Why a pause, not an end, for Windows Recall is best?

Venkatarangan Thirumalai
2 min readJun 14, 2024

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Microsoft is delaying (as of June 14, 2024) the rollout of their ‘Windows Recall’ feature in the upcoming Copilot+ PCs to gather more feedback from the Windows Insider program, addressing privacy and security concerns. It’s a welcome change to see major tech companies like Microsoft actively responding to community feedback, even if it means taking a step back from their rush to innovate.

The concept of Windows Recall is particularly fascinating to me. Like many others, I often revisit previously accessed information across various platforms-such as contacts, emails, WhatsApp, social media, Messenger, webpages, podcasts, and YouTube videos. To manage this, I meticulously organize valuable data into designated folders in the PC (and cloud) or archive them as notes in Evernote. Tech companies, by keeping data in proprietary silos, necessitate the use of their specific apps to access our own information-a situation unlikely to change without regulatory action.

However, I believe Microsoft’s execution of the Recall feature currently lacks robust security measures. This issue seems to stem from the implementation approach, suggesting a need for an architectural review and improvement rather than a flaw in the concept itself. At a conceptual level, if large technology and social media firms can store vast amounts of our data-including all our interactions and even our digital trails and exhaust-it stands to reason that there should be innovative and secure technological solutions allowing us to store, manage, and retrieve our own data for personal benefit and productivity.

Looking ahead, the introduction of a similar feature by Apple, potentially called ‘Apple Memory,’ would validate this concept. Such a development could prompt Google to launch a comparable feature in Android. If Microsoft then releases ‘Recall’ seamlessly integrated into Windows, it would likely meet no resistance. Yet, innovation isn’t just about following trends-it’s about taking bold risks and being open to feedback, which Microsoft appears to have done in their recent move.

Originally published at https://venkatarangan.com on June 14, 2024.

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Venkatarangan Thirumalai

A Founder Catalyst and a Microsoft Regional Director (Honorary).