The issue focused on Windows servers that Microsoft wants to serve websites over HTTPS. On Windows Server 2012 R2, Microsoft decided to restrict browsers from serving websites over HTTPS by default. But Microsoft says it will continue to allow websites to access websites over HTTPS if Microsoft receives significant requests for websites over HTTPS.

Even though Microsoft doesn't offer software updates that fix this security flaw in Windows 10, Microsoft engineers did recently update Windows Update and PC Settings to reflect the Windows 10 Windows Server 2016 desktop upgrade policies. Microsoft engineers say