
"Officially, Windows 10 died last month, a little over a decade after its initial release. But the old operating system's enduring popularity has prompted Microsoft to promise between one and three years of Extended Security Updates (ESUs) for many Windows 10 PCs. For individuals with Windows 10 PCs, it's relatively easy to get an additional year of updates at no cost."
"To fix the problems, Microsoft released an update for Windows 10 22H2 ( KB5071959) this week that both acknowledges and fixes an issue "where the enrollment wizard may fail during enrollment." It's being offered to all Windows 10 PCs regardless of whether they're enrolled in the ESU program "as it resolves an issue that was preventing affected customers from receiving essential security updates.""
Windows 10 reached end of life last month after over a decade. Microsoft promised between one and three years of Extended Security Updates (ESUs) for many Windows 10 PCs. Individuals can obtain an additional year of updates at no cost, but some PCs encountered bugs preventing enrollment in the ESU program. The broken enrollment process stopped affected machines from receiving free security updates because each PC must be manually enrolled. Microsoft released update KB5071959 for Windows 10 22H2 to acknowledge and fix an issue where the enrollment wizard may fail. The update is offered to all Windows 10 PCs to restore essential security updates.
Read at Ars Technica
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