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Intel Did Not Tell US Cyber Officials About Chip Flaws Until Made Public (reuters.com)

Intel Corp did not inform U.S. cyber security officials of Meltdown and Spectre chip security flaws until they leaked to the public, six months after Alphabet notified the chipmaker of the problems, according to letters sent by tech companies to lawmakers on Thursday. From a report: Current and former U.S. government officials have raised concerns that the government was not informed of the flaws before they became public because the flaws potentially held national security implications. Intel said it did not think the flaws needed to be shared with U.S. authorities as hackers had not exploited the vulnerabilities. Intel did not tell the United States Computer Emergency Readiness Team, better known as US-CERT, about Meltdown and Spectre until Jan. 3, after reports on them in online technology site The Register had begun to circulate.

4 of 79 comments (clear)

  1. Good... by Luthair · · Score: 5, Insightful

    who exactly would trust them with this information? We all know they would have spent the last 6-months exploiting them and attempting to find more variations.

  2. Smart by foxjazz4003 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Smart move for Intel. Would you tell your government where you keep your secrets?

  3. Re:You belive this bullshit? by Excelcia · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Of course intelligence agencies knew about it. While I'm not a huge fan (or detractor though) of Assange, he made a good case for Google being essentially an arm of the State Department. Why do you think that China has such an issue with Google? The US now warns about Chinese cell phone manufacturers and that their products are possibly unsafe, but this is very much a case of the fire pit calling the kettle black.

    The NSA certainly knew of, and have likely been exploiting this for years. The only positive in this is that, unlike the last time, at least time time they didn't let their exploit out in the wild. That little gem, not telling the public about zero day vulnerabilities they failed to disclose, which they subsequently weaponized, then lost control of the code for, cost more billions in ransomeware attacks than any other single source.

  4. Stupid Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The choice between trusting my US gov't, who supposedly answers to the American people, or a global multinational corporate that answers to no one, is no choice to me at all. I choose the US gov't

    It doesn't, the US gov works for the banks and corporations.

    That's why banks get bail outs and CEOs get big bonuses.