Monday, April 6, 2026

Your Home Is Not as Safe as You Think: Alerts are free and easy to get


5 Documents Homeowners Are Quietly Filing Before the Next Crisis - YouTube

Your Home Is Not as Safe as You Think: A Complete Guide to Protecting Your Most Valuable Asset

Deed fraud is rising, property tax seizures have been ruled unconstitutional, and most homeowners have never heard of the legal tools that wealthy buyers use routinely. Here is what you need to do — and what to avoid paying for.
Bottom Line Up Front

Owning a home outright — with no mortgage — makes you more attractive to fraudsters, not less. Real estate fraud cost Americans nearly $175 million in 2024 according to FBI data, with seniors accounting for 44% of losses despite filing only 19% of complaints. Four low-cost or free legal steps — a county property fraud alert, a homestead declaration, an enhanced title insurance policy, and a review of your property tax redemption rights under the 2023 Supreme Court ruling in Tyler v. Hennepin County — can substantially reduce your exposure. One expensive product to avoid: commercial "home title lock" services, which the Federal Trade Commission warns are not insurance and do nothing that free county programs cannot do. Consult a licensed attorney in your state before filing structural instruments such as LLCs or trusts.

Key Findings
  • The FBI received 9,359 real estate fraud complaints in 2024, resulting in losses of nearly $175 million — seniors lost $76.3 million of that total.
  • In April 2025, the FBI's Boston Division issued a specific alert about rising quitclaim deed forgery schemes.
  • A 2023 unanimous Supreme Court ruling (Tyler v. Hennepin County) found that counties cannot keep surplus equity when they sell a home for unpaid property taxes — but states are implementing the ruling unevenly.
  • Free county property fraud alert programs exist in most jurisdictions but are rarely publicized by the very counties that administer them.
  • Homestead exemptions — which shield primary residence equity from most creditors — range from unlimited (Florida, Texas) to as low as $15,000 (Alabama) and require a simple one-page filing in many states.
  • The FTC has specifically warned consumers against paying for "home title lock" subscription services, calling them fear-based marketing for a service that free government programs already provide.

The Threat Is Real — But Often Exaggerated for Commercial Gain

Home title theft — also called deed fraud or property fraud — is a genuine and growing crime. It occurs when a criminal forges documents to transfer your property's legal ownership to themselves or a third party without your knowledge, then either sells the home, takes out loans against it, or rents it to tenants. The FBI's 2024 Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) report recorded 9,359 complaints of real estate fraud with losses of nearly $175 million. Attorneys who practice in the field say the trend is worsening. "Home title theft is absolutely rampant at this point," says Neil S. Cohen, president and managing attorney at Barsh and Cohen, a firm that handles title disputes.

However, the threat is also the centerpiece of an aggressive commercial marketing campaign. The Federal Trade Commission issued a specific consumer alert in August 2024 warning that paid "home title lock" services — widely advertised on television and radio — are not insurance at all. They are monitoring subscriptions that notify you after a fraudulent filing has already been recorded. The FTC's unambiguous guidance: "Stop. Take a breath. It's just a ploy to scare you." Free county-run programs do the same job — and in some jurisdictions, do it better.

The mechanics of title fraud are straightforward. Criminals search publicly available county property records — accessible online in seconds — to identify properties owned free and clear, often by older homeowners. They then forge a deed, sometimes using a notary's fabricated signature, and walk the document into the county recorder's office. In most jurisdictions, clerks are legally required to accept and record documents that meet basic formatting standards. "There are places that you just go and record this deed. You don't even have to show your ID," notes real estate attorney Alisha Melvin. Once filed, the fraudulent deed creates what title attorneys call a "cloud" on your chain of title — a legal dispute that can take years and tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees to resolve.

"Once a fraudulent deed is recorded, the criminal can immediately make money from the bogus claim to ownership — before the homeowner even realizes they were a victim."

Certain properties carry elevated risk. Industry data suggests that 88% of title fraud targets non-owner-occupied properties — vacant lots, rental units, vacation homes, and second properties where owners are less likely to notice suspicious activity quickly. Free-and-clear homes (no mortgage lender monitoring the title) account for approximately 67% of reported cases. The combination of high equity, no lender oversight, and an older, less digitally active owner is the profile most attractive to fraudsters.

Step 1: County Property Fraud Alert (Free — Do This Today)

Most counties now operate property fraud alert programs that send you an email or text within 24 hours whenever any document — a deed, lien, transfer, or mortgage — is recorded against your address. The service is free. It takes approximately five minutes to set up online through your county recorder's or assessor's website. Search "[your county name] property fraud alert signup" to locate yours.

This is the most time-efficient protection available and the one the FTC implicitly endorses as the appropriate substitute for expensive commercial monitoring subscriptions. Georgia's statewide system is called FANS (Filing Activity Notification System) and is available at fans.gsccca.org. Many individual county clerks operate equivalent programs. If your county does not, set a free Google Alert for your property address to catch any online real estate listing activity.

Consumer Warning

Paid "home title lock" subscription services — typically $10–$20/month — do not prevent title fraud, do not lock your deed, and are not title insurance. The FTC has explicitly warned consumers they are fear-based marketing. Your free county alert program provides equivalent or better notification. Do not pay for this category of product.

Note that fraud alert programs notify you after a filing has occurred, not before. Their value is in speed of discovery: catching a fraudulent deed within 24 hours rather than months later dramatically reduces the cost and complexity of legal remediation.

Step 2: Homestead Declaration (Free in Most States — File It This Week)

A homestead declaration is a one-page legal document filed with your county recorder that formally designates your primary residence as a protected homestead under state law. In most states it costs nothing to file and takes under an hour to complete. Its primary function: shielding a portion — or in some states all — of your home's equity from unsecured creditors such as medical bill collectors, civil judgment holders, and personal loan recovery firms.

Exemption amounts vary significantly by state and have been updated in recent years:

State Exemption Amount (Approx. 2025–2026) Notes
Florida Unlimited equity Acreage limits apply; must file by March 1 annually
Texas Unlimited equity Acreage limits apply
Massachusetts Up to $1,000,000 Raised from $500,000 by 2024 legislation (Session Law 2024, c. 150); must file Declaration of Homestead
California (LA/OC Counties) Up to $699,421 Indexed to county median home price; updated January 2024
Minnesota Up to $450,000 Or $1,125,000 for agricultural homesteads
Nevada Up to $550,000 Must record homestead declaration before filing for bankruptcy
New York (varies by county) $136,975–$204,825 Married couples can double; New York County up to $300,000 combined
Ohio Up to $145,425 Indexed to inflation
Alabama Up to $15,000 160-acre limit

Critical limitations apply universally: homestead exemptions do not stop mortgage foreclosure, IRS tax liens, property tax authorities, mechanic's liens, or child support obligations. They protect equity specifically from unsecured civil creditors — the judgment from a slip-and-fall lawsuit, an overdue medical bill that went to collections, or a personal loan default. In some states the protection applies automatically; in others you must affirmatively file a declaration with the county registry of deeds to activate it. Check your state's specific rules. Massachusetts, for example, provides only a $125,000 automatic exemption but extends it to $1,000,000 upon filing a Section 3 Declaration — a critical distinction in a high-equity-value housing market.

Step 3: Title Insurance — Standard vs. Enhanced

Most homeowners who purchased their homes accepted whatever title insurance policy their closing agent placed in front of them without knowing that policy types differ significantly. A standard owner's title insurance policy is backward-looking: it covers title defects that existed before you purchased the home, including liens from prior owners or forgeries that occurred before closing. It does not cover deed fraud that occurs after closing.

