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Hackers hack at unhackable new chip for three months. Chip remains unhacked | PC Gamer - groveshemottess81

Hackers hack at unhackable new chip for three months. Chip remains unhacked

hacker leaning over a computer
(Image credit: Getty Images)

The dangerous-titled 'unhackable' processor has survived its biggest hacking test outstandingly unscathed. Created by the University of Michigan (UoM), the Morpheus cut off design has directly been attacked aside more than 500 cybersecurity researchers resolutely going at the microchip for three months perpendicular. Just imagine what that room smelled like by the cease...

Simply in all that time not one has managed to exploit it. Now, three months doesn't needfully mean IT really is completely unhackable, but it certainly makes information technology bad goddam protected.

Naming a chip 'unhackable', a great deal like a certain GPU limiter we could refer, is tantamount to begging someone to come along and sally it, and that is exactly what the UoM has done in putting Morpheus into the Finding Exploits to Thwart Meddling (FETT) Bug Bountifulness hunt from DARPA.

Bounty hunting. FETT. Cute, eh? The research was too supported by the DARPA SSITH program too.

At any rate, the bug search hackathon ran from June through Revered last year, and the RISC-V based chip resisted all attempts to compromise it.

Dubbed Morpheus by its creators, the chip design uses a mixture of 'encryption and churn' to first, arbitrarily obfuscate key information points—such as the location, format, and content of a program's nucleus—and then rhenium-randomise them every last while the arrangement is in operation.

"Reckon trying to solve a Rubik's Dice that rearranges itself every time you blink," says team up lead, Todd Austin (via Hexus). "That's what hackers are up against with Morpheus. IT makes the computer an unresolvable puzzle.

"Developers are constantly writing code, and as long as there is new code, there will be new bugs and security measur vulnerabilities. With Morpheus, symmetric if a hacker finds a bug, the information needed to exploit IT vanishes within milliseconds. It's possibly the closest affair to a future-proof fixed system."

diagram of the unhackable RISC-V chip design

(Image credit: University of Michigan)

This level of mystification and roil might sound like an absolute nightmare to code for, or smooth use, but Capital of Texa claims that the design is completely transparent to both software system developers and users, because each the randomness occurs within information known as 'undefined semantics.'

What's more, the action of churning those data points is proved to have negligible impact on the actual performance of the system, with the architecture paper (PDF monition) itself claiming precisely a one-hundredth performance murder.

Yet, it's looking good for the 'unhackable' chip then.

Dave James

Dave has been gaming since the days of Zaxxon and Lady Wiretap on the Colecovision, and code books for the Commodore Vic 20 (Death Rush along 2000!). He collective his prototypical gaming PC at the tender age of 16, and finally finished bug-fixing the Cyrix-based system around a year later. When he dropped it out of the windowpane. He archetypal started writing for Official PlayStation Magazine and Xbox World many decades ago, and so touched onto PC Format full-time, then PC Gamer, TechRadar, and T3 among others. Now helium's back, composition around the nightmarish graphics card grocery, CPUs with more cores than good sense, play laptops hotter than the sunlight, and SSDs more capacious than a Cybertruck.

Source: https://www.pcgamer.com/unhackable-chip-not-hacked-yet/

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