Security for IoT Is a Requirement, Not a Choice
IoT watchIt is hard to attend any sort of meeting to do with semiconductors without hearing about the Internet of Things (IoT), and probably the hottest subtopic is IoT security. Some devices will contain our health data, some are dangerous. Even the apocryphal internet-enabled toaster could potentially burn down your house. The second day of this year's EDPS in Monterey was completely dedicated to semiconductor security.
A couple of weeks ago, the GSA held their Silicon Summit and one of the topics was securing the IoT. This took the form of a panel session moderated by Venky Anant of McKinsey. The panelists were Nuri Dagdeviren from Microchip (actually from Atmel that Microchip acquired), Paul Kocher from Rambus (the cryptography part, not the memory part), Sami Nassar from NXP, and Volker Politz from Imagination.
Related Semiconductor IP
- Quantum Safe, ISO 21434 Automotive-grade Programmable Hardware Security Module
- Embedded Hardware Security Module (Root of Trust) - Automotive Grade ISO 26262 ASIL-B
- Embedded Hardware Security Module for Automotive and Advanced Applications
- Hardware Security Module
- ECC Secure Accelerator - High-performance ECC IP with advanced physical security
Related Blogs
- Why is Hard IP a Better Solution for Embedded FPGA (eFPGA) Technology?
- USB4 Sideband Channel Is Not a Side Business
- ReRAM-Powered Edge AI: A Game-Changer for Energy Efficiency, Cost, and Security
- LPDDR6: A New Standard and Memory Choice for AI Data Center Applications
Latest Blogs
- Physical AI at the Edge: A New Chapter in Device Intelligence
- Rivian’s autonomy breakthrough built with Arm: the compute foundation for the rise of physical AI
- AV1 Image File Format Specification Gets an Upgrade with AVIF v1.2.0
- Industry’s First End-to-End eUSB2V2 Demo for Edge AI and AI PCs at CES
- Integrating Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC) on Arty-Z7