Trusted Platform Module (TPM) is a chip on a computer board or in a notebook that is commonly made by Infineon and is used to make the computer Trusted Computer Group compliant! The
small chip holds data encryption
keys that are said to be used for computer security... Although many believe otherwise!
The commonly accepted use of it is Digital Rights Management (DRM) and it is used to give content providers administrator rights to your file system similar to the way a rootkit
trojan does!
In it'
s development, TPM had also been known as Palladium and "Fritz chip" but they rename it everytime it recieves negative press reviews so when
people buy a product that contains TPM, it's just more technical jargon on the box that no
one knows about!
TPM has been in ibm thinkpads for a long time now and it is in apple computers aswell as many others! The consortium that makes up the Trusted Group consists of most large companies in the computer industry, including
microsoft and intel...
The "public
key" inside the tpm can also be used to uniquely identify a computer (much like intels failed cpu id scheme from years ago) and this is
seen by many as Big
Brother inside of the computer tracking and snooping on everything you do! Like the pentium2 id feature, this can be disabled in computers that have it today since the feature is gaining acceptance so slowly, it is relatively
useless! Yet legislation has already been drafted to make it a crime to either manufacture, possess or use a non-compliant computer with no TPM!
"My computer is so awesome it does everything! It even has TPM security!"
A skeptical onlooker asks: "If TPM is such great security, how did some teenagers on the web crack it to allow OSX to install on any computer after
apple used it for protection?"
Here come the
apple lawyers... "OK pal, that's DMCA violation! You're going to
jail."