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Nvidia provides GPUs, drivers, and software used in AI and computing; flaws in these components can expose systems, data, and workloads.

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Nvidia develops graphics processing units (GPUs), accelerator cards, system-on-chip platforms, and the drivers and software stacks that control them. Its hardware is used in workstations, cloud systems, high-performance computing, and AI infrastructure; security news under this tag therefore commonly concerns device firmware, kernel drivers, GPU runtimes, management tools, and software libraries rather than the silicon alone.

Security advisories matter because flaws in drivers or privileged GPU components can allow local code to crash systems, gain elevated access, or cross intended isolation boundaries, depending on the affected platform. Shared GPU servers also require careful tenant and data isolation: residual data in device memory or insecure accelerator-management interfaces can expose workloads. Operators should track Nvidia security bulletins, inventory driver and firmware versions, obtain updates through trusted channels, restrict management endpoints, and test upgrades against dependent CUDA or AI workloads. Vulnerability assessment should include container and orchestration integrations, since a GPU-enabled workload may receive additional host access.

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Video game developer Ubisoft has confirmed that it suffered a 'cyber security incident' that caused disruption to some of its services. Data extortion group LAPSUS$, who has claimed responsibility for hacking Samsung, NVIDIA, and Mercado Libre thus far, also appears to be behind Ubisoft incident. [...]

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