The truth is that hackers will take any chance they can get to infiltrate your system, and CPUs can play a role in that. At the beginning of 2018, Intel’s CPUs were revealed to have a set of vulnerabilities known as Meltdown and Spectre. Just a few months later on March 14 of the same year, another set of vulnerabilities in AMD’s latest line of processors was discovered by a company called CTS-Labs. This time, however, the way the reports were handled was a bit more unorthodox.

The Vulnerabilities

The list of thirteen vulnerabilities discovered by CTS-Labs can be seen summarized in this report. They are grouped into four categories:

Ryzenfall Fallout Masterkey Chimera

Each of these categories represents a method that the exploit would use to gain access to the secure area of the CPU’s processor that stores sensitive data like passwords and other credentials. Chimera appears to be the most powerful since it allows hackers to inject malicious code directly into the processor, rendering the entire system completely vulnerable to attack. Even Microsoft’s new Credential Guard technology cannot protect against these types of attacks, meaning that the majority of software fixes are worthless unless AMD addresses them directly. In the case of Chimera, CTS-Labs assumes it “cannot be fixed and [requires] a workaround.” “Producing a workaround may be difficult and cause undesired side-effects,” the company added. It’s not absolutely clear what CTS-Labs means by a workaround, but I am guessing they mean either writing a new kernel-level driver that ignores a portion of the processor or making new CPUs that fix these vulnerabilities. The other vulnerability categories, in combination with one another, can be used for industrial espionage by a hacker injecting persistent malware into the Secure Processor, according to their whitepaper.

A Few Oddities About this Release

CTS-Labs, up until they made this report, was pretty much a no-name security firm, so it’s important to take everything with a grain of salt. There are three other factors that raise my eyebrows about this particular company: This isn’t to say that the information brought forward by CTS-Labs is invalid, but for the sake of transparency, these are some things that needed to be pointed out.

Should We Worry?

For those of you who are still planning to get a Ryzen chip, don’t let this report stop you. Yes, the processors may well be vulnerable to attack, but the hackers still depend on you to expose those vulnerabilities. Software intending to exploit the CPU still requires your administrative support. Now that we know how vulnerable both processor families are, it’s probably best to start being prudent about what applications you give root access to. No, you won’t wake up one morning to the news that every system (including yours) was attacked by a CPU monster. Programs like these still require your approval to execute. CPU security measures are just meant to be failsafes, as ineffective as they are. If you give an application root access to your computer, you’re going to have a bad time no matter what your CPU does in protest. There are tons of other ways to decimate your system with root access that do not involve getting into the machinations of the processor at all. Does this make you more wary of getting a new CPU? Tell us all about it in a comment!