Just because nothing's happened so far isn't a good reason to think nothing could happen.
I think the most important risk is the possibility that arbitrary code could be executed (meaning viruses and trojans and such), the OS being attacked in ways that current virus scanners may not be capable of combating.
But that just means that the defenses will have to adapt, as they always do.
Not a reason not to buy Core 2 stuff if you are a consumer, but if you're a shared hosting provider (for example) where you have multiple customers on a single box and they depend on the security you provide, this could be a risk worth tracking.
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Uncertainty is an uncomfortable position.
But certainty is an absurd one.
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