NVIDIA is urging customers to enable System-level Error Correction Codes (ECC) as a defense against a variant of a RowHammer attack demonstrated against its graphics processing units (GPUs).
“Risk of successful exploitation from RowHammer attacks varies based on DRAM device, platform, design specification, and system settings,” the GPU maker said in an advisory released this week.
Dubbed NVIDIA is urging customers to enable System-level Error Correction Codes (ECC) as a defense against a variant of a RowHammer attack demonstrated against its graphics processing units (GPUs).
“Risk of successful exploitation from RowHammer attacks varies based on DRAM device, platform, design specification, and system settings,” the GPU maker said in an advisory released this week.
Dubbed
- GPUHammer: New RowHammer Attack Variant Degrades AI Models on NVIDIA GPUs The Hacker [email protected] (The Hacker News)
- Over 600 Laravel Apps Exposed to Remote Code Execution Due to Leaked APP_KEYs on GitHub The Hacker [email protected] (The Hacker News)
- Pay2Key Ransomware Gang Resurfaces With Incentives to Attack US, Israel darkreadingRob Wright
- 350M Cars, 1B Devices Exposed to 1-Click Bluetooth RCE darkreadingNate Nelson, Contributing Writer
- As Cyber-Insurance Premiums Drop, Coverage Is Key to Resilience darkreadingRobert Lemos, Contributing Writer
- The Beginner’s Guide to Using AI: 5 Easy Ways to Get Started (Without Accidentally Summoning Skynet)by Tech Jacks
- Tips and Tricks to Enhance Your Incident Response Proceduresby Tech Jacks
- Building a Security Roadmap for Your Company: Strategic Precision for Modern Enterprises by Tech Jacks
- The Power of Policy: How Creating Strong Standard Operating Procedures Expedites Security Initiativesby Tech Jacks
- Building a Future-Proof SOC: Strategies for CISOs and Infosec Leaders by Tech Jacks
- Security Gate Keeping – Annoying – Unhelpfulby Tech Jacks
- The Beginner’s Guide to Using AI: 5 Easy Ways to Get Started (Without Accidentally Summoning Skynet)
Leave A Reply