How do I tell Windows to shut up about Silverlight?












38















The problem is described well here, so I won't repeat it; but basically, hiding the Silverlight update the naive way doesn't work.



So the question is -- how do I tell Windows to shut up about Silverlight and stop bringing it up on the list?










share|improve this question























  • explain "it's not installed". What's not installed? Microsoft Office? He was simply giving you an example of another Microsoft Product that you would ALSO not get update notifications about, if you follow that recommended solution. So, you disable the update notifications for Microsoft products (not Windows) and you don't get update notifications for Silverlight or any other Microsoft product.

    – Bon Gart
    Jun 11 '12 at 11:52






  • 1





    You may think that the same "update" appears over and over again, but it's not. I just installed a new system. As I don't need Silverlight (or more precisely the Silverlight plugin for my webbrowsers) I chose to hide the "update" (which is actually not an update as Silverlight is not installed). When I click "Check for updates" again, the same Silverlight "update" seems to appear again, except it's not the same: it has a different ID. After hiding and checking for new updates several times, Silverlight doesn't appear anymore. The next time a new version will be out, it will reappear though.

    – user276648
    Mar 14 '13 at 6:50








  • 3





    its freaking annoying, I've repeatly for the last 3 days selected "hide this update" and it keeps popping up each day.

    – BerggreenDK
    Apr 30 '13 at 7:54






  • 1





    There are only about 10 Silverlight updates as of right now, so once you have no other updates you can just keep checking for new updates, hide the Silverlight one, then again and again until you hid them all.

    – user256743
    May 10 '15 at 20:06






  • 2





    Just keeping the information updated: currently there are 10 Silverlights to hide.

    – Diego Queiroz
    Feb 13 '16 at 1:09
















38















The problem is described well here, so I won't repeat it; but basically, hiding the Silverlight update the naive way doesn't work.



So the question is -- how do I tell Windows to shut up about Silverlight and stop bringing it up on the list?










share|improve this question























  • explain "it's not installed". What's not installed? Microsoft Office? He was simply giving you an example of another Microsoft Product that you would ALSO not get update notifications about, if you follow that recommended solution. So, you disable the update notifications for Microsoft products (not Windows) and you don't get update notifications for Silverlight or any other Microsoft product.

    – Bon Gart
    Jun 11 '12 at 11:52






  • 1





    You may think that the same "update" appears over and over again, but it's not. I just installed a new system. As I don't need Silverlight (or more precisely the Silverlight plugin for my webbrowsers) I chose to hide the "update" (which is actually not an update as Silverlight is not installed). When I click "Check for updates" again, the same Silverlight "update" seems to appear again, except it's not the same: it has a different ID. After hiding and checking for new updates several times, Silverlight doesn't appear anymore. The next time a new version will be out, it will reappear though.

    – user276648
    Mar 14 '13 at 6:50








  • 3





    its freaking annoying, I've repeatly for the last 3 days selected "hide this update" and it keeps popping up each day.

    – BerggreenDK
    Apr 30 '13 at 7:54






  • 1





    There are only about 10 Silverlight updates as of right now, so once you have no other updates you can just keep checking for new updates, hide the Silverlight one, then again and again until you hid them all.

    – user256743
    May 10 '15 at 20:06






  • 2





    Just keeping the information updated: currently there are 10 Silverlights to hide.

    – Diego Queiroz
    Feb 13 '16 at 1:09














38












38








38


10






The problem is described well here, so I won't repeat it; but basically, hiding the Silverlight update the naive way doesn't work.



So the question is -- how do I tell Windows to shut up about Silverlight and stop bringing it up on the list?










share|improve this question














The problem is described well here, so I won't repeat it; but basically, hiding the Silverlight update the naive way doesn't work.



So the question is -- how do I tell Windows to shut up about Silverlight and stop bringing it up on the list?







windows-7 windows-update silverlight






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jun 11 '12 at 4:43









MehrdadMehrdad

14.2k36115187




14.2k36115187













  • explain "it's not installed". What's not installed? Microsoft Office? He was simply giving you an example of another Microsoft Product that you would ALSO not get update notifications about, if you follow that recommended solution. So, you disable the update notifications for Microsoft products (not Windows) and you don't get update notifications for Silverlight or any other Microsoft product.

    – Bon Gart
    Jun 11 '12 at 11:52






  • 1





    You may think that the same "update" appears over and over again, but it's not. I just installed a new system. As I don't need Silverlight (or more precisely the Silverlight plugin for my webbrowsers) I chose to hide the "update" (which is actually not an update as Silverlight is not installed). When I click "Check for updates" again, the same Silverlight "update" seems to appear again, except it's not the same: it has a different ID. After hiding and checking for new updates several times, Silverlight doesn't appear anymore. The next time a new version will be out, it will reappear though.

    – user276648
    Mar 14 '13 at 6:50








  • 3





    its freaking annoying, I've repeatly for the last 3 days selected "hide this update" and it keeps popping up each day.

    – BerggreenDK
    Apr 30 '13 at 7:54






  • 1





    There are only about 10 Silverlight updates as of right now, so once you have no other updates you can just keep checking for new updates, hide the Silverlight one, then again and again until you hid them all.

    – user256743
    May 10 '15 at 20:06






  • 2





    Just keeping the information updated: currently there are 10 Silverlights to hide.

    – Diego Queiroz
    Feb 13 '16 at 1:09



















  • explain "it's not installed". What's not installed? Microsoft Office? He was simply giving you an example of another Microsoft Product that you would ALSO not get update notifications about, if you follow that recommended solution. So, you disable the update notifications for Microsoft products (not Windows) and you don't get update notifications for Silverlight or any other Microsoft product.

    – Bon Gart
    Jun 11 '12 at 11:52






  • 1





    You may think that the same "update" appears over and over again, but it's not. I just installed a new system. As I don't need Silverlight (or more precisely the Silverlight plugin for my webbrowsers) I chose to hide the "update" (which is actually not an update as Silverlight is not installed). When I click "Check for updates" again, the same Silverlight "update" seems to appear again, except it's not the same: it has a different ID. After hiding and checking for new updates several times, Silverlight doesn't appear anymore. The next time a new version will be out, it will reappear though.

    – user276648
    Mar 14 '13 at 6:50








  • 3





    its freaking annoying, I've repeatly for the last 3 days selected "hide this update" and it keeps popping up each day.

    – BerggreenDK
    Apr 30 '13 at 7:54






  • 1





    There are only about 10 Silverlight updates as of right now, so once you have no other updates you can just keep checking for new updates, hide the Silverlight one, then again and again until you hid them all.

