Researchers discover 2 major flaws in world's microprocessors
Meltdown and Spectre could allow hackers to steal all the memory contents of computers, mobile devices, PCs, servers running in cloud networks
San Francisco
COMPUTER security experts have discovered two major security flaws in the microprocessors inside nearly all of the world's computers. The two problems, called Meltdown and Spectre, could allow hackers to steal the entire memory contents of computers, including mobile devices, personal computers, servers running in so-called cloud computer networks.
There is no easy fix for Spectre, which could require redesigning the processors, according to researchers. As for Meltdown, the software patch needed to fix the issue could slow down computers by as much as 30 per cent - an ugly situation for people used to fast downloads from their favourite online services.
"What actually happens with these flaws is different and what you do about them is different," said Paul Kocher, a researcher who was an integral member of a team of researchers at big tech companies like Google and Rambus and in academia …
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