Tuesday, August 7th
8:30-10:50 AM
AUTO-101-1: Flash in Autonomous Vehicles, Part 1 (Automotive Applications Track Track)
Chairperson: Greg Basich, Associate Director, Automotive Infotainment and Telematics and Connected Mobility Services, Strategy Analytics

Organizer: Andy Marken, President, Marken Communications

Paper Title: Memory security of Automotive Systems

Paper Abstract: Protecting increasingly complex connected car ecosystem is a difficult task, especially as the proliferation of data across different connected devices and routes make them more vulnerable than ever before. The security of NAND devices migrates from the protection of data, complete delete of the data, to the safe communication among intra vehicles, connected systems, and the wireless network. Both storage and transmission of data should be secured and controlled to reduce the exposure to unauthorized users. How can memory suppliers contribute in this connected card ecosystem? The activated key (or security key) and the coding rule are defined to communicate among all connected parties. It may involve OEMs, Tier ones (e.g. Head Unit suppliers), Service provider (e.g. Dealers, Map care/update online program), and NAND storage devices. We would like to share our experiences with 6 guidelines to help other people understand more about the memory security of In-vehicle-infotainment systems.

Paper Author: Crystal Chang, Senior Manager, ATP Electronics

Author Bio: Crystal is in charge of the Memory card BU for ATP Electronics. During her 8 years tenure at ATP, Crystal leads ATP Automotive Task Force to support OEMs and Tier ones with continuous innovation and reliable quality systems (IATF16949, VDA6.3, ASPICE). Combining years of business insight and front-end experiences, Crystal has successfully design-in many global projects especially for In-Vehicle-Infotainment system.