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How to Disable Telemetry Across Windows and Popular Applications


Are there any open-source tools that allow me to disable telemetry for Adobe, Windows, Microsoft, NVIDIA, AMD, GitHub Desktop, Docker Desktop, VS Code, and other applications? How can I disable telemetry and enhance my overall Windows experience?
in reply to tatoko556

Obviously, the most effective approach is to reduce the vector by not using them, or in some of these cases (NVIDIA, AMD, etc) only installing the drivers and not the additional software.

Other than that, the most effective approach I've found is analyzing and blocking the traffic at the router level.

GitHub and Docker you could just use their CLI.

This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to Dr. Wesker

Thank you. I use the official website to download drivers, but it seems they only provide packages like AMD Software: Adrenalin Edition or NVIDIA App for installing the drivers. How can I install only the drivers without the additional bundled software?

Also, which on-device traffic blocker would you recommend, and what rules do you use? Are those rules comprehensive enough to block all telemetry traffic?

I’m concerned that if the IP addresses of their servers change and the traffic blocker doesn’t update in time, some information from my device could still be transmitted. Because of that, I have some doubts about relying on traffic blockers alone.

in reply to tatoko556

Fair warning: even if you disable telemetry on Windows, it has a tendency and history of re-enabling itself after a major update. You shouldn't expect it to be a one-and-done deal.
in reply to onlooker

Thank you! If I find any script I will run those repeatedly after each update
in reply to tatoko556

Between the update happening and you running the script all of the re-enabled telemetry grabs all of your logs and uploads them.

You wouldn’t even make it through login after the update reboot before this happens.

You cannot remove this telemetry and also receive updates. This is by design.

in reply to FauxLiving

Would SimpleWall or PortMaster solve this issue
This entry was edited (21 hours ago)
in reply to MonkderVierte

GlassWire does not appear to be open-source. In addition to TinyWall, I also found Portmaster.
in reply to tatoko556

I use this - github.com/ChrisTitusTech/winu…

But obviously get opinions from other sources first.

It claims to disable most Windows telemetry. Some Adobe. But I haven't actually done any testing to prove it's the case. It's a pretty useful tool. Just use the restore point option first.

Last time I tried this method of disabling Adobe telemetry, photoshop stopped opening after a few days.

For nvidia/amd, just install the drivers, not their tool suite.

As the other posters mention, try to find alternatives.

Other than that, you can try and block at a firewall level. But few companies make it obvious like: nerferoustelemetry.pleasedontb…

in reply to dellhiver

Thank you. This tool is great for some windows tweak.

I use the official website to download drivers, but it seems they only provide packages like AMD Software: Adrenalin Edition or NVIDIA App for installing the drivers. How can I install only the drivers without the additional bundled software?

This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to tatoko556

in reply to dellhiver

Thank you. I have also found choco package for installing nvidia driver only
in reply to tatoko556

It might be a more extreme method, but I use Pi-Hole on my home network running on a Raspberry Pi.

It's more investment than tweaking some Windows settings or configuring a router, but it does a decent job of blocking a lot of telemetry and tracking.

Most of my denied queries listed on the Pi-Hole dashboard are Microsoft based.

I have to use my Pi-Hole as my DHCP server though, otherwise all traffic seems to only come from one device... my router.

If you have a server running at home, Pi-Hole can also be hosted in a Docker container.

in reply to HornedMeatBeast

Thank you, which on-device traffic blocker would you recommend, and what rules do you use? Are those rules comprehensive enough to block all telemetry traffic?

I’m concerned that if the IP addresses of their servers change and the traffic blocker doesn’t update in time, some information from my device could still be transmitted. Because of that, I have some doubts about relying on traffic blockers alone.

in reply to tatoko556

in reply to tatoko556

in reply to ZeDoTelhado

at the network level in your house, having a DNS block level service is great. Pihole and adguard come to mind. This solution is more involved and requires more time to setup, but has tremendous benefits not only on windows telemetry, but overall network telemetry


Are there any on-device tools you could recommend? My laptop won’t always be connected to my home Wi-Fi, and some telemetry could still occur when it’s connected to other networks without my DNS configuration.

