


After Vice Motherboard ran a story on Kaspersky's findings, the security firm clarified a few details in a blog post, saying that over 57,000 users of its antivirus software have downloaded and installed the compromised version of Live Update at some point in time. It might not be as safe as we assumed, however. Using Live Update is a convenient way to stay updated, and until now, has been considered safe. It comes preinstalled on many Asus-brand laptops and desktops, and is offered as a standalone download for the company's millions of motherboards. Live Update is a utility that allows Asus to push out driver, software, and firmware updates to PCs. By their nature, backdoors are vulnerabilities that attackers can exploit, if they know about them. In security parlance, a backdoor is a way for an administrator to gain access to a system or data through a generally undocumented means. Lest anyone need reminding of this, security firm Kaspersky dropped a bombshell on Monday, saying hackers were able to install backdoors on tens of thousands of PCs-and maybe even millions of systems-by pushing out firmware updates through Asus's own Live Update software.

When it comes to PCs, true security is a myth. It's encouraging all users of Asus hardware to run it as a precaution. Finally, Asus released a security diagnostic tool to check if your system is affected.
