THANK YOU FOR YOUR INTEREST IN FortifyIQ

Complete this form and the appropriate member of our team will reach out shortly to assist you with your inquiry.

info@fortifyiq.com

81 Washington Street, Suite #307
Salem, MA 01970

USA

Contact Us

Expert Assessment
of Embedded Encryption in Your IC Design

Leverage FortifyIQ’s deep expertise in embedded cryptosecurity to assess potential vulnerabilities of your IC design

Receive actionable results and guidance to mitigate security vulnerabilities in the IC design before your tapeout by partnering with FortifyIQ

Inspire customer confidence 
by proven security protection of your design and ensure compliance with security certification requirements

Virtually no impact on your project schedule and resources

Integrate Built-in Side-Channel and Fault Injection Attack Protection Even Into Your Existing System-on-Chip

Integrate Built-in Side-Channel and Fault Injection Attack Protection Even Into Your Existing System-on-Chip

Integrate Built-in Side-Channel and Fault Injection Attack Protection Even Into Your Existing System-on-Chip

Fortify’s AES security evaluation by SGS

“Summary. The leakage analysis (Welch t-test) on over 30 million traces did not show statistically significant first- and second-order differences between trace sets with fixed and random inputs. The template-based DPA analysis, on the pseudo-random trace set for the profiling phase (15 million traces) and on a sub-set of 300k fix input traces for matching phase targeting the first-round S-box output, and template attack on ciphertext, did not indicate any potential information leakage.”

” The results for the soft IP presented in the report were obtained on the TOE which is the basic hardware implementation of the soft IP without additional levels of security (e.g. that are present in a secure silicon layout). Therefore the internal strength of the soft IP itself was evaluated. This indicates that the investigated features and parameters of the soft IP implementation should be robust against SCA and fault injection attacks in different implementations including ASIC. Nevertheless, according to the Common Criteria rules, the strength of the final composite product must be evaluated on its own.”

Request Technical Details