| https://www.bloomberg.com/features/2021-supermicro/ Bloomberg's followup article (and probably the original article) doesn't seem to discuss BMCs at all. I'm not saying that I invented the line of argument. I'm saying that Hacker News, the community, brought up BMCs. Its not a talking point of the Bloomberg article at all. The fact remains: we're already in a fully tangential point compared to Bloomberg's "facts" (of which there are very few. Its largely just allegations and FUD). -------- The most frustrating thing is that Bloomberg very well could be correct. But the articles they wrote are absolute crap on this subject. > People coming forward about a successful foreign state sponsored attack on AWS and Apple server infra is a pretty big story for HN, even if it doesn't have all the details you'd like. Without the details of how it happened or the mechanism, then it doesn't matter. We exist in a zero-day world: there are attacks I will never understand in my lifetime, happening today. Welcome to modern computer security. What's important is understanding as many of these attacks as possible, so that we can build the proper security mechanisms and policies to defend ourselves correctly. Without an action plan, the news is basically null and void. It doesn't matter if China hacks us per se, it could be Russia or Iran tomorrow. There's always state actors trying to do things. |