Microprocessor Systems Require End-to-end Security
Much has been written, said and tweeted about the Meltdown and Spectre security flaws in the month since they were unveiled, but the reality is that this conversation is just getting started.
The staggering number of microprocessors that are impacted by these critical, design-level security vulnerabilities in modern CPUs (billions of existing devices) pales in comparison to the number of smart, connected and deeply vulnerable devices that will exist in just a few more years. All of these “endpoints,” including pervasive edge devices like phones, cars, industrial control systems, smart meters and consumer goods, will be susceptible to malicious hacking unless the processor industry starts to think creatively and act swiftly to protect the entire chain of vulnerability.
Intel, ARM, Qualcomm, AMD and others have leapt into action, working to develop an industry-wide approach to resolve this issue promptly and constructively. And to be fair, these newly-revealed vulnerabilities represent architecture-level design flaws that date back more than 20 years, when few people could have imagined such a wholly connected world of vehicles, homes, buildings, and automated factories and utilities — all reliant on a massive profusion of microprocessors. Even when we look at the short term, the ability of designers to predict how devices will look and behave three to five years from now is questionable, not to mention untrustworthy.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- 6809 compatible 8-bit microprocessor
- Microprocessor IP for video codecs and video processing -- High Number of Streams Decoder For Data Center
- Microprocessor IP for video codecs and video processing -- High Number of Streams Encoder For Data Center
- 8-Bit Microprocessor Core
- 8-bit Microprocessor
Related Blogs
- Cycuity Partners with SiFive and BAE Systems to Strengthen Microelectronics Design Supply Chain Security
- Security for IoT Is a Requirement, Not a Choice
- Meeting Requirements for UCIe-Based Multi-Die Systems Success
- EDA and Systems Design Converge...Or Do They?
Latest Blogs
- How fast a GPU do you need for your user interface?
- PCIe 6.x and 112 Gbps Ethernet: Synopsys and TeraSignal Achieve Optical Interconnect Breakthroughs
- Powering the Future of RF: Falcomm and GlobalFoundries at IMS 2025
- The Coming NPU Population Collapse
- Driving the Future of High-Speed Computing with PCIe 7.0 Innovation