When installing and running the KB5018410 update, users might see OneDrive randomly close for no reason. If this happens, the file-sharing/cloud storage app will surface an error if the user attempts one of the following:
Sign out or unlink your account in the Microsoft OneDrive sync app. Unlink sites or folders from syncing to your device from Microsoft SharePoint or Microsoft Teams sites. Uninstalling the OneDrive sync app might fail.
Microsoft points out that this problem affects OneDrive for Business and the standard OneDrive client on Windows 10.
Widespread
In its confirmation and advisory, Microsoft says the problem affects all supported client versions of Windows 10. That means Windows 10 (22H2), Windows 10 (21H2), Windows 10 (21H1), and Windows 10 (20H2). There is currently no fix available and no workaround: “Next steps: We are working on a resolution and estimate a solution will be available in the coming week.” So, the best option for users who access OneDrive on Windows 10 is to avoid installing the Patch Tuesday update. This is the second major incident caused by October Patch Tuesday. This week, Microsoft sent out KB5018496 to fix a Windows 11 2022 Update patch regarding an issue with SSL/TLS handshakes. The update that caused the issues was a Windows security update that landed on October 11 alongside the overall Patch Tuesday releases. It resulted in affected Windows 11 2022 Update devices seeing the error SEC_E_ILLEGAL_MESSAGE within apps that are connected to servers. Tip of the day: Windows now has a package manager similar to Linux called “Winget”. In our tutorial, we show you how to install and use this new tool that allows the quick installation of apps via PowerShell or a GUI.