

While there are workarounds and mitigations for this problem, Microsoft is working on a permanent solution. After an update or the repair has been tried, the bug may prevent impacted apps from the opening. Last Monday, Microsoft admitted an issue with the Windows Installer. Which means in this case two reboots are needed.1) The bug that prevents apps from opening after an attempted repair or update has been fixed in Windows 11 build 22000.348.Ģ) The build is available in the Release Preview and Beta Channels for Windows Insiders.ģ) Some Kaspersky applications are affected, and other applications on Windows 11 and Windows 10 may be affected as well. AES Encryption Module (256 bit) can not be updated until Kaspersky Endpoint Security 10 Service Pack 1 Maintenance Release 2 for Windows (version 10.2.4.674) is updated.AES Encryption Module (56 bit) can be updated at the same time as Kaspersky Endpoint Security 10 Service Pack 1 Maintenance Release 2 for Windows (version 10.2.4.674), with only one reboot required.To complete updates of the Encryption module, reboot your PC.Otherwise the update will not be installed. Before running the update, confirm your acceptance of the terms of the End User License Agreement.The module will not be updated if there are hard drives encrypted using full drive encryption systems (FDE). Decrypt all the hard drives before the update.Rollback to the previous version of the Encryption module is impossible after it is updated to version 1.1.0.73.Pay attention to the special features of the Encryption module update process: installed, you can update AES Encryption module to version 1.1.0.73 via Kaspersky Lab update service.īeta-versions of AES Encryption module can not be updated to 1.1.0.73. If you have Kaspersky Endpoint Security 10 Service Pack 1 for Windows and AES Encryption module version 1.
