All Windows 10 Kernel Mode Drivers Must Be Digitally Signed By Microsoft (i-programmer.info)
"Last year, we announced that beginning with the release of Windows 10, all new Windows 10 kernel mode drivers must be submitted to the Windows Hardware Developer Center Dashboard portal to be digitally signed by Microsoft," reads a MSDN blog post. "However, due to technical and ecosystem readiness issues, this was not enforced by Windows Code Integrity and remained only a policy statement. Starting with new installations of Windows 10, version 1607, the previously defined driver signing rules will be enforced by the Operating System, and Windows 10, version 1607 will not load any new kernel mode drivers which are not signed by the Dev Portal."
Slashdot reader mikejuk quotes a report from i-programmer.info which argues "the control of what software users can run on their machines is becoming ever tighter," and compares Microsoft's proposal to an XKCD cartoon: Before you start to panic about backward compatibility with existing drivers the lockdown is only going to be enforced on new installations of Windows 10. If you simply upgrade an existing system then the OS will take over the drivers that are already installed... Only new installations, i.e. installing all drivers from scratch, will enforce the new rules from Windows 10 version 1607... Be warned, if you need to do a fresh install of Windows 10 in the future you might find that your existing drivers are rejected.
Slashdot reader mikejuk quotes a report from i-programmer.info which argues "the control of what software users can run on their machines is becoming ever tighter," and compares Microsoft's proposal to an XKCD cartoon: Before you start to panic about backward compatibility with existing drivers the lockdown is only going to be enforced on new installations of Windows 10. If you simply upgrade an existing system then the OS will take over the drivers that are already installed... Only new installations, i.e. installing all drivers from scratch, will enforce the new rules from Windows 10 version 1607... Be warned, if you need to do a fresh install of Windows 10 in the future you might find that your existing drivers are rejected.
You cannot imagine how excited I am to be submitting my drivers to the Windows Hardware Developer Center Dashboard portal. Talk about boner killer.
Also, Submitting drivers to the Dev center now requires EV CODE SIGNING CERTIFICATE.
Even though Microsoft will sign the final result, you have to have an EV CERT from a small list of approved CAs to
sign your code before their portal will sign it per the new policy.
In case you have not noticed, the cheapest of the EV Certs is $1000 a Year; Only organizations can obtain these certificates, not individual developers.
Also, all EV Code signing certs require Smartcard/Token-Based Storage of your certificate's private key to ensure credentials cannot be shared, and you cannot automate the digital signing process.
Thus is a move to make sure Open Source software developers and individuals cannot produce Kernel mode drivers.
I'm using windows 10 and I cannot figure out how to change a user's password.
The Anonymous Cowards who responded to you have given you the correct answers. It should be noted that the method for administering other local accounts has not changed since Windows 2000. You still use Control Panel->User Accounts as you did back then, although the method of getting to the control panel has changed over time. In Windows 10 you right click on the start button and choose it from the pop up menu.
The command line version of "net user username NewPassword" has not changed at all since Windows NT 4.0 (19 years ago). Of course, if you are not used to Windows then it is quite reasonable that you wouldn't know the command to use, any more than a Windows admin would magically know to misspell the word password on Linux.
There is no need for hacks. There are two driver-free options available, with cross-OS compatibility.
You can use HID for low speed stuff. Max transfer rate is 64KB/sec, but that's plenty for many applications like sensors and (surprise surprise) human interfaces. If you want more you can use a custom WinUSB interface. All you have to do is add a couple of extra descriptors to your device that tell Windows to attach the WinUSB driver (and optionally what friendly name/icon to use). You can use any endpoint type with it, even composite devices. Naturally Linux just ignores these headers and you can talk to the device by the usual methods (e.g. libusb).
Abusing communication classes (CDC) doesn't work very well on Windows any more. As of Windows 10 you can't just supply a .inf file pointing to usbser.sys, it needs to be signed. You can get free signing keys (and they will still work even after this update, it only applies to code running in the kernel which in this case is usbser.sys which is signed by MS) but you still have to deal with the bugs in Microsoft's implementation.
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC