Without further ado, let’s see what new fixes and improvements there updates bring to the table.

Windows 10 KB4343897 changelog

Provides protections against a new speculative execution side-channel vulnerability known as L1 Terminal Fault (L1TF) that affects Intel Core processors and Intel Xeon processors. Addresses an issue that causes high CPU usage that results in performance degradation on some systems with Family 15h and 16h AMD processors. Addresses an issue that causes Device Guard to block some ieframe.dll class IDs after the May 2018 Cumulative Update is installed. Ensures that Internet Explorer and Microsoft Edge support the preload=”none” tag. Addresses an issue that adds additional spaces to content that’s copied from Internet Explorer to other apps. Addresses the issue where applications that rely on COM components were failing to load or run correctly because of “access denied,” “class not registered,” or “internal failure occurred for unknown reasons” errors.

For more information about the complete changelog, go to Microsoft’ support page.

Windows 10 KB4343885 changelog

Apart from the fixes and improvements listed above, KB4343885 addresses an issue that causes Internet Explorer to stop working for certain websites.

Windows 10 KB4343887 changelog

As far as KB4343887 is concerned, this patch packs all the bug fixes and system improvements brought by the two updates listed above. At the time of writing, users haven’t reported any issues after installing these updates. If you encountered any bugs, let us know in the comments below.

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