Microsoft claims it remains committed to its sustainability goals, despite ending support for Windows 10, a move expected to trigger the largest jump in junked computers in history.
Microsoft finally pulled the plug on Windows 10 support, despite multiple requests and petitions to reconsider the decision. The Public interest Research Group (PIRG) claimed that the move would lead to the single biggest jump in junked computers, potentially leaving approximately 500 million PCs unsupported.
The group recently doubled down on its efforts in an attempt to get Microsoft to backtrack its decision. It claimed that ending support for Windows 10 only widens the digital divide gap, leading to a huge spike in electronic waste coupled with increased cybersecurity threats.
However, Microsoft moved forward with its plans, confirming Windows 10 is dead and that it had shipped the final security update for the OS with several fixes and improvements.
Windows 10's death has received backlash from users. As reported by The Register, protesters lobbied outside Microsoft's Brussels office following the company's decision to end support for the operating system.
The Right to Repair Europe coalition was among the anti-end of Windows 10 groups that lobbied outside Microsoft's Brussels office, and revealed that the protest was geared towards "exposing perfectly functional PCs rendered obsolete by the company's decision to end free and automatic Windows 10 updates."
Right now, Windows 10 users only have a finite number of options, including enrolling in Microsoft's Extended Security Updates (ESU) program by syncing their PC settings to the cloud via a Microsoft account or paying $30 or 1,000 Microsoft reward points. However, Microsoft recently backtracked on the move, at least for users in the European Economic Area, allowing them to access the ESU program for free without meeting the requirements highlighted above.
However, the protesters dismissed Microsoft's ESU program as a last-minute "snooze button," which only acts as a band-aid on a bleeding system and postpones the issue by 12 months. Instead, the protesters are pushing for Microsoft to continue providing free, automatic Windows 10 security updates until 2030.
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