Windows 10 is no longer officially supported by Microsoft, but that doesn't mean the company has actually stopped supporting ...
Microsoft says the ESU program is "not intended as a long-term solution but rather as a temporary bridge to stay secure while one migrates to a newer, supported platform." Windows security ...
On some Windows 10 PCs, people trying to get an extra year of security upgrades were met with an error while signing up for Microsoft's Extended Security Update (ESU) program.
Microsoft has released the KB5068781 update, the first Windows 10 extended security update since the operating system reached end of support last month.
If you do enroll your PC in the ESU program, it only gets you security patches until October of 2026. Businesses, schools, ...
The first ESU update for Windows 10 PCs is update KB5068781, officially known as “2025-11 Cumulative Update for Windows 10 ...
Microsoft has confirmed it is investigating a bug causing the Windows 10 KB5068781 extended security update to fail to ...
Microsoft has fixed the extended security update enrollment bug on Windows 10 with its new KB5071959 out-of-band update.
A bug that displays an incorrect 'end of support' message is expected to be squashed in a future Windows update.
Windows 10 PCs can receive free security updates until October 2026. To qualify for free personal updates, enroll with a Microsoft account. Customers in any of the 30 EEA countries automatically ...
CONSUMER INVESTIGATOR BRIAN ROCHE EXPLAINS. AS WE’VE TOLD YOU BEFORE, MICROSOFT ENDED ALL SUPPORT AND TECHNICAL UPDATES FOR WINDOWS 10 ON WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15TH. THAT MEANS NO SOFTWARE UPDATES, ...
If you've been enrolled in the ESU program, the first extended update of Windows 10 is here in the form of KB5068781.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results