This is a bit strange.
According to a discovery by Bleeping Computer, Intel’s 12th-gen chips don’t support Software Guard Extension (SGX), meaning the chips are unable to play Blu-ray disks in 4K resolution.
An explanation was offered via Intel’s website:
There is tremendous opportunity for application and solution developers to take charge of their data security using new hardware-based controls for cloud and enterprise environments. Intel® Software Guard Extensions (Intel SGX)1 2 offers hardware-based memory encryption that isolates specific application code and data in memory. Intel SGX allows user-level code to allocate private regions of memory, called enclaves, which are designed to be protected from processes running at higher privilege levels. Only Intel SGX offers such a granular level of control and protection.
It’s also been noted that the SGX feature has offered a choice attack vector for the following security trespasses:
- Prime+Probe attack discovered in 2017
- Spectre-like attack disclosed in 2018
- Enclave attack discovered by researchers in 2019
- MicroScope replay attack
- Plundervolt injection attack
- Load Value Injection (LVI)
- SGAxe attack on the CPU cache resulting in the leak of the enclave’s content
Intel 12th-gen chips may not support SGX but some chips from the company still do. These include those from the 7000, 8000, 9000, or 10000-series chips. Intel’s 12th-gen chips are the Alder Lake H-Series chips that were announced in 2021.
Stay tuned for additional details as they become available.
Via The Mac Observer, Intel, and Bleeping Computer