Microsoft Corp said on Tuesday
that software patches released to guard against microchip security threats
slowed down some personal computers and servers, with systems running on older
Intel Corp processors seeing a noticeable decrease in performance.
The comments in a blog post were
the clearest signal from Microsoft that fixes for flaws in microchips from
Intel and rivals described last week could meaningfully degrade performance.
The topic is of keen interest to large data centre operators, which could incur
significant cost increases if computers slow down.
Microsoft also said that security
updates froze some computers using chipsets from Intel rival AMD, dragging
AMD's shares down nearly four per cent. Shares in Intel, which reiterated on
Tuesday that it saw no sign of significant slowdown in computers, fell 2.5 per
cent taking the loss since the issue surfaced last week to about seven per cent
or around $15 billion in market value.
AMD shares have gained nearly 20
per cent in the last week as investors speculated that the chipmaker could
wrest market share from Intel, whose chips were most exposed to the security
flaws.
Security researchers disclosed the
flaws on January 3 that affected nearly every modern computing device containing
chips from Intel, AMD and ARM Holdings, owned by Japan's SoftBank Group Corp.
"We (and others in the industry) had learned of
this vulnerability under nondisclosure agreement several months ago and
immediately began developing engineering mitigations and updating our cloud
infrastructure," Microsoft executive Terry Myerson wrote in a blog post on
Tuesday.
Internet and networking equipment
maker Cisco Systems said in a security advisory updated on Tuesday that it has
identified 18 vulnerable products, including some of its blade servers, rack
servers and routers, and expects to have patches for servers in about five
weeks, on February 18.
Cisco said it is also looking for
problems in nearly 30 other products, including switches and routers. The majority
of Cisco's products were not vulnerable because they are "closed systems
that do not allow customers to run custom code on the device," it said.
The memory corruption flaws, named
Meltdown and Spectre, could allow hackers to bypass operating systems and other
security software to steal passwords or encryption keys on most types of
computers, phones and cloud-based servers.
ARM Holdings estimated that around
five per cent of more than 120 billion chips its partners have shipped since
1991 was impacted by Spectre. It said the number of chips affected by Meltdown
was significantly less.
"ARM will address Spectre in future processors
but there will need to be an ongoing discipline in the design of secure systems
which needs to be addressed through both software and hardware," a company
spokesman said in an emailed statement.
Intel and AMD have not disclosed
the number of chips affected by the security flaws.
Intel said a typical home and
business PC user should not see significant slowdowns in common tasks such as
reading email, writing a document or accessing digital photos.
The chipmaker said last week that
fixes for security issues in its microchips would not slow down computers,
rebuffing concerns that the flaws would significantly reduce performance.
Rival AMD had also played down the
threat, saying its products were at "zero risk" from the Meltdown
flaw, but that one variant of the Spectre bug could be resolved by software
updates from vendors such as Microsoft.
But on Tuesday AMD said it was
aware of an issue with some older-generation processors following the
installation of a Microsoft security update that was published over the weekend.
Microsoft said it was working with
AMD to resolve the issues.
Apple Inc also released an updated
version of its operating system software on Monday to fix the security flaw.
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