Researchers have discovered malicious code circulating in the wild that hijacks the earliest stage boot process of Linux devices by exploiting a year-old firmware vulnerability when it remains unpatched on affected models.
The critical vulnerability is one of a constellation of exploitable flaws discovered last year and given the name LogoFAIL. These exploits are able to override an industry-standard defense known as Secure Boot and execute malicious firmware early in the boot process. Until now, there were no public indications that LogoFAIL exploits were circulating in the wild.
The discovery of code downloaded from an Internet-connected web server changes all that. While there are no indications the public exploit is actively being used, it is reliable and polished enough to be production-ready and could pose a threat in the real world in the coming weeks or months. Both the LogoFAIL vulnerabilities and the exploit found on-line were discovered by Binarly, a firm that helps customers identify and secure vulnerable firmware.
Oh to see a medieval peasant’s face after reading them this headline.
It would probably be blank. The literacy rate wasn’t particularly great back then.
Or you might get accused of being a witch.
What does literacy have to do with hearing something?
A famous one of these was the headline
Galaxy Nexus: Android Ice Cream Sandwich Guinea Pig
I can’t read this either.
Pretty sure it means
Galaxy Nexus (the smartphone): Android (OS) Ice Cream Sandwich (OS Version) Guinea Pig (Test Subject)
(So the new Android OS version, Ice Cream Sandwich, is being tested on the Galaxy Nexus phone)
Galaxy Nexus
Android phone by Google released ~15 years ago.
Android Ice Cream Sandwich
Android 4.0
Guinea Pig
First to try something.
Make sense?
Ffs what laptop options are left?
If you see a kitty cat during the boot, format / put your bios’ keys to “factory” and reinstall.
Not a big deal.
Surely a malware that’s not a POC will not display an obvious logo to notify users of its presence?
You overestimate both the competence of malware developers and the perceptiveness of users.