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MintelIE | 5 years ago

Intel ME can be used to monitor employees without the OS ever becoming aware of anything. The only way to detect it would be to sniff the network.

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etaioinshrdlu|5 years ago

The management at Intel itself are also highly paranoid. They have been using "bossware" for over a decade before COVID. It's just known as a paranoid company.

Although, probably a lot of large corps aren't too different.

dboreham|5 years ago

I experienced this 20 years ago when working on a collaborative project with engineers at Intel. They searched me on leaving the building every day. And this was just an office building, not a final assembly plant where it might be reasonable to want to look for theft of production units. It was like exiting Fry's. I made a mental note then never to work for Intel.

numpad0|5 years ago

“Only the paranoid survive” is their motto, one of their early CEO even has an autobiography in that title

SheinhardtWigCo|5 years ago

Does this really happen, or would it ever? Seems like a contrived scenario for employees to have enough access and knowledge to detect and defeat a userspace or kernel-resident solution that doesn’t want to be found. Plus, if you’re going that far, you’d want to make sure it wasn’t easily detectable by analyzing network traffic.

I’m sure such a thing is out there, but I doubt it’s being used by employers to spy on workers. More like governments spying on workers with access to sensitive IP.

Spooky23|5 years ago

Nope. It’s all over.

Absolute Computrace starts at $29 and is resident in most every OEM BIOS manufactured in the last 20-25 years.

non-entity|5 years ago

I kinda wish I had an intel board atm, because the more I read about ME the more I want to toy with it.

gorgoiler|5 years ago

In theory, or have you heard of this being done in practice?