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Windows in 2025: four Microsoft changes that weakened the OS and possible fixes
Summary
Reporting notes that more frequent Windows 11 feature updates have been linked to UI and performance bugs, while Microsoft has pushed online accounts and widespread Copilot/AI integrations; the article says some users pursue registry edits, ISO modifications, or unofficial scripts as workarounds but those can be risky.
Content
Windows 11 has seen a stream of feature updates since 2024, and reporting highlights growing stability and integration issues as a result. Users and writers describe glitches in the core interface, occasional performance regressions, and more pervasive AI features. Microsoft is also shifting account and encryption behavior and adding Copilot and other agentic AI elements across system apps. The article notes that some people use unofficial workarounds to avoid or remove these changes, and it cautions that those approaches carry risks.
Key reported developments:
- Frequent feature updates have been associated with UI problems such as disappearing taskbar elements, Start menu failures, Explorer crashes, and Task Manager issues.
- A named cumulative update was reported to cause gaming frame drops and required a vendor hotfix as a workaround.
- Microsoft is reported to be pushing online Microsoft accounts during setup and linking BitLocker recovery keys to those accounts by default.
- Copilot and new “agentic” AI features are appearing across Windows apps and the interface, and attempts to remove them are described as temporary or reliant on unofficial methods that the article warns are risky.
Summary:
The reported impact is increased disruption for some users and a larger presence of AI features in the operating system. The article indicates Microsoft appears to be continuing frequent updates and integrations; specific official changes or scheduled reversals are not detailed, so the next steps are undetermined at this time.
