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The Windows console tools (Plink, PSCP, and PSFTP) now send interactive prompts, and read the user's responses, directly from the console, if possible, rather than printing prompts to the (redirectable) standard output or error stream and reading from standard input. (If there's no console involved, they'll fall back to the old behaviour.)
This means that you can, for instance, provide input intended for an established Plink session from another process, while still being able to enter passwords, passphrases, and suchlike interactively during session setup. (Previously, any process trying to drive Plink would have had to contend with the prompts itself, or suppress them.)
This brings the Windows tools' behaviour into line with the Unix versions (which access /dev/tty directly in the analogous situation).
It also allows the tools to read usernames and passwords from the console as Unicode, so that you can enter a username that contains characters not in the system's default character set.
If this change causes a problem for you, you can get the old behaviour by adding the option -legacy-stdio-prompts to the command line.