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Microsemi Continues its FPGA Security Leadership for Secure Boot with Extension of Cryptography Research Differential Power Analysis Patent LicenseSignificantly Increasing Security for Critical Communication, Industrial and Defense Applications, Patent Solution Provides Resistance to DPA Attacks ALISO VIEJO, Calif., Aug. 5, 2014 -- Microsemi Corporation (Nasdaq: MSCC), a leading provider of semiconductor solutions differentiated by power, security, reliability and performance, today announced the company has obtained an extension of its existing Differential Power Analysis (DPA) patent license from the Cryptography Research division of Rambus. The patent license extension allows Microsemi to continue providing industry-leading solutions for the secure booting of third-party processors and FPGAs using the Cryptography Research portfolio of patented breakthrough DPA countermeasures. Microsemi is the only major FPGA company that currently has a license to use the patented DPA countermeasures, and has implemented DPA-resistant secure programming and boot-up protocols in its SmartFusion®2 SoC FPGAs and IGLOO®2 FPGAs. Microsemi will now be able to extend the secure boot protection of these Microsemi devices to other third-party MCUs, DSPs, GPUs and FPGAs used within the same system. Microsemi is currently engaging key customers with the secure boot solution, and is offering the solution as a reference design that runs on Microsemi's standard cryptographically-enabled SmartFusion2 and IGLOO2 FPGAs. "It is more critical than ever to prevent persistent malware implants in boot and application code. Supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) systems, routers and data communications systems together control the world's industrial and communications infrastructure where these threats can be catastrophic," said Bruce Weyer, vice president of marketing and business operations, at Microsemi. "In addition, the U.S. government and defense contractors are looking to share the cost of defense systems through the expansion of foreign military sales. These DoD contractors are looking for ways to secure their advanced technology systems against reverse engineering and exploitation so they can be exported safely, and our secure boot solution is an important security layer in providing that protection." According to the Aberdeen group, by the year 2020 approximately 50 billion machines will be connected. Not only do these machines need to be secure, but they need to be secure in the sense of DPA resistance. Just because a machine or system says it meets the Advance Encryption Standard (AES), it does not necessarily mean it is secure. Microsemi's DPA countermeasure solution increases system overall security by protecting the keys that are stored in the system against side channel attacks. "By extending this license, Microsemi and its customers are helping to secure the massive number of processors and FPGAs used in critical industrial, communications, networking and defense applications, many of which are still vulnerable to the DPA attacks," said Paul Kocher, chief scientist of the Rambus Cryptography Research division. "While the security issues surrounding side channel attacks have continued to gain notoriety, expanding this needed power analysis protection for the boot stage of FPGA devices and processors is an important step towards securing overall systems." Microsemi is in a unique position to be able to offer this enhanced secure boot solution because, in addition to having the most secure FPGAs on the market, Microsemi also offers a software product called WhiteboxCRYPTO™ that allows the secure execution of standard cryptographic algorithms. About Differential Power Analysis Attacks About SmartFusion2 SoC FPGAs About IGLOO2 FPGAs About Microsemi
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