Tuesday, April 10th 2018
AMD Announces Steps, Resources for Spectre Mitigations
AMD today announced, via a security blog post penned by their own Mark Papermaster, that they're beginning deployment of mitigations and resources for AMD processors affected by the Spectre exploits. In the blog post, AMD reiterates how exploits based on version 1 of Spectre exploits (GPZ 1 - Google Project Zero Flaw 1) have already been covered by AMD's partners. At the same time, AMD reiterates how their processors are invulnerable to Meltdown exploits (GPZ3), and explains how mitigations for GPZ2 (Spectre) will occur.
These mitigations require a combination of processor microcode updates from OEM and motherboard partners, as well as running the current and fully up-to-date version of Windows. For Linux users, AMD-recommended mitigations for GPZ Variant 2 were made available to Linux partners and have been released to distribution earlier this year.AMD further related how difficult they expect exploits of the GPZ Variant 2 to be on their CPUs, but say that they have nonetheless worked with customers and partners in order to provide full coverage from such scenarios, by a "combination of operating system patches and microcode updates for AMD processors to further mitigate the risk." A whitepaper detailing the AMD recommended mitigation for Windows is available, as well as links to ecosystem resources for the latest updates.
Operating System Updates for GPZ Variant 2/Spectre
Microsoft is releasing an operating system update containing Variant 2 (Spectre) mitigations for AMD users running Windows 10 (version 1709) today. Support for these mitigations for AMD processors in Windows Server 2016 is expected to be available following final validation and testing.
AMD Microcode Updates for GPZ Variant 2/Spectre
In addition, microcode updates with our recommended mitigations addressing Variant 2 (Spectre) have been released to our customers and ecosystem partners for AMD processors dating back to the first "Bulldozer" core products introduced in 2011. Users should eventually be able to install the microcode patches by downloading BIOS updates provided by PC and server manufacturers and motherboard providers.
Source:
AMD Security Bulletin
These mitigations require a combination of processor microcode updates from OEM and motherboard partners, as well as running the current and fully up-to-date version of Windows. For Linux users, AMD-recommended mitigations for GPZ Variant 2 were made available to Linux partners and have been released to distribution earlier this year.AMD further related how difficult they expect exploits of the GPZ Variant 2 to be on their CPUs, but say that they have nonetheless worked with customers and partners in order to provide full coverage from such scenarios, by a "combination of operating system patches and microcode updates for AMD processors to further mitigate the risk." A whitepaper detailing the AMD recommended mitigation for Windows is available, as well as links to ecosystem resources for the latest updates.
Operating System Updates for GPZ Variant 2/Spectre
Microsoft is releasing an operating system update containing Variant 2 (Spectre) mitigations for AMD users running Windows 10 (version 1709) today. Support for these mitigations for AMD processors in Windows Server 2016 is expected to be available following final validation and testing.
AMD Microcode Updates for GPZ Variant 2/Spectre
In addition, microcode updates with our recommended mitigations addressing Variant 2 (Spectre) have been released to our customers and ecosystem partners for AMD processors dating back to the first "Bulldozer" core products introduced in 2011. Users should eventually be able to install the microcode patches by downloading BIOS updates provided by PC and server manufacturers and motherboard providers.
27 Comments on AMD Announces Steps, Resources for Spectre Mitigations
March 2017 (RyZen launch) - $14.90.
Today - $9.98
market cap loss 2.58 billion
Nothing else really explains their stock price. Plenty of companies with no revenue at all, no IP, and no products are somehow valued at millions...or billions. AMD invents leading tech all the time, has a lot of products, insanely valuable IP, AND is turning a profit, again, but it's time to tank the stock. Mmmkay.
Also, just their normal windows updates crash PCs lol
I mean, there is identity verification, but I don't think anyones trying to steal there's, frankly. That was AMD microcode applied via a microcode patch via MS update, IIRC. I'd say the blame still falls outside MS and vendors need to vet their stuff.
Calls people conspiratorialist for reading cts-labs disclaimer proclaiming monetary motivation.
Sure they could be under nda, but why?... what would they gain for it?
More likely possibilities are they ran out of monetary motivation or are being hushed by AMD, who knows who cares no need to call people conspiracy theorist when you are throwing out your less backed theories...freaking toxic.
Anyways the good news is, AMD took a hard look at their parts and have written formal documentation and are writing microcode/patches for mitigation of these vulnerabilities. @biffzinker says there is minimal performance impact, so to argue here is pointless, take it to private messages if need be.
Carry On
Their about us page also seems to have been stripped of the list of "senior employees" they used to have. I'm guessing they did this to prevent their names from being directly harmed. Right now, without those, I've seen better websites for one-man startup businesses. Their stripping of personal information definitely makes them appear more sketchy, if that's possible.
The entire market is still up 20% in the last year. Just since RyZen launched AMD is down from 14.90 --> 9.98. In the same window, Intel went from 36.07 --> 51.27. Even on the gfx side nvidia has gone from 108.93 --> 227.91. AMD is just getting crushed by the competition because the product is limp. It is good product, I run AMD on my main system. It just isn't special or innovative.
In the same time we have Intel coming up with Optane, thanks to Micron, & a lot of new chipsets :ohwell:
As for stock markets... Just... I can't even. Intel has been tripping head over heals with launching CFL-S and SKL-X in a hurry, not to mention the almost continuous security problems, where the workarounds and security patches caused some serious performance hits on the server segment. Then the stockmarket is projecting cloud storage investments involving Intel big time, while AMD EPYC is basically a better choice on the server end? How does that work?
On the GPU market tho... I can't say anything positive. The ball has been dropped about 4 years ago and rolled even further I think and it still haven't been picked up by RTG. Only one can hope tho.
Wall Street only cares about who's going to give them money, illegally or otherwise.