    – user256743
    May 10 '15 at 20:06






  • 2





    Just keeping the information updated: currently there are 10 Silverlights to hide.

    – Diego Queiroz
    Feb 13 '16 at 1:09

















explain "it's not installed". What's not installed? Microsoft Office? He was simply giving you an example of another Microsoft Product that you would ALSO not get update notifications about, if you follow that recommended solution. So, you disable the update notifications for Microsoft products (not Windows) and you don't get update notifications for Silverlight or any other Microsoft product.

– Bon Gart
Jun 11 '12 at 11:52





explain "it's not installed". What's not installed? Microsoft Office? He was simply giving you an example of another Microsoft Product that you would ALSO not get update notifications about, if you follow that recommended solution. So, you disable the update notifications for Microsoft products (not Windows) and you don't get update notifications for Silverlight or any other Microsoft product.

– Bon Gart
Jun 11 '12 at 11:52




1




1





You may think that the same "update" appears over and over again, but it's not. I just installed a new system. As I don't need Silverlight (or more precisely the Silverlight plugin for my webbrowsers) I chose to hide the "update" (which is actually not an update as Silverlight is not installed). When I click "Check for updates" again, the same Silverlight "update" seems to appear again, except it's not the same: it has a different ID. After hiding and checking for new updates several times, Silverlight doesn't appear anymore. The next time a new version will be out, it will reappear though.

– user276648
Mar 14 '13 at 6:50







You may think that the same "update" appears over and over again, but it's not. I just installed a new system. As I don't need Silverlight (or more precisely the Silverlight plugin for my webbrowsers) I chose to hide the "update" (which is actually not an update as Silverlight is not installed). When I click "Check for updates" again, the same Silverlight "update" seems to appear again, except it's not the same: it has a different ID. After hiding and checking for new updates several times, Silverlight doesn't appear anymore. The next time a new version will be out, it will reappear though.

– user276648
Mar 14 '13 at 6:50






3




3





its freaking annoying, I've repeatly for the last 3 days selected "hide this update" and it keeps popping up each day.

– BerggreenDK
Apr 30 '13 at 7:54





its freaking annoying, I've repeatly for the last 3 days selected "hide this update" and it keeps popping up each day.

– BerggreenDK
Apr 30 '13 at 7:54




1




1





There are only about 10 Silverlight updates as of right now, so once you have no other updates you can just keep checking for new updates, hide the Silverlight one, then again and again until you hid them all.

– user256743
May 10 '15 at 20:06





There are only about 10 Silverlight updates as of right now, so once you have no other updates you can just keep checking for new updates, hide the Silverlight one, then again and again until you hid them all.

– user256743
May 10 '15 at 20:06




2




2





Just keeping the information updated: currently there are 10 Silverlights to hide.

– Diego Queiroz
Feb 13 '16 at 1:09





Just keeping the information updated: currently there are 10 Silverlights to hide.

– Diego Queiroz
Feb 13 '16 at 1:09










6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes


















26














So, problem is there are 7 different versions of Silverlight. Some are older, some are newer.



You can manually Hide, "Check for Updates", Options, Hide them in a loop 7 or more times. I don't want to do that manually so I wrote a WSH js, save as WUA_xSilverlight.js:



var wu_Session = WScript.CreateObject("Microsoft.Update.Session");
var wu_Searcher = wu_Session.CreateUpdateSearcher();
wu_Searcher.Online = false;

do {
WScript.echo("Searching...");
var silverstreak = false;
var searchResult = wu_Searcher.Search("IsHidden=0 And IsInstalled=0");

for(var i=0; i<searchResult.Updates.Count; i++){
var wupdate = searchResult.Updates.Item(i);
if ( ! wupdate.Title.indexOf("Microsoft Silverlight") ) { // if -1
wupdate.IsHidden=1;
WScript.echo(" Hiding update: " + wupdate.Title);
silverstreak = true;
}
}
} while ( silverstreak ); // repeat search


Execute the saved file: cscript.exe WUA_xSilverlight.js.
I could have optimized the search and so the code, but it works so blah.






share|improve this answer


























  • +1 Whoa, this is really cool! I didn't know such a thing was even possible, thanks for that!

    – Mehrdad
    Dec 6 '15 at 23:02






  • 1





    After writing this, this has become one of my favorite scriptlets, forget about optimizing the search... to see everything it finds (really useful in windows 10 where you see less) -- you can make a small adjustment: after "silverstreak = true;" and before the "}n}n}", add: "} else { WScript.echo(".............. " + wupdate.Title);" ......... this displays all the available updates, so even in windows 7 on a domain computer it will show you that windows 10 is waiting and in windows 10 it displays optional updates like for drivers.

    – Tony Marques
    Jan 9 '16 at 14:28








  • 2





    The most important information from your answer is that there are several updates called "Microsoft Silverlight" (with different KB number) and they get actually hidden but you need to repeat the process several times.

    – bpiec
    Feb 28 '16 at 15:28






  • 3





    there's at least 16 ATOW

    – chiliNUT
    Aug 4 '17 at 17:18






  • 2





    For the record, I have hidden 15 Silverlights now. They are KB2512827, KB2617986, KB2636927, KB2668562, KB2977218, KB3056819, KB3080333, KB3106614, KB3126036, KB3162593, KB3182373, KB3193713, KB4013867, KB4017094, KB4023307.

    – iBug
    Jan 22 '18 at 3:11



















10














The issue became clear to me when I hid Bing Desktop v1.3 and Bing Desktop 1.2 showed up next.
Upon careful inspection I had noticed that the Silverlight updates are each with a different date.



So lets say there are 10 Silverlight versions released. V10 will obsolete v1 through v9 and only v10 will show up.
Choosing to hide v10 will cause v9 to show up, hiding v9 will show v8 the next time you check for updates, and so on and so forth.



If you are persistent about it you can hide every single version of Silverlight and it stops showing up (until the next version is released by MS).






share|improve this answer

































    8














    I recently had this issue also, after installing a Windows 7 VM for work. Having not used Windows for quite some time this was very annoying to me as well.



    I had a clean installation of Windows 7, upgraded to whatever the latest service pack is as of this writing and I'd refused to install Silverlight. However, it appears that Windows 7's service packs now "preload" portions of Silverlight, making it show up in Windows Update even when not technically fully installed. Highly irritating.



