NextChip Win Signals Growing Momentum for Rambus Automotive Security IP
Cars are packed with electronics, and in the age of ADAS (Advanced Driver Assistance Systems), those electronics are mission critical to the safe and reliable
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Cars are packed with electronics, and in the age of ADAS (Advanced Driver Assistance Systems), those electronics are mission critical to the safe and reliable
The foundation of security for semiconductor devices is the implementation of a hardware Root of Trust (RoT) on which all secure operations of a system rely. With the growing interest in Physical Unclonable Function (PUF) technology as the source of entropy for
Cryptography depends on entropy. More specifically, every cryptographic protocol requires a source of non-deterministic (random) data to seed its security algorithms. While entropy is everywhere and, per
Thierry Kouthon, a technical product manager at Rambus, recently wrote an article for Semiconductor Engineering that takes a closer look at the critical importance of
Helena Handschuh, a Rambus Security Technologies fellow, recently wrote an article for Semiconductor Engineering that explores the security implications of quantum computing. As Handschuh notes,
Rambus’ Paul Karazuba recently penned an article for Semiconductor Engineering that takes a closer look at how consumer privacy and safety continue to be at