Veracrypt project update (sourceforge.net)

• zx2c4 10 hours ago

This is the same problem I'm currently facing with WireGuard. No warning at all, no notification. One day I sign in to publish an update, and yikes, account suspended. Currently undergoing some sort of 60 days appeals process, but who knows. That's kind of crazy: what if there were some critical RCE in WireGuard, being exploited in the wild, and I needed to update users immediately? (That's just hypothetical; don't freak out!) In that case, Microsoft would have my hands entirely tied.

If anybody within Microsoft is able to do something, please contact me -- jason at zx2c4 dot com.

• ninjagoo 5 hours ago

It has been clear for a while that certain providers and services need to be regulated as utilities - Microsoft, Google, Apple, Visa, Mastercard, and soon Openai and Anthropic.

It should be illegal for these companies, just like utilities, to deny service to anyone or any entity in good standing for dues.

There is little hope for getting this through in the US where most politicians of any stripe hate the public, and the ones that don't have hardly any power. But it might be possible to do this in the EU.

Then, we non-EU folks need to apply for Estonian e-residency [1] which may get us EU regulatory coverage.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-Residency_of_Estonia

• nostrademons an hour ago

It would not surprise me if these actions are coming at the requests of governments. Strong encryption is one of the few things that challenges their monopoly on information; they have a very strong incentive to apply political pressure to the maintainers of these projects to, well, stop maintaining the projects. We've seen this in overt actions that the EU takes; in more covert actions that the U.S. government is suspected of taking; and in the news headlines about third-world dictatorships that just shut off the Internet. Tech companies are perhaps the most convenient leverage point for these actions.

More regulation won't help here, because the regulation-maker is itself the hostile party.

What would help is full control over the supply chain. Hardware that you own, free and open-source operating systems where no single person is the bottleneck to distribution, and free software that again has no single person who is a failure point and no way to control its distribution.

• prox 5 hours ago

We need a law that a human representative can be spoken to within 24 hours or directly when something critical happens.

Also “there is no appeal possible” should be plain illegal.

• burnt-resistor 2 hours ago

Technofeudalism is what happens when grossly under-regulated anarcho-capitalism dominates rather than sustainable, more ordinary capitalism where government regulation is the supreme, minimized biased arbiter that keeps things fairer and sensible for the benefit of the many rather than the benefit of the few.

• gzread 4 hours ago

In the EU, under GDPR, it is legally required to explain automated profiling.

• emsixteen 3 hours ago

How's that work? Got a link handy to explain to a dummy?

• buzer 3 hours ago

Article 13(2)(f)

"In addition to the information referred to in paragraph 1, the controller shall, at the time when personal data are obtained, provide the data subject with the following further information necessary to ensure fair and transparent processing: the existence of automated decision-making, including profiling, referred to in Article 22(1) and (4) and, at least in those cases, meaningful information about the logic involved, as well as the significance and the envisaged consequences of such processing for the data subject."

EDPB Guidelines on automated decision making: https://ec.europa.eu/newsroom/article29/items/612053 especially page 25 is relevant

C‑634/21 is also somewhat relevant to understand how courts have applied ADM in general context of credit reporting https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A... though it didn't specify what information actually needs to provided for 13(2)(f).

• beng-nl 4 hours ago

I understand the sentiment, but.. do you realize how much more expensive that would make all these services?

I don’t know the number. But personally I think using the services and ‘simply’ only use them if the disappearance isn’t catastrophic and have the price be low or free while it works isn’t too bad a trade-off.

Admittedly that’s a big ‘if.’

• alemanek 2 hours ago

That is the wrong way to look at it.

If this requirement was in place they would be a bit more careful about terminating accounts because the cost equation would incentivize it. Maybe they would be more careful in their automation or require more than one level of human review before cutting off access.

These companies are gatekeepers for their platform. It isn’t crazy to require them to act more responsibly.

• prox 3 hours ago

These are usually multi billion dollar companies, they’ll be fine, stop worrying about them.

Start worrying about the erosion of your rights as a consumer.

• amluto 2 hours ago

These services are designed such that security sort of depends on reviewing the programs that are allowed to run. Microsoft, Google and Apple all do this. It adds expense, annoyance, limitations, and really very little security.

The contrasting approach, where one designs a platform that remains secure even if the owner is allowed to run whatever software they like, may be more complex but is overall much better. There aren’t many personal-use systems like this, but systems like AWS take this approach and generally do quite well with it.

• _imnothere 4 hours ago

They sure do earn enough money to afford whatever number that is on your mind.

• zelphirkalt an hour ago

Even if they somehow were so expensive, that it would no longer scale to their size, that is still not our problem and if anything, a sign that either they need to improve their systems, or simply cannot be as big as they are. Shit happens, scale down, I won't cry for them.

• rangerelf 3 hours ago

If it's impossible for a service provider to even talk to its customers, why is it in operation at all?

• HackerThemAll 23 minutes ago

Look how much profit Microsoft made last year.

"Financially, it was a year of record performance. Revenue was $281.7 billion, up 15 percent. Operating income grew 17 percent to $128.5 billion." https://www.microsoft.com/investor/reports/ar25/index.html

So don't be so naive to tell us that 1-2 additional people to handle the appeal process is anything but rounding error in their balance sheet.

• thefounder 3 hours ago

I don't think they would be so much more expensive but they would be less profitable for sure and perhaps less "innovative" as a big chunk of the profit will go into regulation stuff.

• chromacity 3 hours ago

> I understand the sentiment, but.. do you realize how much more expensive that would make all these services?

It wouldn't. For example, before Gmail, email was often free or nearly free (bundled with your internet service), but in most cases, you could talk to a human if you had issues with the service.

What we couldn't do is turn these business models into planetary-scale behemoths that rake in hundreds of billions of dollars in revenue. In essence, you couldn't have Google or Facebook with good customer support. I'm not here to argue that Google or Facebook are a net negative, but the trade-offs here are different from what you describe.

• harel 3 hours ago

Honestly, it's not our problem. Once a service becomes so vital it cannot be terminated without any meaningful process. My meta developer account is suspended and none of my appeals are responded to . Who can I talk to? Nobody. It's wrong.

• miohtama 4 hours ago

If it is regulated as a utility, the government will want to ban these hacking tools.

• zelphirkalt an hour ago

I think the GP is relating to MS services and accounts as utilities that should not be possible to be taken away easily, not about Wireguard.

• JoshTriplett 4 hours ago

Agreed. Be careful what you wish for.

• NewsaHackO 4 hours ago

It always weird to see how dichotomy of some people saying AI will never be profitable and are doomed to fail and others saying that they are such a essential public service that they are a utility and should be subject to government regulation. Hopefully they are not the same group of people, but I suspect there is a greater overlap that one would expect.

• jonathanstrange an hour ago

I'm not one of those people but want to point out that there isn't much of a contradiction there. I don't know if hospitals, universities, train tracks, roads, and libraries technically speaking count as utilities but they overall don't seem to be profitable and at the same time are extremely desirable for a society and an economy to have. AI could turn out to be of the same sort.

• zelphirkalt an hour ago

I have a feeling, that the resolve to do something about it is waning in the EU, because of the plans to soften up the GDPR.

• x0x0 4 hours ago

I've gotten business verification for Microsoft before. The kind you need in order to get certain oauth scopes for their O365 platform.

Do not discount complete, total, utter, profound fucking incompetence as the driving reason behind this.

Getting the business verification was an astounding shitshow. With a registered C corp and everything, massively unclear instructions, UI nestled in a partner site with tons of dead ends. And then even after all the docs, it took another week because -- in an action that nobody could possibly have ever foreseen -- we had two different microsoft accounts due to a cofounder buying ONE LICENSE of O365 for excel and doing domain verification because it suggested it.

• onehair 10 hours ago

Now this is even more alarming! Wireguard's creator has their Microsoft account suspended...

<Tin foil hat on> Microsoft doesn't want to allow software that would allow the user to shield themselves, either by totally encrypting a drive, or by encrypting their network traffic! </Tin foil hat on>

• unicornporn 10 hours ago

> Microsoft doesn't want to allow software that would allow the user to shield themselves

I don't think Microsoft cares (about anything besides making mo' money), but there are plenty of (state) actors that can influence the decision-making at Microsoft when it comes to these issues.

No tinfoil needed.

• vstm 10 hours ago

> No tinfoil needed.

That's what Big Tinfoil wants you to believe!

• whycome 6 hours ago

I heard it doesn’t even contain tin!

• burnt-resistor 2 hours ago

Total enshittification with this pure aluminium shit. The hats don't block government UFO mind control waves and hold their shape nearly as well as the tin ones did. Fucking private equity ruins everything.

• falcor84 9 hours ago

Wait, what?! I was sure that the agenda of Big Tinfoil was to generate FUD so that we buy more tinfoil for our hats. Are you implying their agenda goes even deeper?

• kps 7 hours ago

Have you tried to buy tin foil lately? Big Aluminum has taken over, and just see how far you get soldering the grounding strap to an aluminum foil hat.

• kube-system 3 hours ago

Big Alumulumu is soon to be the market leader.

https://www.tiktok.com/@etong_winter_palikir/video/739554877...

• bombcar 6 hours ago

This is the dirty secret; Big Weird tried to warn us but we didn't listen.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=urglg3WimHA

https://www.goodfellow.com/usa/tin-foil-group

• shevy-java 9 hours ago

But making money at the expense of people is not a Tinfoil conspiracy - it's a factual statement.

• lukan 7 hours ago

It is also a factual statement, that tinfoil shields (somewhat) from electromagnetic radiation.

• balamatom 7 hours ago

But it is NOT necessarily a factual statement that one of the main uses of electromagnetic radiation is for humans to send information over long distances; nor that I first learned about tinfoil hats from some random piece of information that was being broadcast by means of electromagnetic radiation. It's just a vibe.

• lukan 6 hours ago

Yep.

• anonym29 9 hours ago

>I don't think Microsoft cares (about anything else than making money), but there are plenty of (state) actors that can influence the decision-making at Microsoft when it comes to these issues.

