New Rowhammer attacks give complete control of machines running Nvidia GPUs
Both GDDRHammer and GeForge hammer GPU memory in ways that compromise the CPU.
The cost of high-performance GPUs, typically $8,000 or more, means they are frequently shared among dozens of users in cloud environments. Two new attacks demonstrate how a malicious user can gain full root control of a host machine by performing novel Rowhammer attacks on high-performance GPU cards made by Nvidia. The attacks exploit memory hardware’s increasing susceptibility to bit flips, in which 0s stored in memory switch to 1s and vice versa. In 2014, researchers first demonstrated that repeated, rapid access—or “hammering”—of memory hardware known as DRAM creates electrical disturbances that flip bits. A year later, a different research team showed that by targeting specific DRAM rows storing sensitive data, an attacker could exploit the phenomenon to escalate an unprivileged user to root or evade security sandbox protections. Both attacks targeted DDR3 generations of DRAM. From CPU to GPU: Rowhammer's decade-long journey Over the past decade, dozens of newer Rowhammer attacks have evolved to, among other things:Read full article Comments
Related tags
Companies and people
Story threads
Continue with this story
Follow the same topic through connected articles, entity pages, and active story threads.
Большая репетиция для квантовой химии: 1024 GPU посчитали молекулу воды так, как это сделает квантовый компьютер через 10 лет
Как в Японии проверяют алгоритмы для еще не построенных машин?
ScaleOps raises $130M to improve computing efficiency amid AI demand
ScaleOps just raised $130M to tackle GPU shortages and soaring AI cloud costs by automating infrastructure in real time.
Ad slot
Article inline monetization block
A reserved partner slot for relevant tools, services, and contextual editorial integrations.
Related articles
More stories that share tags, source, or category context.
Большая репетиция для квантовой химии: 1024 GPU посчитали молекулу воды так, как это сделает квантовый компьютер через 10 лет
Как в Японии проверяют алгоритмы для еще не построенных машин?
ScaleOps raises $130M to improve computing efficiency amid AI demand
ScaleOps just raised $130M to tackle GPU shortages and soaring AI cloud costs by automating infrastructure in real time.
More from Ars Technica
Fresh reporting and follow-up coverage from the same newsroom.
SpaceX tries to convince FCC that Amazon put satellites into wrong altitude
Amazon denies violation, says SpaceX caused conflict by lowering Starlink satellites.
Google Vids gets AI upgrade with Veo and Lyria models, directable AI avatars
Google Vids brings together Google's most capable AI creation tools.
Male octopuses guided through mating by female hormones
A receptor that's used to find prey is also activated by progesterone.
New fossil deposits show complex animal groups predating the Cambrian
Collection of fossils includes Ediacaran, Cambrian species, suggesting a transition.