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Microsoft to automatically roll back faulty Windows drivers

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Why This Matters

Microsoft's new Cloud-Initiated Driver Recovery feature enhances the stability and security of Windows devices by enabling automatic rollback of faulty drivers. This reduces downtime and manual intervention, ensuring a smoother user experience and maintaining system integrity across the Windows ecosystem. For the tech industry, it signifies a move towards more automated, reliable update management, benefiting both consumers and enterprise users.

Key Takeaways

Microsoft is introducing a new capability that will allow it to remotely roll back problematic Windows drivers delivered through Windows Update.

Called Cloud-Initiated Driver Recovery, the new feature will remove the need for hardware partners or end users to manually fix driver issues once drivers have been distributed to devices. The recovery process is entirely managed by Microsoft, with no partner-side actions required, and will only be initiated for Windows drivers rejected due to quality issues during shiproom evaluation.

Under the current system, if a driver distributed through Windows Update has quality issues, the hardware partner must submit a replacement, or users must manually uninstall the faulty driver, which can leave devices using subpar drivers for a long time.

With Cloud-Initiated Driver Recovery, Microsoft can directly trigger a rollback to a previous, stable driver version (or the next best version available on Windows Update) without requiring new software or actions from hardware partners.

"Today, when a driver published through Windows Update is identified after distribution to have quality issues, the remediation path relies on the hardware partner to submit an updated driver — or on end users to manually uninstall the problematic driver themselves. This creates a gap where devices may remain on a low-quality driver for an extended period," Microsoft said.

"With Cloud-Initiated Driver Recovery, Microsoft can now trigger a recovery action directly from the Hardware Dev Center (HDC) Driver Shiproom, rolling back a problematic driver to the previously known-good version via the Windows Update pipeline. This is handled through coordinated updates to the PnP driver stack and the driver flighting and publishing services."

The company also noted that:

Devices where a Driver Shiproom-approved driver cannot be located will not attempt Cloud-Initiated Driver Recovery

Recovery is delivered through the existing Windows Update infrastructure — no new client agent or partner tooling is required.

The new Windows Update feature is being tested between May and August and will begin rolling back drivers rejected during Flighting or Gradual Rollout starting September 2026.

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