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Comment by TommyTran732

7 hours ago

It's basically taking the blobs that would be normally shipped with the OS in a sensible manner, shuffle it around, then calling it "free" while the same blobs would still be there, just on different flash storage chips.

> https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47943487

  • Because it's true, and I know what he said, I am not confused at all. Did you not read anything at all?

    On the Librem laptop, the tampering is done by PureBoot and inject into /run/firmware. The other user was linking the stuff with the laptop.

    *On a Librem 5, it is stored on a separate chip, then they read it with the initramfs, then mount it on top of the regular filesystem at /lib/firmware*.

    Like I said, it's just shuffling stuff around.

    Here is the actual code, if you care enough to read it: https://source.puri.sm/Librem5/librem5-fw-jail/-/blob/pureos...

    If you can't read code, here is the marketing material: https://puri.sm/posts/shipping-new-sparklan-wifi-cards-with-...

    If you don't know that the firmware for components/peripherals can either be uploaded to them by Linux or just stored on some flash chip on the component, read: https://www.chromium.org/chromium-os/developer-library/refer...

    • I'm tired of arguing with you. I see no effort from your side to come to some understanding or to clarify anything. Here's why.

      > On the Librem laptop, the tampering is done by PureBoot

      What do you mean by "tampering" here? Is uploading firmware to peripherals a "tampering"? Why is this a problem, compared with other devices? Does anybof those blobs run on the CPU? I don't understand what you are trying to say.

      > If you don't know that the firmware for components/peripherals can either be

      I do know. How is this relevant? I never denied that the device does have some proprietary blobs.