And that's why I'm not as worried about this as I was about the same vulnerability in Intel chips a few years ago.
There are a few cloud service providers that will rent you clock cycles on a rack-mounted Mac Mini, but not many, and even then they're for highly-specific workloads or build tasks. I suppose that's a problem for people paying far out the butt for that kind of service, but the vast majority of Apple Silicon devices are never, ever going to host cloud services.
And that's why I'm not as worried about this as I was about the same vulnerability in Intel chips a few years ago.
There are a few cloud service providers that will rent you clock cycles on a rack-mounted Mac Mini, but not many, and even then they're for highly-specific workloads or build tasks. I suppose that's a problem for people paying far out the butt for that kind of service, but the vast majority of Apple Silicon devices are never, ever going to host cloud services.