Well, this is bad. “Downfall” is the name Daniel Moghimi, a security expert at Google, has given to a new vulnerability he has discovered in several generations of Intel processors. Attackers can exploit the vulnerability and read data from other programs and memory areas. The vulnerability has already been reported as CVE-2022-40982 (fave.co/3OyUYcb), and Intel confirmed the flaw here (fave.co/3YyNjiK).
Moghimi reported the vulnerability to Intel on August 24, 2022, but only made the vulnerability public today so that Intel had time to release microcode updates that can fix the vulnerability.
Intel’s Downfall was closely followed by AMD’s Inception, a newfound security hole affecting all Ryzen and Epyc processors. We’ve included details at the end of this post.
INTEL’S ‘DOWNFALL’ FLAW IS SERIOUS
Moghimi explains the vulnerability in detail on a dedicated Downfall website (fave. co/3YxfqyG), including some examples. According to him, billions of Intel processors are affected, which are used in private user computers as well as in cloud servers. The expert describes the possible consequences of the gap as follows:
This story is from the September 2023 edition of PCWorld.
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This story is from the September 2023 edition of PCWorld.
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