AMD has responded to the reports last week of a range of security flaws affecting its Platform Security Processor (PSP) and chipset. The company acknowledges the bugs and says that, in coming weeks, it will have new firmware available to resolve the PSP bugs. These firmware fixes will also mitigate the chipset bugs.
The ASUS ProArt Display PA32KCX is on the way - a brand-new 8K monitor designed for professionals, including DisplayPort 2.1 connectivity.
Owners of LG TVs may want to learn about this vulnerability which could give hackers access to your device. Luckily, LG has rolled out a fix.
Samsung's Galaxy S25 is set to elevate Google AI integration, extending to hardware depths.
I can't help but feeling that all the well-funded scrutiny (like Google Project Zero's) into vulnerabilities, which seems to be a growing fad, is in effect fast-tracking the hackers. This need not be the case. My serious problem with the (hopefully) well-intentioned activities is that they culminate in the idiotic *publication* of the security flaws, out for all the seedy underbelly of the world to see and exploit. GPZ and others of their ilk should keep their findings secret from everyone other than those who can plug up the vulnerabilities. Under no circumstances should they be revealed intentionally to the public.