As I said to them (MS) at tier 2, I have other machines without MS Windows I can use to run VB, and will probably stick to that until they can get a better support system worked out. I have never seen a response ion that system, ever. The only other way to reach out to them is via the MS feedback hub. And it is a pay by incident service, payment is required before support is offered, and if the incident has multiple issues, each incident is a billable issue. And they still have not put a team in place to support "Windows Security" under 21H1. Guess they are still working on the exceptions list.Ĭhecked Pro Support and their support division has not yet stood up a support element for Windows 10 Ver 21H1, as it is still in optional status. I did and the Feature Pack and other Security routines keep popping up in Notifier as a possible security violation when they are just running and checking things (turned that off real quick). Controlled Folders Access is off by default, but can be turned on. Is it the Windows Feature Experience Pack? Is it user profile tightening? (Lots of people posting lost password control). The system now has "enhanced security" since re-load. (Heads up, the "new" system is now called "Windows Security" since 21H1 and will be the same for Windows 11. As would be expected, Tier 1 had no clue, so on to Tier 2, still way above their head, so now on to Tier 3 (Pro Support). Update: Since I got no answer from the MS Community, I moved the question to the official support system. If the kernel updates from the vendor on the update channel, then all bets are off. But, in very few circumstances (unless you really know what you are doing), can you get these tools to stick to the boot devices, and only for that running kernel. Yes, there are Secure Boot Tools for Linux (mok-utils). HP was honest in saying that this was all outside of their expertise, and each thing had its own vendors/engineers.ģ. So fTPM+SecureBoot+W10+HP= very few people really understand all the bits moving to secure the device, and I guess that having Linux outside of the WSL bash shell in W10 is not something MS wants in their environment. W10 disk manager showed the ext4 partition as "unknown" (at the end of the drive) and kept wanting to format it. Once I got the dual boot (Ubuntu) setup properly, about 3 reboots/restarts later, the W10 partition would "stop" allowing the Ubuntu kernel (or Grub) to load Ubuntu, but W10 kept up the Windows bootloader. Outside of Windows (postings and blogs) there are some writings that discuss using the UNIX dd utility to delete, or pre-format a drive before you install Windows, but I have never seen that work properly since Windows 98 SE. Also, there are hidden (no drive letters assigned) partitions to maintain a Windows Recovery Environment (RE) for the OS in case of a system failure. Early on in the ownership of our new HP laptop, I encountered problems with setting up dual-boot with W10, and some reading from MS explained that the "new" recovery partition W10 uses can be dynamically changed by the disk tools to hold larger system updates, and there were rules as to "where" and "what" the partition had to be loaded for W10 to use it for a "load point" (Had to start after the C: drive, or had to be located at the physical end of the drive, can't remember which, or both conditions applied). Even HP admitted they have very few people on staff that understand the hardware/OS relationships as they are changing.ġ. The question was to determine if it would be best to allow Windows 10 Security to see VirtualBox and Python (and other open source programs, etc.) or to exclude it from the system scanner(s) I submitted a general question to MS Community Forum Windows 10, Security and Privacy about the Hyper-V and Windows Security System in the venue of a standard "Home" Windows OS.
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