Friday, April 4, 2025

Windows 11 Install to Require Internet and Microsoft Account

Microsoft (via Will Dormann, Hacker News):

We’re removing the bypassnro.cmd script from the build to enhance security and user experience of Windows 11. This change ensures that all users exit setup with internet connectivity and a Microsoft Account.

Lawrence Abrams:

A previously unknown trick lets you easily bypass using a Microsoft Account in Windows 11, just as Microsoft tries to make it harder to use local accounts.

[…]

When installing Windows 11 and you reach the screen asking, “Let’s connect you to a network,” you can use the Shift+F10 keyboard combination to open a Windows command prompt.

At this prompt, type start ms-cxh:localonly and press Enter on your keyboard to open a “Microsoft account” window where you can create a new local user for the Windows 11 install.

During my recent adventure reinstalling old versions of macOS, I found that it’s now commonly recommended that Mac users have an Internet connection when installing, even if they’ve made a full installer disk. Otherwise it may not succeed. I also found that, even when using a freshly downloaded .pkg of the latest version (of that cycle), the installer would often download what seemed like gigabytes of files. I have little confidence that Mac users still have control over reinstalling archived versions of the OS onto their own hardware without Apple’s verification/meddling. This seems to also be the case when restoring an IPSW file.

Previously:

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You can't set up a new Mac without connecting it to the Internet. It has to be 'activated'. It absolutely insists on phoning home to Trumpistan (aka USA).


Chalk one up for Linux. I used various linux and BSD flavours between 1999 and 2005, and after recently loading up a VM, it’s nice to see it has really come a long, long way.
I’m no fan of all the phoning home and requiring accounts, and this slow creep towards less user ownership and control is not something I’m happy about


“This ensures the security and integrity of that process and prevents an attacker from starting that Mac up without credentials.”

Sure, but so does encasing the Mac in concrete—just depends how committed you are to security.


Recently, this prevented me from installing Windows on an AliExpress mini PC. During installation, Windows detected neither the WiFi card nor the Ethernet port. I could have figured out how to bypass the online requirement or get the installer to load drivers for my hardware, but instead, I just installed Linux, which worked on the first try.

It seemed less work than googling solutions and seeing which one still works.


So much Newspeak and Thoughtcrime prevention. In the release notes Microsoft says this is to improve the customer experience and ensure that everyone exits the installer with an Internet connection and a Microsoft account.

They know for a fact that the users do not always want this. So much so that they will go to these means to work around being forced to do it. And Microsoft considers these vulnerabilities and removes them.

But they absolutely will not address that directly. Just with this thought control Newspeak "improve the customer experience" enshittification.


The second Lightroom Classic works on Linux, I'm done with both of these clowns.


I am avoiding Windows 11 as long as I possibly can. Hopefully by the time needing it becomes unavoidable, I'll be able to find a good hacked installer for something like the LTSC version that has all of the telemetry, adware, useless features, and Microsoft account crap removed from it.


> The second Lightroom Classic works on Linux

There's darktable. I haven't used Lightroom Classic, so I don't know how it compares.

> a good hacked installer

Atlas: https://github.com/Atlas-OS/Atlas


Plume, I hear you, but after almost 20 years of data in Lightroom and building up muscle-memory, I don't want to switch :)

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