On Jun 16, 2012, at 5:44 PM, Gregory Maxwell wrote:

> Or, perhaps, they would have found themselves behind the gun-sights of
> the DOJ again and dropped the whole thing in order to avoid years of
> costly antitrust litigation.  (Or do you think they would have backed
> off at all, just because someone asked, if they didn't think that risk
> was at least somewhat credible?)

Calls for speculation. We know what the certification policy used to be. We 
also know how long DOJ takes to do anything, let alone politicking behind the 
scenes to arrive at compromise, let alone its day in court. Years. Generations 
of computers without a disable feature.

No, but in the view of a handful, it's better for the entire community to 
experience this pain, for years, in order to arrive at some asinine conclusion 
that XXXXXX is the source of all evil in the computing world. Then all would be 
right as rain, unified tribal behavior against an enemy that some people 
thought could be negotiated with.

This handful are the people who use adversarial words like: fight, war, battle, 
attack, surrender, engagement, tactical, etc. to describe this topic. This 
verbiage is the hallmark of propaganda, designed to cause emotive reactions in 
people, so they don't consider inconvenient things like facts.

> 
> Certainly people who are of the opinion that Fedora shouldn't run on
> devices that need signed kernels aren't going to be convinced that
> gaining the ability to make that choice was a big improvement.

Oh, the same people who must think boot loader malware is somewhere in the 
continuum of people's imaginations to being exclusively a Windows threat.

The Windows 8 certification is the most significant change in Microsoft's 
hardware requirements ever, as far as I can tell. It's a significant departure 
from their "support legacy at most any cost" position prior to this. Clearly 
they are more than a bit concerned about boot loader malware than they are 
gaining, what, 1%, by obliterating the entirety of desktop Linux with this 
conspiracy.


Chris Murphy
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