Original release date: May 21, 2018 | Last revised: May 22, 2018

Systems Affected

CPU hardware implementations

Overview

On May 21, 2018, new variants of the side-channel central processing unit (CPU) hardware vulnerabilities known as Spectre and Meltdown were publicly disclosed. These variants—known as 3A and 4—can allow an attacker to obtain access to sensitive information on affected systems.

Description

Common CPU hardware implementations are vulnerable to the side-channel attacks known as Spectre and Meltdown. Meltdown is a bug that “melts” the security boundaries normally enforced by the hardware, affecting desktops, laptops, and cloud computers. Spectre is a flaw that an attacker can exploit to force a CPU to reveal its data.

Variant 3a is a vulnerability that may allow an attacker with local access to speculatively read system parameters via side-channel analysis and obtain sensitive information.

Variant 4 is a vulnerability that exploits “speculative bypass.” When exploited, Variant 4 could allow an attacker to read older memory values in a CPU’s stack or other memory locations. While implementation is complex, this side-channel vulnerability could allow less privileged code to

Corresponding CVEs for Side-Channel Variants 1, 2, 3, 3a, and 4 are found below:

Impact

Side-Channel Vulnerability Variants 3a and 4 may allow an attacker to obtain access to sensitive information on affected systems.

Solution

Mitigation

NCCIC recommends users and administrators

The following table contains links to advisories and patches published in response to the vulnerabilities. This table will be updated as information becomes available.

Link to Vendor Information Date Added
AMD May 21, 2018
ARM May 21, 2018
Intel May 22, 2018
Microsoft May 21, 2018
Redhat May 21, 2018

References

Revision History


This product is provided subject to this Notification and this Privacy & Use policy.

Support Ends for Windows 10 22H2, Windows Server 2012 R2, Exchange 2013, Office 2016