Mihai,

Do you want to protest companies by not buying their equipment?  That is the 
only feasible outcome from this conversation.

The other outcome would be you want advice on what models will work on OpenBSD.

-Brian

> On Jul 3, 2019, at 12:11 PM, Zack Lofgren <z...@zlofgren.com> wrote:
> 
> Mihai,
> 
> It depends on your threat model. You can’t absolutely trust any hardware 
> because of low level firmware. However, that doesn’t matter if your threat 
> model is low enough then that doesn’t matter. Are you an enemy of the state? 
> If so, you probably shouldn’t trust any technology. If you’re just an average 
> person, then using free software is probably enough with good practices like 
> encryption is enough.
> 
> Right now, I use an old Thinkpad with OpenBSD and full disk encryption 
> because it fits what I want. I have proprietary firmware for wireless because 
> I care more about it working than distrusting it for now. If I had a higher 
> threat level, I’d use an even older Thinkpad with coreboot/libreboot (not 
> sure if OpenBSD is compatible) and a different wireless NIC.
> 
> Zack Lofgren
> 
>> On Jul 3, 2019, at 09:48, Mihai Popescu <mih...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> 
>> ...
>> 
>> I asked for an answer more like "avoid using nVidia chipsets", not for 
>> theories.
>> So, again, do you consider brands when choosing hardware, like Dell
>> vs. Lenovo, etc. ?
>> 
>> Thank you.
>> 
> 

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