Comment by drdaeman
Well, maybe we're talking about different things, because I've asked from a regular GNU/Linux user perspective. That is, I have my computers and I'm concerned I would lose my freedoms to use them as I wish, because this attestation would be adopted and become de-facto mandatory if I ever want to do something online. Just like what happened to mobile, and what's currently slowly happening to other desktop OSes.
Production servers are a whole different story - it's usually not my hardware to begin with. But given how things are mostly immutable those days (shipped as images rather than installed the old-fashioned sysadmin way), I'm not really sure what to think of it...
You originally asked what the value proposition for a regular (non-corporate) user was. Then you raised some objections to my answer (or at least so I thought).
Granted these technologies can also be abused. But that involves running third party binaries that require SGX or other DRM measures before they will unlock or decrypt content or etc. Or querying a security element to learn who signed the image that was originally booted. Devices that support those things are already widespread. I don't think that's what this project is supposed to be. (Although I could always be wrong. There's almost no detail provided.)