Based on current knowledge, the threat likelihood is extremely low for Konica Minolta products. 1. Overview (quoted from Cert.org) CPU hardware implementations are vulnerable to cache side-channel attacks. These vulnerabilities are referred to as Meltdown and Spectre. Both Spectre and Meltdown take advantage of the ability to extract information from instructions that have executed on a CPU using the CPU cache as a side-channel. These attacks are described in detail by Google Project Zero, the Institute of Applied Information Processing and Communications (IAIK) at Graz University of Technology (TU Graz) and Anders Fogh.
The issues are organized into three variants:
2. Severity score of these vulnerabilities by CVSS v3, Common Vulnerability Scoring System
Note: For explanation of CVSS, refer to the first.org web site. Since the CVSS score may be updated occasionally, check the latest status on CVE's website. In addition, the CVSS score may be different for each security agency.
3. Risk for MFPs At this time the vulnerability only exists when a malicious program is executed on the target device, if executed, the program can access data stored in memory that should normally be protected by the system (Memory of kernel area of OS, memory of each process and memory of each virtual machine). It is important to know that the Memory data cannot be exposed remotely to an external network.
Several Konica Minolta MFPs contain ARM or Intel processors which are possibly affected by the Meltdown and Spectre vulnerability.
In order for an attacker to exploit this vulnerability in MFPs, it is necessary to execute a malicious program on the target machine by tampering with the internal firmware.
Konica Minolta MFPs have achieved ISO 15408 Common Criteria Security certification. ISO 15408 certified firmware is digitally signed by Konica Minolta. Prior to installing updated firmware on the MFP, the authorized service engineer can verify the Konica Minolta digital signature to ensure data integrity.
In addition, ISO 15408 certified MFPs contain a firmware verification feature. When rewriting the main unit's firmware, a hash value check is run to see if the firmware data was tampered with. If the hash values don't match, an alert is issued, and the firmware is not rewritten. In addition, when enhanced security mode is enabled, hash value checks are performed every time the main power source is turned ON. If the hash values don't match, an alert is issued, and starting the main MFP unit is prohibited.
Because of these fail-safe mechanisms it is extremely difficult for an attacker to embed the exploitive code into the MFP and execute it.
For these reasons, KMI is not currently planning to release updated firmware for Spectre or Meltdown because of the very low risk of this vulnerability to attack our MFPs.
4. For PP controllers, Fiery and Creo
Because EFI Fiery and Creo controllers also contains Intel CPUs, they are affected by the Meltdown vulnerability. EFI announced the status on their public website and via a partner bulletin, shown below.
Currently, Creo has no public comment about this, but they are going to provide software patch sometime in the near future.
5. MFP products which contain affected processors
Office color: (C458/C558/C658), (C659/C759) Office B&W: (458e/558e/658e), (758/808/958) These office products contain ARM Cortex-A15 processor.
PP products; All PP products contains affected Intel processors. 6. CPU vendor’s information ARM: Vulnerability of Speculative Processors to Cache Timing Side-Channel Mechanism Intel: Speculative Execution and Indirect Branch Prediction Side Channel Analysis Method 7. References CERT/CC Vulnerability Note VU#584653 CPU hardware vulnerable to side-channel attacks NIST National Vulnerability Database
CVE-2017-5753 Detail CVE-2017-5715 Detail CVE-2017-5754 Detail
Meltdown and Spectre