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Since the Boot2 is upgradeable, this means you could change the OS license key, and it appears you don't even need to go that far. The Boot1 is most likely capable (or maybe even some file in the system ) of forcing the boot2 to use a different key when loading the OS. That means two things:1. If we discover the RSA key to the OS, TI could change it on us with a boot2 v2.52. If we can figure out how to force our own key, we could easily install our own OS!Thoughts?
Is it just me or is everyone here deaf? I'm not talking about cracking a current key, I'm talking about the possibility of the boot2 and boot1 allowing for other keys than the current one.
So, could we attack boot2 by writing our own code, and appending more data to the end until we find something with the same hash as boot2?
So how hard would it actually be? Would it involve doing 2^256 trials, or is there a faster way?
My point was that the Boot2 has another option for what key it uses than the default. The question lies in what accomplishes this change. It can't be the boot1, since it's read-only, and it can't be the boot2, since it is the boot2 whose actions change.