The Citizen (Gauteng)

Intel, Apple ‘solve chip flaws’

RESEARCHER­S: NO NEED FOR REPLACEMEN­TS AFTER SECURITY FLAWS IDENTIFIED

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Companies say downloadab­le ‘patches’ are sufficient, won’t slow devices.

Security issues with Intel 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 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 US stock markets closed on Thursday that the performanc­e impact of the recent security updates should not be significan­t and would be mitigated over time.

It said Apple, Amazon.com, Google and Microsoft had all reported little to no performanc­e impact from security patches.

“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. “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. – Reuters

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