Microsoft the corporation may only care about making money, but a lot of very high ranking folks within MS Security aren't just friendly to intelligence agencies, they take genuine pride in helping intelligence agencies. They're the kinds of people who saw nothing wrong or objectionable with PRISM whatsoever, they were just mad they got caught, and that the end user (who they believe had no right to even know about it) found out anyway. The kind of people who openly defend the legitimacy of the FISA court.

This aren't baseless accusations, this comes from first-hand experience interacting with and talking to several of them. Charlie Bell literally kept a CIA mug on a shelf behind him, prominently visible during Teams calls, as if to brag.

Remember - Microsoft was the very first company on the NSA's own internal slide deck depicting a timeline of PRISM collection capabilities by platform, started all the way back in 2007. All companies on that slide may have been compelled to assist with national security letters. Some were just more eager than others to betray the privacy and trust of their own customers and end-users.

• maxo133 5 hours ago

I can completely believe this.

I was always convinced that Skype was bought by microsoft so CIA/US intelligence agencies to have listening capabilities.

The first thing Microsoft did after the Skype purchase was making it easier to tap into the calls by removing p2p calling and routing calls using centralized servers.

• vardump 20 minutes ago

Yeah. Otherwise Microsoft purchasing Skype made no sense.

• SoftTalker 3 hours ago

That's my experience with most computer security folks as well, and tech companies who sell security products. Cloak-and-dagger stuff running 24x7 in their heads.

• anonym29 8 minutes ago

There are quite a few extremely talented security folks who are more or less the polar opposite, who view people like Edward Snowden and Julian Assange as heroes, the NSA as guilty of treason, as James Clapper as guilty of perjury, even inside of corporations like Microsoft.

The catch is, views like those must be kept to a fairly modest level by the people who hold them. Discussing them with ideologically aligned colleagues may be fine, but for example, when someone makes statements or asks questions with such pro-privacy framing on stage directly to security leadership at internal company conferences, that is a quick way to a severance package not only for the person on stage, but also for dozens of folks in the audience who clapped a little too enthusiastically at the onstage remarks.

• dboreham 7 hours ago

It's quite possible TLAs plant employees inside important tech companies. So not only are they sympathetic, they directly work for them.

• balamatom 7 hours ago

>I don't think Microsoft cares (about anything besides making mo' money)

If Microsoft amounts to a sentient entity (i.e. is able to care about things), we have a bigger problem.

If we put the wall of metaphor between us and that interpretation, it still remains likely that "users shielding themselves" is of primary concern to Microsoft's bottom line.

• Macha 8 hours ago

Alternatively they asked copilot to scan for crypto projects and ban them

• riskable 6 hours ago

You think it would succeed at that? Come on. Copilot is for entertainment purposes only!

• bombcar 6 hours ago

Watching Microsoft try to dogfood Copilot is entertaining to me, in a way.

• rvnx 5 hours ago

https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/05/copilot-is-for-entertainme...

At least it reached its goal if it entertained you

• ngetchell 10 hours ago

Or more likely, some automated security system flagged popular but suspicious apps for further review.

• antiframe 5 hours ago

If you use an automated process to disable accounts but then state there is no appeals process available as they stated, then you are not to be trusted to be acting in good faith. Bad actors should be called out and not given the benefit of the doubt.

• Gigachad 8 hours ago

Automated systems breaking things without any human contact to get them resolved seems to be the theme of the last 10 years.

• burnt-resistor 2 hours ago

This phenomenon is so Orwellian with insufficient awareness, it should both be an SNL skit and a John Oliver episode. It's illiberal, neoliberal, corporate bullshit that causes harm to individuals. These companies need to be treated as utilities and the "companies can do whatever they want" arguments must be debunked and defeated because of the pervasive power they hold and immense harm they can cause to individuals without a remedy when they rug pull access without clear cause.

It also reminds me of the case of the entire family who lost all of their payment-linked individual accounts including business data and an academic dissertation because the son allegedly behaved inappropriately with a bot. Collective punishment on top of technofeudal instant banishment.

• raxxorraxor 9 hours ago

Where are the people that tried to sell us software signatures as security benefit? The reality is that they are a very specific security problem. In theory and in practice.

• nelox 9 hours ago

Maybe they let Mythos loose and it suggested the safest approach was to remove access ;)

• varispeed 3 hours ago

It is more likely that government doesn't want to allow people to have privacy. Microsoft just obediently listen to orders and execute them.

• blitzar 8 hours ago

"Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity"

• justin_oaks 4 hours ago

When a company makes it impossible to correct their stupidity, it's a malicious act. The behavior speaks loud and clear: "We don't care what damage we do to developers or users. And we don't want to hear about it."

• tux1968 6 hours ago

I'm more convinced than ever that this aphorism has it completely backwards.

• pocksuppet 6 hours ago

It was probably true at some point, then malicious people learned how to fake stupidity and they outnumber actual stupid people, and they learned how to recruit stupid people to their causes.

• xeonmc 5 hours ago

Never attribute to incompetence that which is adequately explained by profit motives.

• BoredPositron 3 hours ago

The guise of a harmless mistake has worn so thin and is so overused by tech companies that I now only see deliberate intent.

• teruakohatu 10 hours ago

I am astounded that the maintainer and inventor of Wireguard is in this position.

Microsoft even supports Wireguard in Azure Kubernetes Service.

• windowliker 8 hours ago

Is this another example of their old modus operandi:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embrace,_extend,_and_extinguis...

?

• riskable 6 hours ago

No. Embrace, Extend, Extinguish was replaced by the AAA strategy: Acquire, Assimilate, Abandon. They were trying to be more Google-like with that "Abandon" step I think.

They've since moved on to the SSS strategy: Ship, Slip, Slop.

• arcanemachiner 4 hours ago

Good heavens! My acronymical notes on Microsoft's product strategy are two revisions out of date!

• wtyvn 4 hours ago

Damn, I thought it was "Slop, Ship, Smile"

• miroljub 9 hours ago

Maybe time for a custom license that would require M$ to sign up for special T&Cs if they want to use this software?

Who cares if it's OSI-approved or not, a line saying "M$, Google, and the like need written permission for every use case" would help to make those leeches honest. Just learn from the JSLint example.

• greenavocado 5 hours ago

This license modifier already exists for others to use (I can't post the direct links here because this site will sanction me for doing so)

plus n-word dot com hosts information about the plus n-word license which purports:

- The software will not be used or hosted by western corporations that promote censorship

- The software will not be used or hosted by compromised individuals that promote censorship

- Users of the software will be immune to attacks that would result in censorship of others

• kbelder an hour ago

Why "Western" corporations that promote censorship? Non-western censorship is allowed?

• greenavocado an hour ago

They don't care as much about things like this

• gzread 4 hours ago

It's even GPL compatible, because the GPL makes provision for additional notice requirements.

That would be both hilarious and horrifying if the only thing stopping the corporate dystopia is that Microsoft doesn't want to say the N word.

• UqWBcuFx6NV4r 9 hours ago

We literally just did this. Now we have Valkey. Nobody won.

• pocksuppet 8 hours ago

Did anyone lose?

Valkey is better because all of the new development work happens on Valkey, not because of the license. If the actual developer changed the license, that would be a different situation.

• Already__Taken 5 hours ago

It's got a lot of analogy to restaurants banning Uber delivery for not handling their food to their standards.

• HackerThemAll 19 minutes ago

That actually is not analogy at all and it makes sense. When a low-paid Uber Eats delivery person just throws the box carelessly and brings damaged dish to the customer, that's a real issue.

In digital services there's no such thing. There's only a damned corporation employing idiots who don't care about community.

• xiconfjs 4 hours ago

What? How?

• nelox 9 hours ago

Agree. Single point of failure. One developer, one account. Crazy.

• ptx 9 hours ago

Having multiple accounts wouldn't help, as Microsoft could easily suspend all the accounts of everyone associated with the project if any account looks suspicious. The single point of failure is Microsoft.

• pjc50 8 hours ago

You're not actually allowed to avoid this by having multiple accounts, that falls under "ban evasion".

But yes, there's a lot of critical single maintainer projects.

• raxxorraxor 9 hours ago

No, that is not the issue here. The source of the problem is something different. This is a wrong root cause analysis.

• jamesnorden 9 hours ago

How would more than one account help in this scenario, exactly?

• hirako2000 4 hours ago

Any account can sign any (same) piece of software. Of course Microsoft could detect the it's signing a software related to a banned signed and ban the new account. So veracrypt (and wireguard) is stuck.

It's outrageous. MS is simply enforcing some Government crackdown on encryption software that would interfere with backdoors.

• sellmesoap 14 minutes ago

With these big players who are regularly found supporting people with evil intentions: Don't attribute to incompitence what could be ascribed to malice, nay you must trust the gods of the clouds to keep your secrets for you, all for the low low price of $x.99 a month a seat, you may only cancel your service with an arcaine dance and the sacrifice of your first born!

• zx2c4 6 hours ago

Encouraged by this thread, I tweeted about it: https://x.com/EdgeSecurity/status/2041872931576299888

• varun_ch 5 hours ago

If someone was a bad actor, right now would be a pretty good time to start exploiting zero days in WireGuard…

• pocksuppet 8 hours ago

The other day I tried to create a Github account and was repeatedly told I am fraudulent. Nothing else. Try again later, it says.

This is the same thing that's happened every time I've tried to have a Microsoft account. I don't think Microsoft wants to have customers who aren't rich.

• jandrese 5 hours ago

Maybe some bot signed up using your email and then did bot things on it. I've had that happen a lot over the years. My Microsoft account is still stuck in German because that's the language the bot used when creating the account (to spam X-Box apparently).

• hirako2000 4 hours ago

I got a 20y old hotmail/live account deleted by Microsoft because a bot tried to reset my password too many times. Considering the magnitude of the targeted attack, MS found the safest way to keep me secure was to wipe my account. That way the attacker could not get into my account.

• reincarnate0x14 2 hours ago

I had something similar with a 6-letter apple account that has never been compromised but I guess got put on some kind of list, because I had to go through account recovery almost every time I logged in, which wasn't a big deal until I got an iphone. Apple support was completely useless. Random old buried forum post in a stall marked "beware the leopard" mentioned the behavior and suggested changing the account name.

Nothing in the Apple site or phone stuff would even clue the user in to what was happening, much less how to resolve it.

• octoberfranklin 2 hours ago

Same here with github.

