Intel Fails to get Spectre, Meltdown Chip Flaw Class-Action Super-Suit Tossed Out
An Anonymous Coward writes:
Intel fails to get Spectre, Meltdown chip flaw class-action super-suit tossed out:
Intel will have to defend itself against claims that the semiconductor goliath knew its microprocessors were defective and failed to tell customers.
On Wednesday, Judge Michael Simon, of the US District Court of Oregon, partially denied the tech giant's motion to dismiss a class-action lawsuit arising from the 2018 public disclosure of Meltdown and Spectre, the family of data-leaking chip microarchitecture design blunders.
The Register broke the Meltdown story on January 2, 2018, as Intel and those who confidentially reported the security vulnerabilities were preparing to disclose them. The following day, Google's Project Zero published details of Meltdown and its cousin Spectre, revealing that efforts to make CPU cores faster using speculative execution have opened them up to side-channel attacks that can read memory that should be out of reach and leak confidential information.
To defend against Meltdown and Spectre, Intel and other affected vendors have had to add software and hardware mitigations that for some workloads make patched processors mildly to significantly slower."
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