8 Views of Security from RSA
Rick Merritt, EETimes
4/23/2015 07:00 AM EDT
SAN FRANCISCO — The Internet of Things, along with everything else, is insecure. The U.S. government wants to help with that and other security problems — if you still trust them.
Those were two of several messages from the annual RSA Conference here.
“We have a long way to go in IoT security just to bring designs up to the not-yet-adequate state of PC security,” Steve Hanna, co-chair of the IoT committee at the Trusted Computing Group (TCG), an industry alliance setting security standards for nearly a decade.
Hana was one of a handful of experts who gave a half-day seminar showing at RSA. They demoed ways cost-constrained embedded systems could adapt the group’s approach to providing a hardware-backed root of trust, something well established in x86-based PCs and servers.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- UCIe D2D Adapter & PHY Integrated IP
- Low Dropout (LDO) Regulator
- 16-Bit xSPI PSRAM PHY
- MIPI CSI-2 CSE2 Security Module
- ASIL B Compliant MIPI CSI-2 CSE2 Security Module
Related News
- PUFsecurity’s PUFrt Anchors the Security of Silicon Labs’ SoC to Achieve the Industry’s First PSA Certified Level 4
- CAST Expands Security IP Line with New Family of Post-Quantum Cryptography Cores
- Secure-IC, now a part of Cadence, unveils Securyzr™ Xperience, an Exclusive Gateway to Security Innovation
- PQShield and Keysight collaborate to validate robust security of quantum-safe cryptography
Latest News
- Arteris and MIPS Partner to Accelerate Development for Physical AI Platforms
- DCD-SEMI expands CryptOne with EdDSA Curve25519 IP core for secure embedded systems
- Syntacore's SCR RISC-V IP Now Supports Zephyr 4.3
- Xylon Presents New 12-Channel GMSL3/GMSL2 FMC+ ExpansionBoard
- YMTC’s NAND Design Surprise Alongside a New Fab