| ▲ | subscribed 2 days ago |
| Secure phones use it. IPhones (Secure Enclave), Pixels (Titan M2).... Yeah, that's not much.... |
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| ▲ | gruez a day ago | parent [-] |
| "TPM" =/= Secure Enclave =/= Titan M2 You could argue TPM can work as a generic term for security coprocessors, but on a technical forum that makes as much sense as saying the pixel tablet is an "iPad". |
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| ▲ | EvanAnderson a day ago | parent [-] | | To be fair, I was using TPM a little genetically (hence the "etc"). I (perhaps wrongly) assume most SoC's today have a non-volatile area for storing roots of trust and possibly a bootloader. My only embedded experience was an Android-based tablet project where DRM on the firmware was of major import because features were locked behind time/geo-limited license keys. |
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