Let's say that age assurance / verification / whatever comes in for computers.
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Let's say that age assurance / verification / whatever comes in for computers.
Not just in one state in the USA, but more broadly.
And let's say that the UEFI/BIOS gets locked down, to inhibit circumvention by Linux-using weirdos.
My pile of old ThinkPads looks rather attractive now, doesn't it?!
@neil Between those restrictions and spiralling cost of new hardware, I’m genuinely thinking I’ll be best off investing in more solar panels and batteries to cover the higher power consumption of old high-end hardware if I need to expand my pool of devices.
(Our shed roof leaks, so we’re planning on re-roofing it this Spring; seems a good opportunity for whacking a bunch of panels on there at the same time.) -
Let's say that age assurance / verification / whatever comes in for computers.
Not just in one state in the USA, but more broadly.
And let's say that the UEFI/BIOS gets locked down, to inhibit circumvention by Linux-using weirdos.
My pile of old ThinkPads looks rather attractive now, doesn't it?!
Dear wife-of-gumnos who has lamented the small mountain of laptops on his desk…these are for the rebellion and one day they will be incredibly valuable.

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Let's say that age assurance / verification / whatever comes in for computers.
Not just in one state in the USA, but more broadly.
And let's say that the UEFI/BIOS gets locked down, to inhibit circumvention by Linux-using weirdos.
My pile of old ThinkPads looks rather attractive now, doesn't it?!
@neil Annoying part about this is liberticide laws seem like they have more longevity than computer hardware. -
@neil
According to this post the law seems misunderstood:
https://infosec.exchange/@david_chisnall/116160637051672728@arutaz The slope is a slippery one.
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Let's say that age assurance / verification / whatever comes in for computers.
Not just in one state in the USA, but more broadly.
And let's say that the UEFI/BIOS gets locked down, to inhibit circumvention by Linux-using weirdos.
My pile of old ThinkPads looks rather attractive now, doesn't it?!
As long as you don't update the UEFI firmware on anything out today, which attempts to install such stupidity, then you should be fine!
Older model ThinkPads are nice. Even the modern Lenovo models are quite nice

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@arutaz The slope is a slippery one.
@neil thats true -
Let's say that age assurance / verification / whatever comes in for computers.
Not just in one state in the USA, but more broadly.
And let's say that the UEFI/BIOS gets locked down, to inhibit circumvention by Linux-using weirdos.
My pile of old ThinkPads looks rather attractive now, doesn't it?!
@neil You just described my computers — a pile of old ThinkPads

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I don't want an appliance.
I want a computer.
A machine this is mine to own and pwn.
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Let's say that age assurance / verification / whatever comes in for computers.
Not just in one state in the USA, but more broadly.
And let's say that the UEFI/BIOS gets locked down, to inhibit circumvention by Linux-using weirdos.
My pile of old ThinkPads looks rather attractive now, doesn't it?!
@neil That's the thing right... there's not much old machines can't do if you don't run bloated software on them.
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Let's say that age assurance / verification / whatever comes in for computers.
Not just in one state in the USA, but more broadly.
And let's say that the UEFI/BIOS gets locked down, to inhibit circumvention by Linux-using weirdos.
My pile of old ThinkPads looks rather attractive now, doesn't it?!
@neil a character in the late Vernor Vinge's Rainbows End lugs around for all the book an old laptop because he refuses to use the locked, hyper-controlled, DRM-ed-to-the-gills modern wearable hardware everybody else is using. At the time (2006) I was like "no way, it will never come to that," but I'm starting to have doubts now...
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