Design Article
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cdhmanning
Modern techniques to prevent hacking in medical systems
Bobby Wong, Renesas Electronics America
7/16/2012 11:17 AM EDT
The advent of electronics has transformed medical devices to become
smarter and more convenient to our daily lives. But recent headlines of
hacking point out a consternation of electronics. Medical device
designers need to understand new tools and design techniques that can
prevent hacking and illicit modification.
The issue of hacking and illicit modification is multi-faceted. Is the software protected inside a microcontroller? How can access to a chip be eliminated to prevent hacking? Is there a way to detect code modification? These are chip-level concerns. There are also system-level issues such as how to enforce an expiration date and how to authenticate genuine equipment.
We discuss several microcontroller features and modern design techniques that address these concerns. Read full article here.
The issue of hacking and illicit modification is multi-faceted. Is the software protected inside a microcontroller? How can access to a chip be eliminated to prevent hacking? Is there a way to detect code modification? These are chip-level concerns. There are also system-level issues such as how to enforce an expiration date and how to authenticate genuine equipment.
We discuss several microcontroller features and modern design techniques that address these concerns. Read full article here.
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cdhmanning
7/25/2012 10:55 PM EDT
Refreshing to see an article that does not use Stuxnet as FUD.
However, I don't get it... This supposedly prevents chip level hacking. If an attacker can get in the box and fiddle with chips then he can quite easily remove the "secure" chip and solder on a hacked chip without the security stuff enabled.
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