HP rolling out a fix for flaw that caused some PCs to log every keystroke

Few laptop models of HP were said to have been affected by a security flaw due to a version of Conexant audio driver that were not meant to be shipped with the machines and had a built in keystroke logger. HP has now said that it rolling out a fix for this flaw.

 
What is Keylogger? A keylogger is a piece of software for which the case of dual-use can rarely be claimed. This means there are very few situations where you would describe a keylogger that records all keystrokes as ‘well-intended’. A keylogger records when a key is pressed, when it is released, and whether any shift or special keys have been pressed. It is also recorded if, for example, a password is entered even if it is not displayed on the screen. 

The fix for the HP keystroke logging security flaw has been issued with a Windows update released on Friday for the following 2016 HP PC models – EliteBook, ProBook and Zbook. Owners of the aforementioned HP devices and owners of 2015 models are advised to download the update right away.

Is HP itself a victim of a backdoored software that third-party vendors have developed on behalf of HP?
The responsibility in this case is uncertain, because the software is offered by HP as a driver package for their own devices on their website. On the other hand, the software was developed and digitally signed by the audio chip manufacturer Conexant.

Conexant is a manufacturer of integrated circuits, emerging from a US armaments manufacturer. Primarily, they develop circuits in the field of video and audio processing. Thus, it is not uncommon for Conexant audio ICs to be populated on the sound cards of computers of various manufacturers. Conexant also develops drivers for its audio chips, so that the operating system is able to communicate with the hardware. Apparently, there are some parts for the control of the audio hardware, which are very specific and depend on the computer model – for example special keys for turning on or off a microphone or controlling the recording LED on the computer. In this code, which seems to be tailored to HP computers, there is a part that intercepts and processes all keyboard input.

Actually, the purpose of the software is to recognize whether a special key has been pressed or released. Instead, however, the developer has introduced a number of diagnostic and debugging features to ensure that all keystrokes are either broadcasted through a debugging interface or written to a log file in a public directory on the hard-drive. This type of debugging turns the audio driver effectively into a keylogging spyware. On the basis of meta-information of the files, this keylogger has already existed on HP computers since at least Christmas 2015. 

According to Axios, HP did not access and share the data that was stored in the files and key logging codes but having them could have posed a security threat for the customers. HP says this fix will remove the key-logging codes and the files that stored the keystrokes. Owners should also delete all the backups that they may have created before updating their Windows versions as they may contain multiple copies of their keystroke data.

HP Vice President told Axios in a statement that the keystroke logging code was a debugging code that must have been left unintentionally by Conexant, the company that made the audio driver for HP’s PC models, and it “should never have been included on shipping PCs.” He further explained that the company never had any intention to include that software or record user’s keystroke data. “It was something that was there in development process and should have been removed,” he added.

Notably, a security firm known as Modzero has earlier intimated HP and Conexant about the keystroke logging flaw, however, HP’s Nash said that the company had already been in a process of working on the fix before Modzero’s notification.

The Acer Switch 3 and Switch 5 both sport 12-inch displays and run on Windows 10.

The Acer introduced the Switch 3 and Switch 5 – the latter is the more premium variant with a fingerprint sensor on board and Windows Hello support.

 These are two stylish and powerful new additions to their back-to-school range which allow consumers to easily transition from notebook to tablet with a detachable keyboard which is fastened with ultra-secure magnets. In fact, the Switch 3 has already won The Red Dot Award for Product Design this year. These additions to their 2-in-1 line are silent models that have silent Acer LiquidLoop fanless cooling systems, so they are as discreet as possible. They also boast an auto-retracted kickstand allowing users to adjust the position of the device with just one hand.

The Acer Switch 3 and Switch 5 both sport 12-inch displays and run on Windows 10. Both new Acer Switch 2-in-1 notebooks can be used with an Acer Active Pen on the touch screen, and have an attachable keyboard that snaps on with magnets and can be adjusted to an ergonomic angle for customer preference. There’s also a U-shaped kickstand that holds up the display and can be adjusted to any angle up to 165 degrees. Both the Switch 5 and Switch 3 have front and rear cameras for video conferencing and capturing memories, and the front webcams provide 720p full-HD video recording. Both models also support the Micro SDXC slot, a thin and reversible USB 3.1 Type-C port, an additional USB 3.1 Type-A port and Bluetooth 4.0.

