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---|---|
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Sweet so my home pc wont get the dreaded patch then is that what your saying , because the gist i have now is thatTo emphasize, the exploit is related to virtual memory, not virtualization, where kernel memory can be leaked to user-space. Virtualization will be one of several "victims" of such exploits, but virtualization is not the bug here.
Are they? Have you looked at the commit?
I think your article needs to be updated.
I think about two people in the thread referred to the commit, and quite possibly you were the only one to even read it, yet we have two long threads of people bashing Intel over something people don't even understand.
It should be obvious to anyone who spend five minutes checking the source that AMD have a bad bug here as well. The Intel bug is a design fault, simply because the engineers didn't take something into account. When you find a new type of defect in a design, it's not unlikely that competing designs might include similar mistakes, so it doesn't surprise me that AMD have a related bug of their own. Investigating such defects usually spawns new useful approaches to find more bugs.
Do you remember "Heartbleed"? It caused people to go look for similar problems and resulted in finding dozens of other bugs, some even worse.
Check the source, and you'll see it's specific to the x86 kernel.
A. It affects only virtual servers indirectly if affected and only really data centers.
But
B. Everyone is getting a patch that might slow down crysis again causing chaos.
If both are true im still concerned, if just A then cheers mate im done here