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Secure Boot is completely broken on 200+ models from 5 big device makers
(arstechnica.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
I think Secure boot is intended to check that the boot loader itself is signed.
This is a way to mitigate viruses and malware that infects the boot loader so it can reinstall itself if it’s removed by AV, or something else.
If you can create a boot loader that is signed in such a way that secure boot can’t tell it’s invalid then you can do some nasty stuff.
Closest analogy I can think of is verisigns private key being leaked and there’s no fast and easy way to revoke and replace it without wreaking havoc on currently installed OS’s machines.