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      Physical Unclonable Functions and Applications: A Tutorial

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          Physical one-way functions.

          Modern cryptographic practice rests on the use of one-way functions, which are easy to evaluate but difficult to invert. Unfortunately, commonly used one-way functions are either based on unproven conjectures or have known vulnerabilities. We show that instead of relying on number theory, the mesoscopic physics of coherent transport through a disordered medium can be used to allocate and authenticate unique identifiers by physically reducing the medium's microstructure to a fixed-length string of binary digits. These physical one-way functions are inexpensive to fabricate, prohibitively difficult to duplicate, admit no compact mathematical representation, and are intrinsically tamper-resistant. We provide an authentication protocol based on the enormous address space that is a principal characteristic of physical one-way functions.
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            Fuzzy Extractors: How to Generate Strong Keys from Biometrics and Other Noisy Data

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              Power-Up SRAM State as an Identifying Fingerprint and Source of True Random Numbers

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Proceedings of the IEEE
                Proc. IEEE
                Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
                0018-9219
                1558-2256
                August 2014
                August 2014
                : 102
                : 8
                : 1126-1141
                Article
                10.1109/JPROC.2014.2320516
                72a50187-7676-47d4-928f-7b255a17f767
                © 2014
                History

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