awesome-windows-privacy

A list of awesome tools, documentation and scripts for better privacy on Microsoft Windows (by TemporalAgent7)

Awesome-windows-privacy Alternatives

Similar projects and alternatives to awesome-windows-privacy

NOTE: The number of mentions on this list indicates mentions on common posts plus user suggested alternatives. Hence, a higher number means a better awesome-windows-privacy alternative or higher similarity.

awesome-windows-privacy reviews and mentions

Posts with mentions or reviews of awesome-windows-privacy. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-05-03.
  • MSFT is forcing Outlook and Teams to open links in Edge and IT admins are angry
    9 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 3 May 2023
    The issue is that it's the way Microsoft conduct business at all. The default should be opt-in not hard to find opt-outs for every patch.

    I would say no, there is no way to make it more tolerable unless you run something like shutup10 or https://github.com/TemporalAgent7/awesome-windows-privacy but then again if you care that much you should simply just run Linux because in reality there is no real good solution since spyware is baked right into the product.

  • Windows Privacy
    1 project | news.ycombinator.com | 9 Feb 2023
  • Tell HN: Windows Defender considers W10Privacy to be malware
    2 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 20 Jan 2023
    You don't even indicate which download link you used, it was "earlier this week" so nobody can try and reproduce it, and you don't even say what it was detected as? Plus you linked to a site that has a whole article talking about them getting regularly flagged for false-positives due to the sensitive settings they're changing within Windows.

    Like what is it you expect to happen here? Plus why are you using this sketchy looking tool instead of one of the many scripts available[0] or Open Source tools[1] that do the same thing while making the source code readily readable?

    I don't personally endorse any of this stuff, in fact I recommend against it. A lot of these scripts disable or remove security features and break functionality that has nothing to do with privacy. Plus users that use this stuff are self-selecting as the exact kind of users without the technical knowledge to know what they're doing, why, or how to undo it (or else they'd just make the changes "by hand"). Breaking Windows Update is a common symptom of this stuff (e.g. install -> rollback -> install -> rollback, loop), and they won't know how to fix it then just blame Microsoft.

    I guess my point is: You try to get sketchy things, from sketchy sites, and it gets flagged thusly, it is working as intended. If you're here to complain that Microsoft pointed your gun away from your own foot, well too bad? Better luck next time, guess?

    [0] https://github.com/TemporalAgent7/awesome-windows-privacy#po...

    [1] https://github.com/TemporalAgent7/awesome-windows-privacy#os...

  • Debloating Windows 10 with one command and no internet scripts
    5 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 2 Jan 2023
    Appx packages are not where the bloat is. These are "store" / UWP apps which are generally sandboxed / very restricted in API access - so they take up disk space but not much else after you close them.

    Sure, if your goal is to save a bit of disk space, this will help; but I suspect when most people think about "bloat" they think of things that slow down their computer (things that actively consume memory / cpu / network).

    In my experience, that bloat is mostly services and scheduled tasks. I started collecting scripts / documentation on debloating with a primary focus on restoring privacy here: https://github.com/TemporalAgent7/awesome-windows-privacy (it's not very maintained but maybe someone finds something useful there)

  • Shopping card starts appearing on Widgets Board.
    1 project | /r/Windows11 | 12 Oct 2022
  • Windows 10 minus the spyware plus added stability and security
    3 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 15 Apr 2022
    I keep a list of (mostly) open source tools, scripts, etc. for debloating Windows 10/11: https://github.com/TemporalAgent7/awesome-windows-privacy

    This thing is not on the list, because it's obviously extremely sketchy (in addition to it being illegal / piracy / etc. the actual "functionality" of removing Windows Update and Windows Defender is bonkers).

  • O&O ShutUp 10 (now supporting win 11)
    10 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 9 Oct 2021
    There are a lot of open source scripts and tools on GitHub for accomplishing the same goal (in various state of being out-of-date, abandoned, etc.); I started collecting the ones that appear somewhat active here: https://github.com/TemporalAgent7/awesome-windows-privacy

    I plan on going through them to weed out duplicates. You shouldn't trust any of those blindly, but definitely read through the code; I'm particularly interested in coming up with a list of services and scheduled tasks that can be safely disabled without impacting any of the applications and services I'm using (I want Windows Update, OneDrive, Office, Defender, Store and store apps, MS Account login and Xbox Gaming for example, which most tools want to disable).

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    www.saashub.com | 1 May 2024
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Stats

Basic awesome-windows-privacy repo stats
7
420
4.2
4 months ago

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