Skip to content
  • Blog Home
  • Cyber Map
  • About Us – Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms and Rules
  • Privacy Policy
Cyber Web Spider Blog – News

Cyber Web Spider Blog – News

Globe Threat Map provides a real-time, interactive 3D visualization of global cyber threats. Monitor DDoS attacks, malware, and hacking attempts with geo-located arcs on a rotating globe. Stay informed with live logs and archive stats.

  • Home
  • Cyber Map
  • Cyber Security News
  • Security Week News
  • The Hacker News
  • How To?
  • Toggle search form

Signal Adds Screenshot-Blocker to Thwart ‘Windows Recall’ 

Posted on May 23, 2025May 23, 2025 By CWS

Sign on Friday shipped a brand new function that mechanically blocks all screenshots of its chat window, positioning it as a privateness defend aimed toward Microsoft’s controversial Home windows Recall know-how that logs on-screen exercise each few seconds for AI search.

The brand new Sign function units a “display safety” flag that blocks the Home windows OS from capturing screenshots of Sign chats. If a consumer or the Recall utility tries, the result’s a clean body. Sign stated the screenshot-blocker is on by default for each Home windows 11 consumer; toggling it off requires digging into preferences and dismissing a vivid warning.

“Though Microsoft made a number of changes over the previous twelve months in response to vital suggestions, the revamped model of Recall nonetheless locations any content material that’s displayed inside privacy-preserving apps like Sign in danger,” in response to a notice from the makers of the encrypted messaging app. 

“Because of this, we’re enabling an additional layer of safety by default on Home windows 11 so as to assist preserve the safety of Sign Desktop on that platform despite the fact that it introduces some usability trade-offs. Microsoft has merely given us no different possibility,” Sign developer Joshua Lund stated.

The controversial Home windows Recall has had a topsy-turvy existence because it was closely promoted by Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella because the hero-feature within the firm’s fleet of AI-powered computer systems.

The corporate delayed the discharge of the know-how to quell issues and deal with safety and privateness dangers, ultimately overhauling the safety structure with proof-of-presence encryption, anti-tampering and DLP checks, and screenshot information managed in safe enclaves outdoors the principle working system.

Now, as Microsoft readies for an additional rollout try, Sign warns that the software program maker has not included granular settings for app builders, describing that as “a evident omission that limits our selections.” 

“We hope that the AI groups constructing methods like Recall will suppose by these implications extra rigorously sooner or later. Apps like Sign shouldn’t need to implement “one bizarre trick” so as to preserve the privateness and integrity of their companies with out correct developer instruments,” Lund argued.Commercial. Scroll to proceed studying.

Sign cautions that integration of AI brokers with “pervasive permissions, questionable safety hygiene, and an insatiable starvation for information” has the potential to “break the blood-brain barrier between purposes and working methods.” 

“This poses a big risk to Sign, and to each privacy-preserving software basically,” Sign’s Lund declared.

“Non-public messaging apps like Sign should be handled with no less than the identical stage of warning that’s afforded to an internet browser’s non-public or incognito shopping window — which Microsoft has already excluded from Recall by default,” Lund famous.

Associated: Controversial Home windows Recall Will get Proof-of-Presence Encryption, Information Isolation

Associated: Microsoft’s Home windows Recall: Reducing-Edge Search Tech or Creepy Overreach?

Associated: Researchers Present How Malware May Steal Home windows Recall Information

Associated: Microsoft Bows to Strain, Disables Controversial Home windows Recall by Default

Associated: Microsoft’s Safety Chickens Have Come Residence to Roost 

Security Week News Tags:Adds, Recall, ScreenshotBlocker, Signal, Thwart, Windows

Post navigation

Previous Post: In Other News: Volkswagen App Hacked, DR32 Sentenced, New OT Security Solution
Next Post: Hackers Use TikTok Videos to Distribute Vidar and StealC Malware via ClickFix Technique

Related Posts

OpenAI’s Sam Altman Warns of AI Voice Fraud Crisis in Banking Security Week News
The AI Arms Race: Deepfake Generation vs. Detection Security Week News
Valuable Information Leaked in LockBit Ransomware Hack  Security Week News
CitrixBleed 2: 100 Organizations Hacked, Thousands of Instances Still Vulnerable Security Week News
Nippon Steel Subsidiary Blames Data Breach on Zero-Day Attack Security Week News
Compumedics Ransomware Attack Led to Data Breach Impacting 318,000 Security Week News

Categories

  • Cyber Security News
  • How To?
  • Security Week News
  • The Hacker News

Recent Posts

  • Microsoft Confirms August 2025 Update Causes Severe Lag in Windows 11 24H2, Windows 10 Versions
  • GeoServer Exploits, PolarEdge, and Gayfemboy Push Cybercrime Beyond Traditional Botnets
  • Microsoft to Limit Onmicrosoft Domain Usage for Sending Emails
  • Hackers Can Exfiltrate Windows Secrets and Credentials Silently by Evading EDR Detection
  • How to Test Website Security Using Free Tools

Pages

  • About Us – Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Rules

Archives

  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025

Recent Posts

  • Microsoft Confirms August 2025 Update Causes Severe Lag in Windows 11 24H2, Windows 10 Versions
  • GeoServer Exploits, PolarEdge, and Gayfemboy Push Cybercrime Beyond Traditional Botnets
  • Microsoft to Limit Onmicrosoft Domain Usage for Sending Emails
  • Hackers Can Exfiltrate Windows Secrets and Credentials Silently by Evading EDR Detection
  • How to Test Website Security Using Free Tools

Pages

  • About Us – Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Rules

Categories

  • Cyber Security News
  • How To?
  • Security Week News
  • The Hacker News