How to Get Microsoft Extended Security Updates for Windows 10 for Free – A Video

By | October 12, 2025

 

How to Get Microsoft Extended Security Updates for Windows 10 For Free – A Video

How to Get Microsoft's Extended Security Updates for Windows 10 for Free - A Video - Cloudeight InfoAve

Suppose you are using Windows 10 and have not signed up for Microsoft’s Extended Security Updates. In that case, we have a special video available for you to watch that shows you how you might be able to get the updates for free.

There are only a couple of days left before Windows 10 reaches its end-of-support date. What’s going to happen to your Windows 10 PC after October 14, 2025, if you do nothing? Not much. When you wake up on October 15th and turn on your old Windows 10 PC, you won’t see any difference. It will look and work just like it did on October 13th.  It’s not going to stop working. But every day you use it without critical security patches that you’ve been getting from Microsoft during the supported life of Windows 10, you’ll be taking a risk. The more time that passes, the more vulnerable your Windows 10 computer will be. There is no good reason for you to take a chance. 

And there’s no reason you can’t use Windows 10 safely for another year (until October 13, 2026). It may not cost you anything.  Watch the video below by ThioJoe, and you’ll see how you can get Microsoft’s Extended Security Updates for free. Please note that Cloudeight is not responsible for the content of the video.

Don’t keep using Windows 10 past October 14, 2025, without security updates.

Don’t take the risk. You’ll be increasingly exposed to critical vulnerabilities, and it’s just not worth it. And now you know how you might be able to get Microsoft’s Extended Security Updates for free, why would you take a chance? And if you choose not to use the Microsoft ESU program, use 0patch. Don’t take chances running an unsupported operating system. With AI now in the hands of miscreants all over the globe, chances are excellent they’ll be quickly exploiting the vulnerabilities in machines running unpatched versions of Windows 10. And that could put you and your personal information at serious risk.

It seems to me that Microsoft didn’t think ESU through very well. They seemed to have rushed into it, leaving things unclear. Perhaps they thought they would scare everyone into buying a Windows 11 computer and get them truly locked into the Microsoft ecosystem, just as Apple has done for years. In Apple’s defense, they don’t seem to encourage users to junk their computers every few years. Do they? 

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