Author's Latest Posts


Securing Chiplet-Based Platforms: Distributed Trust With Centralized Authority


In previous blogs, From Monolithic SoCs to Chiplets: A New Hardware Security Paradigm, and Developing a Security Framework for Chiplet-based Systems, we discussed why chiplets change the game from a security perspective, and why security must be addressed at a platform-level in a chiplet-based system. In a monolithic device, trust is often implicitly bounded by the die itself: sensitive asse... » read more

Developing A Security Framework For Chiplet-Based Systems


In a previous blog, From Monolithic SoCs to Chiplets: A New Hardware Security Paradigm, we discussed why chiplets change the game from a security perspective, and why security must be addressed at a platform-level in a chiplet-based system. In a monolithic SoC, device identity is often anchored in a single root of trust that owns key material and policy. In a chiplet platform, every security... » read more

From Monolithic SoCs To Chiplets: A New Hardware Security Paradigm


Chiplet architectures are quickly becoming the dominant approach for building scalable, heterogeneous SoCs. By disaggregating a monolithic die into multiple interoperable chiplets, silicon designers gain flexibility in process node choices, reuse of proven functions, and faster time-to-market. At the same time, disaggregation breaks one of the most fundamental assumptions in traditional SoC sec... » read more

Navigating FIPS 140-3


FIPS 140‑3 is a U.S. federal standard. Validations are issued under the Cryptographic Module Validation Program (CMVP), jointly managed by the National Institute of Standards (NIST) and the Canadian Center for Cyber Security (CCCS). These validations are accepted by both U.S. and Canadian federal agencies. The standard imposes strict requirements on security boundaries, operational environmen... » read more