Should OS makers, like Microsoft, be legally required to provide 15 years of security updates?

  • nucleative@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    15 years is too long, it doesn’t match the state of the industry or technological progress.

    If anything this slows down innovation which leads me to suspect the 15 year idea was though of by someone who dislikes any technical changes.

    • bestboyfriendintheworld@sh.itjust.works
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      5 hours ago

      15 years is actually reasonable.

      I have a ten year old laptop with an i7 processor, 16 GB RAM, and 1 TB SSD. It still does most things, I bought it for initially just fine. Granted this was one of the best laptops you could buy at the time.

      Apple stopped supporting it with a current version of macOS a couple of years ago sadly. It’s still possible to patch newer versions to install and run on the old machine, but it’s a bit of a hassle.

    • ratten@lemmings.world
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      4 hours ago

      Pretty sure Rocky Linux provides updates for 10 years.

      It’s not asking too much for multi-billion dollar corporations to provide 15 years of updates.

      They have more than enough resources.

    • Rednax@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      Before Microsoft demanded TPM 2.0, you could install the latest version of Windows on extremely old hardware. Easily reaching that 15 years. We had this already. And Windows 11 can easily run without TPM 2.0. Microsoft just has business reasons to demand it. So I don’t see how innovation is slowed down by this.

    • HighlandCow@feddit.uk
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      9 hours ago

      Fair like imagine if Microsoft was forced to support windows 8 for 15 years, a operating system people barely use, also some OSs arnt ran by huge companys