Microsoft wants to put an end to the problematic updates by incorporating a mechanism for their automatic removal in case of a problem.
Τa 'bad updates' are enough and create headaches in Microsoft lately something that wants to improve at all costs. The most recent example of a bad update is KB4482887, which was released on March 4489899, affecting the performance of some games, and Microsoft recommended uninstalling it to end users, and a few days later gave KBXNUMX to fix any problems with the former.
However, it seems that Microsoft wants to try a technique to automatically uninstall such updates and prevent problems for end users. Users have noticed that in the last build if the system fails to boot after a recently installed update, the installation will try to remove it automatically at startup - and in the first successful one it will show us a message with the changes it made, obviously not in user files.
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