    To fix this issue, I followed the removal directions in the following article from Microsoft's Support website: How to clean a corrupted Silverlight installation and then reinstall Silverlight.



    After doing the complete removal from the "Let me fix it myself" section, Silverlight has not once showed up in my Windows Update.



    Update (2015 09 17): If you have Microsoft Office installed, this won't work. It works on Windows 7 as described. Upon installing Office 2013, Silverlight gets installed and the updates in Microsoft Update persist. I haven't yet found a way to stop it with Office installed. Without Office, maybe only Office 2013, these instructions still work.






    share|improve this answer





















    • 2





      so you installed the plugin after all? the idea here is to GET RIDE of the plugin and keep it from popping up in Windows update.

      – BerggreenDK
      Apr 30 '13 at 7:58






    • 4





      No, I removed the plugin. As I said in my answer I only followed the removal instructions. The instructions just happened to be in a Microsoft article about reinstallation, the second half of which you can ignore.

      – Bryson
      Apr 30 '13 at 20:07











    • Like @Ohto below - I tried this (ran all the deletes in a batch file), but WU kept moaning until I hid every update as he suggested. Maybe I missed something? EDIT: I wonder if clearing the WU Download directory (%windir%SoftwareDistributionDownload) would have negated the need for hiding?

      – Umber Ferrule
      Apr 4 '14 at 9:49













    • I had to attempt this like 4 or 5 times last time I reinstalled my Windows 7 VM in VMWare Fusion. It eventually worked, but they're changing things apparently. Not sure what or why.

      – Bryson
      Apr 6 '14 at 0:25



















    2














    If the fixit solution doesn't work (like it did not for me), here is a bit more detailed solution.




    1. Click right mouse button on it, select Hide.

    2. Press ALT + Up or the up arrow next to the address bar

    3. If there is again a Silverlight update available, repeat steps 1. and 2.






    share|improve this answer































      0














      Enter Regedit and look for the following path:




      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftSilverlight




      In there, there will be a key named "UpdateConsentMode", whose value is set at 1 at installation. Changing it to 0 will disable the reminder.






      share|improve this answer





















      • 2





        That key doesn't exist on my system. I assume it's only created once you already installed Silverlight, but in this case we don't want to install it at all.

        – user256743
        Sep 18 '14 at 16:09



















      -8














      Try disabling Microsoft Updates in settings.



      But the side effect is you will not get important updates for other products like Office.



      .



      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer





















      • 16





        This is a terrible non-solution. The issue is not that he does not like Windows Update updates, it's that Windows Update continues showing him an "optional" update for Silverlight which he hasn't installed. Disabling Windows Update completely may be the worst security advice you can give any Windows user, for any reason.

        – Bryson
        Apr 8 '13 at 20:39






      • 2





        Indeed terrible, you dont disable windows update, thats crazy - you only need to remove 1 single item you dont want installed on your computer. Its like, okay - I dont like the amount of gas my car uses, so remove the engine.

        – BerggreenDK
        Apr 30 '13 at 7:55






      • 1





        @Bryson: Moab did not recommend disabling Windows update, but unchecking the box marked "Microsoft Update - check for new optional Microsoft software when I update Windows" (unfortunately, it's the same checkbox that controls updates for non-OS Microsoft products you do have installed). Unchecking that won't stop OS updates the way that disabling Windows Update completely would.

        – Ben Voigt
        Sep 26 '15 at 21:35













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      6 Answers
      6






      active

      oldest

      votes








      6 Answers
      6






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      26














      So, problem is there are 7 different versions of Silverlight. Some are older, some are newer.



      You can manually Hide, "Check for Updates", Options, Hide them in a loop 7 or more times. I don't want to do that manually so I wrote a WSH js, save as WUA_xSilverlight.js:



      var wu_Session = WScript.CreateObject("Microsoft.Update.Session");
      var wu_Searcher = wu_Session.CreateUpdateSearcher();
      wu_Searcher.Online = false;

      do {
      WScript.echo("Searching...");
      var silverstreak = false;
      var searchResult = wu_Searcher.Search("IsHidden=0 And IsInstalled=0");

      for(var i=0; i<searchResult.Updates.Count; i++){
      var wupdate = searchResult.Updates.Item(i);
      if ( ! wupdate.Title.indexOf("Microsoft Silverlight") ) { // if -1
      wupdate.IsHidden=1;
      WScript.echo(" Hiding update: " + wupdate.Title);
      silverstreak = true;
      }
      }
      } while ( silverstreak ); // repeat search


      Execute the saved file: cscript.exe WUA_xSilverlight.js.
      I could have optimized the search and so the code, but it works so blah.






      share|improve this answer


























      • +1 Whoa, this is really cool! I didn't know such a thing was even possible, thanks for that!

        – Mehrdad
        Dec 6 '15 at 23:02






      • 1





        After writing this, this has become one of my favorite scriptlets, forget about optimizing the search... to see everything it finds (really useful in windows 10 where you see less) -- you can make a small adjustment: after "silverstreak = true;" and before the "}n}n}", add: "} else { WScript.echo(".............. " + wupdate.Title);" ......... this displays all the available updates, so even in windows 7 on a domain computer it will show you that windows 10 is waiting and in windows 10 it displays optional updates like for drivers.

        – Tony Marques
        Jan 9 '16 at 14:28








      • 2





        The most important information from your answer is that there are several updates called "Microsoft Silverlight" (with different KB number) and they get actually hidden but you need to repeat the process several times.

        – bpiec
        Feb 28 '16 at 15:28






      • 3





        there's at least 16 ATOW

        – chiliNUT
        Aug 4 '17 at 17:18






      • 2





        For the record, I have hidden 15 Silverlights now. They are KB2512827, KB2617986, KB2636927, KB2668562, KB2977218, KB3056819, KB3080333, KB3106614, KB3126036, KB3162593, KB3182373, KB3193713, KB4013867, KB4017094, KB4023307.

        – iBug
        Jan 22 '18 at 3:11
















      26














      So, problem is there are 7 different versions of Silverlight. Some are older, some are newer.



