Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Chiraag Juvekar, Indian-Origin Scientists Develop Hack-Proof Chip

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 Feb, 2016 12:20 PM
    A team of Indian-origin researchers has developed a new type of radio frequency identification (RFID) chip that is virtually impossible to hack, thus preventing your credit card number or key card information from being stolen.
     
    According to Chiraag Juvekar, graduate student in electrical engineering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), the chip is designed to prevent so-called side-channel attacks.
     
    Side-channel attacks analyze patterns of memory access or fluctuations in power usage when a device is performing a cryptographic operation, in order to extract its cryptographic key.
     
    “The idea in a side-channel attack is that a given execution of the cryptographic algorithm only leaks a slight amount of information," Juvekar said.
     
    “So you need to execute the cryptographic algorithm with the same secret many, many times to get enough leakage to extract a complete secret,” he explained.
     
    One way to thwart side-channel attacks is to regularly change secret keys.
     
    In that case, the RFID chip would run a random-number generator that would spit out a new secret key after each transaction.
     
    A central server would run the same generator, and every time an RFID scanner queried the tag, it would relay the results to the server, to see if the current key was valid.
     
    Such a system would still, however, be vulnerable to a "power glitch" attack in which the RFID chip's power would be repeatedly cut right before it changed its secret key.
     
    An attacker could then run the same side-channel attack thousands of times, with the same key.
     
    Two design innovations allow the MIT researchers' chip to thwart power-glitch attacks.
     
    One is an on-chip power supply whose connection to the chip circuitry would be virtually impossible to cut and the other is a set of "nonvolatile" memory cells that can store whatever data the chip is working on when it begins to lose power.
     
    For both of these features, Juvekar and Anantha Chandrakasan, professor of electrical engineering and computer science and others used a special type of material known as a ferroelectric crystals.
     
    Texas Instruments and other chip manufacturers have been using ferroelectric materials to produce nonvolatile memory or computer memory that retains data when it's powered off.
     
    Along with Texas Instruments that has built several prototypes of the new chip, the researchers presented their research at the “International Solid-State Circuits Conference” in San Francisco recently.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Free falling iPhone to rotate in mid-air to prevent damage

    Free falling iPhone to rotate in mid-air to prevent damage
    The next time your iPhone is about to fall onto the ground, it might just rotate in mid-air and save itself from damage....

    Free falling iPhone to rotate in mid-air to prevent damage

    App to save footballers suffering sudden cardiac arrest

    App to save footballers suffering sudden cardiac arrest
    A new app will help anyone attending sports events to identify and treat sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) on the football field and save lives in emergencies....

    App to save footballers suffering sudden cardiac arrest

    Bell's CraveTV launches next week for $4 a month

    Bell's CraveTV launches next week for $4 a month
    Bell's streaming competitor to Netflix and Shomi will launch to "TV lovers" next week at about half the price.

    Bell's CraveTV launches next week for $4 a month

    IBM helps you donate computer power to fight Ebola

    IBM helps you donate computer power to fight Ebola
    IBM has engineered a way for everyone to join the fight against Ebola — by donating processing time on their personal computers, phones or tablets to researchers.

    IBM helps you donate computer power to fight Ebola

    Twitter gets Instagram style photo filters

    Twitter gets Instagram style photo filters
    The Twitter app for iOS and Android devives has replaced its photo filter grid with an easier to use Instagram-style row of adjustable filters....

    Twitter gets Instagram style photo filters

    This computer understands science better than humans

    This computer understands science better than humans
    A computer developed by the University of Wisconsin-Madison (UWM) has proved that it is better than scientists at extracting data from scientific publications...

    This computer understands science better than humans