Hundreds of consumer and enterprise-grade x86 and ARM models from various vendors, including Intel, Acer, and Lenovo, are potentially vulnerable to bootkits and takeover.
So this nullifies Bitlocker when the key is stored jn the TPM right? The whole reason that works is the TPM verifies that the OS is secure before boot and so the OS can then be trusted with the Bitlocker encryption key. But if the TPM believes the OS is secure when it isn’t, you can modify the OS to just dump the encryption key on boot. Am I missing something here?
So this nullifies Bitlocker when the key is stored jn the TPM right? The whole reason that works is the TPM verifies that the OS is secure before boot and so the OS can then be trusted with the Bitlocker encryption key. But if the TPM believes the OS is secure when it isn’t, you can modify the OS to just dump the encryption key on boot. Am I missing something here?