Breaking
May 31, 2025

Forced E-Waste PCs and the Case of Windows 11’s Trusted Platform Maya Posch | usagoldmines.com

Until the release of Windows 11, the upgrade proposition for Windows operating systems was rather straightforward: you considered whether the current version of Windows on your system still fulfilled your needs and if the answer was ‘no’, you’d buy an upgrade disc. Although system requirements slowly crept up over time, it was likely that your PC could still run the newest-and-greatest Windows version. Even Windows 7 had a graphical fallback mode, just in case your PC’s video card was a potato incapable of handling the GPU-accelerated Aero Glass UI.

This makes a lot of sense, as the most demanding software on a PC are the applications, not the OS. Yet with Windows 11 a new ‘hard’ requirement was added that would flip this on its head: the Trusted Platform Module (TPM) is a security feature that has been around for many years, but never saw much use outside of certain business and government applications. In addition to this, Windows 11 only officially supports a limited number of CPUs, which risks turning many still very capable PCs into expensive paperweights.

Although the TPM and CPU requirements can be circumvented with some effort, this is not supported by Microsoft and raises the specter of a wave of capable PCs being trashed when Windows 10 reaches EOL starting this year.

Not That Kind Of Trusted

Although ‘Trusted Platform’ and ‘security’ may sound like a positive thing for users, the opposite is really the case. The idea behind Trusted Computing (TC) is about consistent, verified behavior enforced by the hardware (and software). This means a computer system that’s not unlike a modern gaming console with a locked-down bootloader, with the TPM providing a unique key and secure means to validate that the hardware and software in the entire boot chain is the same as it was the last time. Effectively it’s an anti-tamper system in this use case that will just as happily lock out an intruder as the purported owner.

XKCD's take on encrypting drives.
XKCD’s take on encrypting drives.

In the case of Windows 11, the TPM is used for this boot validation (Secure Boot), as well as storing the (highly controversial) Windows Hello’s biometric data and Bitlocker whole-disk encryption keys. Important to note here is that a TPM is not an essential feature for this kind of functionality, but rather a potentially more secure way to prevent tampering, while also making data recovery more complicated for the owner. This makes Trusted Computing effectively more a kind of Paranoid Computing, where the assumption is made that beyond the TPM you cannot trust anything about the hardware or software on the system until verified, with the user not being a part of the validation chain.

Theoretically, validating the boot process can help detect boot viruses, but this comes with a range of complications, not the least of which is that this would at most allow you to boot into Windows safe mode, if at all. You’d still need a virus scanner to detect and remove the infection, so using TPM-enforced Secure Boot does not help you here and can even complicate troubleshooting.

Outside of a corporate or government environment where highly sensitive data is handled, the benefits of a TPM are questionable, and there have been cases of Windows users who got locked out of their own data by Bitlocker failing to decrypt the drive, for whatever reason. Expect support calls from family members on Windows 11 to become trickier as a result, also because firmware TPM (fTPM) bugs can cause big system issues like persistent stuttering.

Breaking The Rules

As much as Microsoft keeps trying to ram^Wgently convince us consumers to follow its ‘hard’ requirements, there are always ways to get around these. After all, software is just software, and thus Windows 11 can be installed on unsupported CPUs without a TPM or even an ‘unsupported’ version 1.2 TPM. Similarly, the ‘online Microsoft account’ requirement can be dodged with a few skillful tweaks and commands. The real question here is whether it makes sense to jump through these hoops to install Windows 11 on that first generation AMD Ryzen or Intel Core 2 Duo system from a support perspective.

Fortunately, one does not have to worry about losing access to Microsoft customer support here, because we all know that us computer peasants do not get that included with our Windows Home or Pro license. The worry is more about Windows Updates, especially security updates and updates that may break the OS installation by using CPU instructions unsupported by the local hardware.

Although Microsoft published a list of Windows 11 CPU requirements, it’s not immediately obvious what they are based on. Clearly it’s not about actual missing CPU instructions, or you wouldn’t even be able to install and run the OS. The only true hard limit in Windows 11 (for now) appears to be the UEFI BIOS requirement, but dodging the TPM 2.0 & CPU requirements is as easy as a quick dive into the Windows Registry by adding the AllowUpgradesWithUnsupportedTPMOrCPU key to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMSetupMoSetup. You still need a TPM 1.2 module in this case.

