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Researchers discover a GPU vulnerability that could threaten AI models

September 4, 2025
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September 4, 2025

The GIST Researchers discover a GPU vulnerability that could threaten AI models

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Lisa Lock

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Andrew Zinin

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This article has been reviewed according to Science X's editorial process and policies. Editors have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

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Researchers discover a GPU vulnerability that could threaten AI models
GDDR6 DRAM Organization. Credit: https://gururaj-s.github.io/assets/pdf/SEC25_GPUHammer.pdf

A team of computer scientists at the University of Toronto recently discovered that a certain type of hardware attack is effective against graphics processing units (GPUs), the core computing engines that power today's artificial intelligence models and cloud-based machine learning services.

The researchers found that a Rowhammer attack, previously known to affect the memory in central processing units (CPUs), is also effective against GPUs equipped with graphics double data rate (GDDR) memory. GDDR is designed for high-speed data transfer and is commonly found in graphics cards.

A successful attack on GPUs running AI models could result in "catastrophic brain damage" with model accuracy plummeting from 80% to just 0.1%, says Gururaj Saileshwar, an assistant professor in the department of computer science in the Faculty of Arts & Science.

Such degradation could have serious consequences for AI applications that depend on those models—from medical imaging analysis in hospitals to fraud detection systems in banks.

In a Rowhammer attack, memory cells are manipulated into flipping bits—tiny pieces of data—by rapidly accessing adjacent rows of cells over and over. This causes electrical interference that leads to errors in memory regions the attacker hasn't directly accessed, potentially allowing them to bypass security or take control of a system.

"Traditionally, security has been thought of at the software layer, but we're increasingly seeing physical effects at the hardware layer that can be leveraged as vulnerabilities," says Saileshwar, who is cross-appointed to the Edward S. Rogers Sr. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and the Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering.

Working with second-year computer science Ph.D. student Chris (Shaopeng) Lin and fourth-year computer science undergraduate student Joyce Qu, Saileshwar developed a proof-of-concept GPUHammer attack targeting the GDDR6 memory in an NVIDIA RTX A6000, a GPU widely used for high-performance computing. They discovered that a single bit flip to alter the exponent of an AI model's weight could cause a massive reduction in the model's accuracy.

"This introduces a new way AI models can fail at the hardware level," said Saileshwar, who co-authored a paper with Lin and Qu that was accepted to USENIX Security Symposium 2025, held August 13–15 in Seattle.

The GPU users most at risk are those managing cloud computing environments—not individual home or office users. In cloud settings, multiple users may access the same GPU simultaneously, allowing an attacker to tamper with another user's data processing.

Saileshwar notes that the researchers had to account for key differences between CPU and GPU memory. GPUs are more difficult to target due to their faster memory refresh rates, slower memory latency and other architectural differences. Ultimately, the researchers leveraged GPU parallelism—its ability to run multiple operations simultaneously—to optimize their hammering patterns. This adjustment led to the bit flips that demonstrated a successful attack.

It wasn't easy. "Hammering on GPUs is like hammering blind," Saileshwar says, noting that the team nearly gave up after repeated failures to trigger any bit flips.

On CPUs, researchers can use tools to inspect the memory interface and understand how memory accesses behave and how instructions are sent from the CPU to memory. But because GPU memory chips are soldered directly onto the GPU board, there's no easy way to perform similar inspections, Saileshwar says. The only signal the team observed was the eventual bit flips.

Earlier this year, the researchers privately disclosed their findings to GPU giant NVIDIA—now the most valuable company in the world. In July, the U.S. company issued a security notice to its customers.

NVIDIA's suggested remedy is to enable a feature called error correction code (ECC), which can repel a GPUHammer attack. However, the researchers found that the remedy slows down machine learning tasks by up to 10%. They also warned that future attacks involving more bit flips might be able to overwhelm even the ECC protections.

The findings underscore the need for increased attention to GPU security—an area where Saileshwar says work is "just beginning."

"More investigation will probably reveal more issues. And that's important, because we're running incredibly valuable workloads on GPUs. AI models are being used in real-world settings like health care, finance and cybersecurity. If there are vulnerabilities that allow attackers to tamper with those models at the hardware level, we need to find them before they're exploited."

More information: GPUHammer: Rowhammer Attacks on GPU Memories are Practical. gururaj-s.github.io/assets/pdf/SEC25_GPUHammer.pdf

Provided by University of Toronto Citation: Researchers discover a GPU vulnerability that could threaten AI models (2025, September 4) retrieved 4 September 2025 from https://techxplore.com/news/2025-09-gpu-vulnerability-threaten-ai.html This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

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Disclaimer: Information found on cryptoreportclub.com is those of writers quoted. It does not represent the opinions of cryptoreportclub.com on whether to sell, buy or hold any investments. You are advised to conduct your own research before making any investment decisions. Use provided information at your own risk.
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© 2023-2025 Cryptoreportclub. All Rights Reserved