Digital Engineering 24/7

Helping design and engineering professionals discover, evaluate and specify technologies and processes that shorten the design cycle and enable success.

Encrypted Sensors Has Programmed Encryption onto FPGA Hardware Chip

The company says it has applied to trademark it as an actual private network.

Latest Digital Thread News

Latest Digital Thread Resources

  • Design & Simulation Software Guide 2025

    In this Special Issue, Digital Engineering presents its second annual guide to design and simulation software vendors.

  • Design & Simulation Software Guide

    In this Special Issue, Digital Engineering presents its inaugural guide to design and simulation software vendors, including listings for CAD, CAM, simulation, generative design, PLM, rendering and visualization, design for additive manufacturing,…

  • More Resources

By DE Editors  

May 7, 2019

Encrypted Sensors, a cybersecurity company, has programmed a quantum computer-proof encryption onto a field-programmable gate arrray (FPGA) hardware chip. The company says it has applied to trademark it as an actual private network (APN), a hardware-based encryption system that functions without software controls or operating systems on which VPNs are based.

The company’s non-algebraic encryption algorithm is considered by cybersecurity experts to be an encryption solution. 

“Since our encryption is not based on math, it challenges the way computers operate,” explains Brian Penny, inventor of the algorithm and co-owner of Encrypted Sensors. “Any computer trying to break it would have to decide what is—and isn’t—reality.”

Hardware-based APNs function independent of any software controls or operating systems. An attacker would have to physically gain control of the specific APN hardware that is set up for the network. 

Benefits of the encryption being on the FPGA chip include having control of the entire encryption environment. The encryption can run a lot faster, near real time, compared with other encryption systems, according to Encrypted Sensors.

Sources: Press materials received from the company and additional information gleaned from the company’s website.

 
 

From our Sponsors

Meltio Takes Metal Additive to the Next Level
Meltio's DED technology enables industries to tailor and customize their solutions to create & repair metal parts.
Easing the Transition from ETO to CTO with Configuration Lifecycle Management
Manufacturers are discovering that the Configure-to-Order (CTO) model provides significant benefits when it comes to customization.
Siemens + Altair = The Next Chapter in Design and Simulation
With its acquisition of Altair, Siemens creates a unified simulation portfolio combining generative design with high-performance computing and AI workflows.