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by sseneca
1891 days ago
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Ah. So, if a Windows application runs in ring 0, it can put malware in a place such that it can then interact with the Linux install? Is there _any_ way to bypass this, apart from separate machines? I didn't know this was possible. |
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This is one of the reasons I'm so enthusiastic about the T2 and M1: a hardware root of trust designed by a competent vendor. (Yes, there is a flaw in the T2, but it requires physical access to exploit.) In my opinion, those are the only trustworthy desktops or laptops on the market right now. You'll notice AWS (Nitro) and Google (Titan) also have their own proprietary hardware security chips for the same reason.