• @[email protected]OP
    link
    fedilink
    English
    471 month ago

    I wouldn’t be surprised if I knew that the backdoors that appear in Windows were designed by someone. I didn’t know they were this brazen.

      • @Kyrgizion
        link
        201 month ago

        Yeah, when the actual mobo and cpu can be taken over remotely, what does the OS even matter?

        • sunzu2
          link
          fedilink
          161 month ago

          exploits regularly found in AMD and intel consumer chips

          didn’t apple chips get spotted with a vulnerability also? m2s?

          • ᥫ᭡ 𐑖ミꪜᴵ𝔦 ᥫ᭡
            link
            fedilink
            English
            14
            edit-2
            1 month ago

            That’s not a hard proof, people keep saying Intel ME and AMD PSP are potential backdoors ( key word: potential ) and this argument is good if we’re arguing about: which is the best ISA, an Open ISA ( RiscV ) or closed ISA ( x86 )

            I was asking for a general example, I know that Mediatek chips included a backdoor but I only found one article that talked about it … In french…

            Mobos : I think it’s MSI ( I could be wrong ) that installed a piece of software through a Bios update, which showed they have privileged remote access capabilities ( I couldn’t find that source, sorry )

            Another example would be ASUS and Gigabyte Mobos, now the initial source says it came from the second hand resellers, but no one confirmed that… which is scary… because that would mean it came straight from ASUS and/or Gigabyte

            I was asking for incidents that you came across that could demonstrate the presence of firmware backdoors, saying having too many bugs is not a good argument, because all software has bugs.