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A huge controversy erupted earlier this week as the license governing Intel's latest CPU microcode updates redistribution inserted a legally-binding clause that gagged its customers from publishing benchmarks or comparative testing that showed the performance impact of microcode updates that mitigate security vulnerabilities in Intel processors. Intel has since started reaching out to media sites. "We are updating the license now to address this and will have a new version available soon. As an active member of the open source community, we continue to welcome all feedback," the opening remarks from the Intel spokesperson read. Not long after, Intel updated the license terms to have just three conditions:
Sounds good so far, however, the language in the opening remarks got us thinking, whether Intel has two different licenses targeted at two different groups:
1. Big cloud-computing providers such as Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure, Alibaba, Google, etc; and
2. The "open source community" that downloads the microcode update from Intel website and posts performance numbers in news blogs.
TechPowerUp doesn't just cater to the open source community. We are equally interested to know whether cloud-computing providers are gagged from disclosing performance impact of microcode updates, because a lot more money and jobs are lost as a result of lowered performance/$ or stunted performance/$ growth from cloud-providers.
We are awaiting a specific affirmative/negative from the Intel spokesperson on whether a cloud-computing firm like Amazon Web Services (AWS), for example, is free to disclose performance impact of the latest microcode update to its downstream customers without violating the applicable license governing the microcode update distribution.
Watch this space.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site
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Sounds good so far, however, the language in the opening remarks got us thinking, whether Intel has two different licenses targeted at two different groups:
1. Big cloud-computing providers such as Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure, Alibaba, Google, etc; and
2. The "open source community" that downloads the microcode update from Intel website and posts performance numbers in news blogs.
TechPowerUp doesn't just cater to the open source community. We are equally interested to know whether cloud-computing providers are gagged from disclosing performance impact of microcode updates, because a lot more money and jobs are lost as a result of lowered performance/$ or stunted performance/$ growth from cloud-providers.
We are awaiting a specific affirmative/negative from the Intel spokesperson on whether a cloud-computing firm like Amazon Web Services (AWS), for example, is free to disclose performance impact of the latest microcode update to its downstream customers without violating the applicable license governing the microcode update distribution.
Watch this space.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site