New 'Shade BIOS' Technique Beats Every Kind of Security
What if malware didn't require an operating system to function? How would anyone possibly notice, let alone disable it?
Stay updated on BIOS security trends, threats, and protection strategies. Essential reading for IT professionals and cybersecurity enthusiasts.
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Background for this topic.
BIOS is low-level firmware embedded on a motherboard chip that initializes hardware components and loads the operating system during startup. It operates before the OS and controls critical functions like hardware configuration and the boot sequence. Because BIOS runs first, it establishes the initial trust environment for the system’s software and hardware.
Security risks include unauthorized BIOS modification, which can implant persistent malware that survives OS reinstallations or disk replacements. Attackers may exploit vulnerabilities to install firmware rootkits or bypass secure boot protections. Defenses focus on restricting BIOS access with passwords, applying cryptographically verified firmware updates, and enabling hardware-based secure boot mechanisms to ensure only trusted code executes during system startup.
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What if malware didn't require an operating system to function? How would anyone possibly notice, let alone disable it?
A firmware update for hundreds of Gigabyte PC models gets rid of a backdoor capability that could be hijacked by cybercriminals, the company says.
The latest three memory corruption flaws in Dell BIOS highlights the challenges of fixing firmware vulnerabilities.