An enhanced owner's title insurance policy (sometimes called an extended coverage policy) faces forward. It typically covers fraudulent deed transfers after closing, identity-theft-based transfers, and forgery of documents recorded against your property in the future. Critically, enhanced policies generally cover legal fees to fight fraudulent transfer claims — fees that attorneys report commonly range from $20,000 to $40,000 or more for a contested title dispute.

To determine your current coverage, call your title company and ask: "Is my policy standard or enhanced, and what would it cost to upgrade?" This is a single phone call that takes roughly ten minutes. If you cannot locate your original title insurance documentation, your county recorder's office can confirm who issued your policy.

Owner's title insurance does not prevent fraud. But when combined with a property fraud alert (which provides early detection) and an enhanced policy (which covers remediation costs), homeowners are far better positioned to absorb the financial impact of a fraudulent filing. Attorneys and fraudsters alike treat heavily insured, monitored properties as low-return targets.

Step 4: The Supreme Court's Ruling on Property Tax Seizures — Know Your Redemption Rights

On May 25, 2023, the United States Supreme Court issued a unanimous ruling in Tyler v. Hennepin County, 598 U.S. 631 (2023), that resolved a significant constitutional question about government property seizures for unpaid taxes. The case involved Geraldine Tyler, a 94-year-old Minnesota woman who had moved to a senior living facility and allowed property taxes on her condominium to lapse. By 2015, she owed approximately $2,300 in back taxes plus $13,000 in accumulated interest and penalties. Hennepin County seized the condominium under Minnesota's tax-forfeiture statute, sold it for $40,000, and kept the entire proceeds — including $25,000 in equity beyond the $15,000 tax debt.

Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for a unanimous court, held that the county's retention of the surplus equity constituted a "classic taking" under the Fifth Amendment's Takings Clause. The principle Roberts invoked traces to the Magna Carta of 1215: a government may not take more from a property owner than what is legitimately owed. States are now constitutionally required to return surplus equity to former homeowners after a tax forfeiture sale.

The practical implications remain uneven. The ruling did not specify remediation procedures, and states are updating their statutes at widely differing speeds. In New York, the legislature passed remedial amendments retroactive to the May 25, 2023 decision date. In Maryland, federal courts are applying the Tyler reasoning to Baltimore's tax-lien auction system. In Nebraska, the state supreme court has extended liability to private tax lien purchasers who benefit from what it called "unconstitutional taking."

What every homeowner should know: every state has a property tax redemption window — a defined period during which you can pay back taxes and fees to reclaim your property before the government completes the forfeiture process. These windows vary by state and typically run from one to three years from the date of delinquency. Most homeowners who miss these windows do so not because they were unwilling to pay, but because they did not receive timely notice or did not understand the timeline. Set a recurring annual reminder to verify your property tax account is current. If you receive a notice of delinquency or a notice of federal tax lien, treat it as an immediate priority.

From 2014 to 2020, approximately 1,200 Minnesotans lost their homes and all their equity for tax debts that averaged just 8% of the home's value — a practice the Supreme Court has since ruled unconstitutional.

Step 5: Structural Protection for Investment Properties — LLC and Trust Considerations

For homeowners who own rental properties, vacation homes, or other real estate beyond their primary residence, title fraud and civil liability present compounded risk. When real estate is held in your personal name, a civil judgment against you personally can potentially reach all property in your name — your rental, your vehicle, your savings — in what attorneys describe as putting "everything in the same legal pot."

A properly structured Limited Liability Company (LLC) creates a legal separation between you and the property. A judgment against the LLC generally stays within the LLC's assets, and a personal creditor pursuing you individually generally cannot pierce the LLC's assets — provided the entity is maintained as a genuinely separate business, with its own operating agreement, its deed properly titled in the LLC's name, and its finances kept separate from personal accounts. A badly structured or nominally maintained LLC provides no meaningful protection and creates false confidence.

A revocable living trust does not offer the same creditor protection but accomplishes a different objective: it obscures your personal identity as the owner in public records, which reduces your profile as a fraud target. Sophisticated property owners often use both instruments in combination. Neither is appropriate as a DIY project for high-value properties. State laws governing LLC formation, trust administration, and the interaction of both with title, taxation, and Medicaid planning differ substantially. This conversation belongs with a licensed estate planning or real estate attorney in your state.

Transfer-on-death (TOD) deeds are a simpler instrument available in many states that designates an heir to receive your property automatically upon death, without probate. Real estate attorneys note that a TOD deed can help establish a documented chain of intended ownership that can be used to counter a fraudster's competing claim.

What to Do Right Now: A Verified Action Checklist

Action Cost Time Required Where to Start
Sign up for county property fraud alert Free 5–10 minutes Search "[your county] property fraud alert" or county recorder website
Check your deed in public records Free 10–15 minutes Your county clerk or recorder of deeds website
File homestead declaration Free–$35 filing fee (varies by state) Under 1 hour County recorder or registry of deeds; search "[your state] homestead declaration form"
Review title insurance policy type Free (inquiry); enhanced upgrade varies One phone call Call your title insurance company; ask if policy is standard or enhanced
Verify property tax account is current Free 5 minutes Your county tax assessor's website
Freeze your credit at all three bureaus Free (federally mandated) 20–30 minutes Equifax.com, Experian.com, TransUnion.com
Set annual calendar reminder to review deed Free 2 minutes Any calendar application; recommended at tax time
Consult attorney re: LLC or trust (investment properties only) Attorney fees vary by state and complexity Multiple sessions State bar association referral service; real estate or estate planning specialist

A Note on Fraud Risk and Proportionality

A responsible assessment of this risk should include calibration. The FTC has specifically warned against fear-based marketing in this space, and their caution is warranted. No federal agency tracks home title theft as a standalone crime category — it falls within broader real estate fraud statistics — which suggests it is not common enough in absolute terms to warrant dedicated federal reporting infrastructure. The FBI's 9,359 real estate fraud complaints in 2024 cover the full spectrum of property crime, of which deed forgery is a subset.

For most homeowners, the concrete risk of losing a home to deed fraud is relatively low. The risk of being targeted rises meaningfully if you own a free-and-clear property, are 60 or older, own a vacant property or second home, or live in a high-value real estate market. The steps outlined in this report are proportionate to that risk profile: most are free and require an afternoon, not ongoing subscription fees or aggressive commercial products.

Local Focus  |  San Diego County

Protecting Your San Diego Home: What Local Owners Need to Know

San Diego County homeowners face a distinctive set of circumstances: among the highest median home values in the nation, a Proposition 13 property tax structure that can mask delinquency risks, California's recently updated homestead exemption law, and a county-run fraud alert system that most residents still haven't activated. Here is the local picture.

The Stakes Are Higher Here

Home values in San Diego County place local owners in a qualitatively different risk category than most of the country. With single-family home prices reaching a median of approximately $1,000,000–$1,060,000 by late 2025 according to California Association of Realtors data, and the Zillow Home Value Index placing the countywide typical home value around $950,000 as of early 2026, even a partially fraudulent deed filing represents potential exposure to hundreds of thousands of dollars in equity — well above national averages.

  • ~$1M Median single-family home price, San Diego County, Dec. 2025 (C.A.R.)
  • ≤$722K Max California homestead equity protection (2025), indexed to county median
  • 5 yrs Tax delinquency period before San Diego County can initiate "Power to Sell"

San Diego County is routinely at or near the California statutory maximum for homestead equity protection, currently up to approximately $600,000–$722,000 indexed to the county median sale price. This is far more than the $75,000 maximum that existed before 2021, but it still leaves owners of fully appreciated properties with significant unprotected equity above the cap. Filing a homestead declaration activates one important additional benefit: it protects voluntary sale proceeds for up to six months, giving you time to reinvest equity in a new primary residence if you sell under financial pressure.

