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Product manager Stephen Hosking (spotted by The Verge) says TPM (Trusted Platform Module) 2.0 is a "non-negotiable standard for the future of Windows," shutting the door on any official support for older PCs that don't have these integrated security chips. That means that many users will be faced with relatively few options next year: buy (or build) a new PC, stay on Windows 10 without support, or switch to Linux.
Microsoft's blog post lays out the argument for the TPM 2.0 requirement as a security necessity. TPM devices are essential for modern security and encryption tools, ensuring that every component of the computer is trusted and verified. And they're becoming far more ubiquitous — almost every new laptop and desktop comes with a processor that has TPM 2.0 compliance built in, no extra components required. That's even true for Arm-based hardware, like the new generation of laptops with Qualcomm Snapdragon processors.
But it's hard to take Hosking's promises of "future-proof" hardware at face value when there
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