> Intel recently acknowledged that they enabled the ability to update
> microcode on Pentium chips several years ago. That's right folks, they put
> a backdoor in your hardware. The good news is, it could be used to fix
> this bug, should Intel be so inclined.
>
> AMD's microcode is updateable too. No clue about cyrix.
This is something I discussed with a friend about two years ago.
Imagine if you will someone with information on how to download new
microcode to the CPU. This person has the availity to write a
virus/trojan/activex/program that can now compleatly disable your CPU
in such a way that it would need to be taken out to reinitialize.
If they fully disable the CPU the end user would program replace every
single component of the computer before the CPU. This would cost thousands
of hours of lost work and man power.
Far worse, it could introduse subtle random flaws in for example the login
or artihmetic processing. How may industries would be affected if hit?
Or what about microcode backdoors that add your own instructions to
bypass memory protection? You could write your own program to modify
your process structure to become owned by root. The possibilities are
endless.
If Intel where to provide a program to update the microcode on the CPU
it would most probably be disassembled and reverse engineered quickly.
Whats a multi-billion company to do?C
> George Imburgia, Network Specialist Phone: (302)739-4068
> Delaware Technical & Community College Fax: (302 739-3345
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Aleph One / aleph1@dfw.net
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