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getcrunk | 1 month ago
this basically will remove or significantly encumber user control over their system, such that any modification will make you loose your "signed" status and ... boom! goodbye accessing the internet without an id
pottering recently works for Microsoft, they want to turn linux into an appliance just like windows, no longer a general purpose os. the transition is still far from over on windows, but look at android and how the google play services dependency/choke-hold is
im sure ill get many down votes, but despite some hyperbole this is the trajectory
tocariimaa|1 month ago
mariusor|1 month ago
The plan is probably to have that as an alternative for the niche uses where that is appropriate.
This majority of this thread seems to have slid on that slippery slope, and jumped directly to the conclusion where the attestation mechanism will be mandatory on all linux machines in the world and you won't be able to run anything without. Which even if it would be a purpose for amutable as a company, it's unfeasible to do when there's such a breadth of distributions and non corpo affiliated developers out there that would need to cooperate for that to happen.
4gotunameagain|1 month ago
Eventually you will not be able to block ads.
jcgl|1 month ago
I do agree that these technologies can be abused. But system integrity is also a prerequisite for security; it's not like this is like Digital "Rights" Management, where it's unequivocally a bad thing that only advances evil interests. Like, Widevine should never have been made a thing in Firefox imo.
So I think what's most productive here is to build immutable, signable systems that can preserve user freedom, and then use social and political means to further guarantee those freedoms. For instance a requirement that owning a device means being able to provision your own keys. Bans on certain attestation schemes. Etc. (I empathize with anyone who would be cynical about those particular possibilities though.)
[0] https://0pointer.net/blog/fitting-everything-together.html
[1] https://github.com/systemd/particleos
dust42|1 month ago
But then Linux wouldn't be where it is without the business side paying for the developers. There is no such thing as a free lunch...
TacticalCoder|1 month ago
Yeah. I'm pretty sure it requires a very specific psychological profile to decide to work on such a user-hostile project while post-fact rationalizing that it's "for good".
All I can say is I'm not surprised that Poettering is involved in such a user-hostile attack on free computing.
P.S: I don't care about the downvotes, you shouldn't either.
noisy_boy|1 month ago
P.S: Upvoted you. I don't care about downvotes either.