this post was submitted on 20 Jul 2024
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Privacy
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In that case, have fun coding up your own bootloader and flashing it onto the device. If you can't trust the bootloader, then you can't trust anything at all from the operating system that sits on top of it, because it could be compromised. If you can't trust a bootloader, then the only thing you can trust is a pen and a piece of paper.
True but it feels like obscurity via obscurity.
A huge part of the bootloader stack is opensource....
https://android.googlesource.com/platform/system/core/+/master/fastboot/
https://android.googlesource.com/trusty/lk/trusty/
https://android.googlesource.com/platform/external/avb/
why dont we just put uefi on phones
Phones don't use an IBM-PC architecture. You'd need a phone based on an architecture phones aren't usually based on or You'd need to re-engineer UEFI to work for an architecture it wasn't designed for
UEFI has supported ARM for years now...
And "phones don't use UEFI"