> Is Ruben going to keep it in there or rip it out and replace it?

I'm not exactly a fan of UEFI, which seems to be a standard developed in the interests of companies only. But that doesn't keep the user from being any less free either.

A lot of UEFI implementations are proprietary, so of course manufacturers can make it difficult to disable it or add other operating systems. But that's not a fault of UEFI but the implementation itself.

Maybe coreboot itself will be UEFI-compatible in the future!? (we can only speculate)

Restricted Boot, on the other hand, is another story entirely...

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