Tech Advisor

Windows 10 will soon aggressive­ly block dubious downloads

You’ll have the option to allow helper apps on your PC, but Microsoft will tell you when they’re a bad idea.

- MARK HACHMAN reports

Windows 10 will begin blocking ‘potentiall­y unwanted applicatio­ns’ – bundled apps that you probably don’t want – by default, Microsoft says, beginning in early August. The change was announced in a support document – fave.co/389zoWO.

If you download a lot of third-party utilities, you may already have run into a potentiall­y unwanted applicatio­n (PUA), also called a potentiall­y

unwanted program (PUP). The terms most often describe a bundled piece of adware, or – worse – a small additional applicatio­n that slowly mines cryptocurr­ency in the background.

You might not even know where the PUA comes from. Sometimes it might be the developer itself that added the PUA for additional revenue, or a site that aggregates the utilities and provides them for download. Either way, the PUA is an app you never asked for and probably don’t want.

Microsoft is becoming slightly more aggressive in how it treats PUAs. Microsoft already offered you the capability of automatica­lly filtering PUAs as part of the Windows 10 May 2020 Update, though it was off by default. “Starting in early August 2021 we’ll begin turning it on by default to make it easier for you to keep your systems performing at their best,” Microsoft says.

Filtering apps, of course, can lead to errors. After all, you might want to download a cryptomine­r to generate a bit of extra income, or an app that distribute­s updates via an attached BitTorrent client that you’re aware of and accept. If that’s true, you can still toggle what Microsoft calls “reputation­based protection” on and off inside the Windows 10 Settings menu. Go to the Windows Security app via the Windows 10 Settings menu or Windows 10 search box, then to App & browser control > Reputation-based protection.

Under Potentiall­y unwanted app blocking you’ll see two toggle options, Block apps and Block downloads. Both have similar functions. Block downloads works at the browser level, but only with Microsoft Edge. Block apps would be used to fend off apps before download within Chrome or another browser, because Windows Defender will examine those apps only after they’ve been downloaded.

You’ll also see a ‘master’ toggle switch to turn of reputation-based

protection entirely, though it’s not recommende­d. As of this month, the reputation-based protection will be on by default.

Note that turning on Block apps or Block downloads won’t block all apps or downloads, just the ones that Microsoft deems suspicious. Microsoft will quarantine any PUAs it detects and let you choose whether to go ahead and install it on your device. Microsoft is simply using what it knows about the app to let you know gently that it might not be a good idea.

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 ??  ?? Here’s where you can find the Windows 10 reputation­protection settings.
Here’s where you can find the Windows 10 reputation­protection settings.
 ??  ?? Microsoft will quarantine the PUA if it detects it. There, you’ll have the option to delete it, leave it in an isolated ‘quarantine’ state or allow it on your system.
Microsoft will quarantine the PUA if it detects it. There, you’ll have the option to delete it, leave it in an isolated ‘quarantine’ state or allow it on your system.

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