F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems It's common for these two services to have microphone access.

It's common for these two services to have microphone access.

It's common for these two services to have microphone access.

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victordub44
Member
216
10-15-2016, 09:23 PM
#1
I purchased a microphone and during testing I noticed the following in Settings -->Privacy-->Microphone. Two services showed up: Host Process for Windows Services and Windows host process. Are these typical? Does this relate to Windows telemetry?
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victordub44
10-15-2016, 09:23 PM #1

I purchased a microphone and during testing I noticed the following in Settings -->Privacy-->Microphone. Two services showed up: Host Process for Windows Services and Windows host process. Are these typical? Does this relate to Windows telemetry?

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SavageCoder
Junior Member
7
10-23-2016, 05:22 PM
#2
Monitoring is now common everywhere. I disable it whenever possible, though it lacks reliability. I prefer connecting a microphone only when needed, and once connected, I treat everything nearby as public.
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SavageCoder
10-23-2016, 05:22 PM #2

Monitoring is now common everywhere. I disable it whenever possible, though it lacks reliability. I prefer connecting a microphone only when needed, and once connected, I treat everything nearby as public.

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liormori10
Junior Member
40
11-08-2016, 03:56 PM
#3
Some programs rely on a 'Windows workaround method' to get microphone access, which can affect accuracy. Disable this approach and investigate who or what was trying to use the microphone, as it won't function properly afterward.
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liormori10
11-08-2016, 03:56 PM #3

Some programs rely on a 'Windows workaround method' to get microphone access, which can affect accuracy. Disable this approach and investigate who or what was trying to use the microphone, as it won't function properly afterward.

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Sokil
Member
65
11-10-2016, 04:24 AM
#4
Windows host process refers to the Legacy Sound Panel. When you open it and navigate to the Record tab, it becomes active. Regarding "Host Process for Windows Services," it can mean anything. A Win32 app might directly access the microphone and appear in its own list, or it could follow the old Windows service method. In my experience, it was the audio driver control panel that I removed.
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Sokil
11-10-2016, 04:24 AM #4

Windows host process refers to the Legacy Sound Panel. When you open it and navigate to the Record tab, it becomes active. Regarding "Host Process for Windows Services," it can mean anything. A Win32 app might directly access the microphone and appear in its own list, or it could follow the old Windows service method. In my experience, it was the audio driver control panel that I removed.