Latest AMD & Intel CPUs Including Zen 4 & Raptor Lake With VAES Instructions Susceptible To Data Damage on Windows, Patch Rolling Out But Will Reduce Performance

Aug 10, 2022 at 12:38am EDT
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Microsoft has revealed a new bug within Windows 11 & Windows Server 2022 operating systems that affects the latest Intel & AMD CPUs. The bug is related to the encryption on the said OS and processors outfitted with AES/VAES (Vector Advanced Encryption Standard) Instruction sets have been affected.

Microsoft Confirms New Encryption Bug Could Damage Data on Latest AMD & Intel CPUs With VAES Instructions, Patch To Reduce Performance

While AMD & Intel CPUs are the highlights, virtually any system that is running a PC with the following instructions is affected and susceptible to data damage:

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As for the list of CPUs that are affected by this bug, those include Intel CPUs starting the 10th Gen Ice Lake and above, Ice Lake-SP Xeon Scalable processors for servers, and AMD CPUs starting the Zen 3 lineup plus the upcoming Zen 4 chips. For Zen 3, both the non-V-Cache and 3D V-cache parts are affected. Alder Lake & Raptor Lake CPUs don't officially support VAES but it can be enabled on some motherboards with custom BIOS firmware.

Symptoms

  • AES-based operations might be two times (2x) slower after installing the Windows update for the May 24, 2022 preview release or the June 14, 2022 security release.

The root cause of this bug happened when Microsoft added new code paths to Windows 11 and Windows Server 2022 versions of SymCrypt to take advantage of the VAES instructions offered by the latest CPUs. SymCrypt is the core cryptographic library in Windows. These instructions act on Advanced Vector Extensions (AVX) registers for hardware with the newest supported processors.

However, these code paths opened up a vulnerability that could lead to permanent data damage. Now there's already a resolution and workaround which is to install the June 23, 2022 preview of the aforementioned operating systems but it is reported by Microsoft that after applying the new update, PCs will notice slower performance (up to 2x slower) in applications such as:

Microsoft states that users will have to wait for a month for a proper patch to be rolled out but till then, the only workaround to avoid data damage is to switch to lower performance on the older update.

Install the June 23, 2022 preview release for your OS; see below:

Or

Install the July 12, 2022 security release for your OS; see below:

via Microsoft

News Source: WindowsReport

About the author: A Software Engineer by training and a PC enthusiast by passion, Hassan Mujtaba serves as Wccftech's Senior Editor for hardware section. With years of experience in the industry, he specializes in deep-dive technical analysis of next-generation CPU and GPU architectures, motherboards, and cooling solutions. His work involves not only breaking news on upcoming technologies but also extensive hands-on reviews and benchmarking.

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