Trump has been trying to exploit the natural disaster for political gain[.]
Can’t say I’m surprised. Seems to be expected.
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Trump has been trying to exploit the natural disaster for political gain[.]
Can’t say I’m surprised. Seems to be expected.
I relate to your Windows comment. There was a point where I was that person with a bunch of different tools to modify my OS exactly how I like it, and then I realize I’m just doing more work. If I’m willing to do that work anyway, I might as well have an OS that is more malleable.
For those who may not want to click the link, this appears to show a workaround that enterprises might use to bypass the change.
Ah so now they’re a poor steward of my data as well as my money?
On the contrary, I’ll be able to catch the trains with my bear hands.
Excellent! More teeth for the teeth cup.
I wish this was a thing when I was writing application essays. They’re a great example of virtually meaningless content that needs to fit a certain shape.
LLMs are great at generating exactly this type of garbage.
It’s a shame that stupid people are so easily manipulated. We shouldn’t be so permissive and accepting of blatant lies.
One should not be able to waive one’s rights.
Like I needed another reason with this guy.
It’s astounding how one person manages to be so deeply unlikable.
Can we please stop with the privitization? It’s absolutely not been working out very well for the people.
You’d think at some point they would learn their lesson but they seem to love footing the bill.
I thought I was told just a year or two ago it was supposed to be the future of manufacturing.
It is highly unlikely that you have malware sophisticated enough to do something like compromise installation media (already exceedingly rare) yet not sophisticated enough to bypass secure boot.
The purpose of secure boot is to verify that the boot loader and kernel are approved by the manufacturer (or friends of such). There are certainly ways to inject software into a system that doesn’t reside in those locations. It just makes boot sector viruses and kernel mode rootkits slightly more technically challenging to write when you can’t simply modify those parts of the operating system directly. If malware gets root on your installation it’s game over whether or not you have secure boot enabled. Much of the software on a computer is none of those things protected by secure boot.
Plus, take another wager: most systems today ship with secure boot enabled. If you were a malware author, would you still be writing malware that needs secure boot turned off to run? Of course not! You would focus on the most common system you can to maximize impact. Thus, boot sector viruses are mostly lost to time. Malware authors moved on.
Overall, it’s a pretty inconsequential feature born of good intentions but practically speaking malware still exists in spite of it. It’s unlikely to matter to any malware you would find in the wild today. Secure boot keys get leaked. You can still get malware in your applications. Some malware even brings its own vulnerable drivers to punch into the kernel anyway and laugh in the face of your secure boot mitigation. The only thing secure boot can actually do when it works is to ensure that on the disk the boot loader and kernel look legit. I guess it kind of helps in theory.
I was hoping for FreeBSD.
Polling? I don’t even know what that word means. I only know Vote!
That’s a tough nut to crack. Even as a video game platform, they don’t write most of the software that they sell today. They would need to find some way to convince developers to write software for something that’s not the platform nearly all users are running.
I’m not sure that Microsoft ever did halt going down that path. My wife recently bought a PC that came locked down by default and required some fiddling to allow running unsigned apps. This was Windows 10, not sure about 11.
I think it could be more that broad compatibility with everything is their main selling point, and by doing so they were undermining their own ecosystem.
However, this is mere speculation on my part.
Valve is a Titan doing incredible work for the open source community and making money while doing so.
Successful open source software business model at work. Way to go.
It looks like it’s the same flag to me. I mean, it’s entirely possible that administration could use a different path to applying the setting, but it has the same name.