When you use a tool like Rufus to write the Windows 11 installer to a USB stick you can even toggle a few boxes to automatically have all of this done for you. This even includes the option to completely disable TPM as well as the Secure Boot and 8 GB of RAM requirements. Congratulations, your 4 GB RAM, TPM-less Core 2 Duo system now runs Windows 11.

Risk Management

It remains to be seen whether Microsoft will truly enforce the TPM and CPU requirements in the future, that is requiring Secure Boot with Bitlocker. Over on the Apple side of the fence, the hardware has been performing system drive encryption along with other ‘security’ features since the appearance of the Apple T2 chip. It might be that Microsoft envisions a similar future for PCs, one in which even something as sacrilegious as dual-booting another OS becomes impossible.

Naturally, this raises the spectre of increasing hostility between users and their computer systems. Can you truly trust that Bitlocker won’t suddenly decide that it doesn’t want to unlock the boot drive any more? What if an fTPM issue bricks the system, or that a sneaky Windows 11 update a few months or years from now prevents a 10th generation Intel CPU from running the OS without crashing due to missing instructions? Do you really trust Microsoft that far?

It does seem like there are only bad options if you want to stay in the Windows ecosystem.

Strategizing

Clearly, there are no good responses to what Microsoft is attempting here with its absolutely user-hostile actions that try to push a closed, ‘AI’-infused ecosystem on its victi^Wusers. As someone who uses Windows 10 on a daily basis, this came only after running Windows 7 for as long as application support remained in place, which was years after Windows 7 support officially ended.

Perhaps for Windows users, sticking to Windows 10 is the best strategy here, while pushing software and hardware developers to keep supporting it (and maybe Windows 7 again too…). Windows 11 came preinstalled on the system that I write this on, but I erased it with a Windows 10 installation and reused the same, BIOS embedded, license key. I also disabled fTPM in the BIOS to prevent ‘accidental upgrades’, as Microsoft was so fond of doing back with Windows 7 when everyone absolutely had to use Windows 10.

I can hear the ‘just use Linux/BSD/etc.’ crowd already clamoring in the comments, and will preface this by saying that although I use Linux and BSD on a nearly basis, I would not want to use it as my primary desktop system for too many reasons to go into here. I’m still holding out some hope for ReactOS hitting its stride Any Day Now™, but it’s tough to see a path forward beyond running Windows 10 into the ground, while holding only faint hope for Windows 12 becoming Microsoft’s gigantic Mea Culpa.

After having used PCs and Windows since the Windows 3.x days, I can say that the situation for personal computers today is unprecedented, not unlike that for the World Wide Web. It seems increasingly less like customer demand is appealed to by companies, and more an inverse where customers have become merely consumers: receptacles for the AI and marketing-induced slop of the day, whose purchases serve to make stock investors happy because Line Goes Up©.

 

This articles is written by : Nermeen Nabil Khear Abdelmalak

All rights reserved to : USAGOLDMIES . www.usagoldmines.com

You can Enjoy surfing our website categories and read more content in many fields you may like .

Why USAGoldMines ?

USAGoldMines is a comprehensive website offering the latest in financial, crypto, and technical news. With specialized sections for each category, it provides readers with up-to-date market insights, investment trends, and technological advancements, making it a valuable resource for investors and enthusiasts in the fast-paced financial world.

Recent:

A CRT Display for Retro Weather Forecasting Aaron Beckendorf | usagoldmines.com

Making a Treadmill Into a 3D Printer Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com

17 Year Old Hellboy II Prop Still Amazes Heidi Ulrich | usagoldmines.com

White LED Turning Purple: Analyzing a Phosphor Failure Maya Posch | usagoldmines.com

184,000,000 Usernames and Passwords Exposed in Extraordinary Data Breach – Apple, Microsoft, Faceboo...

You Wouldn’t Download A Skateboard? Fenix Guthrie | usagoldmines.com

Tidy LED Matrix Displays GIFs On Demand Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com

2025 Pet Hacks Contest: Keep The Prey At Bay With The Cat Valve Jenny List | usagoldmines.com

DIY Solar Generator Inspired By James Webb Telescope Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com

Hackaday Podcast Episode 323: Impossible CRT Surgery, Fuel Cells, Stream Gages, and a Love Letter to...

This Week in Security: CIA Star Wars, Git* Prompt Injection and More Jonathan Bennett | usagoldmines...