Owner Alert: San Diego's Free Fraud Detection Service — Sign Up Now

San Diego County operates one of the most straightforward county-level fraud alert programs in California. The program, called Owner Alert, was launched in October 2022 by the San Diego County Assessor/Recorder/County Clerk's office under then-Chief Deputy Assessor Jordan Marks. It sends an automated email notification any time a document is recorded with the Recorder's office that transfers title to your property or records a lien in your registered name.

Registration requires only your email address and your property's Assessor Parcel Number (APN), found in the top right corner of your annual property tax bill. The service is free, requires no ongoing interaction, and monitors on a continuous basis.

Take Action — San Diego County


Register for Owner Alert at: www.sdarcc.gov/owneralert/
You will need your APN (printed on your property tax bill).
Questions: owneralert@sdcounty.ca.gov or (619) 238-8158.
You can also verify your deed directly at: arccprn.sandiegocounty.gov

California has also enacted Senate Bill 255, which requires every county in the state to operate a Recorder Notification program by January 1, 2027 — formalizing statewide what San Diego already offers. San Diego County homeowners should not wait for the 2027 mandate; the service is available today.

California Homestead Declaration: What San Diego Owners Should Know

California's homestead exemption underwent a substantial overhaul effective January 1, 2021. The old tiered system — a maximum of $175,000 for qualifying seniors and low-income homeowners — was replaced with a sliding scale tied to each county's median sale price. San Diego County's high home values push the local exemption to the statutory ceiling, currently in the range of $600,000–$722,000 (updated annually by the California Judicial Council based on CAR median pricing data; verify current amount before filing).

California's homestead protection is automatic for most forced-sale scenarios — you do not need to file a declaration for the exemption to apply in bankruptcy or against a judgment lien. However, filing a Declaration of Homestead with the San Diego County Recorder's Office provides one additional benefit that the automatic exemption does not: it protects proceeds from a voluntary sale of your home for up to six months, provided you reinvest those proceeds in a new primary residence. For San Diego homeowners with large equity positions who may contemplate a voluntary sale under financial pressure, this distinction is meaningful.

Filing is straightforward. The Declaration of Homestead form is available from the San Diego County Recorder's Office. There is a nominal recording fee (generally $15–$21 per page). The California State Board of Equalization also administers a separate Homeowner's Property Tax Exemption (distinct from the creditor-protection homestead) that reduces your property's assessed value by $7,000, saving approximately $70 annually on your tax bill — a modest but worthwhile one-time application filed with the Assessor's office.

Important distinction: California's Homeowner's Property Tax Exemption (the $7,000 assessed-value reduction filed with the Assessor) is separate from the creditor-protection homestead declaration (filed with the Recorder). Many San Diego homeowners have one but not the other. Both are worth filing. Check your annual tax bill for "EXEMPTION: HOMEOWNERS" to confirm whether you are currently receiving the property tax exemption.

Property Tax Delinquency: Know the San Diego County Timeline

Proposition 13 stabilizes assessed values for long-term San Diego homeowners, capping annual increases at 2% regardless of market appreciation. This is a significant protection — it also means that many owners who purchased homes decades ago carry property tax bills far below what the current market value would imply, reducing the risk of delinquency from sticker shock alone. However, for owners on fixed incomes, absent-owner situations (vacation homes, properties inherited mid-estate administration, or properties occupied by relatives), tax delinquency remains a real risk.

San Diego County's Treasurer-Tax Collector follows a strict calendar:

  • November 1: First installment of secured property taxes due
  • December 10: First installment delinquent — 10% penalty applied
  • February 1: Second installment due
  • April 10: Second installment delinquent — 10% penalty plus $10 cost added
  • June 30: End of fiscal year; unpaid accounts transferred to defaulted tax roll
  • July 1 onward: Defaulted accounts accrue 1.5% per month (18% annually) plus a $33 redemption fee
  • After 5 years of default: Property becomes subject to the Tax Collector's Power to Sell and may be auctioned (3 years for commercial/vacant land)

Per the Supreme Court's 2023 ruling in Tyler v. Hennepin County, San Diego County — like all California counties — cannot constitutionally retain surplus equity above the tax debt if a tax-defaulted property is sold at auction. California's existing statutory framework already required surplus proceeds to be returned to prior owners, making the state broadly compliant with the Tyler ruling. However, owners facing default should act well before the Power to Sell threshold: the county offers a five-year installment redemption plan that allows defaulted owners to cure their delinquency at 20% per year plus accrued interest, provided they stay current on ongoing taxes.

In June 2024, San Diego County Treasurer-Tax Collector Dan McAllister reported that 41,245 delinquent notices had been sent for the 2023–2024 tax year, with approximately $180 million in taxes still outstanding at the late-payment deadline — $7 million more than the prior year. Owners who missed the June 30 deadline faced the immediate addition of 18% annual penalties on the unpaid balance.

San Diego-Specific Contact Directory

Owner Alert (Deed Fraud Monitoring) San Diego County ARCC
sdarcc.gov/owneralert
(619) 238-8158
Deed/Recording Verification SD County Recorder PRN
arccprn.sandiegocounty.gov
Property Tax Status & Payment SD County Treasurer-Tax Collector
sdttc.com
(877) 829-4732
Assessor / Homeowner Exemption SD County Assessor's Office
sdarcc.gov
(619) 236-3771
Homestead Declaration Filing SD County Recorder's Office
Five branch locations; see:
sdarcc.gov for locations/hours
CA State Board of Equalization Homeowners' Property Tax Exemption
boe.ca.gov
San Diego sidebar sources: 
San Diego County ARCC "Owner Alert" press release, October 14, 2022 (sdarcc.gov); 
San Diego County Treasurer-Tax Collector delinquency notices, June 2024 (sdttc.com); 
California Association of Realtors December 2025 median price data; 
Redfin San Diego market data, February 2026; 
Zillow Home Value Index, early 2026; 
California homestead exemption statutes (C.C.P. § 704.730); 
OakTree Law California homestead exemption analysis, January 2026; 
Katzner Law Group San Diego homestead explainer, October 2025; 
California Senate Bill 255 / CLTA Summary of Legislation, 2025 (effective January 1, 2027); 
San Diego County Treasurer-Tax Collector tax collection calendar (sdttc.com); 
Federal Housing Finance Agency All-Transactions House Price Index, 
San Diego-Chula Vista-Carlsbad MSA, Q4 2025 (FRED/St. Louis Fed).

Verified Sources and Formal Citations

 

Publishing HTML files

 

Here are your practical options:

Quickest fix — Publish via a free static hosting service:

  • GitHub Pages — Upload the HTML file to a GitHub repository, enable Pages in settings, and you get a permanent public URL (e.g., yourusername.github.io/article-name)
  • Netlify Drop — Go to netlify.com/drop, drag and drop the HTML file, and you instantly get a public URL. No account required.
  • Tiiny.host — Similar drag-and-drop simplicity at tiiny.host, free tier gives a shareable link

If you have a website already:

  • Upload the HTML file via FTP or your CMS's file manager to your web root or a subfolder, then link to it directly

If you use Google Drive or Dropbox:

  • These no longer support direct HTML serving (they stopped years ago), so sharing links from those platforms will show the raw code, not render the page

My recommendation for you: Given that you publish IPCSG newsletter content regularly, Netlify Drop is probably the fastest path — it takes about 60 seconds, requires no account, and gives you a clean shareable URL immediately. You can also set a custom subdomain name for the page.

