Xerox PARC Creates Self-Destructing Chip
angry tapir writes: Engineers at Xerox PARC have developed a chip that will self-destruct upon command, providing a potentially revolutionary tool for high-security applications. The chip, developed as part of DARPA's vanishing programmable resources project, could be used to store data such as encryption keys and, on command, shatter into thousands of pieces so small, reconstruction is impossible.
I don't know how reconstructable these things will be(I wouldn't underestimate patience, or machine vision, when reassembling lots of broken bits; but if the destruction of the circuit disrupts floating gates or other such delicate structures used for semiconductor data storage there may be nothing to read even if you rebuild the entire thing); but I'd be very curious to see how they propose to safeguard the circuitry that is used to initiate destruction.
The demo involved resistive heating sufficient to mechanically stress the glass into failure. That sounds exactly like the sort of mechanism where attacking the chip's supply of power(either undervolting it, putting it on a tightly limited constant-current supply, or both) might allow you to keep the chip's logic functions operational; but keep the heater from being able to destroy the glass. Depending on the sensitivity of the circuit layer, one could also slowly and evenly heat the entire package, to increase the power required to induce enough localized thermal expansion to cause catastrophic cracking.
It reminds me of the old fight between satellite and cable 'conditional access' system manufacturers and pirates: you had the really early conditional access cards with separate contacts for the higher voltages needed to reprogram the EEPROM; so people covered those with tape to make the cards read only. Then they moved to onboard charge pumps, and people moved to sabotaging those without damaging the read circuitry. And so forth.
This seems like a similar situation. I don't doubt the ability of stressed glass to shatter violently(semi-related; but fun, "Prince Rupert Drops" are a great demonstration of this); but if you want to turn that into a security mechanism, you need to protect the glass-shatterer componenents, and the sensors that trigger them, from sabotage or deception for the mechanism to be useful in practice. It is an advance over a normal silicon wafer with a small explosive charge, and probably a lot more legal for consumer goods; but you still need to know when to shatter the glass, and make sure that the attacker can't remove your ability to do so without triggering the failsafe.
If proven to be used for enforced obsolescence I'm sure they're in for a bankrupting class action. You break my stuff, you pay me to buy a new one, plus moral damages for the pain you've caused me, regardless of how you did it.
Yet nobody seems to have proven even the existence of "warranty fuses" (ones that make your equipment break just after warranty expires)...
"Everybody's naked underneath" -- The Doctor