I can see your point but, geez, that's pretty depressing if it's the only reason it's supported!
As a sidenote for having installed Debian with SecureBoot on on several systems, I'd say I still had to muck around quite some in the BIOS/UEFI. Latest one I scratched my hair for a bit was an AMD 3700X on an Asrock mobo where I somehow had to turn "CSM" (Compatibility Support Module) off otherwise Debian would stubbornly start the non-UEFI (and hence no SecureBoot) installer. On my Asus / AMD 7700X things were a bit easier but I still had to toggle some SecureBoot setting (from "custom" to "default" or the contrary, don't remember). All this to say: it's still not totally streamlined and users still need to muck around anyway.
As a sidenote for having installed Debian with SecureBoot on on several systems, I'd say I still had to muck around quite some in the BIOS/UEFI. Latest one I scratched my hair for a bit was an AMD 3700X on an Asrock mobo where I somehow had to turn "CSM" (Compatibility Support Module) off otherwise Debian would stubbornly start the non-UEFI (and hence no SecureBoot) installer. On my Asus / AMD 7700X things were a bit easier but I still had to toggle some SecureBoot setting (from "custom" to "default" or the contrary, don't remember). All this to say: it's still not totally streamlined and users still need to muck around anyway.
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