I think this page speaks to the issue:

http://www.mail-archive.com/ibm-acpi-
de...@lists.sourceforge.net/msg01713.html

It seems that enabling and disabling the "hotkey" functionality is no
longer supported, and the functionality is always on. The new behavior
is to log a warning if this attempted, I suppose so that other software
authors might notice this and change their code. From the end user's
perspective there doesn't appear to be a real problem, except that we
regularly get scary messages telling us that there's a serious kernel
problem.

I see a few different ways to address this:

1. The kernel developers could downgrade the kind of warning emitted so that it 
is still logged, but does not trigger this tool. 
2. All the software in Ubuntu that still enables or disables "hotkeys" could be 
hunted down and changed to quit doing this. 
3. The tool that monitors kernel errors could be adjusted so that it quits 
flagging this as a critical issue. 

Option 2 does not seem practical as a fix before Karmic is released, but
"1" or "3" might be able to be accomplished soon. I'll bring this bug
report to the attention of the kernel developers who made the patch
which triggered the issue.

-- 
thinkpad_acpi: WARNING: sysfs attribute hotkey_enable is deprecated and will be 
removed. Hotkey reporting is always enabled
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/430361
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