Microsoft Abruptly Terminates VeraCrypt Account, Halting Windows Updates (404media.co)
291 points by donohoe 4 hours ago
romaniv 2 hours ago
I still hope that one of these days people in general will realize that executable signing and SecureBoot are specifically designed for controlling what a normal person can run, rather than for anything resembling real security. The premises of either of those "mitigations" make absolutely no sense for personal computers.
arcfour 25 minutes ago
I strongly disagree on the Secure Boot front. It's necessary for FDE to have any sort of practical security, it reduces malicious/vulnerable driver abuse (making it nontrivial), bootkits are a security nightmare and would otherwise be much more common in malware typical users encounter, and ultimately the user can control their secure boot setup and enroll their own keys if they wish.
Does that mean that Microsoft doesn't also use it as a form of control? Of course not. But conflating "Secure Boot can be used for platform control" with "Secure Boot provides no security" is a non-sequitur.
serf 14 minutes ago
>It's necessary for FDE to have any sort of practical security
why? do you mean because evil maid attacks exist? anyone that cared enough about that specific vector just put their bootloader on a removable media. FDE wasn't somehow enabled by secure boot.
>bootkits are a security nightmare and would otherwise be much more common in malware
why weren't they more common before?
serious question. Back in the 90s viruses were huge business, BIOS was about as unprotected as it would ever possibly be, and lots of chips came with extra unused memory. We still barely ever saw those kind of malware.
kelseyfrog 22 minutes ago
Anything that restricts user freedom is entirely bad, even if it's at the expense of security.
arcfour 9 minutes ago
astrobe_ 2 hours ago
I don't know about executable signing, but in the embedded world SecureBoot is also used to serve the customer; id est provide guarantees to the customer that the firmware of the device they receive has not been tampered with at some point in the supply chain.
201984 2 hours ago
And what if that customer wants to run their own firmware, ie after the manufacturer goes out of business? "Security" in this case conveniently prevente that.
hhh 36 minutes ago
gjsman-1000 2 hours ago
tosti 2 hours ago
Computers should abide by their owners. Any computer not doing that is broken.
ghighi7878 an hour ago
cferry 2 hours ago
wat10000 an hour ago
PunchyHamster 7 minutes ago
well, unless govt tells MS to tamper it
Galanwe an hour ago
> id est provide guarantees to the customer that the firmware of the device they receive has not been tampered with
The firmware of the device being a binary blob for the most part... Not like I trust it to begin with.
Whereas my open source Linux distribution requires me to disables SecureBoot.
What a world.
WhyNotHugo 41 minutes ago
repelsteeltje an hour ago
mort96 an hour ago
It's to serve the regulators. The Radio Equipment Directive essentially requires the use of secure boot fir new devices.
petcat an hour ago
pjmlp 2 hours ago
If only people didn't install Ask Jeeves toolbars all over the place and then asked their grandson during vacations to clean their computer.
asveikau 32 minutes ago
Apple is also somewhat responsible for the attitude shift with the introduction of iOS. 20-25 years ago a locked down bootloader and only permitting signed code would have been seen by techies as dystopian. It's now quite normalized. They say it's about security but it's always been about control.
Stallman tried to warn us with "tivoization".
VadimPR 2 hours ago
A year ago I used Azure Trusted Signing to codesign FOSS software that I distribute for Windows. It was the cheapest way to give away free software on that platform.
A couple of months ago I needed to renew the certificate because it expired, and I ran into the same issue as the author here - verification failed, and they refused to accept any documentation I would give them. Very frustrating experience, especially since there no human support available at all, for a product I was willing to pay and use!
We ended up getting our certificate sourced from https://signpath.org and have been grateful to them ever since.
riedel 3 minutes ago
I like the idea of a central signing authority for open source. While this might go against the spirit of open source, I think it eventually creates a critical mass and outcry if Microsoft or Google would play games with them. Also foundations might be a good way to protect against legal trouble distributing OSS under different regulations. I am imagining e.g. an FDroid that plays Googles game. With reproducible or at least audited builds also some trusted authorities could actually produce more trusted builds especially at times of supply chain attacks. However, I think such distribution authorities would need really good governance and a lot of funding.
tsujamin an hour ago
For what it’s worth, Trusted Signing verification has been a moving target over the last 12 months. It was open for individuals, then it was closed to anyone except (iirc) US businesses with DUNS numbers, then it opened again to US based individuals (and a few other countries perhaps).