Do keep in mind is certainly possible for the system in places to use hardcoded DNS and ignore your options (at network level, you can always force to reroute to your local DNS. The case of DoH is a bit more tricky)


Thank you. I’m concerned that if the IP addresses of their servers change and the traffic blocker doesn’t update in time, some information from my device could still be transmitted. For the reasons you have listed and changing IP addresses of their servers , I have some doubts about relying on traffic blockers alone.

in reply to tatoko556

The best is Portmaster, it monitors individually all traffic from installed apps and even the one form the OS itself, with the option to block what you don't like, DNScrypt with a big filterlist and optional an (paid) SPN service (VPN which allowed to use different servers depending on the website). IMHO better and easier to handle as Pi-Hole, which don't permit individual per app settings.
in reply to Zerush

Thank you. I'm currently using Simplewall, but I will try to switch to Portmaster
in reply to tatoko556

I don't use Windows or Adobe and things like that (I use Linux and before that I was running a Mac), but for VSCode you may consider using VSCodium instead which is the exact same app (the same source code, running the same extensions) just without MS telemetry.

vscodium.com/

This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to tatoko556

O&O Shutup10 is the most straightforward for Windows. You can run it every once in a while to see if anything’s changed, and it will let you know.
in reply to tatoko556

This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to PiraHxCx

I just rebooted to give an example... in less than 1 minute Edge WebView alone tried about 400 connections (everything red in the graph was blocked)
This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to PiraHxCx

simplewall/Portmaster can completely cut the communication of Adobe, Nvidia and whatever other program you use, so you’d technically look like you are offline to them


Thank you. I believe this is the best option for now. As I don't use their online service this would work well for me. But I'm not sure about driver updates

in reply to PiraHxCx

Microsoft is also constantly changing how stuff works, intertwining stuff so you can’t fully remove without breaking functionality. You used to get media expansion packs (stuff like av1, avif and webp support) through updates or you could download them from their site or use a Powershell command to install them, now you are forced to do it through the MS Store, and guess what happens if you uninstall the MS Store? (at least, a few months ago when I got a new Win11 install, removing MS Store removed the packages). Probably a lot of Edge removing tools are broken by now too, if you watch your network you gonna see Microsoft Edge WebView 2 calling tons of domains all the time, and if you remove it you kill your internet connection entirely (you can, however, block it on the firewall. It used to be just one service, but with some recent update it’s four different services you have to block now).


github.com/ShadowWhisperer/Rem… This still works for me.

in reply to tatoko556

Rather than a tool, what about blocking via the hosts file. There must be some hosts files out there that do this for Windows 11.
in reply to tatoko556

I recently discovered ReviOS.
I just did a clean re-install of Windows with it. And its been great for the last few days. No dumb bloatware or spyware. Though not so privacy crazy as to break things. Supposedly it's changes can't be rolled back with updates due to the techniques they use. We'll see
This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to tatoko556

I’d switch to Windows but I don’t want to use an OS that requires digging through shady online instructions and running random power shell scripts in order to stop it from spying on me until the next update.

I disabled telemetry on Linux(Arch, btw) by not installing enshittified corporate spyware masquerading as an operating system.

Are there any open-source tools that allow me to disable telemetry for Adobe,


Ocular/Scribus

Windows, Microsoft


Linux, Linux Foundation

NVIDIA, AMD


The drivers don’t have telemetry, it’s the software that comes with it.

On Linux you can just install the driver from your package manager without the need for any third party applications.

GitHub Desktop,


git-scm.com/downloads/guis?os=…

Docker Desktop,


docker + wiki.archlinux.org/title/Docke…

VS Code


VS Codium, open source VS Code.

nvim if you want your (programming) life changed

and other applications?


aur.archlinux.org/

in reply to FauxLiving

Yes, the sad reality is that Windows is not quite there yet for desktop usage
in reply to FauxLiving

I disabled telemetry on Linux(Arch, btw) by not installing enshittified corporate spyware masquerading as an operating system.


We have telemetry on linux?

The drivers don’t have telemetry, it’s the software that comes with it.


If drivers are not open source, how can we make sure of that?

Thank you for other suggestions.

in reply to tatoko556

If you have to use Windows, there are at least two mandatory apps

github.com/hellzerg/optimizer

safing.io/

in reply to Zerush

Thanks you. Optimizer is great
This entry was edited (22 hours ago)
in reply to tatoko556

There are several apps to gut Windows, but the Optimizer is the most complete I know. The good thing of Windows is, that are tons of FOSS apps for it out there to show the middle finger to M$.