The Hill: The mother of all ‘zero-days’ — immortal flaws in semiconductor chips.
https://thehill.com/opinion/cybersecurity/3617715-the-mother-of-all-zero-days-immortal-flaws-in-semiconductor-chips/

The CHIPS Act of 2022 was signed into law on Aug. 9. It provides tens of 
billions of dollars in public support for revitalization of domestic 
semiconductor manufacturing, workforce training, and “leap ahead” wireless 
technology. Because we outsource most of our device fabrication — including the 
chips that go into the Navy’s submarines and ships, the Army’s jeeps and tanks, 
military drones and satellites — our industrial base has become weak and 
shallow. The first order of business for the CHIPS Act is to address a serious 
deficit in our domestic production capacity. 

Notoriously absent from the language of the bill is any mention of chip 
security. Consequently, the U.S. is about to make the same mistake with 
microelectronics that we made with digital networks and software applications: 
Unless and until the government demands in-device security, our competitors 
will have an easy time of manipulating how chips function and behave. Nowhere 
is this more dangerous than our national security infrastructure.

For the first quarter-century of ubiquitous internet access, policy makers and 
industry leaders did not imagine — literally could not conceive — a deliberate 
electronic intrusion from an ideological adversary.

Now they hit us almost at will.

Deterrence has proven to be an obviously insufficient policy alternative. 
Western civil societies — our power stations, waste processing facilities, and 
hospitals — are paying a heavy price for their porous defenses and cyber 
naivete.
Every chip starts life as a software program before it is fabricated, mostly in 
Asia, and mostly in Taiwan, into a chip. The process that transforms design 
code into “sand in the hand” silicon is just as vulnerable today as consumer 
applications were in the early 2010s, and for all the same reasons. The impact 
is deeper and more penetrating because once a chip is compromised, it is nearly 
impossible to patch. It might be in space or under an ocean. Our enemies know 
this too.

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