Sustainable 3D Prints with Decomposable Filaments Heidi Ulrich | usagoldmines.com

Today in Edinburgh: The Open Source Hardware Summit Elliot Williams | usagoldmines.com

What does Linux Need? A Dial! Jenny List | usagoldmines.com

364,333 Americans At Risk As Data Giant Discovers Breach – Social Security Numbers, Names and Other ...

Another Doom Port To The Atari ST Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com

IcePI Zero: A Pi Zero for FPGA Tyler August | usagoldmines.com

IcePI Zero: A Pi Zero for FPGA Tyler August | usagoldmines.com

Sui Community Launches Vote on Recovering $162,000,000 in Stolen Crypto From Hacker Conor Devitt | u...

A Simple Tip for Gluing Those LED Filaments Donald Papp | usagoldmines.com

You Can Make Your Own Ribbon Mic With A Gum Wrapper Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com

2025 Pet Hacks Challenge : Poopopticon Is All Up In Kitty’s Business Tyler August | usagoldmines.com

Researchers Are Slowly Finding Ways To Stem The Tide Of PFAS Contamination Lewin Day | usagoldmines....

3D Print ABS Without a Screaming Hot Bed Donald Papp | usagoldmines.com

Bring Back The BIOS! (To UEFI Systems, That Is) Jenny List | usagoldmines.com

The Cost of a Cheap UPS is 10 Hours and a Replacement PCB Maya Posch | usagoldmines.com

Tool Turns SVGs into Multicolor 3D Prints Donald Papp | usagoldmines.com

A Love Letter to Embedded Systems by V. Hunter Adams John Elliot V | usagoldmines.com

Invisible PC Doubles As Heated Seat Tyler August | usagoldmines.com

From Burnt to Brilliant: A Toaster’s Makeover Matt Varian | usagoldmines.com

FLOSS Weekly Episode 834: It Was Cool in 2006 Jonathan Bennett | usagoldmines.com

Supercon 2024: Using an Oscilloscope to Peek Below the Noise Floor Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com

Bubble Displays Make a Neat Retro Clock Jenny List | usagoldmines.com

Remotely Interesting: Stream Gages Dan Maloney | usagoldmines.com

Washington Consumers Gain Right to Repair for Cellphones and More Maya Posch | usagoldmines.com

Stamp: Modular Breakout Boards for SMD Prototyping John Elliot V | usagoldmines.com

A 100-Year-Old Electronic Musical Instrument Brought Back to Life Bryan Cockfield | usagoldmines.com

New Supermaterial: As Strong as Steel and as Light as Styrofoam John Elliot V | usagoldmines.com

Look to the Sky With This Simple Plane Tracker Ian Bos | usagoldmines.com

67,947 Americans Warned as US City Data Breach May Have Exposed Names, Dates of Birth, Social Securi...

Hand Truck Turned Into Motorcycle Bryan Cockfield | usagoldmines.com

2025 Pet Hacks Contest: Fytó – Turn Your Plant Into a Pet Matt Varian | usagoldmines.com

Fixing a Fatal Genetic Defect in Babies With a Bit of Genetic Modification Maya Posch | usagoldmines...

Reconditioning a Vintage CRT Tube Jenny List | usagoldmines.com

‘Your Bank Account Is Under Attack’ – Police Warn Against New Bank Fraud Scheme Targeting Seniors by...

Hands-On: eufyMake E1 UV Printer Tom Nardi | usagoldmines.com

A Forth OS in 46 Bytes Aaron Beckendorf | usagoldmines.com

Automated Blinds Opener On The Cheap Matt Varian | usagoldmines.com

Vintage Intel 8080 runs on a Modern FPGA Heidi Ulrich | usagoldmines.com

A RISC-V Operating System Instruction Manual Bryan Cockfield | usagoldmines.com

Wayback Proxy Lets Your Browser Party Like It’s 1999 Tyler August | usagoldmines.com

2025 Pet Hacks Contest: A Barrel Of Fun For Your Dog Jenny List | usagoldmines.com

Man Allegedly Held Hostage for Three Weeks in Manhattan Apartment, Tortured In Attempt To Gain Acces...

Mouse Model Suggests Starch-Based Plastics Are Still Bad For You Maya Posch | usagoldmines.com

Intercepting and Decoding Bluetooth Low Energy Data for Victron Devices John Elliot V | usagoldmines...

