David W. Hodgins wrote:
>> I'd like to see a complete breakdown of the status of all Intel CPU's,
>> going back to at least the SLOT-1 products and including socket 370,
>> socket 478 and socket 775.
>
> Unlikely that there will be such a list. All cpus are affected.
Well, they do say that anything prior to 1995, and (in the case of Intel
Atom) prior to 2013. I have some Atom-powered netbooks that would
therefore not be vulnerable.
> It provides read access to tiny amounts of data at a time. Given the
> multi-processor/multi-threading of processors, the volume of data the
> exploit would have to sift through to find any thing of use, is massive.
That's one thing I don't understand, based on current reports.
Do operating systems of any or all sorts keep passwords in "special",
strategic or universally-accepted locations in RAM such that sifting
through gb worth of memory dump would not be required?
To just even go about excercising the vulnerability, would the required
code be so specifically crafted such that the exact model/type of CPU
AND the particular OS would both be needed to be known in order for the
code to perform the intended memory dump operation?
Would there be any quirks of particular operating systems that would
render this vulnerability of little or no value, because of workability
issues? I'm thinking of differences between, say, Win-9x/me vs any of
the NT-based Windoze. Differences in how memory is used by the kernel,
etc.
I don't believe that win-9x/me has any notion or ability to separate
memory access between applications, and I've never heard of any sort of
"password" attack or comprimize that is specific to 9x/me that has any
relavence to a user system.
--- NewsGate v1.0 gamma 2
* Origin: News Gate @ Net396 -Huntsville, AL - USA (1:396/4)
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