How Your Computer May be Hacked to Death by Cyber-Machetes! By Paul Walker

     There is always some whiz kid out there, with plenty of time on his hands who finds a hole where no-one before thought that there was a hole.
  https://au.finance.yahoo.com/amphtml/news/unfixable-flaw-allows-hackers-into-computer-021651049.html
  https://thunderspy.io/assets/reports/breaking-thunderbolt-security-bjorn-ruytenberg-20200417.pdf

“A very simple way to get around lockscreens and logins to modern computers has been found by a university researcher. Thunderbolt ports, which were invented by Intel and have been installed into many Windows and Mac computers for the last decade, transfer data at very fast speeds. But it does this by using a system called direct memory access, which Dutch masters student Björn Ruytenberg has shown can be hijacked without knowing the computer's login password. Ruytenberg's method, called Thunderspy, even works for disks that are encrypted. According to iTnews, the Thunderbolt vulnerability is not fixable as it requires hardware changes. Ruytenberg himself warns that the only way to avoid the hack is to keep computers physically secure. Intel did release a feature called "kernel DMA protection" last year that partially protects against this hack. But the workaround slows down performance and stops some Thunderbolt accessories from working, which defeats the whole purpose of having these ports. Moreover "kernel DMA protection" is only available on the most recent computers, with many 2019 models not covered. The company itself recommended physically protecting computers from nefarious people. "We encourage everyone to follow good security practices, including preventing unauthorized physical access to computers."

     I don’t understand it, but I picked up just enough to be even more paranoid about the security of the computer society. I am keeping my computer off in the future. Go on, hack that!

 

Comments

No comments made yet. Be the first to submit a comment
Already Registered? Login Here
Thursday, 25 April 2024

Captcha Image