Note: Microsoft today also released Windows 10 version 1909 and both versions 1903 and 1909 will get the same cumulative updates moving forward.
KB4524570 for Windows 10 1903 and 1909
Today’s update will bump your Windows 10 1903 build to 18362.476 and version 1909 to 18363.476 and it includes the following fixes and improvements:
Addresses an issue in the Keyboard Lockdown Subsystem that might not filter key input correctly.Provides protections against the Intel® Processor Machine Check Error vulnerability (CVE-2018-12207). Use the registry setting as described in the Guidance KB article. (This registry setting is disabled by default.)Provides protections against the Intel® Transactional Synchronization Extensions (Intel® TSX) Transaction Asynchronous Abort vulnerability (CVE-2019-11135). Use the registry settings as described in the Windows Client and Windows Server articles. (These registry settings are enabled by default for Windows Client OS editions and Windows Server OS editions.)Security updates to Microsoft Scripting Engine, Internet Explorer, Windows App Platform and Frameworks, Microsoft Edge, Windows Fundamentals, Windows Cryptography, Windows Virtualization, Windows Linux, Windows Kernel, Windows Datacenter Networking, and the Microsoft JET Database Engine.
If you have automatic updates enabled, you should see the updates in the next couple of days. Or, if you can stay on top of things by heading to Settings > Update & Security > Microsoft Update to check. Or, you can manually install it by downloading it from the Microsoft Update Catalog. Remember, a full system restart is required to complete the installation process. Older supported versions of Windows 10 are receiving patches today, too. There are also a few known issues with these updates which vary depending on the version of Windows 10 you’re running. Make sure to read the Windows 10 Update History page for your version’s release notes. If you have any issues with your system after the update that isn’t resolved by Microsoft’s documented workarounds, you can roll them back. For more on how to do that, read our article: How to Uninstall Windows 10 Cumulative Update.