Microsoft’s Secure Boot certificates expire in June 2026, but older PCs may never get the fix
Every Secure Boot-enabled Windows PC you've used for the last decade has relied on the same set of cryptographic certificates to keep its boot process secure. Those certificates were issued by Microsoft back in 2011, and they're the reason your computer can verify that the software loading before Windows starts is legitimate and hasn't been tampered with. They're baked into your motherboard's firmware, and most people have never had a reason to think about them. That's about to change.
Every Secure Boot-enabled Windows PC you’ve used for the last decade has relied on the same set of cryptographic certificates to keep its boot process secure. Those certificates were issued by Microsoft back in 2011, and they’re the reason your computer can verify that the software loading before Windows starts is legitimate and hasn’t been tampered with. They’re baked into your motherboard’s firmware, and most people have never had a reason to think about them. That’s about to change.
Michael Johnson
Chicago
Chicago
Published by: aplhsindia.in
