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Credit Tom's Hardware
You may not have noticed (or gotten them yet), but Windows 11’s lock screen now carries small text ads that appear in the center of the screen and the upper left corner.
Right now, my ads are for running advertisements on Microsoft.com; I guess it thinks I’m a marketer. However, at other times and on other systems I’ve tested – including some new Copilot+ PCs – I’ve gotten promotions for playing Candy Crush Saga, a preloaded game.
There are a couple of ways to disable ads on the lock screen. First, the simplest is just to change some settings in the Personalization menu.
1. Navigate to Settings->Personalization->Lock Screen
2. Change Personalize your lock screen to something other than “Windows spotlight,” because Windows spotlight definitely has ads. I recommend “Picture” over “Slideshow.”
3. Uncheck “Get fun facts, tips, tricks and more…”
That should give you a static image as your lock screen background and avoid ads appearing on it. But why do you even need a lock screen at all? You can disable the lock screen and then, when your computer is locked, you’ll see the login screen that asks for your password (or PIN or face or thumbprint). The lock screen itself is unnecessary and just adds an extra click you have to make before getting to your password prompt.
Perhaps the most annoying thing Windows 11 has been doing lately is popping up dialog boxes saying “Let’s finish setting up your PC” so it can try to get me to sign up for more Microsoft services like Office 365 or Xbox Game Pass. Microsoft calls this the Second Chance Out of the Box Experience (SCOOBE). I call it “not taking no for an answer.”
SCOOBE pops up at the most annoying times, like when I boot up my PC in the morning and just want to get to work. I can ask it to “remind me later” but, like something out of a 1980s horror franchise, it will come back again sometime soon.
To stop SCOOBE for good:
1. Navigate to Settings->System->Notifications
2. Click Additional Settings
3. Uncheck “Suggest ways to get the most out of Windows and finish setting up this device.”
At first, it seems like a huge convenience. There’s a little weather widget sitting on the left side of your taskbar telling you what the temperature is and whether it’s raining or not. Who wouldn’t want to know what it’s like outside?
But the widget often changes to show distracting information you didn’t ask for: stock prices, information about traffic jams (why would it matter if I’m sitting at my desk), and the very distracting term “breaking news.”
And if you are tempted to hover your mouse pointer over it because you just saw “breaking news” and figure that a nuclear war broke out and you need to be informed, you will be treated to “the widget board,” a giant set of headlines that may involve emotionally-fraught topics such as politics, war, crime, or weird stuff like people claiming they’ve had near-death experiences. Whatever the case, the widget is a distraction. If you want news, you can always open your browser and point it to your favorite news site rather than letting Windows try to suck you into its news feed. All of the stories on the widget board are from MSN.com, so this is a pure play for page views and ad revenue on Microsoft’s part.
To hide widgets from your Taskbar:
1. Right-click on the taskbar and select Taskbar Settings or Navigate to Settings->Personalization->Taskbar.
2. Toggle Widgets to off.
One of my favorite features in Windows 11 and 10 is the search box that lives in the middle of the taskbar. I click there and use it to find my favorite programs and files with just a few keystrokes. But, by default, Windows 11 tries to distract me with “search highlights,” its set of promoted headlines, historical facts, and promotions for apps and games.
For example, as I was writing this, my Windows 11 showed a small icon in the search bar that was a picture of Rosalind Franklin, a famous scientist who helped make many advances in our understanding of DNA, coal, and viruses. When I clicked on the search box to begin looking for an app, I was treated to a giant set of tiles with links to stories on MSN about Rosalind Franklin’s birthday and her discoveries, followed by promotions for completely irrelevant apps such as Bubble Shooter and Cut the Rope.
Even if you care deeply about the birthdays of historical figures or learning more about whatever holiday it is today, these search highlights are a distraction that gets in the way of what the search box is supposed to do: direct you to a file or app.
To disable Search Highlights:
1. Click in the search box.
2. Select Search settings from the … menu.
3. Toggle “Show search highlights” to off.