It makes no difference what you want Windows to do, Windows will do what it wants to do. There has been a lot of talk about what Windows is sending back to the mother ship at Redmond. A recent traffic analysis of the Enterprise version of Windows 10 shows that it is sending an awful lot back, regardless of what you tell it. A user set up his firewall to capture everything sent out, after setting up just Windows
Enterprise 10 and nothing else, as well as turning off everything that was available. His firewall captured Windows making around 4,000 connection attempts to 93 different IP addresses during an 8 hour period, with most of those IPs controlled by Microsoft.
The reason this is important is that it was the
Enterprise version, where the user (typically a company) is supposed to be able to have complete control of their system. From a business standpoint, stability and security is important, and in some companies is it legally required (think healthcare and HIPAA in the US). If the
Enterprise version is doing this, can you imagine what the
Home and
Pro versions are doing? That is why I disconnected my Windows machine from the 'net once it was set up. I use Linux Mint to interface with the web now. It has become my main workhorse.
The posting on the network telemetry analysis can be found at
https://voat.co/v/technology/comments/835741. There is some good comments as well as Slashdot at
http://tech.slashdot.org/story/16/02/06/1550249/even-with-telemetry-disabled-windows-10-talks-to-dozens-of-microsoft-servers#comments Something to think about.