• jchw 10 hours ago

I tried to set up a partner account for driver signing last year (as a business entity) and it already seemed basically impossible. I think they're getting ready to just simply not allow it at all.

This is stupid. If Microsoft wants people to stop writing kernel drivers, that's potentially doable (we just need sufficient user mode driver equivalents...) but not doing that and also shortening the list of who can sign kernel drivers down to some elite group of grandfathered companies and individuals is the worst possible outcome.

But at this point I almost wish they didn't fix it, just to drive home the point harder to users how little they really own their computer and OS anymore.

• gib444 10 hours ago

Y'all need to form an alliance or something, get some press coverage (wireguard, veracrypt, libreoffice)

• duskdozer 10 hours ago

True, but really even if it gets resolved for them it should basically be a huge warning sign to everybody. Projects like those might get reinstated but it would only be because of how big they are that it would matter. Any person or small or 'undesirable' project would not get the same resolution.

• withinrafael 3 hours ago

Will send some emails.

• iamnothere 7 hours ago

Surprised to see you here. Thanks for all your hard work.

Windows users are in a tough spot, but with the dawn of Copilot, nobody should be surprised. Frankly, those who remain with Windows after this latest betrayal have chosen their fate.

• SV_BubbleTime 6 hours ago

> those who remain with Windows after this latest betrayal have chosen their fate.

Ah. So almost every single business in the world… suckers?

• serf 21 minutes ago

are you making an argument that businesses worldwide somehow are known to make well thought-out, rational, wise decisions that are in best interest for the business and efficiency of running it?

because most managers I know in my professional life go with the vendor that buys them dinner or slips them tickets for box seats.

• gzread 4 hours ago

Yes.

• croes 6 hours ago

Given MS‘ track record, yes

• tssva 8 hours ago

Has your Apple account been suspended for the last few years?

• tamimio 9 hours ago

I think it’s intentional, those encryption (at rest/transit) applications are outside of MS control and you can assume outside of potential backdoors by three letters agencies, bitlocker vs veracrypt? Of course bitlocker is favorable from their perspective.

I wouldn’t be surprised if NSA already had a list of these applications and the strategies on how to cripple them or worse, compromise them.

• nelox 9 hours ago

Or found they’ve been compromised by someone else? ;)

• rsync 3 hours ago

You said:

"Currently undergoing some sort of 60 days appeals process, but who knows."

.. and the op said:

"I have tried to contact Microsoft through various channels but I have only received automated replies and bots. I was unable to reach a human."

... which is a roundabout way of saying you did not spend lawyer hours and you did not contact them through channels that they cannot ignore: registered, physical mail, from a lawyer.

I'm sorry for these difficulties, truly, but don't tell me you can't reach a human when you most definitely can reach a human. From my own experience with an organization at least as calloused and indifferent as MS[1], as soon as I sent a real, legal communication I had real live humans lining up to talk to me.

[1] Pacific Gas and Electric

• reincarnate0x14 2 hours ago

Microsoft hasn't managed to burn down entire towns (But Copilot is probably working on it), so I suppose we do have at least some kind of gauge of callousness to work off of thanks to PG&E. Which was also the company behind that whole slightly famous Erin Brockovich thing, amongst so very many others.

Sometimes, it's both incompetence AND malice.

• zx2c4 an hour ago

No. The humans just said 60 days.

• matheusmoreira 7 hours ago

> what if there were some critical RCE in WireGuard, being exploited in the wild, and I needed to update users immediately?

Honestly, anyone still using Windows probably deserves it.

• Ms-J 2 minutes ago

Posted this earlier from a throwaway since my account wasn't able to reply for some odd reason and it was marked as dead:

Hello Jason!

I want to first thank you for all of your hard work developing Wireguard.

If I can find someone who is willing to put their name on it to help I definitely will, the problem is the spy agencies don't want your project to exist. It makes it harder to put resources to this. I've worked in security departments of certain companies and saw everything you could imagine.

Same for Mounir over at Veracrypt.

Both of you are developing some of the most important software that exists today.

Keep doing what you are doing by keeping everything in the open. User trust almost doesn't exist for these type of projects. Any hint of an issue would wipe that out in seconds.

This leads me to one question I do have for you zx2c4:

Why does Wireguard attempt to contact your servers and auto update on Android with no toggle to turn this off? It's a threat to everyone. Maybe it also does this on other platforms but I haven't tested them all.

I can think of reasons as to why you did this, none nefarious, but still it would be nice if you included that option so I don't have to patch each update to turn this off.

Thanks.

• newsoftheday 4 hours ago

First I was surprised to read the Veracrypt maintainers could be in this situation, then read the top comment where Wireguard maintainers are too (unless I misunderstood). Is this some malicious new program inside Microsoft to try and shutdown open source projects so they can push Windows products and solutions more?

• NewsaHackO 3 hours ago

It feels more like an automated block due to uncharacteristical increase in download activity. Something that it seems more and more companies are taking seriously is the cottage industry of scams involving less technically savvy downloading apps online and getting their information stolen. The motivation for this is probably the same as Google stopping side loading. Take that as you want.

• gzread 4 hours ago

Yes.

• pogue 12 hours ago

They need to get some tech site like Arstechnica to write about it, like they did when neocities couldn't get ahold of bing. The only way to contact these tech companies to speak to a real human being and not a chatbot is if you know somebody who works there or if the media writes about it.

• perlgeek 9 hours ago

Isn't this Microsoft abusing their quasi-monopoly as a consumer PC OS vendor?

If it weren't for the current administration, I'd say it's time for regulatory action.

• riskable 6 hours ago

The time for regulatory action against Microsoft was thirty years ago and the need for it has only grown since then.

The FTC wasn't doing their job between 1980-2020 because of their ridiculous standard of, "if it doesn't raise consumer prices, it must be allowed." This lead to massive consolidation in many industries which of course ended up raising prices and hurting consumers anyway.

Recently they've had some wins but overall they're still failing to do their job.

• newsoftheday 4 hours ago

> If it weren't for the current administration

Because the Democrats were better at keeping them on a leash? No. Clinton was in charge 30 years ago and blew it.

• tremon 3 hours ago

It was the Clinton administration that started regulatory proceedings against Microsoft, but it was GW Bush that was president during the conclusion of the case. And, true to form:

> The Department of Justice, now under Bush administration attorney general John Ashcroft, announced on September 6, 2001, that it was no longer seeking to break up Microsoft and would instead seek a lesser antitrust penalty

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_v._Microsoft_Cor...

• klabb3 9 hours ago

It's much worse than you think. Press coverage -> manual intervention is at best a bandaid covering up a major wound in a flaw that happens with independent software distribution.

The old model where the user decides which software or apps to run on their machine, is basically already replaced by a whitelist system that is managed by companies who have no interest or obligation to approve developers. Factors like ”being an individual”, an open source developer or god forbid reside outside the USA, you rely on a combination of L1 support doom loops, unjustifiable high recurring prices, kafkaesque and changing requirements, internal inconsistencies. Windows is the worst, but all platforms (except Linux) suffer from this and you can and will get hurt, delayed, and gaslit. If you haven’t, it’s just a matter of time.

I have been blocked for 6 months now with Digicert code cert renewal, for my app Payload, which will never get any media attention. The app doesn’t matter though, the approval process is per-entity (usually, a company). The point is that nobody gives a shit, because they have a monopoly/cartel and they start the validation process after they take your money.

If you are not an app publisher, the best way I can describe it is the ”pre-let’s encrypt” era of SSL certs, but more expensive, strict and ambiguous. In fact, I’ve never gone through any worse approval process in my life, and that includes applying for residency in two countries, business licenses, manual tax filings etc.

• bluGill 7 hours ago

Some countries (the EU in general) are already doing things about this. Owning the app store means you are a monopoly and now the only question is are you illegal by the local laws which vary.

You can/should write your congressman (or whatever they are called in your country) and get better laws in place.

• klabb3 4 hours ago

You are not wrong that regulation is desperately needed, and that EU is doing good things. However, even the EU which are doing the right thing on an anti-trust pro-competition basis, they fundamentally succumb to the same misconception – that middlemen are necessary at all. The EU doesn’t care about the App Store model, they care about the App Store monopoly. They are right about that, but the solution isn’t alternative app stores - it’s much simpler: the solution is NO App Store.

More specifically, it used to be feasible to distribute software between me (the developer) and my customers (the users) without a mandatory gate keeper that looks at me and decides whether I’m worthy, am from the right country, have good intentions etc. This is currently necessary on all desktop and mobile platforms except Linux. There is exactly 1 gatekeeper per platform (the platform owner who controls your device), except windows, which effectively have like 3-4 CAs that’s shrinking every year due to mergers and private equity ownership.

Software curation and reputation systems can be good, either with whitelists (say steam) or blacklists (say antivirus). I can see some use cases for it, but they should be within user control. What we have now is worse than a fearmongering Stallman rant. It’s incredibly bad, both pragmatically and philosophically.

• CR1337 11 hours ago
• bombcar 6 hours ago

The (new?) X link made me think for a moment you got the username @i

• yegle 3 hours ago

The /i/ links are not new, but they used to be for internal (?) links e.g. ads.

• aaronmdjones 4 hours ago

The website formerly known as Twitter has never cared about the username part of the URI; it only looks at the status number and will redirect you to the canonical version if it wasn't.

• firen777 12 hours ago
• SeanDav 10 hours ago

This is worrying on many levels. So Microsoft force you to create an account to use Windows and then they reserve the right to block you from your own account, thereby potentially making you lose access to all your OWN data. This is crazy and yet another reason to stop using Windows as soon as possible.

• jerf 7 hours ago

I know it's not what people want to hear but my response to a lot of the comments here is just a general, I agree, it's time to stop using Windows.

They won't let you secure your drive the way you want. They won't let you secure your network the way you want (per the top-level comment about Wireguard). In so doing they are demonstrating not just that they can stop you from running these particular programs but that they are very likely going to exert this control on the entire product category going forward, and I see little reason to believe they will stop there. These are not minor issues; these are fundamental to the safety, security, and functionality of your machine. This indicates that Microsoft will continue to compromise the safety, security, and functionality of your machine going forward to their benefit as they see fit. This is intolerable for many, many use cases.

