Personal computing discussed
Moderators: renee, mac_h8r1, Nemesis
NeRve wrote:I noticed that the newer Dell business laptops have the options to select an included TPM module for an additional $30. With people saying this is going to spread to common consumer end-users in 5 years - I am really wondering if Trusted Platform will really work... Unless there is some government regulation stating all computers need TPM chips inside them - the whole Trusted Platform movement could end up being a whole lot of nothing...
mattsteg wrote:NeRve wrote:I noticed that the newer Dell business laptops have the options to select an included TPM module for an additional $30. With people saying this is going to spread to common consumer end-users in 5 years - I am really wondering if Trusted Platform will really work... Unless there is some government regulation stating all computers need TPM chips inside them - the whole Trusted Platform movement could end up being a whole lot of nothing...
Why the government?
NeRve wrote:mattsteg wrote:NeRve wrote:I noticed that the newer Dell business laptops have the options to select an included TPM module for an additional $30. With people saying this is going to spread to common consumer end-users in 5 years - I am really wondering if Trusted Platform will really work... Unless there is some government regulation stating all computers need TPM chips inside them - the whole Trusted Platform movement could end up being a whole lot of nothing...
Why the government?
From what I understand about TP is that an ideal situation would be when ALL computers within a network to have TPM - which then there will there be total control/security. Yet now it seems like a TPM chip is more of an optional luxury addon option - which most techno-savy consumers will not even bother getting unless they require it in a job with high-security. I just can't see this trickling down to mainstream consumer markets...
mattsteg wrote:Once again, what does that have to do with the government? The vast majority of us are not on government networks. Also, there is never total control/security.
NeRve wrote:mattsteg wrote:Once again, what does that have to do with the government? The vast majority of us are not on government networks. Also, there is never total control/security.
The government could do a mandate that every computer manufactured from 20xx and sold to US consumers be required to have a TPM chip inside (the same thing with V-Chips in TVs). Now you ask - why would they do this? It could be to instigate massive DRMs to please big media, to ensure that nobody was tries to hack the Pentagon, anti-terrorism, etc... Again this scenario is very unlikely as such a thing would only affect people in the US (any other country without TPM-mandates could have computers sold completely un-neutered.)
NeRve wrote:Do you realize how much of what's integrated into today's average southbridges started out as an added-cost add-on?It already has with the Dell laptops - but it seems to be an optional (more expensive) option.... TPM chips costs money and unless Intel wants to subsidize it for the consumer, it will probably be an optional chip for all future Intel boards...
thecoldanddarkone wrote:OP Do you even know why most people buy laptops with tpms in them?