Would you like me to restructure the article in a different format — for example, plain HTML without embedded fonts that might be easier to paste into a CMS or email client — or help you think through a more permanent hosting setup for your newsletter articles?

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

The Prodigy Strikes: Sindarov Defeats Caruana


Sindarov Proves Why He's a Championship Threat! - YouTube

Critical Battle of the 2026 FIDE Candidates

Background: A Tournament of Emerging Stars

GM Javokhir Sindarov grabbed the sole lead at the 2026 FIDE Candidates Tournament, reaching a remarkable plus-three score by beating co-leader GM Fabiano Caruana. Chess.com To understand how stunning this is, one must appreciate who these players are and what was at stake.

Javokhir Sindarov, born December 8, 2005, is an Uzbek chess grandmaster who became a grandmaster at the age of 12 years, 10 months, and 8 days. Wikipedia His path to Cyprus was paved with historic milestones. Sindarov capped a remarkable campaign in Goa by winning the 2025 FIDE World Cup, defeating Wei Yi in a tense rapid-play tiebreak — the 19-year-old Uzbek grandmaster kept his composure in a dramatic set of rapid encounters, capitalizing on late chances as his opponent faltered in time pressure. Chess News By winning the 2025 FIDE World Cup, he made history by becoming the youngest World Cup winner ever at 19 years, 11 months, and 18 days. Kingdomofchess

His opponent in Round 4, Fabiano Caruana, needs little introduction to the chess world. An American grandmaster of Italian heritage, Caruana has been one of the world's top two or three players for over a decade and was a World Championship challenger against Magnus Carlsen in 2018. The next round paired the two co-leaders at 2.5 points each, with Sindarov having White against Caruana. Chess.com

He's only 20 years old and is playing his first Candidates Tournament, but that hasn't stopped Sindarov from having the best-ever start in any Candidates in this format: 3.5/4. Chess.com


The Game: A Queen's Gambit Accepted Gone Wrong

The opening was a Queen's Gambit Accepted — 1.d4 d5 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 dxc4 — one of the most classical and deeply analyzed structures in all of chess. Caruana, as Black, chose a well-known approach: playing ...c5 to immediately challenge White's central control, aiming either to liquidate White's central pawn advantage or saddle him with an isolated d-pawn. After castling, Black followed with ...Nc6, ...a6, and ...b5, a thematic setup that plants the bishop on b7 and controls the long light-square diagonal.

Where Things Began to Go Wrong for Caruana

The game appeared balanced through the early middlegame. White played ambitiously — Sindarov advanced a4 to challenge Black's queenside pawn chain, then maneuvered his queen's knight to e4, targeting Black's defensive knight on f6. This is a recognized strategic motif: eliminating the king's knight often clears the way for a kingside attack.

The critical moment came when Sindarov exchanged on f6. Instead of recapturing with the queen — which would have been the natural, centralizing move — Caruana chose to recapture with the g-pawn. This decision, designed to activate the rook and bishop battery toward g2, was the fateful turn. As the commentary makes clear, taking with the queen would have allowed e4 with strong effect; after 1...Qxf6 2.e4, White gains dangerous space. And if Black got greedy and captured on d4, the bishop sacrifice to g5 would have created havoc, threatening mate ideas via bishop to b5-check combined with queen pressure.

So Caruana accepted a compromised pawn structure — the open g-file — in exchange for dynamic counterplay with his rook and bishop targeting g2. This is a double-edged, high-risk decision. In principle, it is not wrong; in practice, it placed tremendous demands on precision that Caruana was unable to meet.

Still, there was some confusion over Black's decisive mistake. Caruana thought it was 16...Rg8, and Sindarov agreed with him, but engine analysis shows that it was Caruana's 17th move that was the real issue. Chess.com

The Strategic Drift: The d5 Blockade Collapses

Sindarov responded to the dynamic imbalance with superb strategic clarity. He played c6 — a deeply calculated deflection move, pulling the Black bishop off the defense of the a6 pawn, which was under double attack by White's queen and bishop. Caruana had no real choice but to capture, and White immediately exploited the moment with knight to d4, centralizing powerfully and threatening to unravel Black's position entirely.

From here, the game became a relentless squeeze. Black attempted to establish a blockade on d5, parking his bishop on that square to cork White's central passed pawn ambitions. For several moves, both sides maneuvered with precision — Sindarov probing with rook to c1, bishop to c6, and ultimately the rook lift to c5 — while Caruana fought to keep the d5 square occupied and neutralize the dangerous a-pawn.

The blockade, however, was always a temporary solution, not a cure. When Sindarov finally broke through with d5, the position opened catastrophically for Black. As the commentary describes: every single Black pawn became weak simultaneously, and the Black king — never fully safe after the g-pawn recapture — was now genuinely endangered. The fact that Caruana got low on time early — going under 10 minutes while pondering his 20th move — didn't help either. Chess.com

The Killing Blow: Rook to c5

The game's decisive combination came with elegant simplicity. After a series of pawn advances on the kingside — h4, h5 — and bishop maneuvers to exploit the dark-square weaknesses, Sindarov delivered the coup de grâce: Rook to c5. The threat of Rook to c8, pinning the Black queen against the king, was immediately decisive. The queen could not move — rook to c8 would lead to mate — and Black could not defend against both the pin and the loss of his bishop. Caruana resigned.

Caruana's Own Assessment

Caruana's matter-of-fact summary of his loss: "I kind of got caught in the opening." Chess.com This candid admission reveals the depth of Sindarov's preparation. The young Uzbek had clearly studied this exact structure with his seconds and came armed with a precise roadmap.

Sindarov agreed that a large part of his win was based on preparation: "Of course I never imagined I would go into the rest day with plus three but today I played a really [good] game and the prep was also fantastic, thanks to my seconds." Chess.com


The Bigger Picture: A Star Is Born

The Candidates Tournament is the gateway to the World Championship. The FIDE Candidates Tournament is the most important FIDE tournament of the year. In the Open and Women's events, eight players play each other twice for the right to challenge the FIDE World Champions Gukesh Dommaraju and Ju Wenjun to a match for the title. Chess.com

Sindarov's victory over Caruana was not just a win — it was a statement. His great start of three wins and one draw took the young Uzbek to world number six in the live ratings. Chess.com On the same list, Sindarov jumped up two spots to world number eight Chess.com after the previous round, and now sits even higher. The chess world is beginning to ask a question that would have seemed far-fetched just six months ago: could the youngest World Cup champion in history also become the youngest Candidates winner?

The tournament is far from over — Round five is on Friday, April 3, starting at 8:45 a.m. ET / 14:45 CEST Chess.com, with Sindarov facing Nakamura next. But after four rounds, the narrative belongs entirely to a 20-year-old from Tashkent who earned the grandmaster title before he was a teenager, won the World Cup before he was old enough to drink in most countries, and is now dismantling the world's elite one game at a time.


