Daily Trust

Security flaws put virtually all phones, computers at risk

- By Zakariyya Adaramola, with agency reports

Security researcher­s have revealed a set of security flaws they said could let hackers steal sensitive informatio­n from nearly every modern computing device containing chips from Intel Corp, Advanced Micro Devices Inc and ARM Holdings.

One of the bugs is specific to Intel but another affects laptops, desktop computers, smartphone­s, tablets and internet servers alike. Intel and ARM insisted that the issue was not a design flaw, but it will require users to download a patch and update their operating system to fix.

The news came barely a year after theWannaCr­y cyber-attacks hit the world, affecting more than 200, 000 computers in more than 99 countries.

“Phones, PCs, everything are going to have some impact, but it’ll vary from product to product,” Intel CEO Brian Krzanich said in an interview with CNBC.

Researcher­s with Alphabet Inc’s Google Project Zero, in conjunctio­n with academic and industry researcher­s from several countries, discovered two flaws.

The first called Meltdown, affects Intel chips and lets hackers bypass the hardware barrier between applicatio­ns run by users and the computer’s memory, potentiall­y letting hackers read a computer’s memory and steal passwords. The second, called Spectre, affects chips from Intel, AMD and ARM and lets hackers potentiall­y trick otherwise error-free applicatio­ns into giving up secret informatio­n.

The researcher­s said Apple Inc and Microsoft Corp had patches ready for users for desktop computers affected by Meltdown. Microsoft declined to comment and Apple did not immediatel­y return requests for comment.

Daniel Gruss, one of the researcher­s at Graz University of Technology who discovered Meltdown, called it “probably one of the worst CPU bugs ever found” in an interview with Reuters.

Gruss said Meltdown was the more serious problem in the short term but could be decisively stopped with software patches. Spectre, the broader bug that applies to nearly all computing devices, is harder for hackers to take advantage of but less easily patched and will be a bigger problem in the long term, he said.

Intel denied that the patches would bog down computers based on Intel chips.

“Intel has begun providing software and firmware updates to mitigate these exploits,” Intel said in a statement. “Contrary to some reports, any performanc­e impacts are workload-dependent, and, for the average computer user, should not be significan­t and will be mitigated over time.”

ARM spokesman Phil Hughes said that patches had already been shared with the companies’ partners, which include many smartphone manufactur­ers.

“This method only works if a certain type of malicious code is already running on a device and could at worst, result in small pieces of data being accessed from privileged memory,” Hughes said in an email.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria