You are here: Home » Reuters » News
Business Standard

Design flaw found in Intel chips; fix causes them to slow - report

Reuters  |  FRANKFURT 

By Douglas Busvine

(Reuters) - A design has been found in microprocessors made by that requires updates to computer operating systems, a tech publication reported, adding that the fix causes the chips to operate more slowly.

The defect affects the so-called kernel memory on Intel manufactured over the past decade, reported citing unnamed programmers, allowing users of to discern the layout or content of protected areas on the chips.

That could make it possible for hackers to exploit other security bugs or, worse, expose secure information such as passwords, thus compromising individual computers or even entire

Intel did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment. Microsoft declined to comment.

Shares in Intel were down by 3.4 percent in early U.S. trading following the report.

said programmers working on the open-source were overhauling the affected memory areas, while was expected to issue a Windows patch next Tuesday.

"Crucially, these updates to both and Windows will incur a performance hit on Intel products," wrote (http://bit.ly/2CsRxkj).

"The effects are being benchmarked, however we are looking at a ballpark figure of a five to 30 percent slowdown, depending on the task and the processor model."

It was not immediately clear whether Intel would face any significant financial liability arising from the reported

"The current Intel problem, if true, would likely not require CPU replacement in our opinion. However the situation is fluid," of in said in a note.

Intel may end up having to indemnify harm or costs incurred by customers, and could also lose customers and faces a hit to its reputation, he added.

NOT AFFECTED

Competing has told developers by email that its chips are not vulnerable to the types of attacks that the fix for the Intel chip is intended to address by isolating the kernel memory, said.

Shares in jumped by 7.2 percent in early trade on Wednesday.

The bug is likely to affect major such as EC2, Microsoft Azure and Compute Engine, according to one cited by

Microsoft Azure is due to undergo a maintenance reboot on Jan. 10 while Web Services has also advised customers via email to expect a major security update this Friday.

also said that similar operating systems, such as Apple's 64-bit macOS operating system, would need to be updated.

The patches are based on work by researchers from the in Austria who came up with a way to split kernel and user memory spaces to eliminate the security vulnerability.

(Reporting by and Jim Finkle; Additional reporting by in Bengaluru; Editing by Susan Fenton)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, January 03 2018. 22:22 IST
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU