Great. A political CPU. I am sure it will be GREAT!
1) It is NOT a Russian CPU, it is a UK design
2) It is not current desktop class
3) It is not X86
The UK design could have just as many backdoors as any US design.
Sounds nice, but unfortunately you don't know what your are talking about. If you license a core from ARM you have high visibility into the circuitry and firmware. This differs significantly from buying a packaged unit from Intel or AMD. You can take solace in the fact that a lot of others share your ignorance.
It is a shame you followed up with a personal attack. All three of my bullet points are correct.
Shame on you for snipping my points about where your points were basically irrelevant
to me AND THEN reiterating the appropriateness of your assertions. And, of course, for trying to make points that don't really make any sense from a technical perspective.
I still don't understand what you are trying to say about 'not the current desktop class'. The story indicates that they are targeting desktops. If you are saying that they are not powerful enough, I would say that we don't know enough about that. The architecture with many cores has the ability to excel in some areas with some OS's and software designs. It probably never will with Windows-8, but the Russians threw that OS in the trash even before the Chinese did. Linux and other OS's can be perfectly fine desktops on very limited hardware. I doubt that a criteria for the Russians is that it is a killer gaming platform and I don't give two shits about that either.
CPU's do not have firmware they have microcode. Purchasing and seeing both the microcode and the circuitry might give you some chance of spotting a backdoor but no guarantee. Again, the main point of my statement, a CPU is a bad place to put a backdoor in the first place. This is political posturing.
I use firmware and microcode synonymously. Accd to the story, the Russians are putting enough funding and tasking the right group to do this work that they will almost certainly be licencing access to the micocode, and very likely re-writing it as needed. I probably should have said microcode since it is not re-writable on a per-unit basis but in this context it doesn't matter much.
Show me a Russian made motherboard with Russian made support chips and you have something, otherwise it is pointless.
All I said is that I hope that we can see this
at some point. I'm sure that your (and my) point about real security demanding an encompassing set of solutions is not lost on the Russians. I'm less sure that they would supply the rest of the world with what I happen to want for my own personal reasons.