On 23/03/2018, Thierry Laurion <[email protected]> wrote: > If ... ME is disabled with its modules erased, could > the maker pursue the seller for having made those modifications?
Interesting question. ThinkPenguin seems to be willing to take that risk, but hedges it by voiding the warranty: "Backdoors in modern computing devices are unfortunately a certainty today and while we can't be sure of a fix here it is possible to partially disable one component believed to be a problem. This option does have side-effects and will void any return." [1] (AFAICT, that laptop has the ME "disabled" if the buyer wishes, but it does not ship with Coreboot or Libreboot.) [1] https://www.thinkpenguin.com/gnu-linux/penguin-z-gnulinux-laptop -- coreboot mailing list: [email protected] https://mail.coreboot.org/mailman/listinfo/coreboot

