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FortifyIQ Appoints Avishay Shraga as Chief Product Officer

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FortifyIQ announced the appointment of Avishay Shraga as Chief Product Officer (CPO), strengthening the company’s leadership team as it continues to scale its high-assurance security solutions.

In his new role, Avishay will lead product strategy, roadmap definition, and commercial execution across FortifyIQ’s portfolio, ensuring strong alignment between advanced security technologies, customer needs, and market opportunities.

A business-driven product and strategy leader, Avishay specializes in transforming complex technologies into commercially successful products and strategic assets. Over the course of his career at Sony Semiconductor Israel, Qualcomm, and Intel, he has demonstrated a proven ability to take bold ideas from concept to market leadership.

Most recently, at Sony Semiconductor Israel, Avishay led a corporate-backed security venture, securing multi-million-dollar internal investment, pioneering the world’s first commercial integrated SIM (iSIM), and orchestrating Tier-1 global ecosystem partnerships. His extensive experience in translating foundational security technologies into clear strategic advantages will support FortifyIQ’s mission as the industry transitions toward post-quantum cryptography and demand for protected security solutions continues to grow.

“Avishay brings a rare combination of deep technical expertise, product leadership, and proven ability to build and scale security-driven businesses,” Alexander Kesler, CEO, said. “ His experience in taking advanced technologies from concept to global adoption aligns perfectly with FortifyIQ’s mission. As we expand our platform across hardware and software security, including high-assurance cryptography and post-quantum capabilities, his leadership will be instrumental in accelerating our product strategy and market reach.”

“I am excited to join FortifyIQ at a time when attack-resistant security is becoming mandatory to support hardware revolutions like AI, chiplet supply chains, and device attestation,” said Avishay Shraga. “FortifyIQ’s technological breakthroughs and ability to deliver best-in-class resistance to physical attacks of legacy and post-quantum cryptographic algorithms uniquely position us to solve these critical challenges. I look forward to working with the team to turn this technological leadership into scalable products and meaningful market impact.”

FortifyIQ provides secure, high-assurance cryptographic implementations across hardware IP and software, engineered to withstand real-world physical attacks including side-channel and fault injection. As the industry accelerates toward post-quantum cryptography, FortifyIQ enables this transition as part of a broader security foundation, combining PQC support with exceptional power, performance, and area efficiency, and extreme crypto-agility. This allows customers to deploy robust security today while remaining adaptable to evolving standards, threats, and long-term requirements.

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FortifyIQ AES Algorithm
AVA_VAN.5 Evaluation & Validation Summary
SGS Brightsight Common Criteria Laboratory
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
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