AMD confirms that some Zen 5 CPUs have a worrying security flaw that could put users at risk



  • AMD Zen 5 chips have RDSEED flaw that puts cryptographic key integrity at risk
  • A faulty RDSEED can return zeros, allowing attackers to reconstruct private keys and break encryption
  • AMD recommends turning to 64-bit RDSEED or software alternatives

Some AMD processors, including those built with the latest Zen 5 architecture, have a critical vulnerability that affects cryptographic operations and therefore seriously puts the integrity of protected data at risk.

In a security bulletin, AMD detailed a flaw called “AMD-SB-7055,” describing it as a vulnerability in the RDSEED hardware-based random number generator.



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