They sleek, lightweight design is not only aesthetically pleasing but also easily transportable. The Switch 3 is 295 (W) x 201 (D) x 16.3 (H)mm with the keyboard and as a tablet alone it is 9.95mm. It weighs in at 0.9kg both with and without the keyboard while the Switch 5 is 1.27kg with the keyboard connected and 0.92kg without the keyboard. The Switch 5 is also slightly larger measuring 292 (W) x 201.8 (D) x 12 (H)mm with the keyboard connected and 9.6mm as a tablet alone.The Switch 3 is the more budget offering of the two devices, and offers full-HD (1920×1200 pixels) resolution. It is powered by the Intel Pentium and Intel Celeron processors, and is rated to deliver up to 8 hours of battery life. The Switch 3 sports front-facing features, and supports 32GB, 64GB or 128GB eMMC memory and up to 4GB of LPDDR3 SDRAM4 . The Switch 3 measures just 295x201x16.3mm and weighs 0.9 kg when the tablet and keyboard are connected. The Switch 3 tablet alone measures just 9.95mm in height, and weighs 0.9kg.

The Acer Switch 5 will be available in North America in June starting at $799 (roughly Rs. 51,300); in EMEA in June starting at EUR 1,099 (roughly Rs. 76,800); and in China in July starting at CNY 7,4999roughly Rs. 69,800).
The Acer Switch 3 will be available in North America in June starting at $399 (roughly Rs. 25,600); in EMEA in June starting at EUR 499 (roughly Rs. 34,800); and in China in July starting at CNY 4,999 (roughly Rs. 46,500).

The Key Features Of Switch 3 & Switch 5

Switch 5

Switch 3

Screen Resolution 12″ 2160×1440 12.2″ 1920×1200
CPU Core i5-7200U (2C/4T, 3 MB, 2.5/3.1 GHz)
Core i5-7300U (2C/4T, 3 MB, 2.6/3.5 GHz)
Core i7-7500U (2C/4T, 4 MB, 2.7/3.5 GHz)
Core i7-7600U (2C/4T, 4 MB,  2.8/3.9 GHz)
Celeron 3865U (2C/2T, 2 MB, 1.8 GHz)
Celeron 3965U (2C/2T, 2 MB, 2.2 GHz)
Pentium 4415U (2C/4T, 2 MB, 2.3 GHz)
Graphics HD Graphics 620 (24 EUs) HD Graphics 610 (12 EU)
RAM 8 GB LPDDR3 4 GB LPDDR3
Storage 256 or 512 GB PCIe 3.0 x2 32, 64 or 128 GB eMMC
Wi-Fi 2×2 802.11ac Wi-Fi
Bluetooth Bluetooth 4.0
USB 3.0 × Type-A
× Type-C (also used for charging, external display, etc.)
Card Reader MicroSD
Fingerprint Sensor Yes No
Other I/O Microphone, stereo speakers, audio jack
Battery Life 10.5 hours 8 hours
Thickness Pad: 9.6 mm
Pad + keyboard: ~15.4 mm
Pad: 9.95 mm
Pad + keyboard: 16.3 mm
Weight Pad: 920 grams
Pad + keyboard: 1270 grams
Pad: 900 grams
Pad + keyboard: unknown
Price $799 and €1099 $399 and €499
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Asus ROG Strix GL553V Review

Asus’ first laptops with an RGB-backlit keyboard, which happens to be really comfortable. But its speakers are lackluster, and it has shorter-than-average battery life. It’s the least-expensive option we’ve reviewed with a Pascal-based GPU, but for the price, you’ll have to make some compromises.

Gaming laptops are usually bulky and heavy in order to accommodate top-end components and the cooling they require, and this is no exception. We would have expected something a lot sleeker, considering the fact that Intel and Nvidia’s latest chips run relatively cool, but we think that this is what people expect a serious gaming laptop to look like.

The first thing we noticed when unpacking the Strix GL553V was the neon orange clawmarks and ROG logo on the lid. We’re used to seeing details like this which light up when a product is running, but this laptop looks like it’s screaming for attention even when it’s off. We found this to be a bit over the top, but maybe some potential buyers will like it.

The body of the laptop is plastic, but the surface of the lid is metal-plated. It’s black with a nice brushed finish, that would have looked quite good had it not been for the aforementioned orange accents. It does pick up fingerprints and smudges very easily.

The 15.6-inch, 1080p screen on the Strix is sharp and colorful. When I watched a full-HD trailer for Spider-Man: Homecoming, the red in Spidey’s suit was the perfect shade of crimson and the blue was nice and deep, while the fur in the villainous Vulture’s collar was nice and sharp.

On the left side, you’ll find a power inlet, Ethernet port, HDMI video output, two USB 3.0 Type-A and one Type-C port, and a single 3.5mm audio socket. On the right, there’s only a DVD-RW drive, a Kensington lock slot and one USB 2.0 port. The speakers and an SD card slot are positioned beneath the front lip of the laptop’s lower half, completely out of sight. The heatsink fins visible through the vents on the left, the speaker grilles in front and the rubber legs on the bottom are all the same orange colour as the lid highlights.

