Those batteries have probably met a worse fate than the white MacBook line they came from. According to Forbes, Charlie Miller's
managed to render seven of them useless after gaining total access to
their micro-controllers' firmware via a security hole. Evidently, the
Li-on packs for the line of lappies -- including Airs and Pros -- are
accessible with two passwords he dug up from an '09 software update.
Chuck mentions that someone could "use them to do something really bad,"
including faulting charge-levels and thermal read-outs to possibly even
making them explode. He also thinks hard-to-spot malware
could be installed directly within the battery, repeatedly infecting a
computer unless removed. Come August, he'll reportedly be detailing the
vulnerability at the Black Hat security conference along with a fix he's
dubbed Caulkgun, which only has the mild side-effect of locking-out updates by Apple. Worth being safe these days, though. Right? Full story in the links below.
Featured Post
Make Money Through Microworkers.com
There are many ways to make our Surf on web to be useful. Apart from our curriculam making ourself to be relaxed through hearing Music an...
Popular Posts
- Brando's USB optical mouse doubles as a digital scale, for when you really need it
- Electrical Circuits Video Tutorial for Competitive exam Aspirants
- Increasing Creativity Through Laughter - Alo Ha ha ha
- CASUAL-R527b Root and Recovery for the AT&T Samsung Galaxy S 4 in CWM
- Educational Inspiration a common man's Burning Desire
i recived nice information from this aritcle
ReplyDelete