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How to disable the 'Pause updates' feature on Windows 10 May 2019 Update


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How to disable the 'Pause updates' feature on Windows 10 May 2019 Update

Do you need to restrict user access to delaying updates on Windows 10? Here's how to do it after upgrading to the May 2019 Update.
 

Starting with the Windows 10 May 2019 Update (version 1903), Microsoft is doing a lot of things right with updates. In this release and moving forward, Windows Update will stop forcing feature updates on devices, and it'll let you choose when to install new versions. Also, the option to pause updates will be easier to find in the Settings app, and the feature will be available for Windows 10 Home users.

 

Alongside these new changes, the May Update will also allow you to take full control and decide if users can pause updates, which is an option that can come in handy in many scenarios. For instance, it'll be useful when sharing a computer with multiple users when you're already managing deadlines for automatic updates and restarts. Or when you're working in a network environment and you need to comply with the policies of your organization.

More on the May Update

Whatever the reason, if you must remove (or re-enable) access to the feature to pause updates on Windows 10, you can accomplish this task using the Group Policy Editor and Registry.

 

In this Windows 10 guide, we walk you through the steps to disable the option to pause updates with the settings available with the May 2019 Update.

How to disable Pause updates option using Group Policy

If you're running Windows 10 Pro, the easiest way to remove access to the "Pause updates" feature is using the Local Group Policy Editor with these steps:

  1. Open Start.
  2. Search for gpedit.msc and click OK to open the Local Group Policy Editor.
  3. Browse the following path:

    Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates > Windows Components > Windows Update

  4. On the right side, double-click the Remove access to "Pause updates" feature policy.

  5. Select the Enabled option.

  6. Click Apply. 
  7. Click OK.
  8. Restart your computer.

Once you complete these steps, the "Pause updates" option will no longer be available in the Windows Update settings page, or in the Advanced options page in the Settings app.

 

If you want to revert the changes, or the "Pause updates" is grayed out even though you didn't change the settings, you can use the instructions outlined above, but on step No. 5, make sure to select the Not Configured option.

How to disable Pause updates option using Registry

Alternatively, if you're running Windows 10 Home, or you don't have access to the Group Policy Editor, you can modify the Registry to disable the option to pause updates on the May 2019 with these updates:

 

Warning: This is a friendly reminder that editing the Registry is risky, and it can cause irreversible damage to your installation if you don't do it correctly. We recommend making a temporary full backup of your PC before proceeding.

  1. Open Start.
  2. Search for regedit and click the top result to open the Registry.
  3. Browse the following path:

    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Policies\Microsoft\Windows\WindowsUpdate

    Quick tip: On Windows 10, you can now copy and paste the path in the Registry's address bar to quickly jump to the key destination.

  4. Right-click the WindowsUpdate (folder) key, select New, and click on DWORD (32-bit) Value.

  5. Name the key SetDisablePauseUXAccess and press Enter.
  6. Double-click the newly created DWORD and set the value from 0 to 1.

  7. Click OK.
  8. Restart your computer.

After you complete the steps, users will no longer have access to pause updates using the Settings app.

 

At any time, you can undo the changes using the same instructions, but on step No. 6, make sure to set the value from 1 to 0, or right-click the SetDisablePauseUXAccesskey and select the Delete option.

 

While we're focusing this guide on disabling the update feature, you can also refer to these instructions if for some reason the option becomes disabled without warnings, and you need to re-enable the setting again.

 

 

 

 

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doesn't the paid by 3g/g or metered in network still work?.

 

it's where you say you pay for each GB, then microsoft

doesn't force updates because they could get sued for

costing you more money.

 

the limit could be pretty much limitless.

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Technophile ,, The AchieVer. Friend  I seen daily you share posts regarding win 10.. seems like this will never end for atleast one more yr...as this OS is full of so call new features and ctrls...

Its not easy to ctrl updates.. i mean we cant choose wat update to install and wat not.. its only start & pause...Slowly  everything is like been ctrl by them/Microsoft.

 

 

 

 

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Windows 10 version 1903: When will you get the next big feature update?

In the "Windows as a service" era, updates can arrive when you least expect them. So can major changes in Microsoft's update policies for business customers. I've sorted out the details of the latest Windows Update for Business policy change. There will be a test.

 
 
next-windows-eta.jpg

 

Élyse Betters-Picaro / ZDNet

It's a classic anxiety dream: You're in math class. You didn't study for the test. You watch as the professor scratches out what appear to be hieroglyphics on the chalkboard, and you have absolutely no idea how all those symbols and variables fit together. And then she calls on you.

 

That's how I felt last week as I tried to make sense of what's going on with Microsoft's rules for deferring updates in Windows 10.

 

The procedures for deferring updates used to be simple arithmetic (defer all feature updates xdays, and defer all quality updates y days). That's still true of the monthly quality updates that arrive on Patch Tuesday, but unfortunately the formula for feature updates now feels more like differential calculus.

 

When will you get a new feature update? Before you can solve that problem, you need to calculate several variables. Let's go through the list.

WHICH EDITION OF WINDOWS 10 ARE YOU RUNNING?

This is the most important variable of all.

 

As it has since the dawn of the Windows 10 era, Microsoft reserves its full set of update management features for business editions. And in a relatively new wrinkle, the end-of-service date (the date when Microsoft stops supplying updates for a version) has a major impact on when feature updates are automatically installed.