      You can manually Hide, "Check for Updates", Options, Hide them in a loop 7 or more times. I don't want to do that manually so I wrote a WSH js, save as WUA_xSilverlight.js:



      var wu_Session = WScript.CreateObject("Microsoft.Update.Session");
      var wu_Searcher = wu_Session.CreateUpdateSearcher();
      wu_Searcher.Online = false;

      do {
      WScript.echo("Searching...");
      var silverstreak = false;
      var searchResult = wu_Searcher.Search("IsHidden=0 And IsInstalled=0");

      for(var i=0; i<searchResult.Updates.Count; i++){
      var wupdate = searchResult.Updates.Item(i);
      if ( ! wupdate.Title.indexOf("Microsoft Silverlight") ) { // if -1
      wupdate.IsHidden=1;
      WScript.echo(" Hiding update: " + wupdate.Title);
      silverstreak = true;
      }
      }
      } while ( silverstreak ); // repeat search


      Execute the saved file: cscript.exe WUA_xSilverlight.js.
      I could have optimized the search and so the code, but it works so blah.






      share|improve this answer


























      • +1 Whoa, this is really cool! I didn't know such a thing was even possible, thanks for that!

        – Mehrdad
        Dec 6 '15 at 23:02






      • 1





        After writing this, this has become one of my favorite scriptlets, forget about optimizing the search... to see everything it finds (really useful in windows 10 where you see less) -- you can make a small adjustment: after "silverstreak = true;" and before the "}n}n}", add: "} else { WScript.echo(".............. " + wupdate.Title);" ......... this displays all the available updates, so even in windows 7 on a domain computer it will show you that windows 10 is waiting and in windows 10 it displays optional updates like for drivers.

        – Tony Marques
        Jan 9 '16 at 14:28








      • 2





        The most important information from your answer is that there are several updates called "Microsoft Silverlight" (with different KB number) and they get actually hidden but you need to repeat the process several times.

        – bpiec
        Feb 28 '16 at 15:28






      • 3





        there's at least 16 ATOW

        – chiliNUT
        Aug 4 '17 at 17:18






      • 2





        For the record, I have hidden 15 Silverlights now. They are KB2512827, KB2617986, KB2636927, KB2668562, KB2977218, KB3056819, KB3080333, KB3106614, KB3126036, KB3162593, KB3182373, KB3193713, KB4013867, KB4017094, KB4023307.

        – iBug
        Jan 22 '18 at 3:11














      26












      26








      26







      So, problem is there are 7 different versions of Silverlight. Some are older, some are newer.



      You can manually Hide, "Check for Updates", Options, Hide them in a loop 7 or more times. I don't want to do that manually so I wrote a WSH js, save as WUA_xSilverlight.js:



      var wu_Session = WScript.CreateObject("Microsoft.Update.Session");
      var wu_Searcher = wu_Session.CreateUpdateSearcher();
      wu_Searcher.Online = false;

      do {
      WScript.echo("Searching...");
      var silverstreak = false;
      var searchResult = wu_Searcher.Search("IsHidden=0 And IsInstalled=0");

      for(var i=0; i<searchResult.Updates.Count; i++){
      var wupdate = searchResult.Updates.Item(i);
      if ( ! wupdate.Title.indexOf("Microsoft Silverlight") ) { // if -1
      wupdate.IsHidden=1;
      WScript.echo(" Hiding update: " + wupdate.Title);
      silverstreak = true;
      }
      }
      } while ( silverstreak ); // repeat search


      Execute the saved file: cscript.exe WUA_xSilverlight.js.
      I could have optimized the search and so the code, but it works so blah.






      share|improve this answer















      So, problem is there are 7 different versions of Silverlight. Some are older, some are newer.



      You can manually Hide, "Check for Updates", Options, Hide them in a loop 7 or more times. I don't want to do that manually so I wrote a WSH js, save as WUA_xSilverlight.js:



      var wu_Session = WScript.CreateObject("Microsoft.Update.Session");
      var wu_Searcher = wu_Session.CreateUpdateSearcher();
      wu_Searcher.Online = false;

      do {
      WScript.echo("Searching...");
      var silverstreak = false;
      var searchResult = wu_Searcher.Search("IsHidden=0 And IsInstalled=0");

      for(var i=0; i<searchResult.Updates.Count; i++){
      var wupdate = searchResult.Updates.Item(i);
      if ( ! wupdate.Title.indexOf("Microsoft Silverlight") ) { // if -1
      wupdate.IsHidden=1;
      WScript.echo(" Hiding update: " + wupdate.Title);
      silverstreak = true;
      }
      }
      } while ( silverstreak ); // repeat search


      Execute the saved file: cscript.exe WUA_xSilverlight.js.
      I could have optimized the search and so the code, but it works so blah.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Dec 17 '15 at 1:59









      unforgettableid

      6532926




      6532926










      answered Dec 6 '15 at 22:58









      Tony MarquesTony Marques

      38433




      38433













      • +1 Whoa, this is really cool! I didn't know such a thing was even possible, thanks for that!

        – Mehrdad
        Dec 6 '15 at 23:02






      • 1





        After writing this, this has become one of my favorite scriptlets, forget about optimizing the search... to see everything it finds (really useful in windows 10 where you see less) -- you can make a small adjustment: after "silverstreak = true;" and before the "}n}n}", add: "} else { WScript.echo(".............. " + wupdate.Title);" ......... this displays all the available updates, so even in windows 7 on a domain computer it will show you that windows 10 is waiting and in windows 10 it displays optional updates like for drivers.

        – Tony Marques
        Jan 9 '16 at 14:28








      • 2





        The most important information from your answer is that there are several updates called "Microsoft Silverlight" (with different KB number) and they get actually hidden but you need to repeat the process several times.

        – bpiec
        Feb 28 '16 at 15:28






      • 3





        there's at least 16 ATOW

        – chiliNUT
        Aug 4 '17 at 17:18






      • 2





        For the record, I have hidden 15 Silverlights now. They are KB2512827, KB2617986, KB2636927, KB2668562, KB2977218, KB3056819, KB3080333, KB3106614, KB3126036, KB3162593, KB3182373, KB3193713, KB4013867, KB4017094, KB4023307.

        – iBug
        Jan 22 '18 at 3:11



















      • +1 Whoa, this is really cool! I didn't know such a thing was even possible, thanks for that!

        – Mehrdad
        Dec 6 '15 at 23:02






      • 1





        After writing this, this has become one of my favorite scriptlets, forget about optimizing the search... to see everything it finds (really useful in windows 10 where you see less) -- you can make a small adjustment: after "silverstreak = true;" and before the "}n}n}", add: "} else { WScript.echo(".............. " + wupdate.Title);" ......... this displays all the available updates, so even in windows 7 on a domain computer it will show you that windows 10 is waiting and in windows 10 it displays optional updates like for drivers.

        – Tony Marques
        Jan 9 '16 at 14:28








      • 2





        The most important information from your answer is that there are several updates called "Microsoft Silverlight" (with different KB number) and they get actually hidden but you need to repeat the process several times.

