This morning, June 1, the Windows 10 nag began. I can confirm that if you remove and hide KB3022345, KB3035583, and KB2952664, the nag goes away...
How does this pertain to KB3022345 causing false SFC results?
Tip: If you have clients running Win7 (or Win8), you should be posting in the appropriate IT Pro-specific forums over on the TechNet side:
- https://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/windows/en-US/home?category=w7itpro
- https://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/windows/en-US/home?category=w8itpro
PS: I think you'll find that KB3035583, KB2952664 & KB2990214 are the Win10 Upgrade prerequisites for Win7.
Microsoft MVP (Windows Client) since October 2002
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https://support2.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;3022345
KB3022345 does NOT cause file corruption.
Summary
This update enables the Diagnostics Tracking Service in Windows 8.1, Windows Server 2012 R2, Windows 7 Service Pack 1 (SP1), and Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1. This tracking service collects data about functional issues in Windows.
This update contains the following two manifests that are occasionally updated by the Diagnostic Tracking Service:The two files are marked as static files in the update. When an advanced user runs the System File Checker Tool (sfc.exe), the files are unintentionally flagged as corrupted. There is no impact or corruption on a device that is running this update, and this issue will be fixed in a later service update.
- telemetry.ASM-WindowsDefault.json
- utc.app.json
Thanks for the information Susan,
is the following anything to worry about, and if so, is there a fix?
(f) CBS MUM Corrupt 0x00000000 servicing\Packages\Microsoft-Windows-IE-Hyphenation-Parent-Package-English~31bf3856ad364e35~~~11.2.9412.0.mum Expected file name Microsoft-Windows-IE-Hyphenation-Parent-Package-English~31bf3856ad364e35~neutral~~11.2.9412.0.mum does not match the actual file name
(f) CBS MUM Corrupt 0x00000000 servicing\Packages\Microsoft-Windows-IE-Spelling-Parent-Package-English~31bf3856ad364e35~~~11.2.9412.0.mum Expected file name Microsoft-Windows-IE-Spelling-Parent-Package-English~31bf3856ad364e35~neutral~~11.2.9412.0.mum does not match the actual file name
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I believe it has hit me too. I manage 2 Windows 7 systems, one a 12GB tower and one a 4GB laptop, and both have started showing SFC failures. I tried looking at the logs suggested, and there seemed among other things to be suggestions of multiple ownerships
(is that possible?) on files which I believe were in the PendingRenames folder. Certainly PendingRenames was not being emptied, and had appalling numbers of files in them: something like 2,000 on the laptop, and well over 10,000 on the tower.
Whether coincidentally or consequently, Avira Antivirus on the tower is now crashing when it tries to start. Attempts either to repair the installation from the programs removal control panel, or simply to remove it and reinstall, both ran into error alerts
I've never seen before. So right now I can neither run it nor re-install it, which is both rather amazing and quite bad.
I have removed the KB3022... update on the tower, and I'm about to see if I'm any further forward, both with SFC and with Avira.
As another respondent has mentioned, I'd like to hide KB3022345 from Windows Update, but I can't seem to find any reference to it now, apart from in the Update history. Maybe that's a good thing, but it would be more secure if I could make certain it never slips in again.
Thank you very much for this discovery, I was going a little mad over it -- I've pretty well accepted the proposition that Windows updates are intact and an improvement when they come out, despite my innate software engineer's wariness of such claims. Isolating a bad one among that whole stream of them would not have been easy. It's hard enough just to do a clean boot when the system makes no provision to let you save your own typical configuration to be restored after debugging.
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Stourport-on-Severn, Worcestershire, England
Enquire Plan Execute
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I just ran sfc/ scannow and found no corrupt files. Microsoft is pushing telemetry updates for data mining that I have removed. They serve no security purpose and are only there to further Microsoft's data mining exploits. This is the list of updates that are unnecessary:
KB3035583
KB2952664
KB2976978
KB2990214
KB3068708
KB3022345
KB2952264
KB3021917
KB3050265
KB2977759
KB3065987
KB3075851
KB3075249
KB3080149
KB3044374
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I spend most of my time at EVGA forums these days. After it was discovered how much data Windows 10 was leeching from its users we all became suspicious of Microsoft and started doing some digging. It was noticed that Microsoft was also attacking Windows 7 & 8 with these exploits. I used to trust Microsoft explicitly and installed every update that they listed as important. What I have found out is that what Microsoft considers important is not the same as what I consider important. I have already tried Windows 10 and went back to Windows 7 after it literally sucked my soul out through my eyeballs and sent my personal data including Contact list traipsing all over the globe. If you click on the 'Get more information' link about the update you'll see it is only to send more data to Microsoft.
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Stourport-on-Severn, Worcestershire, England
Enquire Plan Execute
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