
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Semiconductor counterfeiting has grown into a $200 billion annual problem threatening the integrity of global electronics supply chains. As both chip shortages and sophisticated counterfeiting techniques persist, traditional detection methods fall short—requiring complex setups, hardware modifications, or extensive data labeling.
Two machine learning engineers from Analog Devices' advanced R&D team unveil their elegant solution: an unsupervised learning approach that captures the unique "fingerprints" of authentic chips by analyzing power signatures during memory operations. What makes their method revolutionary is its lightweight footprint (under 60KB) and ability to run directly on standard Cortex-M4 microcontrollers at the edge, requiring no cloud connectivity or specialized equipment.
The team shares their methodology for creating a robust dataset of 1,000 secure authenticator chips and developing a convolutional autoencoder architecture that achieved 100% accuracy in distinguishing authentic components from close counterparts. Their model learns the normal reconstruction patterns of legitimate chips, then flags anomalies when encountering counterfeits with distinctly different power signatures.
Beyond secure authenticators, this approach proves universally applicable to any semiconductor from which analog fingerprints can be collected. Rather than replacing traditional cryptographic methods, it serves as an additional security layer that remains effective even when encryption keys might be compromised through side-channel attacks.
Ready to strengthen your supply chain against increasingly sophisticated counterfeits? Discover how this scalable, software-based solution could be integrated with your existing security infrastructure to provide an additional layer of protection for critical semiconductor components.
Send us Fan Mail
Support the show
Learn more about the EDGE AI FOUNDATION - edgeaifoundation.org
By EDGE AI FOUNDATIONSemiconductor counterfeiting has grown into a $200 billion annual problem threatening the integrity of global electronics supply chains. As both chip shortages and sophisticated counterfeiting techniques persist, traditional detection methods fall short—requiring complex setups, hardware modifications, or extensive data labeling.
Two machine learning engineers from Analog Devices' advanced R&D team unveil their elegant solution: an unsupervised learning approach that captures the unique "fingerprints" of authentic chips by analyzing power signatures during memory operations. What makes their method revolutionary is its lightweight footprint (under 60KB) and ability to run directly on standard Cortex-M4 microcontrollers at the edge, requiring no cloud connectivity or specialized equipment.
The team shares their methodology for creating a robust dataset of 1,000 secure authenticator chips and developing a convolutional autoencoder architecture that achieved 100% accuracy in distinguishing authentic components from close counterparts. Their model learns the normal reconstruction patterns of legitimate chips, then flags anomalies when encountering counterfeits with distinctly different power signatures.
Beyond secure authenticators, this approach proves universally applicable to any semiconductor from which analog fingerprints can be collected. Rather than replacing traditional cryptographic methods, it serves as an additional security layer that remains effective even when encryption keys might be compromised through side-channel attacks.
Ready to strengthen your supply chain against increasingly sophisticated counterfeits? Discover how this scalable, software-based solution could be integrated with your existing security infrastructure to provide an additional layer of protection for critical semiconductor components.
Send us Fan Mail
Support the show
Learn more about the EDGE AI FOUNDATION - edgeaifoundation.org