My completely uninformed guess was that someone had done something naughty with Trusted Signing-issued code signing certificates.
Anyway, when I first saw the VeraCrypt thing this morning my initial reaction was “I wonder if this is them pushing developers onto trusted signing the hard way?”
VadimPR 39 minutes ago
I'm in Europe and ended up creating an organization since I have my own company, but they messed up the verification of one of the legitimate documents, and there was no way to reach them once they made that mistake. Frustrating, and definitely a lost customer for them.
20k 3 hours ago
There's a good reason everyone calls them microslop these days. The sooner we're all able to ditch this crappy company, the better - they're actively holding back the tech industry at this point
mbix77 2 hours ago
Yea, I'm in the process of converting our complete ETL infrastructure from SSIS/SQL Server to Python/PostgreSQL. Next step is Office 365, which will be more difficult, but doable since we are a small company anyway.
stvltvs 2 hours ago
Are you converting the SSIS automatically somehow or rewriting it?
tonyedgecombe 3 hours ago
They have been holding back the tech industry for decades now.
embedding-shape 2 hours ago
To be fair, the tech industry been holding itself back for decades now too, since lots of people seemingly have somewhat low prices to go from being a FOSS evangelist to wearing a "Microsoft <3 Open Source" t-shirt.
trueno 2 hours ago
p_ing 2 hours ago
What does this even mean? It's like throwing around the word 'bloat'.
BigTTYGothGF 2 hours ago
Looking at the rest of the tech industry in 2026 that might be a blessing.
giancarlostoro 2 hours ago
Outside of work, I don't use Windows very often if at all. I have a 2017 laptop that Microsoft made, and it is so damn sluggish for absolutely no reason, its VERY VERY vanilla mind you.
leptons 2 hours ago
Apple also holds back the tech industry in many ways. All companies seem willing to put profits before progress.
red-iron-pine an hour ago
active directory and excel runs the world.
what is apple doing that is similar?
trueno 3 hours ago
i remember years and years ago learning some posix/shell syntax and working in terminal. felt like my love for windows unraveled in real time. these days using windows... feel like i gotta take a shower after. like many i was just raised on windows it was the household operating system i had like 20 years of general computer usage under my belt on windows before i finally felt a mac trackpad for the first time. that hardware experience alone was the first pillar kicked out upholding my "windows is the best" philosophies. then i got into coding, then i tripped and fell out of hourly boeing slave labor into a sql job (lost 55% yearly income, no regrets yo). then i started discovering the open source world, and learned just how much computing goes on outside of the world of windows and how many insanely bright minds are out there contributing to... not microsoft. now i have linux and macos machines everywhere, i still haven't found the bottom but the last 6-7 years or so have been a really rich journey.
currently have a 32bit win xp env spun up in 86box just to compile a project in some omega old visual studio dotnet 7 and the service pack update at the time (don't ask). it is seriously _wild_ being in there, feels like stepping into a time machine. nostalgia aside, the OS is for the most part... quiet. doesn't bother you, everything is kind of exactly where you expect it to be, no noise in my start menu, there isnt some omega bing network callstack in my explorer, no prompts to o365 my life up.
it feels kinda sad, what an era that was. it's just more annoying to do any meaningful work in windows these days.
im currently working with c/cpp the idiot way (nothing about my story is ever conventional sigh), by picking a legacy project from like 22 years ago. this has forced me to step back into old redhat 7.1+icc5, old windows xp + dotnet7 like i explained above, and im definitely taking the most unpragmatic approach ever diving in here.. but there's one thing that absolutely sticks out to me: microsoft has always tried to capitalize on everything. tool? money. vendor lock. os? money. vendor lock. entire industries/education system capture? lotta money. lotta vendor lock. lotta generational knowledge lock.
