Microsoft has announced a new feature called Cloud-Initiated Driver Recovery, which automatically rolls back problematic drivers delivered through Windows Update to a known-good version without needing user or hardware partner intervention. The feature is set to be released in September 2026 after several months of testing.
This mechanism aims to fill a gap in the current driver recovery process. When a driver distributed via Windows Update is found to have quality issues, fixing the problem currently relies on hardware partners submitting an updated driver or users manually uninstalling the problematic one. This can leave devices running on low-quality drivers for an extended period.
This feature is only relevant for drivers identified as having quality issues during the shiproom evaluation. Drivers that are published and functioning properly will not be impacted. Recovery efforts are limited to devices and hardware targets associated with the specific driver shipping label and do not extend to unrelated hardware configurations or other drivers.
End users will now benefit from automatic recovery if they encounter problematic driver releases, eliminating the need to identify the faulty driver or manually undo updates.
This change addresses a common source of post-update instability, where a single defective driver could cause crashes, hardware issues, or system failures for days or even weeks before a fix is released.
Microsoft has not announced a specific rollout date in September or clarified whether the update will be available for all Windows versions at once or in stages.
Microsoft Introduces Cloud-Initiated Driver Recovery to Roll Back Problematic Windows Update Drivers Automatically - gHacks Tech News
Microsoft is rolling out Cloud-Initiated Driver Recovery in September to automatically replace problematic drivers delivered through Windows Update.