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Hands-on IC reverse engineering training

Hands-on IC reverse engineering training

Technology News |
By eeNews Europe



The company will first present its new tool during hardwear.io’s 5th edition (Santa Clara), a platform for hardware and security community where researchers showcase and discuss their innovative research on attacking and defending hardware. By detecting and processing the whole interconnection and standard cell library of the digital core, ChipJuice recovers any chips’ internal architecture in the form of their netlists and their HDL file. Fully developed in-house, a version of ChipJuice is currently being reviewed within an Insiders’ program.

“Wherever there are electronic products there are ICs, whether in consumer, banking, telecommunication, automotive, defence or medical solutions. For secure ICs extraction, exploration and evaluation, Texplained is the only company that offers a turnkey solution including, service, software and IP” said Texplained’s CEO Clarisse Ginet in a statement.

Thanks to its expertise, Texplained can extract hardware and firmware information from almost any chip on the market. The company has put at the disposal of chip enthusiasts who would like to explore further the silicon, several resources such as optical and Electronic images at different magnifications of a diversity of microcontrollers, FPGA, microprocessors & SoCs.


As part of the Hardware Security Conference & Training, Olivier Thomas, Texplained’s co-founder and CTO, will give a 2-day Training on the 11th and 12th of June, focusing on the IC Reverse Engineering & Embedded Code Extraction Technique. Attendees here will assist to the first demo of ChipJuice.

Texplained will also host a 3-day training and conference in June during Recon Montreal as well as in September during hardwear.io Holland (The Hague). Olivier also gave a talk at the Black Hat Conference on “Advance IC reverse engineering techniques: In depth Analysis of a modern smart card”.

Texplained – www.texplained.com

Related articles:

Analysis tool reads through chips’ architectures

Stepping up security in chip design: Texplained

French startup hacks secure chips for the common good

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