On Jun 18, 2012, at 10:05 AM, Matthew Garrett wrote:

> 2) Government. If a large enough set of national governments required 
> that secure boot be disabled by default then we could assume that 
> arbitrary hardware would work out of the box. It's unclear to me which 
> laws you think the vendors would be breaking, but I'm not a lawyer.

In the current U.S. (and likely EU as well) political climate, i.e. extreme 
ignorance of computing, fear of real and imaginary infrastructure 
vulnerabilities, and desire to make out with all things with the word security, 
there is in my estimation no chance Secure Boot nor the Windows 8 hardware 
requirements will be perceived as being anti-competitive.

It would be easier to find government money to retrofit older hardware with 
UEFI Secure Boot capability than to find the money to even explore the 
possibility of Microsoft (or vendor) anti-competitive behavior, in this context.

Chris Murphy
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