Anyone still running Windows 11 version 23H2 (Home or Pro) can now look forward to an unsolicited upgrade, whether they like it or not. The Redmond group management has decided that on November 11, 2025, it will finally stop tolerating outdated installations. The technical pretext: expiring support. The reality: a well-disguised gain in control.
The new operating system package with the less than charming name Windows 11 25H2 is not much more than an upgraded enablement update. Anyone who has 24H2 will only get a few cosmetic corrections, new group policies and the odd registry switch – real innovation looks different. But that’s not the point here. It’s about the principle: Microsoft does not tolerate unruliness. The tactic is reminiscent of the Windows 10 era, when the infamous forced upgrade with hidden dialogs and misleading pop-ups still caused outrage. This time, the whole thing is more civilized, but no less well thought-out: Microsoft is releasing the upgrade in waves, in a targeted manner, based on telemetry data. And anyone still on 23H2 will be served the update without being asked, provided that hardware compatibility does not already mean the end.
And that’s where it gets interesting: the famous minimum requirements – TPM 2.0, UEFI with Secure Boot, a handful of certified CPUs – remain in place. Anyone with an older but functional system will be left out in the cold or will be allowed to tinker. Officially, support for Windows 10 has ended, even though there are millions of productive machines in the field. Anyone still wondering about electronic waste is probably living in a different reality. The forced update can currently only be avoided by companies, as Enterprise and Education versions of 23H2 will remain in the safety net until November 2026. A generous concession to the IT departments of this world, which have their own worries anyway. The rollout for end users, on the other hand, follows a clear script: Automatic distribution via Windows Update, without consultation, without opt-out. Ironically, Microsoft calls this the “out-of-the-box experience”.
Of course, the official narrative is: security. If you don’t update, you remain vulnerable, and that’s true. Cyberattacks, exploits and zero-days are lurking everywhere. But instead of educating users or allowing flexibility, Microsoft is tightening the update reins further. Patch refusers are beaten into compliance, kindly but firmly. Technically speaking, 25H2 is still based on the 22H2 kernel, a classic feature enablement package. This saves bandwidth and development time, but makes the lack of innovation clearly visible. Big new features? Not at all. Much of what sounds new on paper, such as the latest recall feature or improved AI integration, is reserved exclusively for the more expensive Copilot devices. There are breadcrumbs for the masses.
The whole thing is reminiscent of a diplomatic capitulation to one’s own update strategy. In the past, the company has let it slide too often, letting users get away with it, and now it’s cleaning up its act. Microsoft’s message is clear: either you march in step or you stay out. Anyone who is not prepared to regularly change to the new horse will be classified as a potential weak point and systematically eliminated. The moral question remains: How much autonomy is a user still allowed to have over their system? Or to put it another way: when does an operating system become more of a platform sovereignty than a tool? With Windows 11 25H2, Microsoft is once again making a statement, not with technical innovations, but with political strategy.
Welcome to the age of “managed computing”, where systems no longer belong to the user, but to the provider. And the next update is guaranteed to be ready and waiting.
Source: Golem, picarchive