I see Gigabyte are rushing to fix a vulnerability in its BIOS for motherboard that use the App Center. By default, when you start your PC you get a pop up (notification) asking you to download the App Center. This behaviour can be turned off in the BIOS. I personally don't need or want any of the extra items that are controlled by the App Center and have turned this off in the BIOS.
What I don't know, is if by turning this behaviour off in the BIOS, does that render my PC safe from this vulnerability or do I still need to update the BIOS which was released today: BIOS Update
This is the information released yesterday by Eclypsium: Risk-from-gigabyte-app-center-backdoor
What I don't know, is if by turning this behaviour off in the BIOS, does that render my PC safe from this vulnerability or do I still need to update the BIOS which was released today: BIOS Update
This is the information released yesterday by Eclypsium: Risk-from-gigabyte-app-center-backdoor
My Computer
System One
-
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro 24H2
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- Local shop built (KC Computers Ltd)
- CPU
- Intel Core i9 13900F
- Motherboard
- Gigabyte Z690 Gaming X (rev. 1.0/1.1) - (BIOS: F30 Sep 27, 2024)
- Memory
- 2 x Kingston Fury 32gb DDR5 5600 Beast
- Graphics Card(s)
- Gigabyte Eagle (Nvidia) RTX 3060
- Sound Card
- Chord Async USB 44.1kHz - 384kHz 2Qute DAC
- Monitor(s) Displays
- piXL PX27UDH4K 27 Inch Frameless IPS Monitor
- Screen Resolution
- 4K (3840 x 2160) 60fps
- Hard Drives
- 1 x KINGSTON NVMe M.2 SSDSKC3000D2048G 2TB
1 x Samsung SSD 870 EVO 250GB
2 x Crucial CT4000MX500SSD1 4TB
2 x Crucial CT2000MX500SSD1 2TB
1 x Crucial CT250MX500SSD1 250.0 GB
- PSU
- Gigabyte 750w
- Case
- Fractal Torrent
- Cooling
- Stock Intel CPU, 2 x Fractal 180mm PWM (front), 3 x Fractal 140mm PWM (bottom)
- Keyboard
- Logitech MX Mechanical Wireless Illuminated Performance Keyboard
- Mouse
- Logitech MX Master 3S Wireless Performance Mouse
- Internet Speed
- 900 Mbps/300 Mbps Trooli FTTP
- Browser
- Firefox
- Antivirus
- Eset Nod32