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Flipping one bit leaves AMD CPUs open to VM vuln
If you use virtual machines, there's reason to feel less-than-Zen about AMD's CPUs. Computer scientists affiliated with the CISPA Helmholtz Center for Information Security in Germany have found a ...
A new software-based fault injection attack, CacheWarp, can let threat actors hack into AMD SEV-protected virtual machines by targeting memory writes to escalate privileges and gain remote code ...
Researchers have developed an exploit for AMD CPUs that allows attackers to undermine memory protections, and thereby escalate privileges or perform remote code execution (RCE) in cloud environments.
VMware announced support for AMD secure encrypted virtualization-encrypted state (SEV-ES) in the latest update to its vSphere virtualization platform. SEV-ES provides hardware layer encryption of ...
One of the oldest maxims in hacking is that once an attacker has physical access to a device, it’s game over for its security. The basis is sound. It doesn’t matter how locked down a phone, computer, ...
AMD has found its hardware being trashed, yet again, by some German security researchers who figured out a way to get the hardware-based Secure Encrypted Virtualization (SEV) hypervisor to give up its ...
There are few mid-to-large enterprises at this point that haven’t migrated at least some of their IT operations to the cloud. The cost-savings at scale are real, but shifting infrastructure outside of ...
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