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by ryukoposting 680 days ago
It's certainly useful, but having it embedded within the hardware with no way to properly secure it makes the RP2040 a non-starter for any product I've ever written firmware for.
1 comments

it has secure boot and TrustZone.
Not the RP2040. That chip has no boot security from anyone with physical access to the QSPI or SWD pins.