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  1. Workshop on Fault Diagnosis and Tolerance in Cryptography (FDTC).
  2. Workshop on Fault Diagnosis and Tolerance in Cryptography (FDTC 2007)
  3. Securing Flash Technology
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2014 Workshop on Fault Diagnosis and Tolerance in Cryptography
2013 Workshop on Fault Diagnosis and Tolerance in Cryptography
2012 Workshop on Fault Diagnosis and Tolerance in Cryptography
2011 Workshop on Fault Diagnosis and Tolerance in Cryptography
2010 Workshop on Fault Diagnosis and Tolerance in Cryptography
2009 Workshop on Fault Diagnosis and Tolerance in Cryptography (FDTC)
2008 5th Workshop on Fault Diagnosis and Tolerance in Cryptography
Workshop on Fault Diagnosis and Tolerance in Cryptography (FDTC 2007)
Workshop on Fault Diagnosis and Tolerance in Cryptography-Title
Workshop on Fault Diagnosis and Tolerance in Cryptography - Copyright notice
Preface
Program Organization
Program Committee
Securing Flash Technology
How can we overcome both side channel analysis and fault attacks on RSA-CRT?
Montgomery Multiplication with Redundancy Check
Fault Detection Structures for the Montgomery Multiplication over Binary Extension Fields
A Structure-independent Approach for Fault Detection Hardware Implementations of the Advanced Encryption Standard
A Novel Double-Data-Rate AES Architecture Resistant against Fault Injection
DFA Mechanism on the AES Key Schedule
Countermeasures Against Branch Target Buffer Attacks
Cheap Hardware Parallelism Implies Cheap Security
Passive and Active Combined Attacks: Combining Fault Attacks and Side Channel Analysis
Tate Pairing with Strong Fault Resiliency
Register Transfer Level Concurrent Error Detection in Elliptic Curve Crypto Implementations
Author index

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Securing Flash Technology

Content Provider IEEE Xplore Digital Library
Author Handschuh, H. Trichina, E.
Copyright Year 2007
Description Author affiliation: Spansion EMEA, Levallois-Perret (Handschuh, H.) || Spansion Internal. Inc., Munich (Trichina, E.)
Abstract Flash memory is a type of non-volatile semiconductor memory that can be electrically erased and programmed. It can be found in almost every high-capacity consumer electronic device in the market. Examples of such mass memory products include USB flash drives, digital cameras, mobile handsets, set-top boxes for Pay-TV applications, and many more. Some of them use NAND flash technology and others use NOR flash technology. To put it simply, NAND flash is the most adequate for mass-storage of user data because of its high speed access and because the organization of user data is usually error-tolerant (digital pictures, music) and NOR flash is more adequate for code-type data because of its highly reliable nature and its XIP (execute in place) capability, meaning that a program stored in NOR flash does not need to be transferred to RAM before being executed. When it comes to set-top boxes or handsets, manufacturers and operators are becoming increasingly security concerned. Conditional Access providers do not want to see their operating system and security codes dispatched over the internet and mobile phone operators fear that viruses or Trojan horses will eventually reach the handset platform. Thus new security features start appearing on those types of flash memory devices. Another sector which needs increasing data and program storage capacity is the smart card industry. Current high-end cards have a few hundred kilobytes of embedded ROM and EEPROM memory to hold their operating system and application data when several megabytes would ideally be required. The new high density smart cards will address such requirements in the near future by providing increased on-board storage capacity. The question then becomes how to reach the required security level operators expect for all these new devices.
Starting Page 3
Ending Page 20
File Size 180854
Page Count 18
File Format PDF
ISBN 9780769529820
DOI 10.1109/FDTC.2007.9
Language English
Publisher Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE)
Publisher Date 2007-09-10
Publisher Place Austria
Access Restriction Subscribed
Rights Holder Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE)
Subject Keyword Smart cards Nonvolatile memory Data security Operating systems Flash memory Telephone sets Universal Serial Bus Mobile handsets Semiconductor memory Consumer electronics
Content Type Text
Resource Type Article
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