Why Windows Secure Boot can be bypassed so easily (and what Microsoft isn't telling you)
Microsoft uses Secure Boot to safeguard your Windows PC from malware, attacks, and security vulnerabilities before your operating system fully loads. By default, Secure Boot is enabled on Windows PCs to verify that any software running in the Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) is trusted and safe. The UEFI, in simple terms, is the basic firmware that launches to initialize your PC's hardware and boot your operating system. The built-in Windows security protections aren't active until the operating system fully boots, and that's why Secure Boot is tasked with locking down the UEFI before that happens.
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