Eclypsium Hardware - Hacking Coaster =link=

: A dedicated Hardware Hacking Coaster Reference Guide outlines the technical specifications for each onboard tool.

Eclypsium’s telemetry data shows that 1 in 4 enterprises have at least one device with known vulnerable firmware running in their environment. That is not a defect rate; that is a pandemic. Eclypsium Hardware Hacking Coaster

It is easy to dismiss the as a gimmick—a flashy booth attraction to draw crowds away from the free beer lines. But Eclypsium is not a toy company. They are the firm that discovered vulnerabilities in Dell BIOS, HP firmware, and the infamous Pandora (Panther) baseboard management controller used by Intel. : A dedicated Hardware Hacking Coaster Reference Guide

| Platform | Cost | Debug Interface | Fault Injection | Wireless | Suitability for Beginners | |----------|------|----------------|----------------|----------|---------------------------| | Eclypsium Coaster | $15-30 | ISP (exposed) | Yes (basic) | No | Excellent | | ChipWhisperer Lite | $400 | JTAG/SWD | Advanced | No | Intermediate | | JTAGulator | $200 | Multi-protocol | No | No | Advanced | | ESP32-C3 board | $10 | UART/USB | No | BLE/WiFi | Good | | Flipper Zero | $169 | Many | No | Sub-GHz | Intermediate | It is easy to dismiss the as a

The USB controller in the Eclypsium coaster came from a legitimate electronics distributor. The firmware bug was in the vendor’s golden image. Your data center’s power distribution units (PDUs), your HVAC controllers, your badge readers—they all contain similar third-party silicon. You are not riding your own coaster; you are riding one assembled by the lowest bidder in Shenzhen.

Image