GNOME is planning to protect insecure hardware by notifying users more about their firmware security status. . When you install Linux on your UEFI-enabled computer, you have to disable Secure Boot because the live USB will refuse to boot with the option enabled. Some mainstream Linux distributions support Secure Boot, but it is still challenging to set up for many other distributions (and with Nvidia hardware onboard). While things may not have improved over the years, Secure Boot is an essential protection feature in general. . Explore GNOME's initiatives aimed at alerting users about their firmware security conditions in relation to Secure Boot vulnerabilities.. Secure Boot, GNOME Notifications, UEFI Security, Firmware Status, Linux Hardware Risks. . Brittany Day
The Secure Boot security mechanism of the Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) can be bypassed on around half of computers that have the feature enabled in order to install bootkits, according to a security researcher. . At the Hack in the Box 2014 security conference in Amsterdam, Corey Kallenberg, a security researcher from nonprofit research organization Mitre, also showed Thursday that it's possible to render some systems unusable by modifying a specific UEFI variable directly from the OS, an issue that could easily be exploited in cybersabotage attacks. The link for this article located at Network World is no longer available. . At the Hack in the Box 2014 security conference in Amsterdam, Corey Kallenberg, a security researche. secure, security, mechanism, unified, extensible, firmware, interface, (uefi), bypass. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Hackers can easily 'brick' computers with malicious firmware. UEFI effectively blocks that attack vector and costs nothing. Most people don't understand UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface) or even know whether their computer has it. An interface layer between an operating system and firmware, UEFI offers much better security than plain old PC BIOS. The link for this article located at InfoWorld is no longer available. . Most people don't understand UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface) or even know whether their. hackers, easily, 'brick', computers, malicious, firmware, effectively, blocks, attack. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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