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posted by Fnord666 on Friday June 04 2021, @07:50AM   Printer-friendly
from the scatter-brains dept.

NewAtlas published an article that may outline the future of secure computing:

Engineers have designed a computer processor that thwarts hackers by randomly changing its microarchitecture every few milliseconds. Known as Morpheus, the puzzling processor has now aced its first major tests, repelling hundreds of professional hackers in a DARPA security challenge.

[...] Essentially, the processor starts by encrypting key information, such as the location, format and content of data. But that's not enough on its own – a dedicated hacker could still crack that code within a few hours. And that's where Morpheus gets clever – the system shuffles that encryption randomly every few hundred milliseconds. That way, even if a hacker somehow manages to get a picture of the entire processor, it'll completely change before they have a chance to act on it.


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  • (Score: 2) by hendrikboom on Monday June 07 2021, @07:31PM

    by hendrikboom (1125) Subscriber Badge on Monday June 07 2021, @07:31PM (#1142863) Homepage Journal

    I have two, count them, two shower stalls in my apartment. I can use either of them anytime I want. Except, of course when I'm waiting for a restaurant delivery...

    And no, I don't take my computer into the shower with me.

    I'm relatively waterproof. My computer isn't. Linux doesn't make computers waterproof.

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