Your system will still work without the security feature, but what are the risks if you disable it?
If you have recently checked your Windows update history, you probably noticed something about the Secure Boot Allowed Key Exchange Key (KEK) and wondered what it is. In 2011, with Windows 8, ...
Abstract: This paper investigates intelligent reflecting surfaces (IRS)-assisted secure transmission for remote state estimation in the presence of an eavesdropper. To counter the eavesdropper and ...
—or, in English, “Secure Boot Allowed Key Exchange Key (KEK) Update.” The name might sound confusing, but it’s actually a routine security update linked to Secure Boot, ensuring your PC continues to ...
Abstract: This article concerns the secure containment control problem for multiple autonomous aerial vehicles. The cyber attacker can manipulate control commands, resulting in containment failure in ...
Microsoft urges Windows Server admins to prepare for Secure Boot certificate updates. Expiring 2011 Secure Boot certificates in June 2026 require proactive remediation. Updated firmware trust chains ...
If your PC is more than two years old, your Windows Secure Boot certificates will expire in June 2026. You will stop receiving Secure Boot updates, and it could eventually cause boot issues. While ...
Secure Boot has long been a foundational security pillar for Windows client devices and Windows Server systems running on physical hardware and virtual environments. The original Secure Boot ...