Braydon Fuller @Braydon Fuller - 18d
It's important to support hardware that supports software freedom and security. UEFI secure "restricted" boot, from 2011, was one of the first potential issues, certainly not the last. nostr:nevent1qqsx7pmgr2lc76rens4gnpq24489a7ckpw6nrmtv3tdmjsy004kwercpzemhxue69uhkummnw3ex2mrfw3jhxtn0wfnj7q3q235tem4hfn34edqh8hxfja9amty73998f0eagnuu4zm423s9e8ksxpqqqqqqzcxu5a2
I haven't looked into the issue in depth. There are many great engineers working on both, however something feels misguided or confused. It's great to see more support for different distributions and implementations. From my work on a Bitcoin implementation, we discovered multiple security vulnerabilities in the process, of which we collaborated with Core to resolve. 😄