I think it is becoming clear that Microsoft no longer considers Windows users to be their customers any more. Despite the fact that people do in fact pay for Windows, Microsoft has shifted from largely supporting their customers to out-and-out exploiting their customers. (Granted a certain amount of exploitation has been around for a long time, but things like the best backwards compatibility in the industry showed their support, as well.)

I suspect this is the result of a lot of internal changes (not one big one) but I also see no particular reason at the moment to expect this to change. To my eyes both the first and second derivative is heading in the direction of more exploitation. More treating users like a cattle field and less like customers. When new features or work is being proposed at Microsoft, it is clear that it is being analyzed entirely in terms of how it can benefit Microsoft and users are not at the table.

No amount of wishing this wasn't so is going to change anything. No amount of complaining about how hard it is to get off of Windows is going to change anything; indeed at this point you're just signalling to Microsoft that they are correct and they can treat you this way and there's nothing you will do about it for a long time.

• zarzavat 6 hours ago

Stop supporting Windows as well.

Open source developers are doing Microsoft a big favor when they support Windows and publish Windows builds and installers. It's a substantial effort, and apparently that effort isn't appreciated.

If all open source software dropped support for Windows, it wouldn't really affect the open source community that much. It would definitely cause headaches for Microsoft however.

• jraph an hour ago

It's not that easy.

I agree that supporting Windows helps its ecosystem.

But also open source software on Windows is an important gateway to the free world. When you are already used to Firefox, LibreOffice and VLC, you might as well switch to Linux painlessly, but if those didn't run on Windows, switching to Linux would require relearning everything.

• ufmace an hour ago

I think they've been heading that way for a while, and it's only getting clearer.

I've been thinking, and said before, 90s Microsoft was far from perfect, but they at least seemed to care a lot about the quality of Windows. 2020s Microsoft seems to see Windows users as a captive audience they can exploit for whatever the corporate executives fancy at the moment. It seems more like a gradual transition.

In any case, it seems to be getting more clear that Linux is destined to be the best OS for power-users.

• BLKNSLVR 7 hours ago

Correction: stop using Microsoft products as soon as possible.

• xorcist 10 hours ago

It's not your own data anymore if you gave it away.

• gzread 4 hours ago

Google and Apple have been doing this for a long time, and Microsoft clearly got jealous.

Their first big win was when they banned the Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court from accessing any of the court's documents, then deleted all of those documents. Now they're going after slightly less important enemies of the state. That bar will continue to drop as long as it's allowed to. And let's not kid ourselves: if you develop or use encryption software that Mossad can't break, you are an enemy of the state.

• criddell 7 hours ago

Or create the account but don't use Microsoft services.

• whyoh 5 hours ago

That probably had nothing to do with LibreOffice. Lots of people have had their MS accounts locked for no reason. I guess the automatic abuse detection system just sucks.

My advice is don't use a MS account if you can, at least not for anything critical. You don't need it for development, you can use 3rd party CAs for signatures.

• Topfi 9 hours ago

Honest question, did we ever get an answer what was the cause for the sudden change from the original Truecrypt developer?

Even if one doesn't want to maintain that project for purely private reasons, recommending Bitlocker as the drop-in-replacement always made it smell fishy to me.

• abcd_f 9 hours ago

It's more or less commonly accepted that its creator got jailed for being an arms dealer.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Le_Roux

• Topfi 9 hours ago

I knew the speculation on him being involved in some capacity, but as the wiki page states, this was never confirmed in any substantial way.

More importantly, if development seized with no public comment, that would be one thing and may strengthen the "he got arrested" theory. However, there was some final communication, specific recommendations to rely on Bitlocker of all things, a new version of Truecrypt was released solely for decrypting existing disks and then the web page was removed, including a flag set on robots.txt to ensure it wouldn't appear on archive.org. All this concurrent to a crowd funded source code audit that, in the end, did not find any server issues or backdoors (I recall some speculation back in the day, that either known code quality issues or an intentional backdoor could have caused the exodus).

That all makes it hard to link this to an arrest of the main developer, though I dislike speculation without any hard evidence and if there is no new information, I'll keep this filed under "there is no answer".

• Izmaki 5 hours ago

I always believed that rather than publicly stating that they were about to be arrested or worse, which may alert regular, non-tech-savy people, he sent a hidden message in the arguably horrendous recommendation of replacing his tool with BitLocker.

I think he was trying to scream “Run!” without actually screaming “run”.

• _boffin_ an hour ago

Wasn’t there something with 7.1A and that the canary was gone after that version too?

• JoshGlazebrook an hour ago

> He subsequently admitted to arranging or participating in seven murders, carried out as part of an extensive illegal business empire.

Yikes

• diath 7 hours ago

Makes you wonder what kind of leverage/information you have to have to only get 25 years for admitting to being involved in 7 murders.

• pnw an hour ago

According to Wikipedia, the DEA gave him immunity on additional charges in return for pleading guilty and running a sting against his associates, but before the DEA knew about the murders.

• badocr 5 hours ago

My theory is that Le Roux was just financing the (two?) TrueCrypt developers.

• Jerrrrrrrry 5 hours ago

One of the greatest men of our times.

• no_time 9 hours ago

I would also like to know why is it excluded from Archive.org

https://web.archive.org/web/20260000000000*/https://www.true...

• bombcar 5 hours ago

This can be done by Archive.org doing it for whatever reason (asked, on their own, etc) or it can be triggered by the current owner of the domain modifying robots.txt I believe.

• b65e8bee43c2ed0 9 hours ago

likely chose to shut down rather than bend over, same as Lavabit a year prior. I find it more plausible than the other theory.

• jug 8 hours ago

I went on a Wikipedia dive and discovered this funny bit regarding the court process surrounding Lavabit and FBI's desire of the TLS private keys.

> The contempt of court was caused by Levison providing the keys printed in a tiny (4 point) font, which was deemed "largely illegible" by an FBI motion, which went on to complain that "To make use of these keys, the FBI would have to manually input all 2560 characters, and one incorrect keystroke in this laborious process would render the FBI collection system incapable of collecting decrypted data."

(And to be clear, that's all they ever saw of said keys)

• pas 7 hours ago

> The court ordered Levison to be fined $5,000 a day beginning 6 August until he handed over electronic copies of the keys. Two days later Levison handed over the keys hours after he shuttered Lavabit.

• trinsic2 an hour ago

I remember that. That was around the time they were using the National Security Letter to make things happen that were clearly illegal. Now look at where we are at. They are using Nation Security reasoning for anything.

• Topfi 8 hours ago

Fair assumption, but unlike Lava, TC never had customer/user data. The NSL/forced shut down theories also make little sense to me however, the fork was up by the end of the week and was easy to foresee. Kinda why this fascinates me so much, no theory I ever read survives basic scrutiny. Perhaps some things, we’ll never know.

• b65e8bee43c2ed0 6 hours ago

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nils_Torvalds#Linux_kernel_sta...

>When my oldest son [Linus Torvalds] was asked the same question: "Has he been approached by the NSA about backdoors?" he said "No", but at the same time he nodded. Then he was sort of in the legal free. He had given the right answer, [but] everybody understood that the NSA had approached him.

so the assumption here is that TC were also asked to accept "contributions" from bioluminescent individuals, and chose not to. "just use Bitlocker" was a deafeningly loud dogwhistle, don't you think?

• newsoftheday 4 hours ago

Agreed, that whole thing was suspicious. I still use TrueCrypt, because of the suspicious nature of how it all went down.

• 1970-01-01 8 minutes ago

Why is there no simple workaround for this? Why is it dead in the water and why can't we use another mechanism to verify the update files with SHA1?

• 0xCE0 8 hours ago

Linux is the only hope at this point for the future of computing.

Windows and macOS are just too risky to do any business with. Waste of all resources.

• chaostheory an hour ago

Who knows maybe Valve can expand from just gaming?

• delfinom 7 hours ago

Don't worry, US states are working on making Linux illegal through age verification requirements in the OS.

• gruez 2 hours ago

Isn't linux complaint because of the systemd change?

• McGlockenshire an hour ago

The only thing that systemd did was add a space and api to store an attested birth date. That is what the entire meltdown was about. A CRUD API.

Everything else about complying with the wacko age verification law is up to distro builders.

• cguess 7 hours ago

and yet... still unusable by the mass majority of people.

• teekert 7 hours ago

My kids grew up on Gnome essentially, I can tell you Win11 is a lot more confusing to them, not just because because they grew up on Gnome, there is just so much more ... stuff. And notifications and flashy things and news and weather apps and they all want your attention. Gnome is much more iPadOS like (minus that horrible concoction called the App Store).

Sure, if you're all in on MS365 (like all schools here in the Netherlands), Windows may be somewhat more handy with its native apps and all your stuff there with a single log-in.

• cguess 7 hours ago

And someone once raised their kids speaking Klingon, that isn't a good excuse on why it's a language others should use.

For the vast majority of people MS365 is a requirement, but really the issue is that even minor fixes require the command line on Linux and that makes it unusable.

• newsoftheday 3 hours ago

> For the vast majority of people MS365 is a requirement

No it isn't actually, not for the majority, my wife (former Sales Person and Manager) uses Google office tools and used LibreOffice Write and Calc for years successfully.

• dartharva 4 hours ago

None of this is true

• teekert 6 hours ago

I guess it means that even when something is (arguably) objectively more simple, people still won't bdge just because they don't want change. They don't want to learn new things.

I myself am quite different. I have thoroughly had it with my current iPhone and am eyeballing /e/OS, before that I really started to find Android boring, before that Windows mobile (the nice one with the cards). I switch Gnome, KDE, some other DE (now getting ready to try Niri) every year or 2. I don't get the struggle, for me a new env is like a present (even though I normally hate presents). So much niceness to explore, so much to optimize. I love it. But I'm also one of those guys that reads the oven manual and tries all functions in week 1.

I'm not weird, all you people are weird.

• Pay08 4 hours ago

No, it means that people have requirements that Linux does not fulfill. I need the Office suite, and would rather not gamble with the various compatibility promises made by alternatives.

• trinsic2 an hour ago

Good luck with that.

• uyzstvqs 4 hours ago

This is always said by people who either never touch the Linux desktop, or exclusively use their own custom Arch setup.

You can install Fedora Linux, Linux Mint or Manjaro, and it's more user friendly than Windows 11 and macOS.

