Asset1 Shutterstock 1916603153 (1)1540 800

A Reverse-Engineering Assessment of a Secure Authenticator with PUF Technology

Sept. 15, 2021
From fault injection to side-channel analysis cybercriminal attacks grow more sophisticated. But you can’t steal what isn’t there. Enter the physically unclonable function (PUF) and a third-party security lab’s study on ChipDNA™ PUF technology.

From fault injection to side-channel analysis and invasive techniques, cybercriminals continue to become more sophisticated in their attack methods that are applied to security ICs. With pervasive connectivity and the resulting exposure, hardware-based security provides the most effective solution for protecting the assets of embedded systems. The newest embedded security ICs feature the most advanced level of protection against invasive attacks currently available: the physically unclonable function (PUF). This paper provides the findings of a reverse-engineering study conducted by a third-party security lab to evaluate the security robustness of Maxim’s secure authenticator with ChipDNA™ PUF technology.

Popular Partner Content

2.95-V to 16-V, stackable 40-A synchronous SWIFT™ buck converter with pin-strapping and PMBus

2.95-V to 16-V, stackable 40-A synchronous SWIFT™ buck converter with pin-strapping and PMBus

Allegro's Coreless Current Sensor Solutions

The ACS3761X Hall-effect sensor IC solution family is a coreless and shield-free solution, reducing BOM and overall inverter size and weight. These d…

Power Factor Correct Basics and Design Considerations

Power factor correct (PFC) basics and design considerations. This series discusses PFC basics, topology comparisons, and design considerations to achi…
Baidu