The words 'Microsoft' and 'trust' only really seem to fit together with the help of an 'anti' somewhere in the middle. I find it somewhat odd therefore, to find this particular company proposing the development of a 'trusted computer platform'. Trusted by whom? Not by me, that's for sure. It's not an altogether new idea, of course. In 1998 Intel came under fire for its processor ID idea, which enabled software -- or a Web site -- to quiz your CPU for its unique 64-bit serial number. This CPUid, which is built into almost every Intel processor since the Pentium III, is now switched off by default after initial outrage at the discovery that Web sites and applications could record it without the users' knowledge. Now, you have to download a utility from Intel here and switch the CPUid feature on. Not that any software or Web sites actually use it.
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