So doesn’t the ryzen have the same management backdoors as intel?
Not arguing, honestly question. I haven’t kept up with that.
I have no idea. Please elaborate.
Intels management framework has a well known cia/nsa back door. It’s been written about ad nauesum.
It cannot be turned off, Started shortly after WOL became predominant. It’s bare metal, cares not about your OS. I’m sure AMD had to play ball, and it’s been said Apple m chips have the same.
Any search engine would lead you to articles. I’m Not a search engine.
Interesting. I will look into that further. Thanks.
The AMD version is called Platform Security Processor (PSP). It's been in basically everything since around 2013 I think. There is no escaping the "computer inside your computer" these days.
There were specific hardware configurations that the NSA requested (required) of intel that if detected would automatically disable the IME. I am not aware of something like that for AMD but I am sure it exists.
The short version of this is that there is a very small processor (ARM based usually) that is imbedded in your processor that has full access to the data lines in the computer (usb, networking, direct data going to the CPU/GPU/ETC) that cannot be disabled (usually), cannot be directly accessed by the user (usually) and could potentially be used to steal data from you, secrets for encrypted devices, etc.... (I think the Intel one was running some sort of ultra striped *nix like "os").
I did far too much research on this stuff back in the day but it's still around and it's still a "insider threat" for basically every computer in the world.