Researchers at New York University Abu Dhabi’s Design for Excellence lab have developed new innovations in computer chip technology that present landmark achievements in IT security. Secured by a secret key so that only authorized users may utilize them and immune to reverse-engineering, ‘logic-locked’ computer chips will provide future users with new guarantees of security for their devices. As IT security rises to the forefront of public concern in the wake of recent cyber security attacks such as WannaCry and Petya ransomware, academic solutions have been investigated in order to secure future systems from hackers. With any electronic device claiming to be “smart” containing a chip, from cell phones and computers to airplanes and medical devices, chip security has become a subject of priority amid the broadening debate surrounding measures for cyber defence. “Traditionally, security features are implemented at the software or system levels; for the first time, we have security implemented at the lowest possible level, the hardware level. This is quite important because if the hardware is compromised, there is no software or system security fix,” explained NYUAD Associate Dean of Engineering for Academic Affairs, Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, and Head of Dfx Ozgur Sinanoglu.
NYUAD’s Dfx research team designed two different chips over the past year, utilizing commercial and in-house developed software tools to help them build a baseline chip as well as their logic-locked chip. These are microcontroller chips with mainly an ARM microprocessor unit; they allow you to load a software program onto their memory, which they may then execute, allowing users to design a computational system or computer around them. The team at NYUAD are now pursuing a platform that will enable the research community to validate the security of their new solution through extensive red-team blue-team testing.