Intel are not having a good time lately are they? More vulnerabilities in their CPUs have been made public.
How many is that Intel have had recently that affect them? Quite a lot. This time, it appears AMD are not affected at least. Still, this is a lot of major security problems to go through with Spectre and Meltdown, Foreshadow and ZombieLoad. Currently, Intel are saying that they're "not aware of any use of these issues outside of a controlled lab environment" so you don't need to go and panic just yet. Just keep an eye on updates for your distribution and motherboard BIOS updates.
Here's they two they're now talking about:
CVE-2020-0548 is an information disclosure vulnerability with a CVSS score of 2.8, low, referred to as Vector Register Sampling. This issue is rated “low” as the user would first need to be authenticated on the target system, the high complexity of an attack, and low confidence in the attacker’s ability to target and retrieve relevant data.
CVE-2020-0549 is also an information disclosure vulnerability requiring authenticated local access. The CVSS score is 6.5, medium. Referred to as L1D Eviction Sampling, the severity score is higher on this one because the attack complexity is lower and the ability to target specific data higher. This vulnerability has little to no impact in virtual environments that have applied L1 Terminal Fault mitigations.
If you have an Intel CPU made before Q4 2018, you're likely affected. CVE-2020-0549, which is also being called CacheOut which has a dedicated website mentions that "Intel inadvertently managed to partially mitigate this issue while addressing a previous issue".
You can see Intel's official post on it here.
My next system will be AMD based, and for good, i never will use Intel again.
... than the PGA ....
If, someday, AMD decide to implement the LGA system in the mid class processors, I will try them....
Sadly, actually AMD use the LGA system only in the Threadripper processor.
Also, my next build will be a AMD system. ;)
But the important facts is:
These vulnerabilities were discovered bei the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and the Air Force Reseach Laboratory (AFRL) of Australia. So now the military (and probably secret services) seem to have an interest in such vulnerabilities. I wonder why...
Quoting: GrimfistThe vulnerabilities itself are not that interesting, because they are a lot more theoretical than previous ones.
But the important facts is:
These vulnerabilities were discovered bei the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and the Air Force Reseach Laboratory (AFRL) of Australia. So now the military (and probably secret services) seem to have an interest in such vulnerabilities. I wonder why...
Them releasing their knowledge to the public is not the dangerous case...
Quoting: EikeNot everybody changed their computer yesterday, and Intel was better for decades.^-- This.
I've been eyeballing AMD MoBos/CPUs because, lets face it---there is just more bang in them hard-earned bucks. I'm still saving up because I'm aiming for the future "proofing" that latest gen will get me, but it's gonna be AMD this time around.
I'd already made up my mind. This article is just a thumbs-up from the Universe. :)
Last edited by Nanobang on 29 January 2020 at 12:55 pm UTC
Quoting: bekoQuoting: EikeNot everybody changed their computer yesterday, and Intel was better for decades.^-- This.
True but a lot did 3 years ago to yesterday :P
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