Sources

  1. Chess.com — Round 4 Report (April 1, 2026): "Sindarov Takes Down Caruana To Grab Sole Lead; Giri Beats Esipenko." https://www.chess.com/news/view/2026-fide-candidates-tournament-round-4
  2. Chess.com — Round 3 Report (March 31, 2026): "2026 FIDE Candidates Round 3: Caruana Wins In 19 Moves, Sindarov Beats Pragg With Piece Sac." https://www.chess.com/news/view/2026-fide-candidates-tournament-round-3
  3. Chess.com — Round 1 Report (March 29, 2026): "FIDE Candidates 2026 Round 1: Caruana, Pragg, Sindarov All Win In Stunning Start." https://www.chess.com/news/view/2026-fide-candidates-tournament-round-1
  4. FIDE Official Release (April 1, 2026): "FIDE Candidates: Javokhir Sindarov records third win as Anna Muzychuk moves into joint lead." https://www.fide.com/fide-candidates-javokhir-sindarov-records-third-win-as-anna-muzychuk-moves-into-joint-lead/
  5. ChessBase — Round 4 (April 1, 2026): "Candidates R4: Head-to-head stats." https://en.chessbase.com/post/candidates-tournament-2026-hth-4
  6. ChessBase — World Cup 2025 Final (November 26, 2025): "Javokhir Sindarov wins FIDE World Cup." https://en.chessbase.com/post/world-cup-2025-r8tb
  7. Chess.com — World Cup Final (November 26, 2025): "Javokhir Sindarov Becomes Youngest Ever FIDE World Cup Champion." https://www.chess.com/news/view/2025-fide-world-cup-final-tiebreaks
  8. FIDE Official Release (November 26, 2025): "Javokhir Sindarov crowned 2025 FIDE World Cup Champion." https://www.fide.com/javokhir-sindarov-crowned-2025-fide-world-cup-champion/
  9. Wikipedia — Javokhir Sindarov (updated 2026): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Javokhir_Sindarov
  10. Chess.com Player Profile — Javokhir Sindarov: https://www.chess.com/players/javokhir-sindarov

 

Thursday, March 26, 2026

The Unwritten Rules of IT — Explained (With Therapy Included)

The Unwritten Rules of IT — Starting With What Nobody Tells You

BLUF: The Unwritten Rules of IT

You don't need to know everything. You need to keep learning, stay humble, and understand that technology rarely fails on its own — humans fail it, consistently, creatively, and at the worst possible time.

The rules break down into three unavoidable truths:

On entering the field: Start before you're ready. Experience beats preparation every time, "I don't know" is a legitimate answer, and the only skill with guaranteed shelf life is the ability to learn new ones.

On the humans: Almost every outage has a human at the root of it — one who changed something, skipped the test, refused to document, or scheduled the Friday deployment with misplaced confidence. The systems are largely fine. The people are the variable.

On AI: It's a fast, tireless, extremely confident tool that doesn't know what it doesn't know, will fabricate solutions that look exactly like real ones, and is already being handed credentials it shouldn't have by someone in your organization who was just trying to be helpful. Supervise it accordingly.

The through-line: IT is not a technology problem with occasional human interference. It is a human problem that happens to run on technology. Every rule in this document — from "never deploy on a Friday" to "it's always DNS" — is ultimately a rule about people: how they communicate, cut corners, assume, avoid, and occasionally, heroically, hold everything together with a 2am fix that nobody will ever fully understand.

 

0a. You don't need to know everything to get started. The single biggest reason talented people never enter IT is that they're waiting until they feel ready. That feeling never comes. Not on day one, not after your A+, not after your CCNA, not after twenty years. The people who look like they know everything have simply had more opportunities to figure things out under pressure — which is just experience wearing a confident expression.

0b. Experience is the certification that actually matters. You can memorize every answer on a practice exam and still freeze when a real problem lands in front of you. You can also fumble through your first year, break things, fix things, and emerge knowing more than any exam ever tested. The field rewards people who kept showing up. It is far less impressed by people who studied perfectly and then waited.

0c. "I don't know — let me find out" is a complete and professional answer. Users will assume you know everything. Managers will assume you know everything. The new hire shadowing you will assume you know everything. None of them know everything either. The most dangerous IT professional isn't the one who admits ignorance — it's the one who can't. Confidently incorrect is how outages happen.

0d. An inch thick and a mile long is the job. IT is not about mastering one thing completely. It's about knowing enough about everything to ask the right questions, recognize the right patterns, and know which expert to call. Your value isn't depth in isolation — it's the ability to connect dots across an impossibly wide landscape. Nobody hired you to know everything. They hired you to figure things out.

0e. The ability to learn is the only skill that doesn't expire. Every specific technology you know today will eventually be legacy, deprecated, or replaced by something a 24-year-old built last Tuesday. The sysadmin who thrives for thirty years isn't the one who mastered Windows NT — it's the one who was curious enough to keep learning when everything changed. Comfort with not-yet-knowing is the most durable skill in the field.


And Then You Meet the Humans

1. Never deploy on a Friday. Technically this is about timing, but really it's about humans. Specifically, the human who schedules a Friday deployment because "it'll only take five minutes" — the same human who has never, in recorded history, completed anything in five minutes. The deployment takes four hours. You know this. They know this. Nobody says it out loud.

2. "I didn't change anything." They changed something. The full archaeology of this statement is remarkable. Stage one: "I didn't change anything." Stage two: "Well, I updated one thing, but that shouldn't matter." Stage three: "Okay, I may have also restarted the service." Stage four: "...and installed some software." Stage five: quiet, prolonged eye contact as the full picture emerges. You will reach stage five every single time. Budget for it.

3. The 2am fix makes zero sense on Monday morning. The human who wrote the 2am fix was you, technically, but they were operating under conditions — panic, caffeine, a user screaming on Slack — that no longer exist. The real problem is the other human: the one who created the crisis at 2am because they "just needed to make one quick change before a big presentation" and didn't mention this to anyone until something exploded. That human went to bed at 9pm. They slept great.

4. Never say the Q word ("It's quiet"). The Q word is never said in isolation. It's always said in response to a human. Usually a manager wandering through asking how things are going, clearly hoping for reassurance. You, desperate to provide it, say "pretty quiet actually." The manager nods, satisfied, and leaves. Three things break simultaneously. The manager will not return to witness this. They are at lunch.

5. If it's working and nobody knows why — don't touch it. The dangerous human here is the enthusiastic new hire who wants to "clean things up" and "apply best practices." They are not wrong that it's messy. They are catastrophically wrong that this matters. The mess is the solution. The mess accumulated organically around an original problem like scar tissue. Disturbing it doesn't clean things up — it just moves the chaos somewhere less predictable.

6. The backup you never tested is the one you'll need. There are two humans in this story. The first said "we should test the backups regularly" and was told "we don't have time for that right now." The second is the executive calling at midnight asking why the data is gone. These two humans have never been in the same meeting about backup testing. They will, however, be in the same meeting about the incident report. It will be a long meeting.

7. Document it now or hate yourself in six months. Documentation fails because of humans at every stage. The human who built it didn't document because they were too busy. The human who inherited it didn't document because they were trying to understand it. The human who needs it now is opening a ticket marked URGENT while simultaneously asking a question that is answered nowhere. Somewhere, the original human has left the company and is living their best life, completely unreachable, on a beach.

8. Restarting fixes 80% of problems. Admitting it fixes 0% of credibility. The real issue is the human on the other end of the ticket who will, if told "we restarted it," immediately ask "why did it need restarting?" — a question with a real answer that will take forty-five minutes to explain and will not satisfy them. So instead you say "we identified and resolved an instability in the service layer," which is both technically accurate and completely unanswerable as a follow-up. Humans respond well to words that sound like effort. This is not cynicism. This is professional communication.

9. DNS. It's always DNS. The human problem with DNS is that explaining why it's DNS takes longer than just fixing it. So you fix it. The human asks what was wrong. You say "DNS issue." They nod as though this means something to them. It does not mean something to them. Next month they will make a change that breaks DNS again and tell you, with complete sincerity, that they didn't change anything.

10. The person who never raises a ticket has the biggest problem. This human has a workaround. The workaround involves copy-pasting something into Notepad, waiting 30 seconds, and then copying it back. They do this seventeen times a day. They have never mentioned it to anyone because "it's fine, I've got a system." The system took them four minutes to develop eighteen months ago and has since consumed approximately 140 hours of their life. They are fiercely protective of it. When you fix the underlying problem, they will be briefly annoyed that their system no longer works.


