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by nneonneo 2761 days ago
Yes, that's unfortunate - the lack of drivers means that Linux devs will once again have to reverse someone's proprietary software to develop their own drivers. It's not a fun state of affairs. Unfortunately, Apple is not likely to start fully supporting Linux on Mac hardware by providing drivers and documentation. But the point here is that they haven't done anything technically to prevent you from running Linux.
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From what I remember, it acts as a "normal" NVMe device and you can just add its PCI ID and see the disk in Linux…

but in 10 seconds after that it powers the system off because it detects something like an unauthorized OS. Sounds a bit like prevention.