Intel's Sandy Bridge Processor Has a Kill Switch
An anonymous reader writes "Intel's new Sandy Bridge processors have a new feature that the chip giant is calling Anti-Theft 3.0. The processor can be disabled even if the computer has no Internet connection or isn't even turned on, over a 3G network. With Intel anti-theft technology built into Sandy Bridge, David Allen, director of distribution sales at Intel North America, said that users have the option to set up their processor so that if their computer is lost or stolen, it can be shut down remotely."
What could possibly go wrong.
Knowing right out of the gate that some one else COULD have access to this kill feature is unnerving at best.
Is it me or is this one of the dumbest ideas ever to come out of Intel?
I was looking forward to this CPU. Now, I am really going to research this. This may flip me back to AMD. I didn't like when Intel did the tracking on the PIII and the sound of this makes me just as uncomfortable.
Great people don't need people to complete them, great people complete other people. -- Matthew Pawlikowski.
Want to shut down the opposition's operations? Just disable their computers.
Do. Not. Want.
This to me says it will push foreign governments to non-intel machines. Can't risk the US government getting control of something like this.
Or any other power for that matter. No government or military would really want this on their systems. They might think they want it to "stop theft" but the consequences of someone else getting control are way to much.
Wow. More than 30 comments already and no-one has brought up Microsoft killing the cpu if it thinks your copy of the OS is pirated. Must be a slow day. ;)
You're just jealous 'cuz the voices talk to *me*