• WarmWash 6 hours ago

Linux is stuck because it's made and maintained by people who love linux.

Look at popular unix based OS's - Android, MacOS, iOS..

Whats the first thing they do? Take the command line out back and shoot it. Whereas for linux users, their is this l33t h4cker festishization of only using a keyboard to do everything. All these distros have an extremely robust CLI under the hood, and an afterthought quasi GUI on the surface. Just good enough for grandma to check her email and watch youtube.

• hparadiz 6 hours ago

Why do folks act like windows isn't full of cli commands? First thing on any windows box is running debloat in powershell. Installing apps from a gui in Linux has been solved for a long time.

• WarmWash 5 hours ago

Having an excellent CLI doesn't preclude having an excellent GUI. No reason we can't have both.

Also I hate linux repos with a passion, because they are optimized for CLI usuage, and (like the whole OS) the GUI parts are a total unoptimized afterthought. Never mind that they are a dumping ground for whatever code anyone shits out, with virtually zero management or curation. With a CLI you don't see this, with a GUI it's a total mess.

I'm fine with app stores, but they need to be actively managed and curated. If not, I far far prefer just downloading .exe's from the source.

• PokestarFan 6 hours ago

MacOS has a good CLI if you need to use it. There are CLI equivalents for a lot of the system setting/administration stuff.

• kbelder 4 hours ago

>Just good enough for grandma to check her email and watch youtube.

Which is 90% of the use of a computer. And Steam is taking care of the other 10%.

• newsoftheday 3 hours ago

> Whereas for linux users

My wife has used Linux for many years successfully and has never used the CLI once.

• WarmWash 8 minutes ago

So has my grandma

• goolz 5 hours ago

I have had Bazzite on my gaming PC for a while now, never have to mess with the terminal much. It has come a long, long way. Even gentoo has become more accessible than ever. While some of this holds true, you most certainly do not need to live in the command line with some of these distros. Especially if you are just trying to play some games and browse the web, etc.

• sgbeal 4 hours ago

>> Linux is the only hope at this point for the future of computing.

Linux is the most obvious, but there are numerous flavors of BSD as well.

> and yet... still unusable by the mass majority of people.

That info is 20+ years out of date. Distros like Suse and Ubuntu made Linux "click, click, click, it's installed" more than two decades ago. i've watched complete non-techies switch to Mint Linux long-term, the only intervention from me (their resident techie) being showing them how to boot up the USB stick installer.

• tapoxi 7 hours ago

This isn't really true anymore with the advent of Flatpak & Flathub. It's just an app store like any other platform. Even the majority of games work without tweaking.

• cguess 7 hours ago

I've run Linux as a daily driver recently Flatpak and Flathub still break all the time. Not to mention the last time I bumped my Nvidia drivers nothing decided to open anymore.

Any OS that requires even once going to the command line is unusable for 99% of the population (and for me I just shouldn't ever have to).

• raudette 6 hours ago

I hit this recently - nVidia issues with a Flatpak, I spent about half an hour on it, gave up, and just decided to try the app out on another laptop.

• newsoftheday 3 hours ago

My wife (former Sales Person and Manager) has used Linux for many, many years and prefers it over Windows.

• megous 7 hours ago

Not used does not mean not usable. Primary school aged children used MS-DOS without any documentation in 1990's. Pretty sure randomly selected people would be able to use modern Linux distro, when pre-installed just like windows are.

• no_time 9 hours ago

prediction: they are testing the waters. If there is enough outcry they will go "oopsie whoopsie, hehe :3 your account is restored".

If there isn't enough outcry they will go forward and disable more signing keys related to things like torrent clients, VPN software, eject UBO from the edge store etc etc.

Atleast now I'm a bit more certain that VC is indeed safe.

• superxpro12 5 hours ago

They've finally sprung their enshittification trap. Their move into "open source" was never of friendly origin. It was a business move, plain and simple.

And now they're locking down Window OS, hard. Expect github and vscode to follow.

• trinsic2 an hour ago

I left GitHub for GitLab because i knew this was coming.

• dizhn 12 hours ago

Microsoft disabled the developer's certificate so no windows releases can be made.

• jonathanstrange 11 hours ago

As someone who is just planning to publish signed desktop software for Windows, this is deeply worrying. What reasons could there be for cancelling a certificate, especially when it has been used for years and the identity is already established?

Are there some ways to combat such decisions legally?

• electroly 6 hours ago

Perhaps not legally, but technically, you have an option: don't use the Microsoft Store. This isn't as wild a suggestion as it may seem to non-Windows users: the store is barely used by Windows users. You can get your own code signing certificate from a public CA, sign your own installer, and post it on your website. This is still the primary way that Windows software is distributed. Microsoft does not have a hand in any part of it; they can't cancel anything. Their only role is including the public CA in their root certificate store. If you're not shipping a kernel driver, you don't need Microsoft's permission for anything. You can still ship an .msix installer which is the same technology used by the Store.

I recently de-listed my app in the store and closed my Microsoft developer account. I was wrong for having bothered with it; just a waste of my time for no benefit. Stick to your own deployment.

• ComputerGuru 4 hours ago

It’s become neigh impossible to get your own code signing cert these days. The 2025 update from the CA forum required code signing certs to be short lived (no more three or five year certs) and stored exclusively on an HSM. As a result, most companies cross-signing these certs have moved to a subscription PaaS model where you are issued a cert but never receive custody of it, and perform signing via their APIs, and are at their mercy should they decide to block your account.

Anyway, even if you could get your own cert it would be same thing: MS could revoke or blacklist your indicate cert (though usually the grounds for doing so are much less shaky than your account being suspended for vague “tos violations”)

• electroly an hour ago

I was afraid of the HSM at first but for an open source developer (rather than a big company) I found it wasn't a big deal. I can't sign in GitHub Actions and I have a USB stick that lights up when I sign releases, but it hasn't been a blocker. I got mine from Sectigo Store. This isn't hypothetical, I really did it, I've got the HSM, it works. It wasn't difficult. It just cost some money and a little bit of time. "Nigh impossible" is a tremendous exaggeration. I'll concede "annoying and expensive" perhaps. If you've got the money, you can get the HSM. You don't have to re-buy the HSM when you renew your certificate.

The Microsoft Store account was painful to set up, I'll note. My developer account had also been cancelled by Microsoft for unknown reasons, and I ultimately had to set up a brand new one. New email, new name. My new account has my middle initial because I couldn't clash with the existing, closed account. My first and last name alone are banished forever from the store.

The "same thing", as you concede, isn't the same thing. Quantity has a quality of its own: one happens all the time and we're reading an article about it happening right now. In the comments there's another prominent maintainer who it happened to, and it happened to me personally! That's three right here! The other happens so infrequently that people in this same HN thread are complaining that it isn't happening enough. Can you find an example that's like Veracrypt and WireGuard? In practice, it seems they rarely do this, even when they should. You can actually view the list under "Manage computer certificates" > "Untrusted Certificates." On my computer the entire list is 20 certificates.

I'm standing by my suggestion, 100%. These aren't equivalent risks at all.

• ComputerGuru 22 minutes ago

Thanks for sharing your experience. I have been code signing releases for over a decade as an indie publisher myself, until I found myself effectively iced out by the HSM requirement, the increased cost, and the shortened cert lifetimes, which, as someone with certain executive order dysfunctions, I already had a hard time being on top of with the old (multi-year) lifetimes.

I just migrated to MS artifact signing and, thank the lord, had an actually easier time getting verified than I did with the Sectigo and Comodo in the past. I’m sure I’m not representative of anyone else’s experience but having already had a developer account (with a different email and without an Azure account!) that I had already been using for the Microsoft Store might have helped, as well as the fact that I had a well-established business history (I’ve heard businesses younger than 3 years can’t get verified??), but reading all the comments here makes me very uneasy about the future.

It’s good to know the HSM route isn’t a complete non-starter. The main reason I panned it is that when I started looking into this I found that a number of companies that had previously offered the HSM route had done a bait and switch and were now keeping custody unless you were big enterprise (meaning willing to put up with 10k/yr fees). I did find a few that would allow OSS devs to sign their work, but read horror stories on Reddit and elsewhere about their freezing the account and issuing no refunds if you ask them to issue the cert in the name of your LLC or corporation instead of with your personal name (which I expressly did not want). Also, they actually were more expensive than Azure artifact signing even after the HSM cost was taken out.

• trinsic2 an hour ago

Yep. OS level stores are just way for the org to exercise control over installs.

I have stay far away from that process for a long time. Apple MacOS seems like the worst in that department IMHO.

• rkagerer 4 hours ago

Thank you for that. Although it may be unlikely, I'd love to see a mass exodus away from their failed attempt to emulate all the worst aspects of appstores popularized in other platforms.

I grew up being able to download software and install it, and actually prefer that model (relying on reputational trust of the party publishing it, my own verification from other signals researched, or sandboxing techniques where appropriate).

Most users may not be aware, but a rare gem of a version of Windows that refreshingly doesn't even come with the store (or a bunch of the other unwanted bloat) is IoT Enterprise LTSC.

As a lifelong Windows user, the premise of Microsoft controlling what goes on my PC is revolting. I'm buying a tool from them, not a set of handcuffs. If it was some non-profit, open-source group running the store I might be more inclined to trust it. But ultimately the only gatekeeper on a product I own should be me. Otherwise I don't really own it, which leads to problems like this one.

• shelled 11 hours ago

Realistically speaking - anything could be a reason. A shakedown or blocking based on some "nudge" (this might come across as tin-foiled though). Some flag/trip-wires going wrong, more worryingly due to a bug/false alarm - and this is more worrying because in this case semi-incompetent large orgs like MSFT find it really hard to accept it, fix, and move on. Some change in OP's account that either they don't see or haven't realised - some edge case, you never know.

And of course, it doesn't affect their earnings and there are no consequence, or significant, so they won't care and won't respond or tell what went wrong.

Can one move legally? Sure. But then it effectively is a combo of who blinks first and who can hold their breath longer.

• politelemon 11 hours ago

This is a concern and risk that has realised itself multiple times over the past decades. There have been multiple stories linked to multiple developers in the past.

If you publish to any closed platform including ios, mac, win, android, this is the risk you run and a condition of operating you will need to accept.

