I think it was a glitch, but I just got an error message installing macOS about it being out of date, and prompting to install in reduced security mode. This suggests that you can, in fact, do new macOS installs on Apple Silicon without phoning home (or if it fails).
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This is important for us because Asahi Linux is, from the machine's point of view, a new macOS install. The final flow/tooling is still undecided as we basically have to cobble things together from Apple tools intended for macOS, but there *should* be a way to avoid phone-home.
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Just to be clear here, the phoning home isn't about "may I install Asahi Linux on my Mac", it's about "may I install the macOS bootloader version / macOS version Asahi Linux pretends to be on my Mac".
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Replying to @marcan42
What I don't get is... how come the bootloader isn't required to be signed by Apple?
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It is. We cannot replace the bootloader. We can replace the OS (which we will replace with *another* bootloader), since the OS is allowed to be unsigned after you re-configure the boot policy to permissive security.
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