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No, it's the opposite. The FPGA makes it much harder to hide a trojan in the silicon. If the LUTs were biased, it would be detected fairly quickly. A dedicated circuit with an RF interface would be equally obvious in terms of chip usage and power draw.


I didn't say anything about modifying the LUTs or adding RF interfaces, I don't know where you got that from.


How would the in-field FPGA receive the broadcast in your scenario?




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