And Then AI Showed Up

11. AI is confidently wrong the way only a very fast, very agreeable intern can be. The danger isn't that AI doesn't know something — it's that it doesn't know that it doesn't know something, and will explain its wrongness to you in beautifully structured paragraphs with appropriate technical terminology. A human who doesn't know something will usually hesitate. AI will not hesitate. It will cite the hesitation in APA format if you ask nicely.

12. "The AI said so" is not a root cause. You will get tickets caused by someone copy-pasting AI-generated code directly into production without reading it. The code will be almost correct. "Almost" is doing a lot of work in that sentence. When you ask why they didn't test it first, they will explain that the AI seemed very sure. The AI is always very sure. That is not the same thing as being right.

13. Prompt garbage in, prompt garbage out. AI does not rescue bad requirements — it accelerates them. If you ask a vague question, you will receive a confident, thorough, beautifully formatted answer to a slightly different question than the one you meant to ask. This is not the AI's fault. This is Rule 2 in a new costume: the user didn't change anything. They just asked the wrong thing.

14. AI will hallucinate a library, a function, and three Stack Overflow posts that don't exist. It will do this calmly, with working-looking syntax and plausible version numbers. You will spend forty minutes trying to install a package that has never existed before you realize what happened. The AI, when informed of this, will apologize sincerely and suggest a different package that also doesn't exist. This is not malice. This is a very sophisticated form of making things up, which somehow makes it worse.

15. Someone has already given the AI admin credentials. You just don't know who yet. There is a human in your organization who, trying to be helpful, fed a system prompt containing environment variables, API keys, or database connection strings into a third-party AI tool. They did this because the tool asked for "context" and they wanted to be thorough. This happened. It may be happening right now. Check your logs. Check your logs again. Consider crying.

16. AI doesn't replace the need to understand the thing — it replaces the excuse not to. For twenty years the defense was "this is too complicated to document properly." AI can now draft your runbooks, summarize your architecture, and explain your legacy codebase in plain English in about four minutes. The humans who refused to document will now have to explain why they also refuse to have AI document it. This conversation will be awkward. Enjoy it.

17. The AI audit trail is "we asked it and it said yes." Traditional systems fail with logs, error codes, stack traces, and timestamps. AI fails with vibes. Something went wrong and the AI was involved, but reconstructing exactly what was asked, what was returned, and what the human did with that information is an exercise in archaeology with no artifacts. If you're deploying AI in any serious workflow, logging the inputs and outputs isn't optional. It's the only thing standing between you and an incident report that says "the AI told us to."

18. AI is the new junior developer who works at superhuman speed and has read every Stack Overflow post ever written but has never actually run anything in production. This is not an insult — junior developers are valuable, and so is AI. But you wouldn't give a junior developer unsupervised access to the production database on their first day, hand them the deployment keys, and go to lunch. The same logic applies here, just with higher throughput and more confident typing.

19. "We'll just use AI for that" is the new "we'll fix it in post." It sounds like a solution. It has the shape of a solution. It is a placeholder wearing a solution's clothes. Slotting AI into a broken workflow doesn't fix the workflow — it automates the broken parts at scale, adds a layer of opacity to the failures, and ensures that when something goes wrong, nobody is entirely sure which part of the system decided to do the thing that caused the problem.

20. AI changes every six months. The humans using it do not. New model, new capabilities, new limitations, new hallucination patterns, new things it's surprisingly good at, new things it confidently ruins. You will just have finished training your team on how to use the current version responsibly when a new one arrives that behaves differently in ways nobody has fully mapped yet. The humans will continue to use it exactly as they used the previous version, applying lessons that no longer apply, missing capabilities that now exist, and filing tickets about behavior that changed four months ago. 


The uncomfortable truth no one will print:

The infrastructure almost never fails on its own. Servers don't get bored and decide to misbehave. Networks don't harbor resentment. Code doesn't act out of spite — though it occasionally feels that way at 2am.

Almost every outage, every mystery, every "how did this even happen" post-mortem traces back to a human decision. A skipped test. An undocumented change. A timeline someone invented and then treated as a physical law. A meeting where the words "do we have time to do this properly?" were asked and answered incorrectly.

 

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Microsoft's Secure Boot Reckoning:


Windows 11 gets Secure Boot Allowed Key Exchange Key (KEK) update on more PCs, requires a reboot to install

Security & Enterprise  |  Analysis & News
Security Alert

What the 2026 Certificate Expiration Means for Every Windows PC

A 15-year-old trust anchor is expiring this June, and Windows is racing to push replacement certificates to millions of devices before the clock runs out—leaving Windows 10 users, older PCs, and unmanaged endpoints exposed if the rollout stalls.

▶ Bottom Line Up Front

Microsoft's original Secure Boot certificates—issued in 2011 and embedded in the firmware of virtually every Windows PC sold over the past 14 years—begin expiring in June 2026. Your computer will not stop booting, but it will lose the ability to receive new security protections for the pre-OS boot environment, including mitigations for active threats like the BlackLotus UEFI bootkit (CVE-2023-24932). Microsoft is pushing replacement 2023 certificates via Windows Update in a phased rollout that accelerated with the March 2026 Patch Tuesday cycle. Most Windows 11 users on supported hardware who allow Microsoft-managed updates need to do nothing. The at-risk groups are large and real: Windows 10 users who did not enroll in Extended Security Updates (ESU) before the October 2025 end-of-support date, owners of older PCs whose OEMs are not providing firmware updates, and enterprise environments managing IT-controlled or air-gapped systems. Action is required now, not in June.

If you opened Windows Update recently and found a pending item labeled "Secure Boot Allowed Key Exchange Key (KEK) Update," you have just received a front-row seat to one of the most consequential under-the-hood security overhauls in Windows history. The update is small—it downloads in under two minutes and installs with a single reboot—but it represents the tip of an enormous iceberg: the scheduled retirement of the cryptographic trust anchors that have protected the Windows boot process since the era of Windows 8.

The certificates in question are not obscure. They are baked into the UEFI firmware of nearly every PC manufactured between 2012 and 2023. Three of them are on the clock: the Microsoft Corporation KEK CA 2011 and the Microsoft UEFI CA 2011, both expiring in June 2026, followed by the Microsoft Windows Production PCA 2011—which signs Windows' own bootloader—expiring in October 2026.

What Secure Boot Actually Does, and Why Certificates Matter

Secure Boot is a feature of UEFI firmware that validates every piece of software that runs during system startup. Before the Windows kernel ever loads, your PC's firmware checks digital signatures on the bootloader, boot manager, and key drivers against a database of trusted certificate authorities (CAs) stored in the chip itself. Trusted signatures run; untrusted signatures are blocked. It is the closest thing a modern PC has to a cryptographic gatekeeper standing at the door before the operating system is even conscious.

Like a website's TLS certificate, Secure Boot certificates carry expiration dates by design. Periodic renewal is a standard cryptographic hygiene practice—a way to ensure that aging algorithms and key material do not become a liability. The 2011 certificates have served their purpose across more than a decade of continuous operation, but their time is now ending on a hard deadline that does not care about deployment complexity.

When these CAs expire, firmware can no longer use them to validate new updates. Devices that have not received replacement certificates will enter what Microsoft officially describes as a "degraded security state." They will still boot. Standard Windows cumulative updates will still install. But they will be unable to receive new security protections for the early boot process—including updates to the Secure Boot revocation databases, new Boot Manager versions, or mitigations for newly discovered bootkit vulnerabilities.