NASA Is Shutting Down the International Space Station Sighting Website Maya Posch | usagoldmines.com

Pico-mac-nano Fits Working Macintosh on Barbie’s Desk Tyler August | usagoldmines.com

2025 Pet Hacks Contest: A Water Fountain For Your Cat Jenny List | usagoldmines.com

How to Build an STM32 Web Dashboard Using the Mongoose Wizard John Elliot V | usagoldmines.com

Hackaday Links: May 25, 2025 Dan Maloney | usagoldmines.com

210,140 Americans Warned As Major Data Breach Disclosed – Stolen Names, Social Security Numbers and ...

Police Hunting for Woman Who Allegedly Deposited $185,000 in Fraudulent Checks Before Going on the R...

Unreleased Amiga Hardware Plays MP3s Bryan Cockfield | usagoldmines.com

Scammer Drains $5,050 From Bank of America Account – Why the Bank Says Reimbursement Is Not Happenin...

NES Zapper Becomes Telephone Bryan Cockfield | usagoldmines.com

The Commodore 64 Gets An HDMI Upgrade Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com

A Quick Introduction to TCP Congestion Control Aaron Beckendorf | usagoldmines.com

2025 Pet Hacks Contest: Feline Facial Recognition Foils Food Filching Tyler August | usagoldmines.co...

Making a Backyard Observatory Replete With Retractable Roof John Elliot V | usagoldmines.com

AI Art Installation Swaps Diffusion for Reflection Tyler August | usagoldmines.com

Reverse Engineering LEGO Island Fenix Guthrie | usagoldmines.com

A Presence-sensing drive for Securely Storing Secrets Aaron Beckendorf | usagoldmines.com

Nearly Half of All Zelle Scams at JPMorgan Chase and Other US Banks Traced To a Single Source: Repor...

Nerf Blaster Becomes Remote Control Turret Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com

437,329 Americans Hit by Massive Data Breach – Customer’s Names, Addresses, Social Security Numbers,...

The Need For Speed? Elliot Williams | usagoldmines.com

Who Needs 100K Speakers When You’ve Got a 3D Printer? Tyler August | usagoldmines.com

LED Matrix Built For M.2 Interface Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com

TeensyROM NFC Game Loading on the C64 Heidi Ulrich | usagoldmines.com

EMF Forming Was A Neat Aerospace Breakthrough Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com

2025 Pet Hacks Contest: Aquassist Fish Feeder Matt Varian | usagoldmines.com

JPMorgan Chase, TD Bank Issue Data Breach Alerts After Rogue Workers Steal Sensitive Info, Triggerin...

Thief Behind Massive Coinbase Exploit Swaps Stolen Crypto and Trolls On-Chain Sleuth ZachXBT Conor D...

Retail Giant To Lose $403,000,000 After ‘Highly Sophisticated and Targeted’ Cyberattack Exposes Sens...

Tearing Down And Hacking The T2S+ Thermal Camera Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com

2025 Pet Hacks Contest: Keep Your Hound Toasty Warm With This Heated Dog Bed Jenny List | usagoldmin...

Hacker Plunders $223,000,000 Worth of Crypto from Sui-Based Decentralized Exchange Rhodilee Jean Dol...

Hackaday Podcast Ep 322: Fake Hackaday Writers, New Retro Computers, and a Web Rant Jenny List | usa...

POV On The Flipper Zero Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com

This Week in Security: Signal DRM, Modern Phone Phreaking, and the Impossible SSH RCE Jonathan Benne...

Behold Self-Synchronizing, Air-Flopping Limbs That Hop and Swim Donald Papp | usagoldmines.com

Foil Leyden Jar Helps Bring Crookes Tube to Life Seth Mabbott | usagoldmines.com

Running DOOM on an Atari ST Heidi Ulrich | usagoldmines.com

Recovering Water From Cooling Tower Plumes With Plume Abatement Maya Posch | usagoldmines.com

You Can 3D Print These Assistive Typing Tools Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com

Department of Justice Charges Two Men in Alleged $227,000,000 Medicare Scam Daniell Marlow | usagold...

Building a Tiny Table Saw Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com

2025 Pet Hacks Contest: Loko Tracks Fido with LoRa and GPS Tyler August | usagoldmines.com

Hackaday Supercon 2025 Call For Participation: We Want You! Elliot Williams | usagoldmines.com

Hackaday Supercon 2025 Call For Participation: We Want You! Elliot Williams | usagoldmines.com