Harnessing chaos to protect against hackers
Professor Dan Gauthier and doctoral student Noeloikeau Charlot recently published a study that presents a way to use chaos to help develop digital fingerprints for electronic devices that may be unique enough to foil even the most sophisticated hackers.
Just how unique are these fingerprints? The researchers believe it would take longer than the lifetime of the universe to test for every possible combination available.
“In our system, chaos is very, very good,” said Daniel Gauthier, senior author of the study and professor of physics at The Ohio State University.
The study was published online in the journal IEEE Access.
Daniel Gauthier
The researchers created a new version of an emerging technology called physically unclonable functions, or PUFs, that are built into computer chips.
Gauthier said these new PUFs could potentially be used to create secure ID cards, to track goods in supply chains and as part of authentication applications, where it is vital to know that you’re not communicating with an impostor.
Read more from the article by Jeff Grabmeier: Scientists harness chaos to protect devices from hackers (osu.edu)