On 9/22/2011 4:51 PM, ved...@nym.hush.com wrote: > I know only very limited stuff about this, but I thought that this > was mainly to check that copies of windows were 'non-pirated', and > has come under some criticism that they might be able to exclude some > from running linux OS's ...
That's kind of like thinking that integrated circuits exist to run Windows. Windows is just one particular thing you can do with ICs, the same way that preventing end-users from installing their own operating systems is one particular thing you can do with UEFI. EFI was first developed by Intel for the Itanium processor/motherboards. Itanium was Intel's attempt at a clean break with the past, and not just in terms of architecture but in terms of the boot process. It was discovered EFI could be very useful for non-Itanium systems, and so the UEFI standard came about -- "Unified" EFI, which was able to support a large variety of systems. > My concern is, how vulnerable ... is it to run gnupg from a usb and > an Ubuntu install disk, when booting bypasses the harddrive's mbr > altogether, even considering known bios rootkit infections? This one's impossible to answer. Are you in an environment where BIOS rootkits are common? How do you know your answer to that question is correct? Etc., etc. _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users