The whole point of Asylo is to provide a hardware abstraction layer to make applications portable across different enclaves; it's the opposite of reinforcing Intel's position.
My main concern is not "reinforcing Intel's position" --- it could just as well be AMD, or ARM, or any other relatively tiny group of hardware manufacturers; the point is that everyone else is giving up and handing the ultimate control over their computing devices and the software they run to a small group, and that is most doubleplus ungood.
My main concern is not "reinforcing Intel's position" --- it could just as well be AMD, or ARM, or any other relatively tiny group of hardware manufacturers; the point is that everyone else is giving up and handing the ultimate control over their computing devices and the software they run to a small group, and that is most doubleplus ungood.