• technion 10 hours ago

There's more to it. Signed desktop software can be signed by any CA.

Veracrypt has kernel drivers. Microsoft's ability to control what you can sign is specific to kernel drivers, and Microsoft's trigger finger around bans exists in the world where bad drivers BSOD machines.

In general this isn't your problem.

• raxxorraxor 9 hours ago

Speculation as well and highly unlikely. Microsoft drivers can very well BSOD your machine as well, not a significant or convincing threat scenario and certainly not something that lead to certificate revocation of driver developers. There is zero quality control or review by Microsoft here. Not for their own products and not for third party ones.

• fluoridation 7 hours ago

That's not entirely true. Certain classes of signing keys require driver developers to put their driver through a test battery and submit the results to Microsoft.

• rkagerer 4 hours ago

I wish Microsoft expanded and built on that model, instead of moves like firing swarthes of their QA staff.

It could have grown into a massive, self-service testing playground where any developer could submit their product and put it through an arsenal of basic, automated evaluations (e. does uninstall leave tidbits behind?), with paid upgrades to more tailored services. They could even publish scores to help consumers coarsely compare workmanship across different vendors, and encourage an emphasis on quality across the whole ecosystem.

Instead they decided to just become overpaid bouncers who take your money, check your ID, and don't even bother about what you bring through the door.

• lossyalgo 4 hours ago

According to this: https://x.com/EdgeSecurity/status/2041872931576299888

> ...it seems like they instituted an identity verification policy, didn't notify me about it, and then I guess they suspended accounts who didn't do the verification.

So, make sure you verify your account? Check spam folder regularly? Log in via web interface at least once a year?

• hulitu 3 hours ago

> So, make sure you verify your account?

What ? On my computer ? Microsoft really has some nerves. My Microsoft account is scheduled for deletion.

• lossyalgo 2 hours ago

I guess we can assume you won't be releasing any software for Windows in the near future :)

• actionfromafar 8 hours ago

You just have to start living like they do in Russia and comply in advance. Don't do anything "interesting", no encryption, or if you do, make sure you leave breadcrumbs, scratch that, a bread trail for them to easily get access to customer data. An Oracle or Sharepoint integration maybe?

• Gareth321 10 hours ago

We can still install, right? It just comes up with a scary warning. Still not great but at least we aren't locked out.

• Strom 10 hours ago

You can, but it's more than a warning. VeraCrypt has a signed kernel driver, which has higher requirements. You'll need to boot into a special Windows mode and disable Driver Signature Enforcement.

• HauntingPin 10 hours ago

Afaict, you can't disable driver signature enforcement permanently without disabling secure boot.

• nslsm 9 hours ago

You also get a huge watermark that says "Test Mode" that takes up the entire screen (not kidding)

• DHowett 5 hours ago

Three lines of text in 12-point font in the corner which can be covered by a window is hardly “the entire screen.”

• nslsm 5 hours ago
• anfilt 17 minutes ago

Not the OP you responded too, but what the hell! I have not really used windows in a while but that's absurd. That text is massive just for an unsigned driver.

• raxxorraxor 9 hours ago

Secure boot is an anti-feature in most of the landscape anyway. Sure, if you have a distribution under your control or influence it could theoretically be a benefit. But you need to not be stupid or naive here.

You can also roll you own encryption if you are not stupid and naive. Probably a question of self-reflection.

• fluoridation 7 hours ago

Note that signatures are not revoked retroactively when a certificate is revoked. You can still install previous releases.

• bluGill 7 hours ago

With all the bugs and potential security flaws that are there and not fixable.

• fluoridation 7 hours ago

I don't know what to tell you, man. If you don't want bugs then don't use computers.

• idolofdust 28 minutes ago

Get off Windows right now.

The newest frontier AI models can easily find 0-days in all major software stacks, while the two biggest open source security tools on Windows can’t even ship patches.

• LWIRVoltage 4 hours ago

What sucks about this, is due to implementation,Windows is the only way to achieve some stuff in Veracrypt. For example: doing full system partition encryption, and the Hidden OS install that only Veracrypt can do- requires Windows with the computer set to MBR rather than UEFU. I had hoped we'd see more of the plausible deniability tech at the OS level

But aside from one or two experimental attempts, also presented at BlackHat https://web.archive.org/web/20250914062843/https://portswigg...

- the consumer has nearly lost access to high end plausible deniability

• shelled 11 hours ago

I am somewhat also concerned that this software was still being distributed on SourceForge.

• reddalo 10 hours ago

Yes, I stopped using SourceForge after they started tampering with installers to put adware inside of them.

It's a bit worrying that a sensitive app such as VeraCrypt is still distributed there.

• poizan42 9 hours ago

That was 11 years ago, under DHI Group though. I don't think Slashdot Media have been up to the same shady stuff.

• bartvk 9 hours ago

But think about it, if they were on Github now, which is owned by Microsoft, would there be even further consequences?

• frizlab 10 hours ago

I don’t even understand how SourceForge still exists!

• luke5441 9 hours ago

Depending on GitHub and Microsofts largesse there surely is much better. See OP.

• Pay08 10 hours ago

Why?

• qwertox 8 hours ago

~2015, "DevShare". They wrapped open-source software downloads with opt-out adware and PUPs (potentially unwanted programs), without the original developers' consent in some cases. They took over abandoned/unmaintained projects (like GIMP for Windows, VLC, etc.) and replaced the original download with their adware-wrapped version.

• pocksuppet 5 hours ago

Note that it's meaningless to call out "PUPs" as that category includes many things that are developed and distributed on sourceforge, like torrent clients.

• tomgag 10 hours ago

Sorry to hear about this turn of events, but it was pretty much to be expected given the way the world is turning, and Microsoft being Microsoft.

Switch to Linux if you can, and come give Shufflecake a try ;)

https://shufflecake.net/

• LWIRVoltage 3 hours ago

.... This deserves it's own posts , on HN, just for awareness-

Aside from https://web.archive.org/web/20250914062843/https://portswigg... , there haven't been really many goes at going for plausible deniability with modern systems, and I see the segment about a Hidden OS feature in work as well.

Hoping this succeeds. Funny, eventually Shufflecake, after it gets fully capable on Linux, might have to look at making versions for Windows and Mac

• not_a9 7 hours ago

https://community.osr.com/t/locked-out-of-microsoft-partner-... Could be a related issue to this? Maybe Microsoft just doesn’t want driver developers for whatever reason.

• altairprime 4 hours ago

Presumably it’s part of their commitment to kill kernel patching in Windows, to prevent another Worldwide Enterprise Windows Outage Caused By A Buggy Vendor DLL event.

• superxpro12 5 hours ago

its my computer. its my os. i own it. I paid my money and bought the program. not them. I am free to install whatever software and modify whatever kernel components as i see fit.

I am so sick and tired of the continued erosion of the ownership model. I dont want to rent anything. But corporations see it as an avenue to increase revenue. We pay more, for less. What else is new.

• chaostheory 44 minutes ago

It’s time to switch to Linux or another open OS.

• fsflover 4 hours ago

So why don't you stop using the OS that has a completely different approach to computing?

• ninjagoo 11 hours ago

Looks like Linux and some of the BSDs are the only remaining truly open OSes.

• krylon 10 hours ago

True, however, that has been the case for quite a while. This particular incident doesn't change that, except for the VeraCrypt developer, who is in a crappy situation now (not just regarding VeraCrypt, he mentions he was using the certificate for his main job as well, so this sucks a lot for him).

• sph 10 hours ago

Well, of course. Have the other commercial offerings every been "truly open OSes"?

• Aachen 10 hours ago

So far I haven't had much concrete reason for my family to switch away from Windows. The updates maybe, needing to pay for a new license and the UI changes are like pulling the chair out from under them, especially as they get older (Windows 7 was hard for my grandma, thankfully they left 10 mostly alone but 11 is quite different again so she's currently staying on 10 — not that her hardware supports 11 anyway but that's fixable), but it's either learning the new Windows UI, let's say ten storypoints of newness, or learning some Linux desktop environment, even if it's Mint which is similar to 7/XP it's not quite the same either and probably like 15 storypoints at minimum, even if then you're done for much longer

But if OSes are being locked down and software has trouble distributing security updates through official repositories for Windows... that's a good reason to finally make the switch. Same as why my family is on Android: I can install f-droid, disable the google store, and don't have to worry about them installing malware / spyware / adware

There's different degrees of openness. Android till 2026 was an acceptable compromise (let's see how it goed forwards). Windows is also on the decline with their account policy, not sure about this certificate revocation thing (thankfully haven't had to deal with it yet; I'm not a user myself) but it sounds like they're moving to a walled garden also

When the degree changes and gets even less open, yeah you can say "well of course, they were never truly open, they're commercial" but it's still a change and might lead people to alter their choices

• sph 7 hours ago

You'll find that people that are not computer experts will take to modern Linux with much more ease than those that have complex needs, which for 90% of the people these days means that access to the Web satisfies all their needs. Moving from Windows 7 to 11 will probably be as traumatic as moving from Windows 11 to KDE, so it's an investment worth doing in my opinion.

• SV_BubbleTime 6 hours ago

While I agree entirely that Linux in 2026 has never been more usable… how much actual work is being put into Office and 365 tooling native on Linux?

Like none. Literally the best office you MIGHT KIND OF be able to run in 2016, but probably more like 2013.

Valve focused on games, that is awesome and really helpful…

But there are 10,000 distros and instead of putting real resources to put even rickety bridges over MS’s moat, no sorry, this team is making duplication-of-effort distro 10,001 which is now identical to thousands of others but the taskbar is in the middle of screen.

The people working on Linux are consistently uninterested in then things people would need to drop windows.

• trinsic2 an hour ago

> While I agree entirely that Linux in 2026 has never been more usable… how much actual work is being put into Office and 365 tooling native on Linux?

Why the hell would you want that? Office365 is a buggy piece of nightmare.

• SV_BubbleTime 24 minutes ago

Because even though you don’t like a thing, the entire world of business uses it.

Hold your nose and work on WINE if you need to think that way. But MS has moats, and office is one of the widest.

• xorcist 10 hours ago

Until Microsoft decides to no longer sign the Linux boot loader shim (for IBM/Red Hat, no less).

