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...yet.

I like Nvidia. I got Nvidia products. But I'm also not stupid; there's a programmable microcontroller inside my GPU that decides whether or not everything works right. It accepts signed firmware when you update it and can presumably be reprogrammed via an OTA update to refuse functionality or outright brick the hardware. If Nvidia wanted to, they could absolutely killswitch my GPU.

This is the part of modern consumer electronics we all have to satisfy ourselves with. It's the case with your iPhone, your Nintendo Switch, probably your desktop computer too. We've long since crossed this Rubicon of trust in the hopes private interests won't eventually betray us down the road.

My "No Backdoors. No Kill Switches. No Spyware." T-shirt has people asking a lot of questions already answered by my shirt.

Anyway, I missed the news - apparently this is in response to a proposed bill by one Bill Foster that would mandate tracking & kill switch technology in chips that could be sent overseas: https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/gpus/nvidia-gpu-t...

(The body of the article doesn't mention kill-switch, but the cached search engine results do.)

(comment deleted)
Didn't Nvidia put in a kill switch to disable crypto mining on their cards?
Pretty good. If they want to back up those words with actions, they can start by disabling pervasive telemetry in their drivers, for example.
No CUDA on FreeBSD.

No Open Source Drivers.

This article should be titled "Nvidia: No Backdoors. No Kill Switches. No Spyware... YET"