W02 - Protecting Electronics Supply Chain Throughout Lifecycle

By Mark Tehranipoor

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Florida, Gainsville, FL

Published on

Abstract

Your feedback matters! Help us gain a better understanding of your learning experience. We invite you to complete the following 3-question survey prior to watching this webinar, and complete the following short survey after watching. Thank you.

Growing complexity of system-on-chip (SoC) and ever-increasing cost of IC fabrication have forced the semiconductor industry to shift from a vertical business model to a horizontal model. In this model, time-to-market and manufacturing costs are lowered through outsourcing and design reuse. To be more specific, SoC designers obtain licenses for third party intellectual property (3PIPs), design an SoC by integrating the 3PIPs with their own IPs, and then outsource the SoC design to contract foundries and assemblies for fabrication, test and packaging. With most of these entities involved in design, manufacturing, integration, and distribution located across the globe, original IP owners no longer have the ability to monitor the entire process. The lack of trust and transparency/control has led to vulnerabilities such as IP piracy, IC overproduction, cloning, tampering, and more. To protect the supply chain from such vulnerabilities, academic and industry researchers have proposed many techniques e.g., IP encryption, logic obfuscation, secure split test, etc. However, recent literature have pointed out to some of the limitations of these approaches. In this webinar, we will present complementary techniques to provide an end-to-end solution to protecting electronic supply chain.

To see the schedule for upcoming live webinars please visit the MEST Webinar Calendar.

Bio

Mark M. Tehranipoor Mark M. Tehranipoor is currently the Intel Charles E. Young Preeminence Endowed Chair Professor in Cybersecurity and the Chair of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) at the the University of Florida. He is also currently serving as the Director for Florida Institute for Cybersecurity (FICS) Research, Director for Edaptive Computing Inc. Transition Center (ECI-TC), Co-director for the AFOSR/AFRL Center of Excellence on Enabling Cyber Defense in Analog and Mixed Signal Domain (CYAN), and Co-Director for the National Microelectronic Security Training Center (MEST). He also served as the Associate Chair for Research and Strategic Initiatives for the ECE Department from 2017-2019 and the Program Director of Cybersecurity in the Herbert Wertheim College of Engineering from 2019-2022. His current research projects include: hardware security and trust, electronics supply chain security, IoT security, and reliable and testable VLSI design. Dr. Tehranipoor has published numerous journal articles and refereed conference papers and has delivered more than 220+ invited talks and keynote addresses. In addition, he has 15 patents issued, and has published 13 books of which two are textbooks. His projects have been sponsored by 50+ companies and Government agencies.

Dr. Tehranipoor is a Fellow of IEEE, Fellow of ACM, Golden Core Member of IEEE Computer Society, and Member of ACM SIGDA. He is also a member of the Connecticut Academy of Science and Engineering (CASE). He is a recipient of 14 best paper awards and nominations, the 2009 NSF CAREER award, the 2014 AFOSR MURI award on Nanoscale Security, the 2008 IEEE Computer Society (CS) Meritorious Service award, the 2012 and 2017 IEEE CS Outstanding Contribution, the 2010 and 2016 IEEE TTTC/CS Most Successful Technical Event for co-founding and chairing HOST Symposium, the 2018 IEEE HOST Hall of Fame Member, the 2009 and 2014 UConn ECE Research Excellence award, the 2012 UConn SOE Outstanding Faculty Advisor award, the 2016 UF College of Engineering Excellence in Leadership award, the 2016 UF ECE Research Excellence Award, the 2020 UF’s College of Engineering Teacher/Scholar of the year award, and the 2020 UF Innovation of the Year Award.

He serves on the program committee of more than a dozen leading conferences and workshops. Prof. Tehranipoor served as the guest editor for JETTA, IEEE Design and Test of Computers, ACM JETC, and IEEE Computer Society Computing Now. He served as Program Chair of the 2019 International Test Conference (ITC), Vice-program Chair of the 2018 ITC, Program Chair of the 2007 IEEE Defect-Based Testing (DBT) workshop, 2016 IEEE International Verification and Security Workshop (IVSW), Program Chair of the 2008 IEEE Defect and Data Driven Testing (D3T) workshop, Co-program Chair of the 2008 International Symposium on Defect and Fault Tolerance in VLSI Systems (DFTS), General Chair for D3T-2009 and DFTS-2009, and Vice-general Chair for NATW-2011, General Chair for 2008-2009, and 2021 IEEE HOST, and General Chair for 2019-2021 IEEE PAINE Conference.

Over the years, he has led a number of major initiatives in the domain of microelectronics security and trust. He co-founded the IEEE International Symposium on Hardware-Oriented Security and Trust (HOST) and served as HOST-2008 and HOST-2009 General Chair and continue to serve as Chair of the Steering Committee for HOST. He also co-founded IEEE Asian-HOST and the IEEE International Conference of Physical Assurance and Inspection of Electronics (PAINE). Further, he co-founded the Journal on Hardware and Systems Security (HaSS) and currently serving as EIC for HaSS. He is also led development of Trust-Hub sponsored by the National Science Foundation (NSF). He served as associate Editor-in-Chief (EIC) for IEEE Design and Test of Computers from 2012-2014. He is currently serving as an Associate Editor for IEEE Design and Test of Computers, JETTA, Journal of Low Power Electronics (JOLPE), ACM Transactions for Design Automation of Electronic Systems (TODAES), IEEE Transactions on Computers, and IEEE Transactions on VLSI (TVLSI). He has served as an IEEE Distinguished Speaker and an ACM Distinguished Speaker from 2010-2013. Further, he served as an ambassador of cybersecurity for IEEE from 2016-2020.

Prior to joining University of Florida, Dr. Tehranipoor served as the founding director of the Center for Hardware Assurance, Security, and Engineering (CHASE) and the Comcast Center of Excellence in Security Innovation (CSI) at the University of Connecticut.

Sponsored by

Cite this work

Researchers should cite this work as follows:

  • Mark Tehranipoor (2024), "W02 - Protecting Electronics Supply Chain Throughout Lifecycle," https://nanohub.org/resources/39002.

    BibTex | EndNote

Time

Tags