Secure Boot provides no additional security

Secure Boot is just another name for Trusted Boot

Microsoft are just requiring that vendors implement the specification

MANDATORY: No in-line mechanism is provided whereby a user can bypass Secure Boot failures and boot anyway Signature verification override during boot when Secure Boot is enabled is not allowed. A physically present user override is not permitted for UEFI images that fail signature verification during boot. If a user wants to boot an image that does not pass signature verification, they must explicitly disable Secure Boot on the target system.

Secure Boot can be used to implement DRM

Secure Boot provides physical security

Secure Boot only defines the interaction between the firmware and the bootloader. It doesn't specify any higher policy

Only machines that want to boot Windows need to carry Microsoft's keys

This is only a problem for clients, not servers

Secure Boot is required by NIST

It's easy for Linux to implement Secure Boot

It's only a problem for hobbyist Linux, not the real Linux market

Conclusion

Talking about Secure Boot again, I'm afraid. One of the things that's made discussion of this difficult is that, while the specification isn't overly complicated, some of the outcomes aren't obvious at all until you spend a long time thinking about it. So here's some clarification on a few points.Untrue. Attacks against the pre-boot environment are real and increasingly common - this is a recent proof of concept, and this has been seen in the wild. Once something has got into the MBR, all bets are off. It can modify your bootloader or kernel, inserting its own code to return valid results whenever any kind of malware checker scans for it. The only way to reliably identify it is to either move the disk to another system or to cold boot off verified media. By restricting pre-OS code to something that's been signed, Secure Boot does provide enhanced security.Untrue. Trusted Boot requires the ability to measure the entire boot process, which gives the OS the ability to figure out everything that's been run before OS startup. The root of trust is in the hardware and a TPM is required. Secure Boot is simply a way to limit the applications that are run before the OS. Once booted, there is no way for the OS to identify what was previously booted, or even if the system was booted securely.Untrue. Quoting from the Windows 8 Hardware Certification Requirements:Section 27.7.3.3 of version 2.3.1A of the UEFI spec explicitly permits implementations to provide a physically present user override. Whether this is a good thing or not is obviously open to argument, but the fact remains that Microsoft forbid behaviour that the specification permits.Untrue. The argument here is that Secure Boot can be used to restrict the software that a machine can run, and so can limit a system to running code that implements effective copy protection mechanisms. This isn't the case. For that to be true, there would need to be a mechanism for the OS to identify which code had been run in the pre-OS environment. There isn't. The only communication channel between the firmware and the OS is via a single UEFI variable called "SecureBoot", which may be either "1" or "0". Additionally, the firmware may provide a table to the OS containing a list of UEFI executables that failed to authenticate. It is not required to provide any information about the executables that authenticated correctly.In both these cases, the OS is required to trust the firmware. If the firmware has been compromised in any way (such as the user turning off Secure Boot), the data provided by the firmware can be trivially modified and the OS told that everything is fine. As long as machines exist where users are permitted to disable Secure Boot, Secure Boot is not any kind of DRM scheme.Untrue. Secure Boot does not in any way claim to improve security against attackers who have physical access, for the same reasons as the DRM case. The OS has no way to determine that the firmware's behaviour has been modified. A physically-present attacker can simply disable Secure Boot and install a piece of malware that lies to the OS about platform security. The "Evil Maid" attack still exists.Misleading. It's true that Secure Boot only specifies the authentication of pre-OS code. However, if you implement Secure Boot it's because you want to ensure that only authenticated code has run before your OS. If there is any way for unauthenticated code to touch the hardware before your OS starts, you can't ensure that. If an authenticated Linux kernel is booted and then loads an unsigned driver, that unsigned driver can fabricate a fake UEFI environment and then launch Windows from it. Windows would falsely believe that it has booted securely. If that authenticated Linux kernel were widely distributed, attackers could use it as an attack vector for Windows. The logical response from Microsoft would be to blacklist that kernel.The inevitable outcome of implementing Secure Boot is that every component that can touch hardware must be signed. Anyone who implements Secure Boot without requiring that is adding no additional security whatsoever.Again, misleading. Microsoft only require one signing key to be installed, and the Windows bootloader will be signed with a key that chains back to this one. However, the bootloader is not the only component that must be signed. Any drivers that are carried on ROMs on plug-in cards must also be signed. One approach here would have been for all hardware vendors to have their own keys. This would have been unscalable - any shipped machine would have to carry keys for every vendor who produces PCI cards. If a machine carried an nvidia key but not an AMD one, swapping a geforce for a radeon would have resulted in the firmware graphics driver failing to load. Instead, Microsoft are providing a signing service. Vendors will be able to sign up for WHQL membership and have their UEFI drivers signed by Microsoft.This leads to the problem. The Authenticode format used for signing UEFI objects only allows for a single signature. If a driver is signed by Microsoft, it can't be signed by anybody else. Therefore, if a system vendor wants to support off-the-shelf PCI devices with Microsoft-signed drivers, the system must carry Microsoft's key. If the same key is used as the root of trust for the driver signing and for the bootloader signing, that also means that the system will boot Windows.Not strictly true. While Microsoft's current requirements don't mandate the presence of Secure Boot on server hardware, if present it must be enabled and locked down as it is for clients. It's not valid for servers to ship with disabled Secure Boot support, or for it to be shipped in a mode allowing users to make automated policy modifications at OS install time.This is one that I've heard from multiple people working on Secure Boot. It's amazingly untrue. The document they're referring to is NIST SP800-147 , which is a document that describes guidelines for firmware security - that is, what has to be done to ensure that the firmware itself is secure. This includes making sure that the OS can't overwrite the firmware and that firmware updates must be signed. It says absolutely nothing about the firmware only running signed software. Secure Boot depends upon the firmware being trusted, so these guidelines are effectively a required part of Secure Boot. But Secure Boot is not within the scope of SP800-147 at all.Misleading. From a technical perspective, sure. From a practical perspective, not at all. I wrote about the details here Untrue. It's unclear whether even the significant Linux vendors can implement Secure Boot in a way that meets the needs of their customers and still allows them to boot on commodity hardware. A naive implementation removes many of the benefits of Linux for enterprise customers, such as the ability to use local modifications to micro-optimise systems for specific workloads. One of the key selling points of Linux is the ability to make use of local expertise when adapting the product for your needs. Secure Boot makes that more difficult.Much reporting on the issues surrounding Secure Boot so far has been inaccurate, leading to misunderstandings about the (genuine) benefits and the (genuine) drawbacks. Any useful discussion must be based around an accurate understanding of the specification rather than statements from analysts with no real understanding of the Linux market or security.