![]() ![]() The remaining OEMs are still investigating the matter. Rockwell, Supermicro, and Toshiba have confirmed not being impacted. Others may cross that threshold before OEMs come up with a fix.īleepingComputer notes that only Insyde, Fujitsu, and Intel have confirmed being affected by the flaws. ![]() What makes the issue that much more complicated is the fact that some of the devices affected have exceeded their end-of-life date and are no longer supported. While Insyde released firmware patches to help address the issue, these now need to be accepted by the OEMs and released onto affected products, and that might take a while. “All of the aforementioned vendors (over 25) were using Insyde-based firmware SDK to develop their pieces of (UEFI) firmware.” > This dangerous Intel CPU vulnerability could allow attackers to break into your laptop > Faulty update mechanism puts millions of Dell devices at risk Millions of Dell PCs could be at risk from driver security flaw dating from 2009 ![]()
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