Silicon physical random functions
Proceedings of the 9th ACM conference on Computer and communications security
Active hardware metering for intellectual property protection and security
SS'07 Proceedings of 16th USENIX Security Symposium on USENIX Security Symposium
A Survey of Hardware Trojan Taxonomy and Detection
IEEE Design & Test
Gate-level characterization: foundations and hardware security applications
Proceedings of the 47th Design Automation Conference
FPGA time-bounded unclonable authentication
IH'10 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Information hiding
A unified submodular framework for multimodal IC Trojan detection
IH'10 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Information hiding
IEEE Spectrum
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Historically, the dominant technological and application trends have had a direct impact on the key integrated circuits design metrics. In the 70s, the silicon area was a scarce and expensive commodity. Therefore, development of techniques such as hardware sharing and design simplification was of prime importance. In the 80s, the premier design metrics was the speed of computation while in the 90s, the quest for power and energy optimization emerged. Initially, the emphasis was on minimizing the switching power but the focus has gradually moved towards minimizing the leakage energy.