Seems more and more that Sandy Bridge may be a better choice for a CPU right now than Ivy Bridge... unless you really really need the extra GPU power of Ivy Bridge.
Some new features that were launched with Ivy Bridge apparently make it less secure than Sandy Bridge chips:
http://semiaccurate.com/2012/05/15/inte ... nightmare/
One More Reason not to buy Ivy Bridge
Moderators: NeilBlanchard, Ralf Hutter, sthayashi, Lawrence Lee
Re: One More Reason not to buy Ivy Bridge
"maybe" and "likely", they're just speculating, there's no proof that it's an issue for all systems.
What are the other reasons?One More Reason...
Re: One More Reason not to buy Ivy Bridge
I couldn't get past the first couple paragraphs of ranting - tldr. I'll wait for other sources to comment on whether Vpro is good or a gateway to evil.
-
- Posts: 450
- Joined: Mon Mar 29, 2010 2:47 am
- Location: Bratislava, Slovak Republic
Re: One More Reason not to buy Ivy Bridge
Seems like someone doesn't understand why this technology exists in first place (i mean Charlie). It is not for you, typical home user, you should turn it off. It is for you, corporate administrators, where if there is an attacker, you have a bigger problem than a single compromised computer. Secondly, anyone who ever tried to enable AMT VNC connection will know how hard it is in the first place. I don't see it as realistic for a virus/trojan to change BIOS/UEFI settings, configure the whole AMT thing correctly, configure port redirects on the corporate firewalls and allow this way to use any of vPro features remotely.