To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
All the Windows 8 certified systems (including cheap ones) that I've looked at implement key management, either through an explicit UI or via returning the system to Setup Mode. You're the one claiming that the majority of manufacturers will ignore this requirement. If so, you should be able to buy pretty much any cheap Windows 8 certified motherboard and prove that it doesn't have this functionality. How about this: pick a random Windows 8 certified board off Newegg and link it here. Buy it and test it. If there's no way to install your own keys, I'll pay for it.
Heh. Let's put it this way, if there was any confidence in this then Linux distributions wouldn't be getting themselves key-signed by Microsoft, would they?
You will be reporting the demise of pretty much all key management on all but high-end systems on your blog in future and I will happily be around to point you back to this........ I haven't heard anything from you about how Microsoft is going to enforce this. Motherboards will have Microsoft's key and that's all that matters.
The only reason Secure Boot can be disabled is because of the massive amount of bootable software users and companies use and still need to use on their hardware - namely previous versions of Windows, imaging software and VMware - which will be dropped off the face of the map at a later date.
Chromebooks implement Secure Boot in the way that they do because it's more difficult to differentiate a legitimate user who has physical access and someone more malicious. I can understand it because of their function, but I hope Google will find a way to do it in future. Secure Boot on PCs will marginalise software you can boot and make hardware ridiculously expensive.
You also sail right over Windows on ARM which is a platform that has no such legacy problems for Microsoft and where you get absolutely no quarter given whatsoever. That's where we will end up.
Edited 2013-02-05 22:18 UTC





Member since:
2005-07-06
Since you made the assertion that this is somehow enforced by Microsoft then I suggest that you do it sweetheart. I'm afraid you don't get out of it like that. As you should well know motherboard manufacturers have done, do and will do the absolute bare minimum and less to cut costs. They are not going to implement a modifiable key system that virtually none of their users use.....and you think Microsoft will complain about that?
I'm sorry Garrett, but I'm smelling you out as a sell-out as Sam Varghese has already done.
Edited 2013-02-05 21:48 UTC