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Date:20th Dec 2011
INVIA SAS to use CRI's tech in providing
security IP for chips
Cryptography Research, Inc. (CRI), a division of Rambus
and INVIA SAS (INVIA) have announced that they have entered
into an agreement enabling INVIA to develop products incorporating
Differential Power Analysis (DPA) countermeasures for use
by licensees of CRI's DPA patents. INVIA provides security-related
semiconductor design IP and embedded software to ASIC and
FPGA designers.
"As part of our focus on delivering high-quality,
tamper-resistant security blocks to our ASIC and FPGA customers,
we are pleased to join the Cryptography Research DPA countermeasures
developer ecosystem," said Robert Leydier, INVIA's
president. "Working with CRI further strengthens the
protection from major security threats we offer our semiconductor
customers."
DPA is a form of attack that involves monitoring the fluctuating
electrical power consumption of a target device and then
using advanced statistical methods to derive cryptographic
keys and other secrets. Strong countermeasures to DPA help
protect tamper-resistant products used in applications such
as military and aerospace products, smartphones and other
mobile applications, banking, pay television, mass transit,
secure ID, secure storage, automobiles and consumer electronics.
"DPA countermeasures are a crucial component of secure
systems," said Pankaj Rohatgi, technical director,
Hardware Security Solutions at Cryptography Research. "INVIA
has developed DPA-resistant hardware cores tailored to address
the anti-tamper needs of our licensees, and we are pleased
to have INVIA join our DPA countermeasures ecosystem."
Microsemi Corporation has announced the immediate availability
of INVIA's differential power analysis (DPA)-resistant products
on Microsemi's flash-based FPGA devices. DPA is a technique
used by hackers to extract secret keys and compromise the
security of semiconductors and tamper-resistant devices
by analyzing their power consumption. Microsemi says it
is the only major provider of cSoCs and FPGAs to hold a
patent license from Cryptography Research, Inc (CRI) for
DPA-countermeasures, and to offer INVIA's software libraries
for AES, RSA and ECC cryptographic algorithms.
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