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Huang: IRIS (Infra-Red, in situ) Project Updates
dimanche 10 mars 2024, 11:24 , par LWN.net
Andrew 'bunnie' Huang provides an update on
his IRIS infrared chip-scanning project as the starting point for a detailed summary on how chip customers can detect forgeries and modifications in general. The technique works because although silicon looks opaque at visible light, it is transparent starting at near-infrared wavelengths (roughly 1000 nm and longer). Today's commodity optics and CMOS cameras are actually capable of working with lights at this wavelength; thus, IRIS is a low-cost and effective technique for confirming the construction of chips down to block level. For example, IRIS can readily help determine if a chip has the correct amount of RAM, number of CPU cores, peripherals, bond pads, etc. This level of verification would be sufficient to deter most counterfeits or substitutions.
https://lwn.net/Articles/964956/
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56 sources (32 en français)
Date Actuelle
ven. 22 nov. - 05:38 CET
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