• irusensei 5 hours ago

In most cases you can put your computer secure boot in setup mode and roll your own keys.

• trinsic2 an hour ago

Until they making CA a requirement, then disable changing the CA settings and it defaults to Microsoft. Then you are fucked.

• SeanDav 10 hours ago

Except compulsory age verification in Linux is now becoming a real threat. Some Linux distros are actively against this but many are not seemingly interested in fighting it: CachyOS, Ubuntu, Fedora and others.

Age Verification is the thin end of a much bigger wedge in "open" OS's

• sunshine-o 3 hours ago

Yes time to wake up.

I really believe most "open source" big projects have been compromised long ago. We have saw all those "Foundations" taking them over with all their governance, bureaucracy and goal which do not make any sense at the first look.

One example is Fedora, which is part of "The Digital Public Goods Alliance" [0], "a multi-stakeholder initiative that accelerates the attainment of the Sustainable Development Goals by facilitating the discovery, development, use of, and investment in digital public goods."

The Digital Public Goods Alliance has about every governments as member plus all the usual suspects: Gate Foundation and co.

All the leaderships have usually no background or experience in open source or even computers but are just magically placed there. But you can't say anything because they are mostly women.

You read the goals and roadmaps of those foundations and find out it has nothing to do with software or open source. It is basically there to control those projects and then have them implement all the age verification, digital id, etc.

So yes this is not a surprise all those projects are now all in absurd features such as age verification.

- [0] https://www.digitalpublicgoods.net/

• Pay08 9 hours ago

I thought community projects (as opposed to the corporate Fedora and Ubuntu) are exempt from such laws.

• akimbostrawman 10 hours ago

the current law requires no verification at all simple attestation, you could put in _any_ age. it also does not effect linux distros as a whole, only distros in jurisdictions with the laws.

• SeanDav 10 hours ago

Sure, for now... I simply don't believe it will stop at "simple attestation", because we all know that simple attestation is practically useless, but once the various distros accept this "trivial" inconvenience, "Age verification 2" with harsher requirements will soon be on the way.

I would be ecstatic to be proved wrong on this, but experience tells me that is not likely to happen.

• imglorp 4 hours ago

We all know it's not about age, it's about user identity. As above, it's clearly a wedge so it's not rhetorical to observe more invasive and controlling features are coming.

• pocksuppet 5 hours ago

Simple attestation is very useful for the case where a parent gives a child access to a computer and wants that computer to block porn. That's the use case everyone is clamoring for, and asking the root user "how old is this user?" solves it in a simple, open, privacy-preserving way. Everybody wins, except the teenager who wants to watch porn. If this were not legally mandated, everyone would support it as a useful feature, but since it is legally mandated, we have to get angry about it.

• SeanDav 4 hours ago

This has got very little to do with children - that is just the excuse that sounds good. "Think of the children" is a rhetorical tactic that anyone who wants to get unfettered access to your data rolls out whenever they can. It is a tactic that unreasonable people use to influence reasonable people, because it is so difficult for a reasonable person to argue against without coming across as uncaring and/or bigoted.

• pocksuppet an hour ago

If it was an excuse to get your data there would be some data-getting involved. It may be hard for you to believe, but lots of people really do want parental controls that actually work and are bound by the force of law.

• trinsic2 44 minutes ago

Yes that may be true, but parents are being misguided by efforts that are trying to control aspects of data.

If you, as a parent, make yourself open to this attack, you will find that you are making us less free of a society by expecting others to parent for you.

• egorfine 9 hours ago
• nixpulvis 11 hours ago

We need a better way to sign and verify software. Clearly companies like Microsoft and Apple have not been good for the open source communities and are inhibiting innovation.

• iamniels 11 hours ago

We need better OSes such that signing of software is not required to keep your computer safe.

• drewfax 7 hours ago

GrapheneOS is doing lot of things right in this regard. Robust permission system adopted from AOSP and hardening by default in every imaginable way. Things like hardened malloc, storage scopes are excellent security features. Malware cannot do much even with the default settings.

• layer8 5 hours ago

With a file system driver like Veracrypt, if it’s malicious, the OS might keep your computer safe, but not your files that you store in that file system.

• nixpulvis 3 hours ago

Yes, I completely agree.

• fsflover 5 hours ago

Qubes OS is such OS: it runs everything in VMs with strong hardware isolation. My daily driver, can't recommend it enough.

• PunchyHamster 11 hours ago

Just add code cert generation to letsencrypt, it's not like MS validates the code that you sign used certs from them anyway

• mr_mitm 11 hours ago

What would be the point? How would you prevent malware from being signed? Currently, code signatures are used as a signal for trustworthiness of the code.

• sidewndr46 9 hours ago

Microsoft signed the Crowdstrike updates. I don't think a CA signing a piece of malware is a realistic thing to be concerned about.

• megous 7 hours ago

Only signal is that whoever is in the subject DN (highly) probably signed the code. There's 0 signal about trustworthiness of the code in the signature. Thrustworthiness signal is in the behavior/reputation of the signer.

Pretty sure there were historically a lot of apps that stole peoples contact lists and were signed properly. Certainly in the Android world.

• duskdozer 10 hours ago

Is it some entirely different process than providing hashes and a GPG signature?

• mr_mitm 9 hours ago

Well, yes. Just look at OP and Jason struggling to get their code signed.

• Eldt 11 hours ago

Misplaced trustworthiness?

• Pay08 10 hours ago

On the source code side, I quite like the way Guix does things, i.e. needing every commit to be gpg-signed. They even have a handy tool for verifying the repo[0] but I'm not sure how viable this is for non-OSS projects.

[0]: https://guix.gnu.org/manual/devel/en/html_node/Invoking-guix...

• uyzstvqs 4 hours ago

I suggest that developers could self-sign to verify the legitimacy of future updates. Otherwise leave it unsigned.

This entire "big tech overlords have to sign apps & drivers to keep you safe" concept is one giant pile of nonsense.

• tamimio 9 hours ago

It should something like web certificates, you can bring your own.

• realusername 10 hours ago

I think this is fundamentally an unsolvable problem and I'm not even sure it's worth pursuing.

Any large scale signing platform will have large oversights and be rendered useless. See the appstore / play store/windows...

• _s_a_m_ 11 hours ago

Microsoft doing everything in their power to be assholes, as always

• krylon 10 hours ago

As much as I like bashing Microsoft, never underestimate people's capacity for incompetence, especially where large organizations are involved. I don't see how they would gain anything from this move.

• cm2187 10 hours ago

It doesn’t help that they do that sort of shits AND mandate a microsoft account for logging in to windows. Also how much trust can you have that if you move your business to azure they will not randomly kill it. Incompetence or malice, almost doesn’t matter to the average user.

• krylon 8 hours ago

The outcome is the same, yes. With incompetence, there is at least a glimmer of hope things will get rectified. But you are correct, trust is destroyed this way, and it doesn't look like Microsoft cares much.

• pjdesno 2 hours ago

Interesting.

My only experience with Veracrypt is via a law firm I was consulting with, who used it to protect some files they were sharing with me. Law firm and their end client are both big, prestigious companies.

• RandomGerm4n 11 hours ago

That's especially ridiculous because this whole security mechanism that Microsoft is forcing on Windows user doesn't even work. There are tons of leaked certificates and on forums dedicated to game hacking you can find guides on how to get your hands on one yourself. People there use them to write kernel drivers for cheating in games. Game developers often blacklist these in their anti-cheat software so that the game no longer launches on a computer using a driver with that certificate. Microsoft however does not do this and malware developers can then simply use the certificates for their own purposes. So all this nonsense is basically just a restriction on regular users and honest developers while the “bad guys” can get around it.

• Deathmax 4 hours ago

Microsoft has been taking steps to mitigate the leaked code signing certificate problem.

On the driver side of things, new versions of Windows no longer trust the cross-signed certs, so you must submit your driver to Microsoft to validate and sign, so no private key to go missing. https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/windows-itpro-blog/...

On the regular Authenticode side of things, the new CA/B Forum rules have prohibited storing new private keys outside of hardware modules for a while now, so eventually you won't be able to find a leaked private key for code signing that would still be valid.

• redox99 8 hours ago

That's kind of crazy. Why doesn't Microsoft revoke such certs such that you can't sign new software with it?

• steve1977 7 hours ago

Because it's mostly just performative.

• 8cvor6j844qw_d6 10 hours ago

Seeing this kind of friction makes me more confident in VeraCrypt. The tools that never seem to run into trouble with platform gatekeepers are the ones I'd worry about.

• Pay08 9 hours ago

That seems like a very nonsensical stance.

• pocksuppet 5 hours ago

Well look at something like ANOM. The FBI encouraged its use. Because it was run by the FBI and they could see all the private messages.

If Veracrypt was a honeypot, the powers that be would go out of their way to make it as easy to use as possible. They'd instantly sack whoever made this decision, and reverse it.

• Pay08 4 hours ago

So is coreutils a honeypot?

• baobabKoodaa 8 hours ago

The biggest risk in encryption software is that you lose access to your data. You seem to be ignoring that risk completely and focusing on something else entirely.

• dboreham 7 hours ago

I don't think you would loose access. You can always recover data on an open platform such as Linux.

• hereme888 6 hours ago

Besides Veracrypt, are there any real alternatives to Bitlocker for total drive encryption in Windows?

• baobabKoodaa 8 hours ago

Can someone please explain the implications for current Windows users of VeraCrypt?

• ratg13 4 hours ago

No new features, no security patches.

• folbec 8 hours ago

I would not be surprised if it was some sort of AI driven mistake.

Some guy somewhere deciding to delegate threat assessment to Copilot or some other automated tool.

• john_strinlai an hour ago

i would bet a years salaray that you are correct. copilot or some automated process. and then the message is automated with an automated appeal-denial flow.

conspiracy theories are fun and all, but 99.99% of the time it is just incompetence, miscommunication, etc.

• baobabKoodaa 8 hours ago

Anyone here who could reach out to specific persons inside Microsoft who could fix this?

• Tsarp 6 hours ago

For folks looking for a much simpler single binary alternative.

https://github.com/srv1n/kurpod

• layer8 4 hours ago

This is not a replacement, as it has no native file system integration, only a web interface.

