this post was submitted on 18 Aug 2025
7 points (88.9% liked)
Technology
425 readers
364 users here now
Share interesting Technology news and links.
Rules:
- No paywalled sites at all.
- News articles has to be recent, not older than 2 weeks (14 days).
- No videos.
- Post only direct links.
To encourage more original sources and keep this space commercial free as much as I could, the following websites are Blacklisted:
- Al Jazeera;
- NBC;
- CNBC;
- Substack;
- Tom's Hardware;
- ZDNet;
- TechSpot;
- Ars Technica;
- Vox Media outlets, with exception for Axios;
- Engadget;
- TechCrunch;
- Gizmodo;
- Futurism;
- PCWorld;
- ComputerWorld;
- Mashable;
- Hackaday;
- WCCFTECH;
- Neowin.
More sites will be added to the blacklist as needed.
Encouraged:
- Archive links in the body of the post.
- Linking to the direct source, instead of linking to an article talking about the source.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I understand a little of that, at what point do the good/bad lists of keys get exchanged? Is the OS responsible for that?
That 2053 expiration date on the example key concerns me a little. Yeah that is 28 years from now, but people do run old hardware sometimes, like I have a 2003 Windows XP machine, not on the internet, that is connected to a CNC machine. I know Secure Boot and TPM 2.0 is standard now but how long with MS or the industry stick with it, and will they fix things before abandoning the standard and moving onto the next thing? Likely not.
I know this will help with security and anti-cheat, but I'm not that eager to run things in my BIOS that can prevent the system from booting if everything isn't just right.