those can but 10nm CPUs after Plundervolt can't undervolt , it's disabled from UEFI and not only there's no option to reenable it in the UI, the very EFI variable itself is write locked. I have an X1 Gen 4 (Intel 11th gen) and you just can't do it.
On my Lenovo Legion 5 Pro with i7-13700HX I can disable undervolting protection in stock UEFI. The only problem is that Windows virtualization features get disabled when undervolting is allowed, and I kind of need those.
Perhaps it's just your laptop manufacturer. But people were able to undervolt on gen 11 by editing the EFI variables and then turning off virtualization.
I remember some boards, you would have to paint a cpu pin with nail polish to stop it from conducting, or carefully jump one of the several hundred pins on the socket…
That'd be reason to take away the reenable from UEFI but write protecting the EFI variable where changing it already requires to boot into an EFI editor is just being dicks, pardon my French. Just let me enable it , I am aware of the risks.
I think the trouble is that it is not possible to distinguish (through reliable technical means) a responsible overclocker such as yourself versus an unscrupulous actor editing EFI variables in flash. So, because some bad guys/gals found a way to damage the system, all the good guys/gals suffer as a result, because the system cannot tell them apart. Reminds me of airport security...
those can but 10nm CPUs after Plundervolt can't undervolt , it's disabled from UEFI and not only there's no option to reenable it in the UI, the very EFI variable itself is write locked. I have an X1 Gen 4 (Intel 11th gen) and you just can't do it.