        – bpiec
        Feb 28 '16 at 15:28






      • 3





        there's at least 16 ATOW

        – chiliNUT
        Aug 4 '17 at 17:18






      • 2





        For the record, I have hidden 15 Silverlights now. They are KB2512827, KB2617986, KB2636927, KB2668562, KB2977218, KB3056819, KB3080333, KB3106614, KB3126036, KB3162593, KB3182373, KB3193713, KB4013867, KB4017094, KB4023307.

        – iBug
        Jan 22 '18 at 3:11

















      +1 Whoa, this is really cool! I didn't know such a thing was even possible, thanks for that!

      – Mehrdad
      Dec 6 '15 at 23:02





      +1 Whoa, this is really cool! I didn't know such a thing was even possible, thanks for that!

      – Mehrdad
      Dec 6 '15 at 23:02




      1




      1





      After writing this, this has become one of my favorite scriptlets, forget about optimizing the search... to see everything it finds (really useful in windows 10 where you see less) -- you can make a small adjustment: after "silverstreak = true;" and before the "}n}n}", add: "} else { WScript.echo(".............. " + wupdate.Title);" ......... this displays all the available updates, so even in windows 7 on a domain computer it will show you that windows 10 is waiting and in windows 10 it displays optional updates like for drivers.

      – Tony Marques
      Jan 9 '16 at 14:28







      After writing this, this has become one of my favorite scriptlets, forget about optimizing the search... to see everything it finds (really useful in windows 10 where you see less) -- you can make a small adjustment: after "silverstreak = true;" and before the "}n}n}", add: "} else { WScript.echo(".............. " + wupdate.Title);" ......... this displays all the available updates, so even in windows 7 on a domain computer it will show you that windows 10 is waiting and in windows 10 it displays optional updates like for drivers.

      – Tony Marques
      Jan 9 '16 at 14:28






      2




      2





      The most important information from your answer is that there are several updates called "Microsoft Silverlight" (with different KB number) and they get actually hidden but you need to repeat the process several times.

      – bpiec
      Feb 28 '16 at 15:28





      The most important information from your answer is that there are several updates called "Microsoft Silverlight" (with different KB number) and they get actually hidden but you need to repeat the process several times.

      – bpiec
      Feb 28 '16 at 15:28




      3




      3





      there's at least 16 ATOW

      – chiliNUT
      Aug 4 '17 at 17:18





      there's at least 16 ATOW

      – chiliNUT
      Aug 4 '17 at 17:18




      2




      2





      For the record, I have hidden 15 Silverlights now. They are KB2512827, KB2617986, KB2636927, KB2668562, KB2977218, KB3056819, KB3080333, KB3106614, KB3126036, KB3162593, KB3182373, KB3193713, KB4013867, KB4017094, KB4023307.

      – iBug
      Jan 22 '18 at 3:11





      For the record, I have hidden 15 Silverlights now. They are KB2512827, KB2617986, KB2636927, KB2668562, KB2977218, KB3056819, KB3080333, KB3106614, KB3126036, KB3162593, KB3182373, KB3193713, KB4013867, KB4017094, KB4023307.

      – iBug
      Jan 22 '18 at 3:11













      10














      The issue became clear to me when I hid Bing Desktop v1.3 and Bing Desktop 1.2 showed up next.
      Upon careful inspection I had noticed that the Silverlight updates are each with a different date.



      So lets say there are 10 Silverlight versions released. V10 will obsolete v1 through v9 and only v10 will show up.
      Choosing to hide v10 will cause v9 to show up, hiding v9 will show v8 the next time you check for updates, and so on and so forth.



      If you are persistent about it you can hide every single version of Silverlight and it stops showing up (until the next version is released by MS).






      share|improve this answer






























        10














        The issue became clear to me when I hid Bing Desktop v1.3 and Bing Desktop 1.2 showed up next.
        Upon careful inspection I had noticed that the Silverlight updates are each with a different date.



        So lets say there are 10 Silverlight versions released. V10 will obsolete v1 through v9 and only v10 will show up.
        Choosing to hide v10 will cause v9 to show up, hiding v9 will show v8 the next time you check for updates, and so on and so forth.



        If you are persistent about it you can hide every single version of Silverlight and it stops showing up (until the next version is released by MS).






        share|improve this answer




























          10












          10








          10







          The issue became clear to me when I hid Bing Desktop v1.3 and Bing Desktop 1.2 showed up next.
          Upon careful inspection I had noticed that the Silverlight updates are each with a different date.



          So lets say there are 10 Silverlight versions released. V10 will obsolete v1 through v9 and only v10 will show up.
          Choosing to hide v10 will cause v9 to show up, hiding v9 will show v8 the next time you check for updates, and so on and so forth.



          If you are persistent about it you can hide every single version of Silverlight and it stops showing up (until the next version is released by MS).






          share|improve this answer















          The issue became clear to me when I hid Bing Desktop v1.3 and Bing Desktop 1.2 showed up next.
          Upon careful inspection I had noticed that the Silverlight updates are each with a different date.



          So lets say there are 10 Silverlight versions released. V10 will obsolete v1 through v9 and only v10 will show up.
          Choosing to hide v10 will cause v9 to show up, hiding v9 will show v8 the next time you check for updates, and so on and so forth.



          If you are persistent about it you can hide every single version of Silverlight and it stops showing up (until the next version is released by MS).







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Aug 8 '13 at 2:21









          slm

          6,33563846




          6,33563846










          answered Aug 8 '13 at 0:06









          taltamirtaltamir

          42038




          42038























              8














              I recently had this issue also, after installing a Windows 7 VM for work. Having not used Windows for quite some time this was very annoying to me as well.



              I had a clean installation of Windows 7, upgraded to whatever the latest service pack is as of this writing and I'd refused to install Silverlight. However, it appears that Windows 7's service packs now "preload" portions of Silverlight, making it show up in Windows Update even when not technically fully installed. Highly irritating.



              To fix this issue, I followed the removal directions in the following article from Microsoft's Support website: How to clean a corrupted Silverlight installation and then reinstall Silverlight.



              After doing the complete removal from the "Let me fix it myself" section, Silverlight has not once showed up in my Windows Update.



              Update (2015 09 17): If you have Microsoft Office installed, this won't work. It works on Windows 7 as described. Upon installing Office 2013, Silverlight gets installed and the updates in Microsoft Update persist. I haven't yet found a way to stop it with Office installed. Without Office, maybe only Office 2013, these instructions still work.






              share|improve this answer





















              • 2





                so you installed the plugin after all? the idea here is to GET RIDE of the plugin and keep it from popping up in Windows update.

