Latest news with #Qualcomm-powered


News18
2 days ago
- News18
Indian Govt Issues Major Security Warning Over MediaTek Chipsets: Millions Of Smartphone And TV Users At Risk
Last Updated: The new security alert from the Indian government has been issued after MediaTek has raised its own bulletin for the users. The Indian government has raised a new security warning which concerns a range of MediaTek chipsets that power phones, TVs, audio gear and more. The alert has been notified by the manufacturer via a detailed post earlier this month. And now the Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In) is following up with those concerns and warning the people in the country. The latest security issue affects devices running on varied MediaTek processors that can be exploited to attack the users. The CERT-In note dated June 11, 2025 comes with high-severity rating says, 'Multiple vulnerabilities exist in the MediaTek products due to heap overflow & null pointer dereference in Bluetooth, null pointer dereference & incorrect authorisation in wlan and uncontrolled recursion in ims service." When you read further about the security issue, the bulletin clearly talks about the risks linked to the Wi-Fi and Bluetooth modems/drivers running through the MediaTek chipset on various devices. Hackers can use these issues to target both businesses and individuals who use devices powered by any of the latest MediaTek chipset. You can get more details on this over here. MediaTek has thankfully discovered the issues causing the concerns and an update has been passed on to the handset makers who should be offering it via a new update in the next few weeks. You are most likely going to be asked to install the latest security patch from different brands that should keep your devices secure from a whole range of attacks. The MediaTek security alert has come a few days after Qualcomm-powered Android smartphones faced similar security risks that were notified by the government. The bulletin talks about multiple vulnerabilities reported in a host of Qualcomm chipsets that power phones, GPUs, Wi-Fi modem and more. The company also shared the details of the Snapdragon chipsets and modems affected by the vulnerabilities to inform the users. First Published: June 12, 2025, 08:10 IST
Yahoo
14-02-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Arm is reportedly developing its own in-house chip
Chip designer Arm plans to unveil its own processor this year with Meta as the launch customer, The Financial Times reported. The chip would be a CPU designed for servers in data centers and would have the potential to be customized for clients. Manufacturing would be outsourced to a contract fab plant like TSMC (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.) and the first in-house chip could be revealed as early as this summer, according to the FT's sources. Last month, Arm parent Softbank announced the Stargate project, a partnership with OpenAI to build up to $500 billion worth of AI infrastructure. Arm, along with Microsoft and NVIDIA, is a key technology partner for the project. Arm's chip could now play a role in that project, and also in Jony Ive's mysterious AI-powered personal device, reportedly being developed in collaboration with OpenAI's Sam Altman, according to the report. Arm's designs power nearly every smartphone and mobile device in the world, along with Apple Mac and Qualcomm-powered Windows PCs. They generally use less power for the same level of compute as Intel and AMD chips, so they've become desirable for data farms that power AI applications as well. See for yourself — The Yodel is the go-to source for daily news, entertainment and feel-good stories. By signing up, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy. The move would put Arm in direct competition with many of its own customers like NVIDIA, which manufacturers its own Arm-based server CPUs. To date, Arm has never made its own chips — instead, it licenses its technology and patents to major companies like Apple. Those companies then customize the designs for their own needs and use a contract manufacturer like TSMC or Samsung to build the chips. UK-based Arm is currently embroiled in a testy legal battle with Qualcomm over licensing terms. Meanwhile, parent SoftBank is reportedly close to purchasing Ampere, a server chip designer. That deal will be "central to Arm's own chipmaking project," according to FT's inside sources.