The $1,099 Asus ROG Strix GL553 is the most affordable gaming laptop that the company currently sells, and it comes with a comfortable keyboard, a vivid display and an Nvidia GTX 1050 GPU. But the laptop’s subpar speakers and finicky touchpad are serious trade-offs.

However, if you want an affordable gaming laptop that can play the latest games at medium settings, the Strix is a good option.

There’s a healthy 16GB of DDR4 RAM and a 256GB SATA SSD as well as a 1TB hard drive. That combination will let you boot and load games quickly while still having enough space for loads of media. The screen is a 1920×1080-pixel IPS panel, which Asus says can reproduce 72 percent of the NTSC colour gamut.

For connectivity, there’s Gigabit Ethernet, Wi-Fi ac, and Bluetooth 4.0. All three USB ports on the left operate at 5Gbps, which means that even the Type-C port doesn’t support USB 3.1 speed. Still, it should be convenient over the years. There’s only one HDMI video output – we would have liked a DisplayPort as well. We aren’t sure if anyone will ever need to use the 8X DVD-RW drive, but it’s still there.

priced starting at Rs. 94,990. We’re reviewing the top-end configuration which costs Rs. 1,36,990. For this money, you get an Intel ‘Kaby Lake’ Core i7-7700HQ processor, which has four cores with Hyper-Threading and runs at between 2.8GHz and 3.8GHz. The other star of this show is an Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050Ti GPU with 4GB of dedicated video RAM.

However, if you want an affordable gaming laptop that can play the latest games at medium settings, the Strix is a good option.

Apple Turns iPhone And iPad Into A MacBook In Latest Patent

Apple’s patent application, which was originally filed in September, was published by the US Patent and Trademark Office. The patent filing for an electronic accessory device shows a traditional laptop that will not function without a host device. 

Host devices would provide “internal components for portable computing devices having a thin profile.” The host device, in this case an iPhone, will fit into a slot on the laptop and will act as the CPU. Essentially, this would turn it into a iPhone-powered laptop.

Theoretically, the host device could serve a number of purposes to “expand usefulness of a portable device” such as acting an extended storage device, or, in the case of the design above, using the iPhone as a multi-touch trackpad with Force Touch and haptic feedback. Another design shows an iPad acting as touchscreen display for the laptop, fitting into a slot which is usually meant for the laptop screen.

 This certainly looks like a way to achieve a touchscreen MacBook.
It’s worth remembering that most patent filings usually never come to fruition, but this one does offer an insight into what Apple thinks could be the future of its product lineup.

AMD Announces Ryzen 7 1800X, 1700X, and 1700 CPUs for High-End Desktops

The Ryzen 7 1800X,  Ryzen 7 1700X and Ryzen 7 1700. These are the first commercial products based on the Zen architecture which AMD has been working on for four years in an effort to become competitive with Intel in the high-end PC space again.

All three Ryzen 7 models have eight cores and support 16 threads. They are manufactured on a 14nm process. At the top of the lineup is the Ryzen 7 1800X, which has a base clock speed of 3.6GHz and a boost clock of 4GHz. AMD says this is the fastest 8-core processor available in the market right now. The Ryzen 7 1700X has base and boost speeds of 3.4GHz and 3.8GHz respectively, while the Ryzen 7 1700 runs at 3GHz and 3.7GHz respectively. The 1800X and 1700X have 95W TDP ratings while the 1700 is a 65W part.

16-thread Broadwell-E Core i7-6900K in the Cinebench R15 benchmark as well as in a video encoding operation in Handbrake using identical configurations. Demonstrations of gaming performance also indicated superior performance, mostly thanks to the presence of eight physical cores. For workloads that don’t necessarily benefit from having more cores, AMD still boasts of price and power efficiency advantages.

AMD is hoping to take on Intel’s Core i7 CPUs; not only the mainstream quad-core Kaby Lake models, but also the 8- and 10-core Broadwell-E models which comprise Intel’s high-end desktop portfolio. In particular, AMD hopes to be disruptive by pricing the Ryzen 7 1800X at a recommended retail price of Rs. 37,999 ($499 in the US) as opposed to the $1,050 sticker price of the Core i7-6900K. The Ryzen 7 1700X is priced at Rs. 29,499 in India ($399 in US) and the Ryzen 7 1700 will cost Rs. 24,499 ($319 in the US) – each roughly $25 less expensive than Intel’s Core i7-6800K and Core i7-770K, which they are positioned against.

The three CPUs are available for preorder immediately, and will officially go on sale on March 2.New motherboards with the AM4 socket will be available from Asus, Gigabyte, MSI, Biostar and ASRock on launch day. Boutique PC vendors and system integrators in many countries will have desktop systems available for sale immediately, with major PC brands expected to follow. Information about the launch of other Ryzen models and mobile CPUs is not available yet, although AMD has already confirmed that its server-oriented “Naples” CPUs using the Zen architecture are scheduled to hit the market later this year.