Ah, I see, Bloomberg. So instead of a (partial) retraction of your at least half if not fully bullshit China implant story, you're going to now publish *one guy's* claim of Ethernet jack implants. When you had <5 days to check anything he provided.
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So now we have *software* detecting *analog* stuff like the "power consumption" of a *network*. None of those words go together. At all.pic.twitter.com/h0W0R8cI7L
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Basically every Ethernet jack I've seen in anything but cheapo consumer routers/switches has been metal. How the hell is this an IOC?pic.twitter.com/1LG7tBe9MW
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Nevermind that... Ethernet jacks don't have power pins. Where is this module (that uses so much power that it gets hot) magically powering itself from? Nobody runs PoE out to servers. Did they modify the board design to add power pins too?
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right? Like, what interest would the *CEO of a hardware security consultancy* have in convincing everyone that their hardware is insecure... oh wait This comment made my jaw droppic.twitter.com/tHCdY8WqmT
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..because it's so hard to take a photo. lack of a photo is slam-dunk on the Bloomberg article being bullshit. I hope Supermicro sues them.
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I mean, at least this article doesn't have a *fabricated* photoshoot like the last one did.
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Exactly, sci-fi. I take pictures when I find strange hardware. Besides, biggest risk still comes from firm/software that double-uses secure hardware. Nothing needs to be embedded; closed or hidden-in-plain-site (on github, even) source code has proven much more effective!
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