                – BerggreenDK
                Apr 30 '13 at 7:58






              • 4





                No, I removed the plugin. As I said in my answer I only followed the removal instructions. The instructions just happened to be in a Microsoft article about reinstallation, the second half of which you can ignore.

                – Bryson
                Apr 30 '13 at 20:07











              • Like @Ohto below - I tried this (ran all the deletes in a batch file), but WU kept moaning until I hid every update as he suggested. Maybe I missed something? EDIT: I wonder if clearing the WU Download directory (%windir%SoftwareDistributionDownload) would have negated the need for hiding?

                – Umber Ferrule
                Apr 4 '14 at 9:49













              • I had to attempt this like 4 or 5 times last time I reinstalled my Windows 7 VM in VMWare Fusion. It eventually worked, but they're changing things apparently. Not sure what or why.

                – Bryson
                Apr 6 '14 at 0:25
















              8














              I recently had this issue also, after installing a Windows 7 VM for work. Having not used Windows for quite some time this was very annoying to me as well.



              I had a clean installation of Windows 7, upgraded to whatever the latest service pack is as of this writing and I'd refused to install Silverlight. However, it appears that Windows 7's service packs now "preload" portions of Silverlight, making it show up in Windows Update even when not technically fully installed. Highly irritating.



              To fix this issue, I followed the removal directions in the following article from Microsoft's Support website: How to clean a corrupted Silverlight installation and then reinstall Silverlight.



              After doing the complete removal from the "Let me fix it myself" section, Silverlight has not once showed up in my Windows Update.



              Update (2015 09 17): If you have Microsoft Office installed, this won't work. It works on Windows 7 as described. Upon installing Office 2013, Silverlight gets installed and the updates in Microsoft Update persist. I haven't yet found a way to stop it with Office installed. Without Office, maybe only Office 2013, these instructions still work.






              share|improve this answer





















              • 2





                so you installed the plugin after all? the idea here is to GET RIDE of the plugin and keep it from popping up in Windows update.

                – BerggreenDK
                Apr 30 '13 at 7:58






              • 4





                No, I removed the plugin. As I said in my answer I only followed the removal instructions. The instructions just happened to be in a Microsoft article about reinstallation, the second half of which you can ignore.

                – Bryson
                Apr 30 '13 at 20:07











              • Like @Ohto below - I tried this (ran all the deletes in a batch file), but WU kept moaning until I hid every update as he suggested. Maybe I missed something? EDIT: I wonder if clearing the WU Download directory (%windir%SoftwareDistributionDownload) would have negated the need for hiding?

                – Umber Ferrule
                Apr 4 '14 at 9:49













              • I had to attempt this like 4 or 5 times last time I reinstalled my Windows 7 VM in VMWare Fusion. It eventually worked, but they're changing things apparently. Not sure what or why.

                – Bryson
                Apr 6 '14 at 0:25














              8












              8








              8







              I recently had this issue also, after installing a Windows 7 VM for work. Having not used Windows for quite some time this was very annoying to me as well.



              I had a clean installation of Windows 7, upgraded to whatever the latest service pack is as of this writing and I'd refused to install Silverlight. However, it appears that Windows 7's service packs now "preload" portions of Silverlight, making it show up in Windows Update even when not technically fully installed. Highly irritating.



              To fix this issue, I followed the removal directions in the following article from Microsoft's Support website: How to clean a corrupted Silverlight installation and then reinstall Silverlight.



              After doing the complete removal from the "Let me fix it myself" section, Silverlight has not once showed up in my Windows Update.



              Update (2015 09 17): If you have Microsoft Office installed, this won't work. It works on Windows 7 as described. Upon installing Office 2013, Silverlight gets installed and the updates in Microsoft Update persist. I haven't yet found a way to stop it with Office installed. Without Office, maybe only Office 2013, these instructions still work.






              share|improve this answer















              I recently had this issue also, after installing a Windows 7 VM for work. Having not used Windows for quite some time this was very annoying to me as well.



              I had a clean installation of Windows 7, upgraded to whatever the latest service pack is as of this writing and I'd refused to install Silverlight. However, it appears that Windows 7's service packs now "preload" portions of Silverlight, making it show up in Windows Update even when not technically fully installed. Highly irritating.



              To fix this issue, I followed the removal directions in the following article from Microsoft's Support website: How to clean a corrupted Silverlight installation and then reinstall Silverlight.



              After doing the complete removal from the "Let me fix it myself" section, Silverlight has not once showed up in my Windows Update.



              Update (2015 09 17): If you have Microsoft Office installed, this won't work. It works on Windows 7 as described. Upon installing Office 2013, Silverlight gets installed and the updates in Microsoft Update persist. I haven't yet found a way to stop it with Office installed. Without Office, maybe only Office 2013, these instructions still work.







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited Sep 18 '15 at 0:10

























              answered Apr 8 '13 at 20:39









              BrysonBryson

              311139




              311139








              • 2





                so you installed the plugin after all? the idea here is to GET RIDE of the plugin and keep it from popping up in Windows update.

                – BerggreenDK
                Apr 30 '13 at 7:58






              • 4





                No, I removed the plugin. As I said in my answer I only followed the removal instructions. The instructions just happened to be in a Microsoft article about reinstallation, the second half of which you can ignore.

                – Bryson
                Apr 30 '13 at 20:07











              • Like @Ohto below - I tried this (ran all the deletes in a batch file), but WU kept moaning until I hid every update as he suggested. Maybe I missed something? EDIT: I wonder if clearing the WU Download directory (%windir%SoftwareDistributionDownload) would have negated the need for hiding?

                – Umber Ferrule
                Apr 4 '14 at 9:49













              • I had to attempt this like 4 or 5 times last time I reinstalled my Windows 7 VM in VMWare Fusion. It eventually worked, but they're changing things apparently. Not sure what or why.

                – Bryson
                Apr 6 '14 at 0:25














              • 2





                so you installed the plugin after all? the idea here is to GET RIDE of the plugin and keep it from popping up in Windows update.

                – BerggreenDK
                Apr 30 '13 at 7:58






              • 4





                No, I removed the plugin. As I said in my answer I only followed the removal instructions. The instructions just happened to be in a Microsoft article about reinstallation, the second half of which you can ignore.

