Pentium 4 loophole could let in hackers

Intel is acting to calm fears that technology in its Pentium 4 processors will allow hackers to steal passwords by reading 'footprints' in the cache.

Hyperthreading, introduced in Intel's Pentium 4, could allow hackers to access secure information, according to Colin Percival, a 23 year old Ph.D student from Vancouver. The technology makes software run faster by letting two threads run on the same processor at the same time. Percival has developed a sophisticated attack based on timing, which exploits the fact that both processes can access the same cache memory.

The attack, revealed on Friday in a paper delivered at the BSDCan conference in Ottawa, relies on a spy process installed on the server, and sharing the L2 cache with an OpenSSL cryptographic process. The spy process observes the time taken for certain cache operations, and deduces what the other process is doing (which Percival refers to as "footprints in the cache"), gathering information that could help crack the desired password.

Intel was informed of the problem in March, and says the risk is very low. It only works on a server that has already been compromised to allow a malicious hacker to install a spy process. If the hacker has already achieved this, there are many easier and quicker ways to steal data, according to Intel spokesman Howard High.

The attack could also affect any other processor that shares resources, and not just Intel chips or hyperthreading chips, the company has pointed out. Nevertheless, the company expects future versions of Windows and Linux to fix the problem.

Since discovering the flaw in October 2004, Percival has been working with FreeBSD and other operating systems developers to judge the dangers, and various responses are posted on his site. Operating systems that do not exploit hyperthreading and keep it disabled, such as SCO's UnixWare, are immune.

ZDNet UK's Peter Judge reported from London. For more coverage from ZDNet UK, click here.

Like this article? Click below to send it to your mobile for free!

Advertisement

Talkback 1 comments

  1. This was announced at BSDCan, not BDSCan... Anonymous -- 19/05/05

    This was announced at BSDCan, not BDSCan...


Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Angus Kidman Storage infrastructure on the tender track
    For a large-scale storage project, it's not uncommon to go out to tender for the best deal — but when was the last time you had to put together a tender for a document management room?
  • Array Apple has killed the video store; will ISPs be next?
    The Olympics are nearly over, and the Australian team deserves kudos for an excellent performance all around. Yet even as the Olympic sun sets on the Bird's Nest for the last time this weekend, millions of spectators around the world will be scanning their dials in the hope of finding something else to fill their viewing hours.
  • Array Conroy's filtering plan: security worries
    Communications Minister Stephen Conroy has welcomed "improvements" in ISP filtering technologies, but will a broad-scale roll-out make ISPs a thief's favourite target?
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured