKey, targets the default TPM-only configuration and grants full access to encrypted drives via a simple USB-based method.

Microsoft is rolling out a new low latency profile in Windows 11 that temporarily boosts CPU power to make apps, menus, and core features like the Start menu respond faster. The update addresses long-standing complaints about sluggish performance and follows earlier reports of the feature under development as part of the Windows K2 project.

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Google published proof-of-concept exploit code on Wednesday for a vulnerability in its Chromium browser that has gone unfixed for 29 months. The flaw affects Chrome, Microsoft Edge, and other Chromium-based browsers used by millions worldwide. It enables attackers to establish persistent connections for monitoring user activity and launching attacks.

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