The support page for an affected version of Windows 10 outlines the symptoms of the issue:
A small number of devices that have installed this update have reported that when running chkdsk /f, their file system might get damaged and the device might not boot.
The same page also outlines how the issue has been addressed:
This issue is resolved and should now be prevented automatically on non-managed devices. Please note that it can take up to 24 hours for the resolution to propagate to non-managed devices. Restarting your device might help the resolution apply to your device faster. For enterprise-managed devices that have installed this update and encountered this issue, it can be resolved by installing and configuring a special Group Policy. To find out more about using Group Policies, see Group Policy Overview.
we want to know whether this is directly pegged to the recession, so we turned to our fact check desk and executive producer suzanne simons. there she is. okay, lady, what are you finding? that s what we wanted to know. most financiing is providing at the state and local levels. 80% of school revenues come from property taxes. now, of course, property taxes are way down. oh, yeah. since the recession hit. a survey by this same group found that 6% of school districts either closed or consolidated their operations during the 2008-2009 school year with another 11% projected either to close or consolidate during this upcoming school year. so, of course, stimulus money was kind of thrown out there. yes. as one measure to kind of help prevent the school closings and it has helped somewhat, although a lot of the school districts facing these budget cuts and the options of possibly having to close the schools are
statistic to make the case. what we re hearing from people across america is that even people who have insurance are terrified about what s going on in the marketplace. they re opening their statements, they re seeing these incredible rate increases if they re not protected by a large employer. it s going on across the country. we just got a goldman sachs analyst who said that the market competition is decreasing in this country, that in the individual market, in the small group market where small employers are absolutely caught, they have no choice and they are getting increasingly frustrated. so i think we know what doing nothing looks like, and it looks pretty scary. 15,000 people a day lose their insurance. and some of those folks are being actually priced out of the marketplace. well, a lot to chew on there. we could spend some time on this, right? yeah. 15,000 people a day, though. suzanne is with our fact check desk.
she s been looking at these numbers. what about that claim. 15,000 people a day being dropped from insurance. lose their insurance every day. we wanted to know where that figure came from. so the fact check desk you ve got to go slow. try to roll that off quickly, you hurt yourself. we did a little digging. here s what we found. it looks like that figure was drawing on figures from the liberal center on progress that dated back from february of 2009. jobless numbers from grown from february 2008 to february 2009 to the tune of about estimates were that about 900,000 of those 1.1 million had lost their health care coverage. which if you do the math turns out to be about 14,000 a day. jump to today and more recent figures and we see that the jobless rate is higher, actually. 9.7%. but the economic stimulus bill provided for more cobra coverage. that s the government subsidized gap. they help you pay your insurance
know, just under $6,000. it comes in right in the middle. you look at wyoming, $3,700 a year. it s still, even with these tuition increases, not such a bad deal. so our bottom line from the fact check desk, still a pretty good deal but that cost advantage is really sort of eroding, obviously, with all of these hikes and the budget problems that california is facing. it s not destined to get better any time soon. and it s a sudden hike too, especially as parents and young people are preparing for one set of fees and when they find out, oh, wait a minute, in a few more months it s going to actually be much higher, that blow hurts. it does. but the big debate too is they re going to offset a lot of these increases for families that make less than $70,000 a year so they ll have more scholarships, more financial aid for the poorer families, but the families who are better off are obviously going to be paying a big chunk extra. folks always have a whole lot of questions after you get o