• Tsarp 3 hours ago

Its not just a web interface. It creates a storage container that can grow and be compacted on the fly is fully portable.

• layer8 3 hours ago

If it doesn’t have file system integration, you can’t edit files in it using regular software.

• Izmaki 5 hours ago

Reminds me of when users of TrueCrypt were urged to just install BitLocker instead. Sus AF.

• trashface 8 hours ago

Hope this is resolved. I guess I could run linux in a VM and mount volumes there, but this is getting a bit dicey. But Win 10 is my last windows anyway.

• lofaszvanitt 2 hours ago

What about the guy who originally created it. Paul Le Roux, the criminal mastermind? That's a wild story :D.

• Havoc 6 hours ago

Microsoft continues to push for year of the Linux desktop

• mapontosevenths 8 hours ago
• HumanOstrich 7 hours ago

From TFA: "I have encountered some challenges but the most serious one is that Microsoft terminated the account I have used for years to sign Windows drivers and the bootloader."

• mapontosevenths 7 hours ago

Yeah, and the first comment beneath that mentions that the most recent version is signed with the "2011 CA" that the article I link to discusses being deprecated.

My guess was that he got caught up in some house-cleaning. My theory being that he's still signing his code the way malware authors also do and got flagged by some automated review that's meant to force him to go get WHCP certified or whatever the new route is.

• HumanOstrich 5 hours ago

The article you linked says the change is rolling out in April in evaluation mode.

And if it were related to some kind of scan and malware flagging, the cert would have been revoked. It is not.

• satai 7 hours ago

Microsoft can't be trusted.

Never was, isn't and I guess won't be.

• speedgoose 11 hours ago

It's perhaps naive, but could he create a new organisation, like a "TotallyNotVeraCrypt" French loi 1901 association, at a different address, and create a new microsoft account by making sure it passes all the requirements.

• repelsteeltje 10 hours ago

Yeah but isn't the point of these certificates to express trust?

The point isn't (or: shouldn't be) to forcefully find your way through some back alley to make it look legit. It's to certify that the software is legit.

Trust goes both ways: we ought to trust Microsoft to act as a responsible CA. Obfuscating why they revoked trust (as is apparently the case) and leaving the phone ringing is hurting trust in MS as a CA and as an organization.

• sidewndr46 9 hours ago

who on planet earth trusts a piece of software because Microsoft signed it?

• roelschroeven 9 hours ago

There are different types of trust, but at the very least with such a signature you can trust that the piece of software is really from Veracrypt and not from a malicious third party.

• repelsteeltje 7 hours ago

For one: Most if not all virus scanners.

A signature is a signal, not an absolute. Although, to be fair, if Microsoft (or most other CAs) had done a better job, then that trust would have carried more weight than it does currently.

• mr_mitm 9 hours ago

Trust isn't binary, it's a spectrum. A signature is a signal that should increase trustworthiness. Not the strongest signal, perhaps even a weak one, but it's not zero.

• orbital-decay 10 hours ago

That's what VeraCrypt is, a fork of the original TrueCrypt after all drama, security doubts, and eventual discontinuation. It took a long time and two independent audits to establish trust in it.

• subscribed 10 hours ago

Probably not French though, give how hostile it appears to be to encryption/security related projects (GrapheneOS had a good arguments re: that)

• kijin 9 hours ago

The author is now based in Japan, and even owns a veracrypt.jp domain. Meanwhile, the old veracrypt.fr domain redirects to veracrypt.io.

Seems rather clear that he doesn't want French jurisdiction.

• fg137 10 hours ago

And Microsoft will be happy to shut that one down because their incompetence.

So we'd better find a real solution now.

• swordsith 8 hours ago

if michalesoft wants to take away our ability to sign drivers, they will find there is more than enough vulnerable easily exploited drivers we can use that are pre-signed online. Thank you micosawft!

• HumanOstrich 7 hours ago

Are you having a stroke?

• qingcharles 4 hours ago
• c0balt 6 hours ago

Most likely just intentionally misspelling the name in the spirit of calling them Microslop.

• deltoidmaximus 6 hours ago

And perhaps the time they sued a kid named Mike Rowe for having a website mikerowesoft.com

• unethical_ban 5 hours ago

I run a dual boot of windows and am currently dauly-driving CachyOS quite happily. I've been playing some Crimson desert and got some occasional crashes... But any other game I have has run smoothly.

Their GUI tools for package management are thin wrappers on CLI tools, but are enough hand-holding that most people should navigate it fine. More devices worked out of the box for my with Linux than Windows.

Just like if you haven't tried AI in a year and have mocked it, you need to try it again. Of you haven't tried Linux desktop in a few years, you need to try again. CachyOS really does seem to handle the driver installs and gaming compatibility well.

• steve1977 7 hours ago

If only there was a way to sign software and not depend on a centralized authority, something like a... web of trust?

(and yes I know, you'd need to have the option to have "your" (haha...) OS trust it of course)

• kwar13 9 hours ago

very much sounds like microsoft

• avaer 10 hours ago

Forced software signing should be illegal.

• Pay08 9 hours ago

It's not forced, especially for normal software, you just get a popup. It's a bit of a pain to disable the requirement for drivers, though.

• baobabKoodaa 8 hours ago

I don't think you can install VeraCrypt, at least for system encryption, unless the installer is signed

• Pay08 7 hours ago

According to further up the thread, you can if you disable secureboot.

• pocksuppet 5 hours ago

And you mess with your boot.ini and ignore that half your screen is taken up by a TEST MODE banner. Buy a screen twice as big and tape over half of it, I guess.

• shevy-java 9 hours ago

This is always a problem when big mega-corporations are involved, be it Google or Microsoft. They want to control the platform.

We really need viable solutions. I have been using Linux since +21 years or so, so it does not affect me personally, but I think Linux needs to become really a LOT more accessible to normal people. And it really has not (on the desktop); all the various "improvements" on GNOME3 or KDE are basically pointless, they have not solved the underlying problem. Ideally problems should be auto-resolvable. If someone wants to use the proprietary nvidia driver, that should be a single click - on ALL Linux distributions. Instead you see some distributions have their own ad-hoc solution and other distributions have no easy solution (for simple people).

• SV_BubbleTime 6 hours ago

I will continue to suppose that the “real issue” with Linux is that the people drawn to developing it will not work well with others and continue year after year to waste time and duplication of effort on five decent, and ten thousand pointless distributions.

Whatever reason for this refusal / inability / choice to not contribute but rather re-create is on the reader to assume.

There is very little effort put into real progress as you point out. Sure, tons of work to move from x11 to Wayland, cool, only the developers give a shit… where is Office/365 that would make daily driving actually viable?

While WINE is impressive, it seems the only real progress for anything past Windows 7 is on paid versions of which there are at least three competing options.

Linux Desktop progress is slow because there it’s thousands of floundering side-projects without a goal of actually pulling normal users in.

• teekert 9 hours ago

I'm sorry, is this some sort of Windows joke that I'm too Linux to understand?

• bilekas 10 hours ago

And yet another example of companies turning actively hostile against their users.

The burden of usage/access is now solely on the customers and the feeling is that regular customers are just a nuisance to be ignored.

• ErroneousBosh 12 hours ago

Jesus, sourceforge is still on the go?

• tvbusy 10 hours ago

I understand that most people want to move to other more modern tools, it's up to you. However, what baffled me is why the author's choice not to move is a problem? Did we pay them to move and they did not move as promised? Was there some crowd funding to move that was not fulfilled?

• IshKebab 8 hours ago

> what baffled me is why the author's choice not to move is a problem?

Because Sourceforge is horrible to use and was at one point actively pushing malware? It's pretty obvious tbh.

• ErroneousBosh 3 hours ago

I just didn't think Sourceforge was still running. There was a mass exodus from it about 20 years ago when it became a massive ad farm that started injecting ads into people's tarballs.

It was never as good as freshmeat.net even in its heyday.

• SXX 12 hours ago

Might be it even not using all your code to train AI. Or at least not asking your explicit permission to do it.

• JimDabell 11 hours ago

Not every conversation has to be a conversation about AI.

• karel-3d 11 hours ago

sourceforge was always very scummy, I think they would definitely use the code for that if they could

• mbreese 11 hours ago

It wasn’t always scummy… but there was a definite shift after they got bought. It’s kept getting worse since then.

Then again, this was something like 20 years ago. Back then, Sourceforge was something closer to GitHub today. It was the de facto public source repository. You could even get an on-premise version, IIRC.

Actually, this is sounding a lot like GitHub these days… not sure what that means.

• ErroneousBosh 3 hours ago

As I've said elsewhere, freshmeat.net was better :-)

• mbreese 3 hours ago

For project discovery, definitely -- but not as a source code repository.

Wow, we're dating ourselves on this, but I remember when it was a big deal that SF.net added SVN support. They apparently didn't turn off CVS until 2017!

• egorfine 11 hours ago

And unfortunately some projects exclusively use sourceforge. Which breaks some of my CI pipelines.

• kome 11 hours ago

yeah, it just works

• hernanhumana 9 hours ago

cool project

• cynicalsecurity 5 hours ago

If you use Veracrypt on Windows then you have no idea what you are doing. Windows is not safe. Use Linux only.

• HackerThemAll 11 minutes ago

I would love to switch long time ago, but I make money on Windows enterprise customers, using specific Windows tools that have no reasonable Linux counterparts.

I'll throw my Windows laptop out of a (pun intended) window on the exact second I'll secure viable and sustainable income using Linux. I know it can be done, but so far it's outside of my circles.

• saidnooneever 10 hours ago

maybe an old vulnerable signed driver can be used to load the new version :D. on a more seirous note, i think contact with a person at MS, likely via socials triggering that, might help here. It all depends on the reason for the ban/block/cancel.

if they had a reason other than 'oops mistake' its likely just going to remain in place. (sadly, that is how MS is. if you care for privacy maybe go to BSD)

• a_paddy 10 hours ago

Who said vulnerable? Perhaps just a driver with less features.

• no_time 9 hours ago

GP refers to the practice of getting kernel level code execution using other, old vulnerable drivers and using it to run the VC driver.

• Hizonner 6 hours ago

This highlights the fact that not only is supporting Windows dangerous to your project, but using Windows is dangerous to your security.