Windows 8 PCs with UEFI Secure Boot Could Lock Linux Out
Although he acknowledges that there’s  nothing to panic about yet, Matthew Garrett, mobile  Linux developer at Red Hat, posted a blog post designed to raise some  concerns over the possibility that Linux might be locked out from Windows  8 PCs because of the new UEFI secure boot feature. 
One of the new security mitigations introduced into Windows 8 involves  bulletproofing the startup process, in an effort to fend off threats  such as rootkits, and similar malware. 
This is done by only loading components that are correctly signed  by Microsoft as Windows  8 is booting.
Here is how Microsoft details the secured boot feature of the next major  iteration of Windows:
“Secured boot stops malware in its tracks and makes Windows 8  significantly more resistant to low-level attacks. Even when a virus has  made it onto your PC, Windows will authenticate boot components to  prevent any attempt to start malware before the operating system is up  and running. 
“If the component isn’t correctly signed by Microsoft, Windows will  begin remediation and start the Windows Recovery Environment, which will  automatically try to fix your operating system.”
Secure boot is an aspect of the evolution of the Unified Extensible  Firmware Interface, involving the integration of signing keys directly  into the system firmware. 
Code running on a machine with UEFI secure boot will need to also be  signed with the same keys as the system firmware by the manufacturer of  the computer. 
According to Garrett, Microsoft considers secure boot enabled by default  as a requirement of the logo program for Windows 8 PCs. 
“The two alternatives here are for Windows to be signed with a Microsoft  key and for the public part of that key to be included with all  systems, or alternatively for each OEM to include their own key and sign  the pre-installed versions of Windows,” he notes.
“The second approach would make it impossible to run boxed copies of  Windows on Windows logo hardware, and also impossible to install new  versions of Windows unless your OEM provided a new signed copy. The  former seems more likely.”
Garrett stresses that a logoed OEM Windows 8 PC with UEFI secure boot  will not boot generic copies of Linux, and there are a dime a dozen of  those. 
While Linux distributors could just as well sign their versions of the  operating system, the very licensing of the platform creates some  issues. Bootloaders under GPLv3 and GPLv2 simply won’t do, because the  licenses imply that the vendors share the signing keys. 
With OS kernels becoming part of the bootloader, they’ll also need to be  signed. And even in the eventuality that devs sign their own code, they  still need to work with manufacturers to have the keys included into  the system firmware. 
“There's no indication that Microsoft will prevent vendors from  providing firmware support for disabling this feature and running  unsigned code. However, experience indicates that many firmware vendors  and OEMs are interested in providing only the minimum of firmware  functionality required for their market. It's almost certainly the case  that some systems will ship with the option of disabling this. Equally,  it's almost certainly the case that some systems won't,” Garrett added.
Personally, I don’t think that Windows 8 PCs with UEFI secure boot will  block users from installing, booting or running any operating system thy  want, including Linux. 
I welcome the new bulletproofed boot process of Windows 8 and I think  that it will have a great impact on increasing the level of security for  end users. At the same time, I’m confident that Linux will still  continue to boot on new computers worldwide even after Windows 8 is  launched. 
Download Windows 8 Developer Preview Build 8102 Milestone 3 (M3)
Download Windows 8 Developer Preview Build 8102 Milestone 3 (M3)
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