Tom’s Hardware reports here on a talk at Black Hat which describes an undocumented God Mode on VIA C3 Nehemiah chips.
TSMC Victim of WannaCry
SecurityWeek reports here that some of TSMC’s manufacturing plants were temporarily shut down due to an attack by WannaCry ransomware.
HP Starts Bug Bounty Program for Printers
Tom’s Hardware reports here on a bug bounty program from HP for its printers.
Robot Vacuum Includes Surveillance Devices and Security Flaws
TechCrunch reports here on the Diqee 360 robot vacuum cleaner. This mobile platform includes a WiFI port, a 360-degree camera and, according to other reports, a microphone. It also includes a code vulnerability that could be exploited.
Plans for Plastic Guns
NBC News reports here on plans by states to block what they call “instructions online for making plastic guns from 3-D printers.” A more precise technical term would be CAD files. Extremetech opines here on challenges stemming from 3-D printed weapons.
Keep in mind that your typical home 3-D printer uses a feedstock of plastic that melts at very low temperatures. Such plastic is highly unlikely to produce a gun that would fire even once. Printers that can make guns that fire at all would be more expensive.
Also keep in mind that preventing one person from distributing CAD files for weapons doesn’t prevent this information from circulating. Reverse engineering products to create CAD files is common practice and reverse engineering services are widely available.
If we look at CAD file distribution as intellectual property theft, we should remember that many other products are vulnerable to this approach. It is only a matter of time, for example, before someone scans an entire automobile and posts the CAD files.