                – Bryson
                Apr 30 '13 at 20:07











              • Like @Ohto below - I tried this (ran all the deletes in a batch file), but WU kept moaning until I hid every update as he suggested. Maybe I missed something? EDIT: I wonder if clearing the WU Download directory (%windir%SoftwareDistributionDownload) would have negated the need for hiding?

                – Umber Ferrule
                Apr 4 '14 at 9:49













              • I had to attempt this like 4 or 5 times last time I reinstalled my Windows 7 VM in VMWare Fusion. It eventually worked, but they're changing things apparently. Not sure what or why.

                – Bryson
                Apr 6 '14 at 0:25








              2




              2





              so you installed the plugin after all? the idea here is to GET RIDE of the plugin and keep it from popping up in Windows update.

              – BerggreenDK
              Apr 30 '13 at 7:58





              so you installed the plugin after all? the idea here is to GET RIDE of the plugin and keep it from popping up in Windows update.

              – BerggreenDK
              Apr 30 '13 at 7:58




              4




              4





              No, I removed the plugin. As I said in my answer I only followed the removal instructions. The instructions just happened to be in a Microsoft article about reinstallation, the second half of which you can ignore.

              – Bryson
              Apr 30 '13 at 20:07





              No, I removed the plugin. As I said in my answer I only followed the removal instructions. The instructions just happened to be in a Microsoft article about reinstallation, the second half of which you can ignore.

              – Bryson
              Apr 30 '13 at 20:07













              Like @Ohto below - I tried this (ran all the deletes in a batch file), but WU kept moaning until I hid every update as he suggested. Maybe I missed something? EDIT: I wonder if clearing the WU Download directory (%windir%SoftwareDistributionDownload) would have negated the need for hiding?

              – Umber Ferrule
              Apr 4 '14 at 9:49







              Like @Ohto below - I tried this (ran all the deletes in a batch file), but WU kept moaning until I hid every update as he suggested. Maybe I missed something? EDIT: I wonder if clearing the WU Download directory (%windir%SoftwareDistributionDownload) would have negated the need for hiding?

              – Umber Ferrule
              Apr 4 '14 at 9:49















              I had to attempt this like 4 or 5 times last time I reinstalled my Windows 7 VM in VMWare Fusion. It eventually worked, but they're changing things apparently. Not sure what or why.

              – Bryson
              Apr 6 '14 at 0:25





              I had to attempt this like 4 or 5 times last time I reinstalled my Windows 7 VM in VMWare Fusion. It eventually worked, but they're changing things apparently. Not sure what or why.

              – Bryson
              Apr 6 '14 at 0:25











              2














              If the fixit solution doesn't work (like it did not for me), here is a bit more detailed solution.




              1. Click right mouse button on it, select Hide.

              2. Press ALT + Up or the up arrow next to the address bar

              3. If there is again a Silverlight update available, repeat steps 1. and 2.






              share|improve this answer




























                2














                If the fixit solution doesn't work (like it did not for me), here is a bit more detailed solution.




                1. Click right mouse button on it, select Hide.

                2. Press ALT + Up or the up arrow next to the address bar

                3. If there is again a Silverlight update available, repeat steps 1. and 2.






                share|improve this answer


























                  2












                  2








                  2







                  If the fixit solution doesn't work (like it did not for me), here is a bit more detailed solution.




                  1. Click right mouse button on it, select Hide.

                  2. Press ALT + Up or the up arrow next to the address bar

                  3. If there is again a Silverlight update available, repeat steps 1. and 2.






                  share|improve this answer













                  If the fixit solution doesn't work (like it did not for me), here is a bit more detailed solution.




                  1. Click right mouse button on it, select Hide.

                  2. Press ALT + Up or the up arrow next to the address bar

                  3. If there is again a Silverlight update available, repeat steps 1. and 2.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Nov 24 '13 at 19:38









                  Ohto NordbergOhto Nordberg

                  1217




                  1217























                      0














                      Enter Regedit and look for the following path:




                      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftSilverlight




                      In there, there will be a key named "UpdateConsentMode", whose value is set at 1 at installation. Changing it to 0 will disable the reminder.






                      share|improve this answer





















                      • 2





                        That key doesn't exist on my system. I assume it's only created once you already installed Silverlight, but in this case we don't want to install it at all.

                        – user256743
                        Sep 18 '14 at 16:09
















                      0














                      Enter Regedit and look for the following path:




                      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftSilverlight




                      In there, there will be a key named "UpdateConsentMode", whose value is set at 1 at installation. Changing it to 0 will disable the reminder.






                      share|improve this answer





















                      • 2





                        That key doesn't exist on my system. I assume it's only created once you already installed Silverlight, but in this case we don't want to install it at all.

                        – user256743
                        Sep 18 '14 at 16:09














                      0












                      0








                      0







                      Enter Regedit and look for the following path:




                      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftSilverlight




                      In there, there will be a key named "UpdateConsentMode", whose value is set at 1 at installation. Changing it to 0 will disable the reminder.






                      share|improve this answer















                      Enter Regedit and look for the following path:




                      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftSilverlight




                      In there, there will be a key named "UpdateConsentMode", whose value is set at 1 at installation. Changing it to 0 will disable the reminder.







                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited May 14 '14 at 3:24









                      Doktoro Reichard

                      4,50442840




                      4,50442840










                      answered May 13 '14 at 23:37









                      jeffjeff

                      1




                      1








                      • 2





                        That key doesn't exist on my system. I assume it's only created once you already installed Silverlight, but in this case we don't want to install it at all.

                        – user256743
                        Sep 18 '14 at 16:09














                      • 2





                        That key doesn't exist on my system. I assume it's only created once you already installed Silverlight, but in this case we don't want to install it at all.

                        – user256743
                        Sep 18 '14 at 16:09








                      2




                      2





                      That key doesn't exist on my system. I assume it's only created once you already installed Silverlight, but in this case we don't want to install it at all.

                      – user256743
                      Sep 18 '14 at 16:09





                      That key doesn't exist on my system. I assume it's only created once you already installed Silverlight, but in this case we don't want to install it at all.

                      – user256743
                      Sep 18 '14 at 16:09











                      -8














                      Try disabling Microsoft Updates in settings.



                      But the side effect is you will not get important updates for other products like Office.



                      .



                      enter image description here






                      share|improve this answer





















                      • 16





                        This is a terrible non-solution. The issue is not that he does not like Windows Update updates, it's that Windows Update continues showing him an "optional" update for Silverlight which he hasn't installed. Disabling Windows Update completely may be the worst security advice you can give any Windows user, for any reason.

