Hi,

On Thu, Dec 07, 2006 at 11:18:24AM +0100, Peter Stuge wrote:
> > * Using any TPM against the intention of the vendor
> 
> By using a payload that does tricks before the TPM starts up?

I don't know _too_ much about this topic yet, so I might be wrong, but I
think the TPM chip doesn't actually _do_ anything by itself. It
can be enabled/disabled and configured/used by the BIOS though, and as _we_
control the BIOS in this case we could do all kinds of funny stuff ;)

As soon as I get that darn 440BX RAM init working I'll play a bit with
this stuff, I think.

There's the TPM emulator, http://tpm-emulator.berlios.de/, which will be
useful even if you don't have a physical TPM chip.


Uwe.
-- 
http://www.hermann-uwe.de  | http://www.holsham-traders.de
http://www.crazy-hacks.org | http://www.unmaintained-free-software.org

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: Digital signature

-- 
linuxbios mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.openbios.org/mailman/listinfo/linuxbios

Reply via email to