Comment by nullpoint420 1 month ago Unless it becomes a law, and the hardware makers adapt. 3 comments nullpoint420 Reply palata 1 month ago My Google Pixel allows adding custom keys, which GrapheneOS uses. So I guess that's technically feasible? nullpoint420 24 days ago That adds your custom keys to the fastboot bootloader, not the boot ROM. This means you'd still have to chain your boot through fastboot.You couldn't boot straight from boot ROM -> UEFI for instance. palata 24 days ago Interesting! What's the consequence of that? Like is that a problem?
palata 1 month ago My Google Pixel allows adding custom keys, which GrapheneOS uses. So I guess that's technically feasible? nullpoint420 24 days ago That adds your custom keys to the fastboot bootloader, not the boot ROM. This means you'd still have to chain your boot through fastboot.You couldn't boot straight from boot ROM -> UEFI for instance. palata 24 days ago Interesting! What's the consequence of that? Like is that a problem?
nullpoint420 24 days ago That adds your custom keys to the fastboot bootloader, not the boot ROM. This means you'd still have to chain your boot through fastboot.You couldn't boot straight from boot ROM -> UEFI for instance. palata 24 days ago Interesting! What's the consequence of that? Like is that a problem?
My Google Pixel allows adding custom keys, which GrapheneOS uses. So I guess that's technically feasible?
That adds your custom keys to the fastboot bootloader, not the boot ROM. This means you'd still have to chain your boot through fastboot.
You couldn't boot straight from boot ROM -> UEFI for instance.
Interesting! What's the consequence of that? Like is that a problem?