Slashdot Mirror


Microsoft Releases Standards For Highly Secure Windows 10 Devices (bleepingcomputer.com)

An anonymous reader writes from a report via BleepingComputer: Yesterday, Microsoft released new standards that consumers should follow in order to have a highly secure Windows 10 device. These standards include the type of hardware that should be included with Windows 10 systems and the minimum firmware features. The hardware standards are broken up into 6 categories, which are minimum specs for processor generation, processor architecture, virtualization, trusted platform modules (TPM), platform boot verification, and RAM. Similarly, firmware features should support at least UEFI 2.4 or later, Secure Boot, Secure MOR 2 or later, and support the Windows UEFI Firmware Capsule Update specification.

2 of 173 comments (clear)

  1. Re: Did anyone RTFA? by maeltor3138 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't see a helluva lot of flamebait in the summary. MS releasing security standards that are legitimate is actual news and deserves legitimate consideration. The ridiculousness of the standard "M$=bad" bullshit responses doesn't help anyone and make things better for computing in general. Simply saying that (not saying you do, using "you" as a generalization) "you use Linux and everyone else should to" simply shows that you have no grounding in pragmatic reality.

  2. Re:Secure Windows is a phrase that doesn't feel ri by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is not about security: this is about locking down the system to a vendor. It's right there in TFS:

    ...trusted platform modules (TPM), platform boot verification... UEFI 2.4 or later, Secure Boot, Secure MOR 2 or later, and support the Windows UEFI Firmware Capsule Update specification.

    Words like "trusted", "secure" etc in computer salesdroid-speak are like "people's" and "democratic" when they get shoe-horned into a country's name - they're a warning sign, a veneer to hide a darker truth.