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Air Force TFPGA is a commercial industrial control system security tool by GrammaTech. SEALSQ Automotive EV Charging is a commercial industrial control system security tool by SEALSQ. Compare features, ratings, integrations, and community reviews side by side to find the best industrial control system security fit for your security stack.
Based on our analysis of NIST CSF 2.0 coverage, core features, company size fit, deployment model, here is our conclusion:
Mid-market and enterprise manufacturers with mission-critical industrial control systems need Air Force TFPGA to detect hardware Trojans and counterfeits at the component level, where supply chain compromise actually enters your infrastructure. The tool requires no golden reference model, meaning you can assess legacy FPGA inventory immediately without waiting for baseline data, and its self-characterization testing directly supports NIST GV.SC supply chain risk management. Skip this if your threat model doesn't include hardware-level adversaries or if you're sourcing components exclusively from tier-one vendors with ironclad provenance; the ROI shrinks fast for organizations with lower supply chain risk exposure.
Enterprise and mid-market OT security teams protecting EV charging networks should evaluate SEALSQ Automotive EV Charging for its ISO 15118 Plug & Charge compliance and integrated PKI lifecycle management, which eliminates the common gap between charger hardware and identity provisioning that leaves most deployments vulnerable to protocol-level attacks. The vendor's VaultIC secure elements handle both certificate management and firmware updates within the same silicon, addressing the NIST PR.AA and PR.DS functions that most charging operators struggle to implement consistently across distributed charger fleets. Skip this if your EV charging infrastructure is still running legacy non-connected chargers or if you need application-layer visibility beyond the charging protocol itself; SEALSQ focuses narrowly on the authentication and encryption layer, not fleet operations or grid integration.
FPGA trust assessment tool for detecting hardware Trojans and counterfeits
Secure elements & PKI for EV charging infrastructure security
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Common questions about comparing Air Force TFPGA vs SEALSQ Automotive EV Charging for your industrial control system security needs.
Air Force TFPGA: FPGA trust assessment tool for detecting hardware Trojans and counterfeits. built by GrammaTech. headquartered in United States. Core capabilities include FPGA self-characterization testing, Statistical analysis of circuit characteristics, Hardware Trojan detection..
SEALSQ Automotive EV Charging: Secure elements & PKI for EV charging infrastructure security. built by SEALSQ. headquartered in France. Core capabilities include ISO 15118 Plug & Charge compliance, VaultIC secure elements for EV chargers, PKI-based digital identity provisioning..
Both serve the Industrial Control System Security market but differ in approach, feature depth, and target audience.
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