On Sun, Oct 23, 2011 at 01:11:01PM +0200, Ori Idan wrote: > Unfortunately this is not FUD at all, it was reported by a Red-Hat employee > and was not denied by Microsoft. > > See: > http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/09/21/secure_boot_firmware_linux_exclusion_fears/
The said RedHat employee is Matthew Garret. Here is the latest from him about the issue: http://mjg59.dreamwidth.org/6503.html Specifically while the UEFI secure boot specification allows the option of accepting custom boot loader at startup (prompting the user to authorize it), Microsoft's requirements for Windows 8 compatibility forbid this. There are some reasonable technical reasons for not allowing this (it is indeed not unlike the prompt for a self-signed SSL certificate in a web browser). But then if we follow this analogy, we'll be left in a world where Microsoft practically signs all certificates. If this would happen on the web, it would be a bad thing as well. (I suggest you actually read those links and don't comment only based on my over-simplistic message) BTW: I believe ChromeOS relies on a similar "secure boot" mechanism, though those devices are supposed to have a switch (BIOS setting or whatever) to switch to an "insecure mode". -- Tzafrir Cohen | tzaf...@jabber.org | VIM is http://tzafrir.org.il | | a Mutt's tzaf...@cohens.org.il | | best tzaf...@debian.org | | friend _______________________________________________ Linux-il mailing list Linux-il@cs.huji.ac.il http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il