You are Here:
Linux Lite 6.6 FINAL Released - Support for 22 Languages Added - See Release Announcement Section



Exploit-Ridden Firmware

Author (Read 2007 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Re: Exploit-Ridden Firmware
« Reply #3 on: December 14, 2017, 11:55:15 AM »
 

LL-user

  • I come here a lot
  • *****
  • 455
    Posts
  • Reputation: 214
  • Linux Lite Member
    • View Profile
Yep, very interesting, enlightening, .... and some kind of scary/shocking, too.

Links fixed, thanks for the heads-up.
« Last Edit: December 15, 2017, 05:56:46 AM by LL-user »
 

Re: Exploit-Ridden Firmware
« Reply #2 on: December 14, 2017, 09:36:08 AM »
 

Jerry

  • Linux Lite Creator
  • Administrator
  • Platinum Level Poster
  • *****
  • 8777
    Posts
  • Reputation: 801
  • Linux Lite Member
    • View Profile
    • Linux Lite OS

  • CPU: Intel Core i9-10850K CPU @ 3.60GHz

  • MEMORY: 32Gb

  • VIDEO CARD: nVidia GeForce GTX 1650

  • Kernel: 5.x
Very interesting. I must admit, as soon as I read 'Google' my spidey senses went off again. It is open source, not free software. Will watch with interest.

Your u-root url requires editing.

 

Exploit-Ridden Firmware
« Reply #1 on: December 14, 2017, 09:07:19 AM »
 

LL-user

  • I come here a lot
  • *****
  • 455
    Posts
  • Reputation: 214
  • Linux Lite Member
    • View Profile
In support of Jerry's firm position regarding UEFI I'd like to share the presentation of Ronald Min







Published on Oct 27, 2017
The Linux Foundation

 
 Replace Your Exploit-Ridden Firmware with Linux - Ronald Minnich, Google With the WikiLeaks release of the vault7 material, the security of the UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface) firmware used in most PCs and laptops is once again a concern. UEFI is a proprietary and closed-source operating system, with a codebase almost as large as the Linux kernel, that runs when the system is powered on and continues to run after it boots the OS (hence its designation as a “Ring -2 hypervisor"). It is a great place to hide exploits since it never stops running, and these exploits are undetectable by kernels and programs.


Our answer to this is NERF (Non-Extensible Reduced Firmware), an open source software system developed at Google to replace almost all of UEFI firmware with a tiny Linux kernel and initramfs. The initramfs file system contains an init and command line utilities from the u-root project (http://u-root.tk/), which are written in the Go language.


About Ronald G. Minnich Ron Minnich is a Software Engineer at Google. He has contributed to many open source projects in the last several decades, including the Linux kernel (9p file system); the FreeBSD kernel (rfork); and Plan 9 (many different areas). He directed the team that ported Plan 9 to the Blue Gene supercomputers. He invented LinuxBIOS (now called coreboot) in 1999. He is one of the core contributors to the Harvey operating system. His most recent Linux Foundation talk was on how to build your own signed version of ChromeOS and resign your Chromebook with your personal keys in 2016.


@Jerry/moderators: If suited better in a different category of the forum, please move accordingly.
« Last Edit: December 14, 2017, 11:52:16 AM by LL-user »
 

 

-->
X Close Ad

Linux Lite 6.6 FINAL Released - Support for 22 Languages Added - See Release Announcement Section