Apple, researchers eye patches to solve Intel chip flaws
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[January 05, 2018]
By Kanishka Singh and Douglas Busvine
FRANKFURT/BENGALURU (Reuters) - Security
issues with Intel Corp microchips are only slowing computers slightly,
technology companies said, as researchers played down the need for mass
hardware replacements to protect millions of devices from hackers.
Google and other security researchers this week disclosed two major chip
flaws - one called Meltdown affecting only Intel Corp chips and one
called Spectre affecting nearly all computer chips made in the last
decade.
That raised the prospect of Intel being on the hook for lawsuits
claiming that software patches to fix the issue would slow computers and
effectively force consumers to buy new hardware, driving the company's
shares down.
But Intel said in a statement after U.S. stock markets closed on
Thursday that the performance impact of the recent security updates
should not be significant and would be mitigated over time.
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It said Apple Inc <AAPL.O>, Amazon.com Inc <AMZN.O>, Google <GOOGL.O>
and Microsoft Corp <MSFT.O> had all reported little to no performance
impact from security patches. http://intel.ly/2CHQ89E
"Intel continues to believe that the performance impact of these updates
is highly workload-dependent and, for the average computer user, should
not be significant," it said.
The company confirmed that the flaws reported by the researchers could
allow hackers to steal information from computers, phones and other
devices, but insisted that the issue was not a design flaw.
The chipmaker said it would require users to download a patch and update
their operating system to fix the issue.
Microsoft and Google have said they expect few performance problems for
most of their cloud computing customers.
Apple said in a separate statement late on Thursday that its tests
showed patches would not significantly affect processing speeds.
"Our testing with public benchmarks has shown that the changes in the
December 2017 updates resulted in no measurable reduction in the
performance of macOS and iOS ... or in common Web browsing benchmarks,"
the California-based firm said.
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Intel logo is seen behind LED lights in this illustration taken
January 5, 2018. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illutration
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WHAT EXPERTS SAY
CERT, the cyber security project at Carnegie Mellon University sponsored
by the U.S. government, on Friday withdrew its recommendation for the
replacement of the central processing units (CPUs) of affected systems.
In the updated guidance, CERT said "operating system and some
application updates mitigate these attacks".
Daniel Gruss, the 31-year-old information security researcher and
post-doctoral fellow at Austria's Graz Technical University who
discovered the Meltdown flaw, welcomed Intel's white paper on the issue.
"This looks much more professional now," Gruss said in comments emailed
to Reuters.
On the change in recommendation from CERT, Gruss said, however, that
there were no replacements yet that could address the flaws in
processors that he and other researchers have found.
"All CPUs are affected, also very recent ones," Gruss said.
"Furthermore, software updates can fix most of the problems, leaving
only a small remaining attack surface."
Browser makers Google <GOOGL.O>, Microsoft Corp <MSFT.O> and Mozilla
Corp's Firefox confirmed to Reuters on Thursday that the patches they
currently have in place do not protect iOS users.
With Safari and virtually all other popular browsers not patched,
hundreds of millions of iPhone and iPad users may not have secure means
of web browsing until Apple issues its patch.
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Apple said it would release a patch for the Safari web browser on its
devices within days. It said that there were no known instances of
hackers taking advantage of the flaw to date.
(Writing by Abinaya Vijayaraghavan; Editing by Amrutha Gayathri and
Patrick Graham)
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