they are lucky people are still using github. theyve tried to poke the bear a few times and theyre slowly but surely enshittifying the place, but im just kinda losing any reverence for microsoft altogether. microsoft has been big for a hot minute now, they have their eras. you can feel when things are driven by smart visionary engineers working behind the scenes, and you can tell when things are in pure slop mode microservice get rich or die trying mode. yea, microsoft has.. always been vendor-lock aggro and kinda hostile, but the current era microsoft is by far the grossest it's ever been. see: microsoft teams (inb4 "i use teams every day, i dont have a problem with it")
im aware people smarter than me can write diatribes on why windows is the best at x thing, but im only informed by my own experience of having to use all three (linux/macos/windows) for my professional work life: i grew up thinking windows was the best.. now im like mostly confident that windows is actually the worst lol. by a pretty damn decent margin. i was gaslit for ages
philistine 2 hours ago
> feel like i gotta take a shower after
I run Crossover and I feel like I gotta take a shower after. Just knowing there's a folder called drive_c on my Mac is the stuff of nightmares.
shevy-java 2 hours ago
Yeah. I felt in a similar manner when I moved to Linux. Microsoft seemed to make people dumber. I do actually use both Linux and Windows (Win10 only), largely for testing various things, including java-related software. But every time I use Windows, I am annoyed at how slow everything is compared to Linux. (I should mention that I compile almost everything from source on Linux, so most of the default Linux stack I don't use; many linux distributions also suck by default, so I have to uncripple the software stack. I also use versioned appdirs similar as to how GoboLinux does, but in a more free form.)
TheOtherHobbes an hour ago
dns_snek 2 hours ago
This is precisely why we can't allow platform-owners to be the arbiters of what software is allowed to run on our devices. Any software signing that is deemed to be crucial for ensuring grandma-safety needs to be delegated to independent third parties without perverse incentives.
This is what the Digital Markets Act is supposed to protect developers against. Have there been any news regarding EU's investigation into Apple? Last I remember they were still reviewing their signing & fee-collection scheme.
nubinetwork 4 hours ago
Tempest1981 2 hours ago
Thanks, the previous title was easy to miss: "Veracrypt project update"
Lihh27 3 hours ago
heh the same company that controls your secure boot chain just killed the signing account for the tool that encrypts your disk
onehair 2 hours ago
They should have also picked up that WireGuard Creator account also got his account terminated
tsujamin 2 hours ago
They did, just further into the article:
> According to a post on Hacker News, the popular VPN client WireGuard is facing the same issue.
onehair 2 hours ago
I meant to say, in the title. As Wireguard is way more popular than VeraCrypt...
saltamimi an hour ago
I'm confused why they can't just generate their own signing key and deploy it alongside the installer.
Using arbiter platforms like this sounds like a great way to footgun yourself.
Someone1234 12 minutes ago
Because a bad guy can also generate their own signing key and deploy it alongside the installer.
See Notepad++ for how that winds up.
avipars an hour ago
shevy-java 2 hours ago
Microsoft wants to control computers. This is why they came up with InsecureBoot - or ad-hoc eliminating accounts willy-nilly style. Microsoft kind of acts like Google here. It is also interesting that the US government is doing absolutely nothing against this despicable behaviour.
red-iron-pine an hour ago
the US government is owned by corporate interests and has been in some capacity since inception. special mention to the Russians and Israelis and Saudis who also own a piece.
msla 4 hours ago
With Windows, you get what you pay for.
In this case, that's an OS controlled by an unaccountable company that can take application software away from you.
Related: If you're the customer, you're the product.
subscribed 4 hours ago
Hmmm, so basically Google but you also pay for it?
kgwxd 3 hours ago
ChromeOS and Android are definitely comparable.
Already__Taken 4 hours ago
Windows actually isn't very cheap.
stronglikedan 2 hours ago
agree, because "free" can be neither "cheap" nor "expensive"
jonathanstrange 2 hours ago
panzi 3 hours ago
I see what you did there.
dark-star 4 hours ago
you can always either disable secureboot and driver signature verification, or (the better solution) just enroll your own certificate in your TPM and sign the driver with that...
askonomm 3 hours ago
Ah, yes, the [insert super inconvenient and complex thing to do that most people don’t know, want or should do] will solve it! And when that fails, surely the user can just write their own OS, right? Bunch of skill-issued complainers we the users are.
falcor84 2 hours ago
dark-star 2 hours ago
malfist 4 hours ago
> or (the better solution) just enroll your own certificate in your TPM and sign the driver with that...
I'll tell Grandma that's what she needs to do.
pixel_popping 3 hours ago
p_ing 2 hours ago
dark-star 2 hours ago
ntoskrnl_exe 3 hours ago
And they say Linux is inconvenient because you have to open the terminal every once in a while.