Jun. 16, 2025 –
By Hassan Triqui, Secure IC
EETimes Europe (June 13, 2025)
As the automotive industry pushes toward Level 4 and Level 5 autonomy, the convergence of functional safety and cybersecurity is no longer theoretical; it is operational. A malfunction may cause damage; a cyberattack may cause disaster. The two domains are now inextricably linked. There is no safety without security.
This new reality demands a fundamental redesign of the automotive value chain. Safety-critical systems cannot rely solely on isolated certifications or static design milestones. Security must be integrated from the chip level to the cloud—from the individual electronic control unit to the fleet level—because autonomous vehicles are not standalone machines; they are nodes in a hyperconnected, evolving ecosystem.
Autonomous vehicles are effectively rolling data centers with real-time mission-critical functions. To ensure their integrity, hardware-based roots of trust must anchor the entire system. These hardware enclaves provide the foundational assurance needed to secure boot sequences, cryptographic operations, and isolation of sensitive processes.