Insider Brief

Infineon integrated its OPTIGA TPM SLB 9672 security chip with NVIDIA’s Jetson Thor platform to provide a hardware-based, quantum-resilient root of trust for robotics and Physical AI systems.

The TPM enables secure key storage, measured boot, remote attestation, encrypted communications, and protected software updates for autonomous systems throughout their lifecycle.

Infineon said its TPM roadmap includes support for NIST-standardized post-quantum cryptography algorithms, helping future robotic deployments address evolving security and compliance requirements.

PRESS RELEASE — Infineon Technologies AG (FSE: IFX) (OTCQX: IFNNY) today announces the integration of its OPTIGA™ Trusted Platform Module (TPM) SLB 9672 with NVIDIA’s Jetson Thor platform. The hardware-based security solution securely stores cryptographic keys and verifies system integrity at the chip level, establishing a certified, quantum-resilient root of trust for Physical AI systems. The integration strengthens the security foundation, enabling robots and autonomous systems to operate securely and reliably across their full lifecycle. As these systems move from controlled environments into factories and public spaces, the impact of a security failure extends beyond data loss to operational disruption and regulatory liability. For the robotics industry, the security architecture decisions made at design-in have lasting commercial and compliance implications.