The semiconductor industry is the lifeblood of the digital economy. The design, manufacturing and consumption of chips is a global ecosystem, and competition is fierce as scaling and cost reductions based on Moore’s law are diminishing. Counterfeit and other unauthorized chips create real risks in areas of reliability, functionality, performance and safety. Joseph Gow will discuss how semiconductor companies can protect their IP and business by securely provisioning silicon, and the means to provide the ecosystem-wide capabilities needed to verify the identity and provenance of semiconductor devices.
Security IP
Building Trust Through Certification of Security Solutions
The Growing Importance of Network Security at Full Line-rate with IPsec and MACsec
Securing Data in Motion with Hardware Security Engines
In modern communication networks, and especially moving to zero trust environments, all communication channels, including local memory interfaces must be secured. Hardware acceleration is essential to ensure the impact on performance, latency and power consumption is minimal and fundamental system operation is not degraded by the addition of security overhead. Gijs Willemse will discuss the architectural advantages, and in many use cases the necessity, for hardware-based encryption engines.
