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To: Jeff Fox who wrote (74400)2/24/1999 4:34:00 PM
From: Tony Viola  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 186894
 
Jeff, slow here today. PIII flaw news:

Intel Links Alleged Pentium Flaw To Software

dailynews.yahoo.com

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Intel Corp. (Nasdaq:INTC - news) said
Wednesday an alleged flaw in its new Pentium's serial number system
designed to keep personal computers secure from interference by ''hackers''
was related to the chip's software, not any physical problem with the chip.

Intel said it is still in talks with the German magazine, Computer Technology, which Tuesday
alleged a flaw in the software Intel provided for turning off the serial number, to determine
what, if anything is wrong with its system.

Intel provided an ''on-off'' system in response to privacy concerns over the issuance of serial
numbers which could be used to track users in cyberspace. The German magazine said it
found a way to thwart that Pentium software and void the ''on-off'' switch without a user's
knowledge.

''What is at issue here is not a chip flaw. There is no flaw in the Pentium III processor with
respect to the processor serial number,'' said Intel spokesman Tom Waldrop. ''What is being
discussed with the German magazine is a possible software hack.''

Intel has maintained that its new serial numbers are ''an important step'' toward combating
malicious hackers. At a developer's conference in Palm Springs, Calif. this week to launch
the new Pentium III chips, Intel underscored the importance of creating a secure environment
for Internet commerce, which it said will grow into a $1 trillion business over the next few
years.

The serial numbers, Waldrop said, will make personal computers ''less hackable'' and
''more secure and private.''

''All software ultimately is hackable and today's Internet security is essentially all software
and it is all hackable,'' said Waldrop. ''What we are doing today is introducing into the
equation is a processor serial number that brings more of a hardware element, that's more
resilient and less hackable and has more reliability.''

Waldrop said that if the software that controls the serial numbers is found to be defective,
Intel will work on a ''patch'' or other software fix.

But he said there have been no allegations of a defect in the chip itself. Five years ago, when
the original Pentium chip was released, a flaw in the way the chip handled certain math
equations led to a recall that cost Intel hundreds of millions of dollars, but the chip went on
to become one of the most successful products in the history of the high-tech industry.


Earlier Stories

Intel Says Probing Alleged Pentium Flaw (February 24)