"After more than 15 years of continuous service, the original Secure Boot certificates are reaching the end of their planned lifecycle and begin expiring in late June 2026. This represents one of the largest coordinated security maintenance efforts across the Windows ecosystem."
— Nuno Costa, Windows Servicing and Delivery Partner Director, Microsoft (February 2026)

The BlackLotus Connection: Why This Is Not Just a Compliance Checkbox

To understand why this update matters beyond abstract certificate hygiene, you need to understand BlackLotus. Discovered in early 2023 by ESET researchers and confirmed in the wild, BlackLotus was the first UEFI bootkit publicly shown to bypass Secure Boot on fully updated Windows 11 systems. It exploited CVE-2022-21894 (nicknamed "Baton Drop"), a vulnerability patched by Microsoft in January 2022—but whose affected signed binaries were never added to the UEFI revocation list, leaving a window for exploitation long after the patch shipped.

Once installed, BlackLotus achieved persistence at the firmware level and could disable BitLocker, Hypervisor-Protected Code Integrity (HVCI), and Microsoft Defender Antivirus—all before Windows loaded. A follow-on vulnerability, CVE-2023-24932, was disclosed in May 2023 as part of Microsoft's remediation effort. The U.S. National Security Agency issued its own BlackLotus Mitigation Guide (U/OO/167397-23, June 2023), explicitly calling on DoD network administrators to take action, and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) issued parallel advisories.

Microsoft has stated directly that the new 2023 Secure Boot certificates are the definitive security measure to address the class of vulnerability that BlackLotus exploited. Without the certificate update and associated revocations now being pushed via Windows Update, a device retains no mechanism to block downgrade attacks that swap modern, secure boot managers for older, vulnerable versions that Secure Boot still trusts. Every day after June 2026 without updated certificates is a day with a narrowing ability to close those gaps.

⚠ Security Context: Active Exploitation

BlackLotus (CVE-2022-21894 / CVE-2023-24932) is a real-world, commercially available UEFI bootkit sold on criminal forums. It requires either administrator privileges or physical access—it is not a drive-by exploit—but once deployed it can survive OS reinstallation and is invisible to traditional antivirus tools. The Secure Boot certificate update and accompanying revocations are the primary mechanism to block downgrade attacks that enable it.

What the 2023 Certificates Change—and Why the Restructuring Matters

The replacement is not a simple one-for-one swap. Microsoft has taken the opportunity to restructure the certificate architecture itself, separating responsibilities that were previously bundled under a single CA. The original Microsoft Corporation UEFI CA 2011 signed everything: third-party bootloaders, option ROMs for graphics and network cards, and various firmware components. The new structure divides this into three distinct certificates:

The Microsoft Corporation KEK 2K CA 2023 replaces the Key Exchange Key, which authorizes updates to the DB (allowed signatures) and DBX (revocation list). The Windows UEFI CA 2023 handles Windows boot loader components specifically. A separate Microsoft Option ROM UEFI CA 2023 handles third-party option ROMs and add-in card firmware. This separation allows for finer-grained trust control—a system that does not need to trust option ROMs can add the Windows CA without broadening trust to all third-party hardware firmware.

The restructuring has practical implications for dual-boot systems and Linux users. Linux distributions that rely on Microsoft-signed shim binaries may need updated shims rebuilt for the new CA. Microsoft has noted that Windows will update certificates that dual-boot Linux systems rely on, but the timing and compatibility of specific Linux distribution shims are the responsibility of those projects.

The Rollout: Who Gets What, When

Microsoft is using a Controlled Feature Rollout (CFR) approach, the same phased delivery mechanism used for major Windows feature updates. Devices on Microsoft-managed updates that meet readiness criteria—including having the correct OEM firmware in place and returning diagnostic telemetry—receive the update as part of monthly cumulative updates. The March 2026 Patch Tuesday cycle notably expanded the rollout to more devices.

For IT-managed environments, enterprises can accelerate the process using Group Policy (navigating to Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates > Windows Components > Secure Boot and enabling the "Secure Boot certificate deployment" policy), registry keys (setting the AvailableUpdates DWORD to 0x5944), Microsoft Intune, or the new Windows Configuration System (WinCS) command-line tools available on Windows 11 versions 23H2, 24H2, and 25H2.

A critical prerequisite that administrators must not overlook: OEM firmware updates must be applied before the Windows certificate update lands. The firmware layer is the foundation. Without it, certificate update attempts on some devices can fail or, in edge cases, cause boot problems. Microsoft has been coordinating closely with major OEMs including Dell, HP, and Lenovo, and all three have published platform-specific guidance and firmware updates for supported hardware lines.

Windows Server is a distinct case. Unlike Windows PCs, Server instances do not receive the 2023 certificates through the automatic CFR pathway. IT administrators managing Windows Server 2022, 2019, 2016, and 2012/R2 must manually initiate the update. Windows Server 2025, certified server platforms, and most hardware built in 2024 and 2025 already include the 2023 certificates in firmware. Microsoft hosted Secure Boot Ask Microsoft Anything (AMA) sessions in December 2025 and February 2026 for enterprise administrators, with another session on March 12, 2026.

"HP is working closely with Microsoft to ensure firmware updates are available so that all supported HP PCs running Windows 11 can adopt the new Secure Boot certificates before legacy certificates expire."
— HP Statement, Microsoft Windows Experience Blog, February 2026

The High-Risk Groups: Who Is Most Exposed

User Group Risk Level Primary Issue Recommended Action
Windows 11 (managed updates, modern hardware) Low None expected; update arrives automatically Verify via PowerShell (see below)
Windows 10 with ESU enrollment Low–Med Certificates delivered via Windows Update through Oct 2026 Confirm ESU enrollment; apply OEM firmware updates
Windows 10 without ESU (end-of-support Oct 2025) High No Windows Update = no automatic certificate delivery Enroll in ESU or upgrade to Windows 11; manual cert deployment possible
Older PCs (pre-2024) with no OEM firmware update High OEM may not provide BIOS/UEFI update; certificate update may fail Check OEM support page; if no update available, assess hardware replacement
Enterprise / IT-managed systems Medium Not all devices on automatic rollout; servers require manual action Deploy via Group Policy / Intune; manually update Windows Server
Air-gapped / offline systems High Microsoft cannot manage these remotely Manual certificate deployment required; follow Microsoft's offline guidance
Linux / dual-boot systems Medium Shim binaries may require distribution-level updates Check distribution guidance; test in non-production before June 2026
Virtual machines (Hyper-V, cloud) Medium Both host and guest VMs may need separate certificate updates Update both layers; consult Azure 2603 release guidance for cloud VMs

The Windows 10 Problem Is Large and Real

Microsoft's Windows 10 mainstream support ended on October 14, 2025. Devices running Windows 10 without Extended Security Update (ESU) enrollment receive no further Windows Updates of any kind—which means they receive no automatic Secure Boot certificate delivery. The problem is structural: Windows 10 powered an estimated majority of the Windows installed base at end-of-life, and many of those machines cannot run Windows 11 due to the TPM 2.0 hardware requirement.

A commercial ESU license for Windows 10 version 22H2 costs $30 per device and covers security updates through October 13, 2026. Consumer ESU is also available for free to Microsoft account holders via Windows Backup enrollment, or through redemption of Microsoft Rewards points. European Economic Area customers qualify for free consumer ESU automatically. For devices that can run Windows 11, upgrading is the cleanest path. For devices that cannot—a population running into the tens of millions globally—the combination of expired OS support and expiring Secure Boot certificates represents a compounding security liability.

