Hackernews posts about Secure Boot
- Keeping the Internet fast and secure: introducing Merkle Tree Certificates (blog.cloudflare.com)
- Keeping the Internet fast and secure: introducing Merkle Tree Certificates (blog.cloudflare.com)
- Show HN: I got tired of managing dev environments, so I built ServBay (www.servbay.com)
- Show HN: Tool for secure file sharing for your projects or personal use (simplelock-g8gpgcdtf5eda5h7.westeurope-01.azurewebsites.net)
- Show HN: Erdos – open-source, AI data science IDE (www.lotas.ai)
- Show HN: Compute CLI – A universal sandbox SDK with direct browser access (www.computesdk.com)
- Show HN: GuardianScan – Website audits for 2025 web standards (guardianscan.ai)
- Show HN: Auto-Compare GA4/Amplitude Data Against Log Definitions (chromewebstore.google.com)
- A cryptographically secure bootloader for RISC-V in Rust (www.codethink.co.uk)
- Secure Boot is broken on 200 models from 5 big device makers (arstechnica.com)
- Secure boot certificate rollover is real but probably won't hurt you (mjg59.dreamwidth.org)
- Secure Boot, TPM and Anti-Cheat Engines (andrewmoore.ca)
- Managing EFI boot loaders for Linux: Controlling secure boot (2015) (www.rodsbooks.com)
- UEFI shell vulnerabilities allow attackers to bypass Secure Boot (eclypsium.com)
- Secure Boot useless on PCs from major vendors after key leak (www.theregister.com)
- Gigabyte motherboards vulnerable to UEFI malware bypassing Secure Boot (www.bleepingcomputer.com)
- Microsoft patches Windows to eliminate Secure Boot bypass threat (arstechnica.com)
- Demicrosofted and simplified UEFI Secure Boot (RC1 demo) [video] (www.youtube.com)
- Compromising the Secure Boot Process (www.schneier.com)
- Secure Boot bypass risk threatens nearly 200K Linux Framework laptops (www.bleepingcomputer.com)
- ChatGPT modified BIOS dump to disable SecureBoot in locked-down device (www.tomshardware.com)
- Introducing HybridPetya: Petya/NotPetya copycat with UEFI Secure Boot bypass (www.welivesecurity.com)
- HybridPetya: More proof that Secure Boot bypasses are not just an urban legend (www.theregister.com)