Nvidia confirms it is investigating a cybersecurity incident التخطي إلى المحتوى الرئيسي

Nvidia confirms it is investigating a cybersecurity incident

 

Nvidia confirms it is investigating a cybersecurity incident

Graphics Chip Maker Nvidia Reports Quarterly Earnings

Image Credits: Justin Sullivan (opens in a new window)/ Getty Images

U.S. chipmaker Nvidia has confirmed that it’s investigating a cyber incident that has reportedly downed the company’s developer tools and email systems.

Nvidia told TechCrunch in a statement that the nature and scope of the incident are still being evaluated, adding that the company’s commercial activities have not been impacted as a result.

“We are investigating an incident. Our business and commercial activities continue uninterrupted. We are still working to evaluate the nature and scope of the event and don’t have any additional information to share at this time,” the statement read.

While Nvidia isn’t sharing any more details about the incident, The Telegraph reports that the company’s email systems and developer tools have been suffering from outages over the last two days following a “malicious network intrusion.”

Citing an insider, the report claims that the company’s systems had been offline for two days but that portions of its email systems had started working on Friday.

It’s not yet clear whether hackers obtained data on Nvidia or its customers, nor whether any of its partners were affected. Nvidia has not yet identified the culprit, and customers say they had not been informed of any incident, according to The Telegraph’s report.

News of a potential cyberattack at Nvidia comes just weeks after the Santa Clara-based company terminated its $40 billion bid to acquire British chip designer Arm. The company said the decision was mutual, resulting from “significant regulatory challenges preventing the consummation of the transaction, despite good faith efforts by the parties.”

تعليقات

المشاركات الشائعة من هذه المدونة

Katherine Wu leaves Coinbase Ventures to join crypto investment firm Archetype

  Coinbase Ventures investor Katherine Wu is leaving the company for early-stage crypto venture capital firm   Archetype , less than a year after joining Coinbase as a senior deal lead in September. “[T]oday is my last day at coinbase sometimes you take that leap of faith and it just doesn’t land quite right- that’s ok!”  Wu wrote in a tweet  on Friday announcing her departure. Wu will work as a venture partner at Archetype, an early-stage VC founded by Ash Egan, who is an investor in a number of prominent crypto startups including Chainalysis, BlockFi, and FalconX, according to the firm’s website. Egan, who previously co-founded ConsenSys Ventures, has invested in renewable bitcoin miner US BTC Corp. and  proof-of-attendance startup POAP  through Archetype. Wu told TechCrunch in a written message that she was “really excited to be back doing what [I] do best — lead investment in founders in crypto looking to raise their first round.” She said she hopes to ...

Why I’m using a credit facility to grow my startup

  Why I’m using a credit facility to grow my startup Brent Jackson @bjackson  /  9:16 PM GMT+1 • February 25, 2022 Image Credits:  Henrik Sorensen  (opens in a new window) / Getty Images Brent Jackson Contributor Brent Jackson  is the founder and CEO of  Torpago . When it comes  to financing, startups and established organizations will have vastly different experiences. Traditional financing may not always be available to high-growth startups, and even when it is, it often depends on the founder’s personal financial picture and their company’s existing revenue. While larger companies can turn to banks and other financial institutions, new founders often have to turn to alternative sources of financing to grow their companies. For my own company, I decided to look at alternative financing options to scale operations and expand our product road map. To accelerate growth, I decided to raise a small amount of debt equity in tandem with a large, r...