This public link is valid for 7 days and shares a thread, including any personal information you added. This link or copies made by others cannot be deleted. If you share with third parties, their policies apply. Can’t copy the link right now. Try again later.
Some cumulative updates are marked "exclusive" because they are pre-requisites for the next month’s security update. Installing KB5031358 was mandatory before later updates (like November 2023’s KB5032190) could be applied, making it an exclusive stepping stone.
No update is perfect. Microsoft acknowledged affecting x64 systems after this patch:
: Points to isolated processing errors where Windows Update fails to read required update components.
Allow the system to download 2023-10 Cumulative Update for Windows 11 Version 22H2 for x64-based Systems (KB5031358) . Reboot your PC when prompted to complete the installation. Method 2: Microsoft Update Catalog (Manual Installation)
Whether the update or during the reboot phase
If you are having trouble installing this specific update, you can manually download it from the Microsoft Update Catalog .
KB5031358 bundled fundamental security mitigations engineered to block actively exploited privilege escalation pathways and remote execution vectors. 1. Mitigation of Zero-Day Vulnerabilities
This update includes various security and quality improvements that were previously in preview (build 22000.2482):
Network administrators will find improvements in how x64 systems handle active directory authentication under high-latency connections. The update addresses a glitch where Wi-Fi connections using WPA3 encryption would intermittently drop during sleep transitions. 3. Security Vulnerability Patches
For system administrators deploying x64 images, this update tightens the integration between local hardware and Microsoft Entra ID (formerly Azure AD). The "Get Started" app has been tweaked to act less like a tutorial and more like a retention tool, pushing users toward Microsoft 365 subscriptions and OneDrive backups immediately post-login. It’s a clear sign that the standalone OS is becoming a thing of the past; Windows 11 is now a portal to Microsoft’s ecosystem.
This public link is valid for 7 days and shares a thread, including any personal information you added. This link or copies made by others cannot be deleted. If you share with third parties, their policies apply. Can’t copy the link right now. Try again later.
Some cumulative updates are marked "exclusive" because they are pre-requisites for the next month’s security update. Installing KB5031358 was mandatory before later updates (like November 2023’s KB5032190) could be applied, making it an exclusive stepping stone.
No update is perfect. Microsoft acknowledged affecting x64 systems after this patch: This public link is valid for 7 days
: Points to isolated processing errors where Windows Update fails to read required update components.
Allow the system to download 2023-10 Cumulative Update for Windows 11 Version 22H2 for x64-based Systems (KB5031358) . Reboot your PC when prompted to complete the installation. Method 2: Microsoft Update Catalog (Manual Installation) Can’t copy the link right now
Whether the update or during the reboot phase
If you are having trouble installing this specific update, you can manually download it from the Microsoft Update Catalog . their policies apply.
KB5031358 bundled fundamental security mitigations engineered to block actively exploited privilege escalation pathways and remote execution vectors. 1. Mitigation of Zero-Day Vulnerabilities
This update includes various security and quality improvements that were previously in preview (build 22000.2482):
Network administrators will find improvements in how x64 systems handle active directory authentication under high-latency connections. The update addresses a glitch where Wi-Fi connections using WPA3 encryption would intermittently drop during sleep transitions. 3. Security Vulnerability Patches
For system administrators deploying x64 images, this update tightens the integration between local hardware and Microsoft Entra ID (formerly Azure AD). The "Get Started" app has been tweaked to act less like a tutorial and more like a retention tool, pushing users toward Microsoft 365 subscriptions and OneDrive backups immediately post-login. It’s a clear sign that the standalone OS is becoming a thing of the past; Windows 11 is now a portal to Microsoft’s ecosystem.