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Secure Boot is an important security feature that most modern computers have, for our own good. It was developed by the UEFI Consortium, which includes many of the biggest PC technology companies ...
And as already mentioned, Secure Boot is already vulnerable to other bypass techniques. That doesn’t mean there’s no reason to take this vulnerability seriously.
Even though Secure Boot was thought to protect systems from bootkits, attackers found a way around it with the vulnerability CVE-2022-21894.
Secure boot and TPM 2.0 both enabled. Should be an option to load the keys for things like the video card and other onboard devices in the same general area as the enable secure boot option.
The Secure Boot credential leak arrives after Apple’s conflict with the FBI over the iPhone 5c used by one of the San Bernardino shooters in December of 2015.
Secure Boot is a mandatory hardware feature for Windows 10-certified PCs, and PC manufacturers don’t have to include the signing key Microsoft provides for Linux distributions.
The Secure Boot setting is located in the UEFI menu which you can launch when the computer starts. Getting to the UEFI is the hardest part of the process, though, and varies from computer to computer.
The Secure Boot vulnerability only proves the point. "I don’t want to diminish any security concerns, but the bigger reason to talk about this is the symbolic issue," says Jeremy Gillulao of the ...
More fun with Windows 8 UEFI, Secure Boot, Fedora and Ubuntu I've been trying to set up multi-booting with Windows 8 and Linux - with limited success. Here's what I've learned so far.
CVE-2020-10713, dubbed BootHole, has a high CVSS rating of 8.2 and sits in the default GRand Unified Bootloader 2 (GRUB2) but affects systems running Secure Boot even if they are not using GRUB2.
Secure Boot 101 First, let’s back up a little bit and look at Secure Boot and how it functioned in Windows 8. When you boot a new Windows 8 PC, the Secure Boot feature in the UEFI firmware ...
Many Linux lovers are worried that Microsoft's new Secure Boot technology will make it more difficult to get the open source operating system onto machines that originally ship with Windows 8. But ...