  • Home  You can't automatically defer any updates, but you can pause all updates for up to 35 days. On versions that have not yet reached their end-of-service date, feature updates are offered but are not installed automatically.
  • Pro  Paying for the upgrade to Pro edition (and the relatively new and extremely rare Pro for Workstations edition) unlocks a handful of business-related features, including the ability to set deferral policies for both quality updates and feature updates. You can set these Windows Update for Business policies using the Windows 10 Settings app or by applying Group Policy.
  • Enterprise or Education  These editions offer the same tools for managing updates as Windows 10 Pro. The major difference that's relevant to this discussion is a longer servicing support schedule: up to 36 months for some versions, compared to a fixed 18-month servicing support period for Home and Pro editions.

To check which edition is running on the current system, click Start, type settings:about in the search box, and press Enter. That opens the Settings > System > About page, where you'll find your Windows edition and version number under the Windows Specifications heading. Make a note of that version information; you'll need it in the next section.

 

 

WHICH VERSION OF WINDOWS 10 ARE YOU RUNNING?

In the "Windows as a Service" era, Microsoft releases a new version of Windows 10 every six months. The major version, corresponding to each one of those semi-annual feature updates, is expressed as a four-digit number in the format yymm. That number indicates the year and month in which the current version was finalized. 

 

The version number is important because it allows you to look up the end-of-service date using the table on the Windows 10 Release Information dashboard.

 

If you're running version 1709 or earlier on Windows 10 Home or Pro, your version has reached its End of Service date. Version 1803 (the April 2018 Update) will reach its end of service date on November 12, 2019.

 

Starting in June 2019, Microsoft says, it will begin automatically updating PCs running versions 1803 or earlier to the new version. The company has not supplied any details about how it will determine which devices get updated except to say that it will use a "machine learning (ML)-based rollout process several months in advance of the end of service date."

 

Enterprise and Education editions use a different servicing schedule, with support for some versions lasting 30 months instead of 18. Because of these longer servicing periods, versions as old as 1703 are still supported with updates.

 

Administrators can use Windows Update for Business and Group Policy to defer feature updates for up to 365 days; to defer feature updates longer than that, you'll need enterprise management tools like Windows Server Update Services.

 

WHAT SERVICING CHANNEL IS YOUR MACHINE CONFIGURED FOR?

Ha! This one's a trick question. As of version 1903, Windows 10 has one and only one servicing channel, called the Semi-Annual Channel. That change was announced in February 2019 in a post on the Windows IT Pro Blog: "Windows Update for Business and the retirement of SAC-T."

 

Previously, Windows 10 was delivered in two phases, one for consumers and small businesses and the second, a few months later, for wide deployment by businesses. In the beginning, these two phases were called the Current Branch and the Current Branch for Business. Those names were later changed to the confusing Semi-Annual Channel (Targeted), followed by the Semi-Annual Channel.

 

If you used Windows Update for Business to assign a machine to the second branch/channel and you assigned deferral dates to those updates, the deferral period didn't begin until Microsoft declared a release ready for widespread deployment by businesses.

 

That setting will no longer be available as of version 1903. On PCs running earlier versions, Microsoft is automatically adding 60 days to the deferral period for devices that were assigned to the Semi-Annual Channel. But that's a one-time exception.

CONFUSED YET? LET'S REVIEW…

On a PC running Windows 10 Home or Pro, version 1803 or earlier, the version 1903 update will arrive sometime soon, and you won't be able to delay it.

 

If you're currently running version 1809, any edition, you can skip version 1903 by ignoring its entry in Windows Update.

 

On a PC running the Pro, Enterprise, or Education editions of Windows 10 version 1809, you can prevent the version 1903 Update from being offered by using Windows Update for Business to assign a deferral period of up to 365 days. That clock started ticking on May 21, 2019, with the public release of Windows 10 version 1903. If you also assigned the device to the Semi-Annual Channel, the start date is July 20, 2019.

WHAT HAPPENS WHEN UPDATE DEFERRAL POLICIES COLLIDE WITH END-OF-SERVICE DATES?

Well, that's the billion-dollar question, isn't it?

 

Microsoft has made major revisions to its update policies for enterprise customers, and the company is being characteristically opaque with the details of those policies, scattering clues throughout various blog posts. After meditating deeply on those blog posts and then engaging in several rounds of Q&A with Microsoft managers responsible for those policies, I think I finally have it figured out.

 

The big takeaway is that end-of-service dates trump deferral policies. If you configure PCs in your organization for the maximum deferral period of 365 days, you run the very real risk that those devices will reach end of service before the deferral period ends.

 

That situation gets worse for PCs running Windows 10 versions 1803 and 1809 that are configured for the Semi-Annual Channel with a deferral period of 365 days for feature updates. In both cases, those devices would reach the end-of-service date (and be forcibly updated) months before the deferral period ended.

 

In an obscure recent blog post, Microsoft has acknowledged that this is an issue for administrators to be concerned about:

For devices with branch readiness set to SAC, we recommend a feature update deferral be configured to no more than 180 days, which would ensure that devices under your management will always be in service. In the future, we will make changes to Windows Update for Business to safeguard against the condition where an extended deferral can result in devices reaching end of service.

Of course, that's not a problem for administrators who've standardized on the Enterprise or Education editions of Windows 10 and who have deployed the H2 (second half of the year) releases. Because those releases have a 30-month servicing lifecycle, admins can safely defer updates for up to two years.

 

What's maddening about all these changes is that there's no central hub of information accessible from an easy to find link. If you're too busy to read every post on the Windows IT Pro Blog, you probably missed the flashing red signals that a change in update policy is afoot.

 

But at least you don't have to worry that you're going to be called to the front of the class to solve that problem you totally forgot to study for.

 

 

 

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