                        – Bryson
                        Apr 8 '13 at 20:39






                      • 2





                        Indeed terrible, you dont disable windows update, thats crazy - you only need to remove 1 single item you dont want installed on your computer. Its like, okay - I dont like the amount of gas my car uses, so remove the engine.

                        – BerggreenDK
                        Apr 30 '13 at 7:55






                      • 1





                        @Bryson: Moab did not recommend disabling Windows update, but unchecking the box marked "Microsoft Update - check for new optional Microsoft software when I update Windows" (unfortunately, it's the same checkbox that controls updates for non-OS Microsoft products you do have installed). Unchecking that won't stop OS updates the way that disabling Windows Update completely would.

                        – Ben Voigt
                        Sep 26 '15 at 21:35


















                      -8














                      Try disabling Microsoft Updates in settings.



                      But the side effect is you will not get important updates for other products like Office.



                      .



                      enter image description here






                      share|improve this answer





















                      • 16





                        This is a terrible non-solution. The issue is not that he does not like Windows Update updates, it's that Windows Update continues showing him an "optional" update for Silverlight which he hasn't installed. Disabling Windows Update completely may be the worst security advice you can give any Windows user, for any reason.

                        – Bryson
                        Apr 8 '13 at 20:39






                      • 2





                        Indeed terrible, you dont disable windows update, thats crazy - you only need to remove 1 single item you dont want installed on your computer. Its like, okay - I dont like the amount of gas my car uses, so remove the engine.

                        – BerggreenDK
                        Apr 30 '13 at 7:55






                      • 1





                        @Bryson: Moab did not recommend disabling Windows update, but unchecking the box marked "Microsoft Update - check for new optional Microsoft software when I update Windows" (unfortunately, it's the same checkbox that controls updates for non-OS Microsoft products you do have installed). Unchecking that won't stop OS updates the way that disabling Windows Update completely would.

                        – Ben Voigt
                        Sep 26 '15 at 21:35
















                      -8












                      -8








                      -8







                      Try disabling Microsoft Updates in settings.



                      But the side effect is you will not get important updates for other products like Office.



                      .



                      enter image description here






                      share|improve this answer















                      Try disabling Microsoft Updates in settings.



                      But the side effect is you will not get important updates for other products like Office.



                      .



                      enter image description here







                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited Jun 11 '12 at 5:40

























                      answered Jun 11 '12 at 5:25









                      MoabMoab

                      51.1k1494160




                      51.1k1494160








                      • 16





                        This is a terrible non-solution. The issue is not that he does not like Windows Update updates, it's that Windows Update continues showing him an "optional" update for Silverlight which he hasn't installed. Disabling Windows Update completely may be the worst security advice you can give any Windows user, for any reason.

                        – Bryson
                        Apr 8 '13 at 20:39






                      • 2





                        Indeed terrible, you dont disable windows update, thats crazy - you only need to remove 1 single item you dont want installed on your computer. Its like, okay - I dont like the amount of gas my car uses, so remove the engine.

                        – BerggreenDK
                        Apr 30 '13 at 7:55






                      • 1





                        @Bryson: Moab did not recommend disabling Windows update, but unchecking the box marked "Microsoft Update - check for new optional Microsoft software when I update Windows" (unfortunately, it's the same checkbox that controls updates for non-OS Microsoft products you do have installed). Unchecking that won't stop OS updates the way that disabling Windows Update completely would.

                        – Ben Voigt
                        Sep 26 '15 at 21:35
















                      • 16





                        This is a terrible non-solution. The issue is not that he does not like Windows Update updates, it's that Windows Update continues showing him an "optional" update for Silverlight which he hasn't installed. Disabling Windows Update completely may be the worst security advice you can give any Windows user, for any reason.

                        – Bryson
                        Apr 8 '13 at 20:39






                      • 2





                        Indeed terrible, you dont disable windows update, thats crazy - you only need to remove 1 single item you dont want installed on your computer. Its like, okay - I dont like the amount of gas my car uses, so remove the engine.

                        – BerggreenDK
                        Apr 30 '13 at 7:55






                      • 1





                        @Bryson: Moab did not recommend disabling Windows update, but unchecking the box marked "Microsoft Update - check for new optional Microsoft software when I update Windows" (unfortunately, it's the same checkbox that controls updates for non-OS Microsoft products you do have installed). Unchecking that won't stop OS updates the way that disabling Windows Update completely would.

                        – Ben Voigt
                        Sep 26 '15 at 21:35










                      16




                      16





                      This is a terrible non-solution. The issue is not that he does not like Windows Update updates, it's that Windows Update continues showing him an "optional" update for Silverlight which he hasn't installed. Disabling Windows Update completely may be the worst security advice you can give any Windows user, for any reason.

                      – Bryson
                      Apr 8 '13 at 20:39





                      This is a terrible non-solution. The issue is not that he does not like Windows Update updates, it's that Windows Update continues showing him an "optional" update for Silverlight which he hasn't installed. Disabling Windows Update completely may be the worst security advice you can give any Windows user, for any reason.

                      – Bryson
                      Apr 8 '13 at 20:39




                      2




                      2





                      Indeed terrible, you dont disable windows update, thats crazy - you only need to remove 1 single item you dont want installed on your computer. Its like, okay - I dont like the amount of gas my car uses, so remove the engine.

                      – BerggreenDK
                      Apr 30 '13 at 7:55





                      Indeed terrible, you dont disable windows update, thats crazy - you only need to remove 1 single item you dont want installed on your computer. Its like, okay - I dont like the amount of gas my car uses, so remove the engine.

                      – BerggreenDK
                      Apr 30 '13 at 7:55




                      1




                      1





                      @Bryson: Moab did not recommend disabling Windows update, but unchecking the box marked "Microsoft Update - check for new optional Microsoft software when I update Windows" (unfortunately, it's the same checkbox that controls updates for non-OS Microsoft products you do have installed). Unchecking that won't stop OS updates the way that disabling Windows Update completely would.

                      – Ben Voigt
                      Sep 26 '15 at 21:35







                      @Bryson: Moab did not recommend disabling Windows update, but unchecking the box marked "Microsoft Update - check for new optional Microsoft software when I update Windows" (unfortunately, it's the same checkbox that controls updates for non-OS Microsoft products you do have installed). Unchecking that won't stop OS updates the way that disabling Windows Update completely would.

                      – Ben Voigt
                      Sep 26 '15 at 21:35




















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