There is an additional problem that no Microsoft update can fully solve: hardware abandonment. Major OEMs including HP, Dell, and Lenovo have committed to providing firmware updates for currently supported hardware lines, but enterprise IT managers have already reported cases where OEMs are refusing to provide BIOS updates for devices outside their support lifecycle—even hardware that is otherwise fully functional. Without an OEM firmware update that prepares the UEFI environment, Windows cannot safely apply the new certificates. As one IT manager noted in the Microsoft Tech Community forums: "Many OEMs are not covering BIOS updates for devices fully compatible with Windows 11 older than five to six years old for this change."

How to Verify Your Status Right Now

You do not need to wait for an update notification to check whether your PC has already received the new certificates. Microsoft provides two verification methods.

🔑 Verification Method 1 — PowerShell (Quick Check)

Open PowerShell as Administrator and run:

([System.Text.Encoding]::ASCII.GetString((Get-SecureBootUEFI db).bytes) -match 'Windows UEFI CA 2023')

A result of True confirms the Windows UEFI CA 2023 certificate is present in the Secure Boot DB. A result of False means it has not yet been applied to your system.

Note: Presence of the certificate in the DB does not necessarily mean the full rollout is complete. The KEK and boot manager must also be updated.

📄 Verification Method 2 — Event Viewer (Full Confirmation)

Open Event Viewer and navigate to Windows Logs > System. Use "Filter Current Log" and select source TPM-WMI (or Microsoft-Windows-TPM-WMI). Look for:

Event ID 1808 — "This device has updated Secure Boot CA/keys." This confirms that all needed certificates have been applied to firmware and the boot manager has been updated.

Event ID 1043 — "Secure Boot KEK update applied successfully." Confirms the KEK specifically.

Event ID 1801 — Indicates that some or all updated certificates and the 2023-signed boot manager have not yet been applied.

What Happens After June 2026 if You Miss the Update

Microsoft has been clear and consistent on one point: missing this deadline does not brick your machine. It will still boot. Standard monthly Windows security updates will still install. But the inability to update boot-level protections becomes a compounding problem over time. Newly discovered bootkit vulnerabilities will have no available mitigation path. New signed software using only the 2023 certificates will be untrusted by firmware that still only carries the 2011 certificates—potentially affecting third-party bootloaders and option ROMs as vendors begin signing exclusively with the new CA. And the revocation mechanisms that allow Microsoft to block compromised binary signatures from running during boot will cease to function.

Security researchers and Microsoft alike describe this as entering an increasingly degraded security posture, not an immediate catastrophe. But the analogy to an unpatched system is apt: every day without the fix is a day the attack surface is larger than it needs to be, against adversaries who are aware of the gap.

The Bottom Line for PC Magazine Readers

For most home Windows 11 users who allow Microsoft to manage their updates: this is already being handled on your behalf. Install the "Secure Boot Allowed Key Exchange Key (KEK) Update" when it appears in Windows Update—or verify it has already been applied using the PowerShell command above. A single reboot is all that is required; no BIOS changes, no visible performance impact.

For Windows 10 users: check your ESU enrollment status today. The $30 per-device commercial option or free consumer ESU through your Microsoft account is worth every cent to maintain both OS security patches and Secure Boot certificate delivery through October 2026. After that, hardware replacement or Windows 11 upgrade is the only supported path.

For IT administrators: do not assume Windows Update alone is moving fast enough in your environment. Audit your fleet's Secure Boot status using the registry key UEFICA2023Status, apply OEM firmware updates before the Windows certificate update arrives, manually address all Windows Server instances, and treat June 27, 2026 as a hard deadline, not a suggestion. Microsoft is hosting a dedicated Secure Boot Technical Takeoff session for IT professionals—attendance is worthwhile if you are managing a significant device fleet.

The certificate expiration is not the new Y2K—there is no midnight cliff where machines stop working. But it is a genuine, deadline-driven security maintenance event with real consequences for devices left behind. The rollout infrastructure is in place. The tools exist. The window to act before the deadline is open right now.

Verified Sources & Formal Citations

  1. Microsoft Support. Windows Secure Boot certificate expiration and CA updates. Microsoft Corporation, 2026. https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/topic/windows-secure-boot-certificate-expiration-and-ca-updates-7ff40d33-95dc-4c3c-8725-a9b95457578e
  2. Microsoft Support. When Secure Boot certificates expire on Windows devices. Microsoft Corporation, 2026. https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/topic/when-secure-boot-certificates-expire-on-windows-devices-c83b6afd-a2b6-43c6-938e-57046c80c1c2
  3. Microsoft Support. Secure Boot Certificate updates: Guidance for IT professionals and organizations. Microsoft Corporation, 2026. https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/topic/secure-boot-certificate-updates-guidance-for-it-professionals-and-organizations-e2b43f9f-b424-42df-bc6a-8476db65ab2f
  4. Costa, Nuno. Act now: Secure Boot certificates expire in June 2026. Windows IT Pro Blog, Microsoft Tech Community, January 14, 2026. https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/windows-itpro-blog/act-now-secure-boot-certificates-expire-in-june-2026/4426856
  5. Microsoft Tech Community. Secure Boot playbook for certificates expiring in 2026. Windows IT Pro Blog, March 2026. https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/windows-itpro-blog/secure-boot-playbook-for-certificates-expiring-in-2026/4469235
  6. Microsoft Windows Experience Blog. Refreshing the root of trust: industry collaboration on Secure Boot certificate updates. February 10, 2026. https://blogs.windows.com/windowsexperience/2026/02/10/refreshing-the-root-of-trust-industry-collaboration-on-secure-boot-certificate-updates/
  7. Microsoft Windows Server Blog. Prepare your servers for Secure Boot certificate updates. February 23, 2026. https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/blog/2026/02/23/prepare-your-servers-for-secure-boot-certificate-updates/
  8. Microsoft Tech Community. Windows Server Secure Boot playbook for certificates expiring in 2026. February 2026. https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/windowsservernewsandbestpractices/windows-server-secure-boot-playbook-for-certificates-expiring-in-2026/4495789
  9. Microsoft Windows IT Pro Blog. Revoking vulnerable Windows boot managers. October 7, 2024. https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/windows-itpro-blog/revoking-vulnerable-windows-boot-managers/4121735
  10. Microsoft Support. How to manage the Windows Boot Manager revocations for Secure Boot changes associated with CVE-2023-24932 (KB5025885). Microsoft Corporation. https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/topic/how-to-manage-the-windows-boot-manager-revocations-for-secure-boot-changes-associated-with-cve-2023-24932-41a975df-beb2-40c1-99a3-b3ff139f832d
  11. Microsoft Security Blog. Guidance for investigating attacks using CVE-2022-21894: The BlackLotus campaign. April 11, 2023. https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/security/blog/2023/04/11/guidance-for-investigating-attacks-using-cve-2022-21894-the-blacklotus-campaign/
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  15. Binarly Research. The Untold Story of the BlackLotus UEFI Bootkit. Binarly, 2023. https://www.binarly.io/blog/the-untold-story-of-the-blacklotus-uefi-bootkit
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  18. Fitzpatrick, Andrew. Microsoft's Secure Boot certificates expire in June 2026, but older PCs may never get the fix. XDA Developers, March 6, 2026. https://www.xda-developers.com/microsoft-secure-boot-certificates-expire-june-2026-older-pcs/
  19. Gatlan, Sergiu. Microsoft rolls out new Secure Boot certificates before June expiration. BleepingComputer, February 2026. https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/microsoft/microsoft-rolls-out-new-secure-boot-certificates-before-june-expiration/
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