Important 2018-06 archive

Executive Summary

On January 3, 2018, Microsoft released an advisory and security updates related to a newly-discovered class of hardware vulnerabilities (known as Spectre and Meltdown) involving speculative execution side channels that affect AMD, ARM, and Intel CPUs to varying degrees. On June 13, 2018, an additional vulnerability involving side channel speculative execution, known as Lazy FP State Restore, has been announced and assigned CVE-2018-3665 . An attacker, via a local process, could cause information stored in FP (Floating Point), MMX, and SSE register state to be disclosed across security boundaries on Intel Core family CPUs through speculative execution. An attacker must be able to execute code locally on a system in order to exploit this vulnerability, similar to the other speculative execution vulnerabilities. The information that could be disclosed in the register state depends on the code executing on a system and whether any code stores sensitive information in FP register state. The security boundaries that may be affected by this vulnerability include virtual machine, kernel, and process. 1. Is lazy restore enabled by default and can it be disabled? In affected versions of Windows (see the Affected Products table), lazy restore is enabled by default and cannot be disabled by the user or administrator. 2. Are VMs in Azure affected? Customers running VMs in Azure are not at risk from this variant. No action is required. 3. What is the CVSS value for this vulnerability? CVSS - 4.3 Medium CVSS:3.0/AV:L/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:C/C:L/I:N/A:N

Overview

Important
MS Severity
Not Exploited
MS Exploit Status
Less Likely
MS Exploit Likelihood
Category Information Disclosure
Released Jun 12 2018
Last Updated Jun 12 2018
Publicly Disclosed No
CISA KEV Not Listed
Known Exploits None Known

EPSS Score

No EPSS score available for this CVE.

View on FIRST.org

Affected Products

2 affected products
Product KB Article Severity Impact Restart Required
Windows 10 for x64-based Systems 4338829 (Security Update) 4345455 (Alternate Cumulative) Important Information Disclosure 4284860 Base: N/A Temporal: N/A Vector: N/A Yes None Windows 7 for 32-bit Systems Service Pack 1 4343900 (Monthly Rollup) 4343899 (Security Only) Important Information Disclosure 4338818 Base: N/A Temporal: N/A Vector: N/A Yes None Windows 8.1 for x64-based systems 4338815 (Monthly Rollup) 4338824 (Security Only) 4338831 (Preview Rollup) 4345424 (Standalone) Important Information Disclosure 4284815 Base: N/A Temporal: N/A Vector: N/A Yes None Windows Server 2008 for 32-bit Systems Service Pack 2 4341832 (Security Update) Important Information Disclosure Yes
Windows Server 2008 for 32-bit Systems Service Pack 2 (Server Core installation) 4341832 (Security Update) Important Information Disclosure Yes

Patches

1 patch
Article Type Restart
4341832 Security Update Yes

Known Exploits

Acknowledgments

Microsoft would like to thank Julian Stecklina from Amazon Germany, Thomas Prescher from Cyberus Technology GmbH