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Journal ArticleDOI

Hardware Trojan Attacks: Threat Analysis and Countermeasures

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TLDR
The threat of hardware Trojan attacks is analyzed; attack models, types, and scenarios are presented; different forms of protection approaches are discussed; and emerging attack modes, defenses, and future research pathways are described.
Abstract
Security of a computer system has been traditionally related to the security of the software or the information being processed. The underlying hardware used for information processing has been considered trusted. The emergence of hardware Trojan attacks violates this root of trust. These attacks, in the form of malicious modifications of electronic hardware at different stages of its life cycle, pose major security concerns in the electronics industry. An adversary can mount such an attack with an objective to cause operational failure or to leak secret information from inside a chip-e.g., the key in a cryptographic chip, during field operation. Global economic trend that encourages increased reliance on untrusted entities in the hardware design and fabrication process is rapidly enhancing the vulnerability to such attacks. In this paper, we analyze the threat of hardware Trojan attacks; present attack models, types, and scenarios; discuss different forms of protection approaches, both proactive and reactive; and describe emerging attack modes, defenses, and future research pathways.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Machine learning for hardware security: Classifier-based identification of Trojans in pipelined microprocessors

TL;DR: In this paper, a pre-silicon simulation-based technique to detect hardware trojans is presented, which exploits well-established machine learning algorithms and has been demonstrated on the AutoSoC CPU.
Book ChapterDOI

Handling Power Draining Attacks

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed an approach to ensure flexibility and reconfigurability of the processing resources by using field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) for direct task execution in hardware.
Book ChapterDOI

Counteracting Active Attacks

TL;DR: In this paper, active threats are associated with attacks that cause direct damage to a system, eventually jeopardizing it, including the generation of erroneous results and preventing result generation within deadline.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Survey of Hardware Trojan Taxonomy and Detection

TL;DR: A classification of hardware Trojans and a survey of published techniques for Trojan detection are presented.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Trojan Detection using IC Fingerprinting

TL;DR: These results show that Trojans that are 3-4 orders of magnitude smaller than the main circuit can be detected by signal processing techniques and provide a starting point to address this important problem.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Hardware Trojan detection using path delay fingerprint

TL;DR: A new behavior-oriented category method is proposed to divide trojans into two categories: explicit payload trojan and implicit payloadtrojan, which makes it possible to construct trojan models and then lower the cost of testing.
Journal ArticleDOI

A taxonomy of computer program security flaws

TL;DR: This survey provides a taxonomy for computer program security flaws, with an Appendix that documents 50 actual security flaws that provide a good introduction to the characteristics of security flaws and how they can arise.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trustworthy Hardware: Identifying and Classifying Hardware Trojans

TL;DR: A proposed new hardware Trojan taxonomy provides a first step in better understanding existing and potential threats.
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