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Creators/Authors contains: "Maasberg, Michele"

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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 18, 2026
  2. Integration of the Internet of Things (IoT) in the automotive industry has brought benefits as well as security challenges. Significant benefits include enhanced passenger safety and more comprehensive vehicle performance diagnostics. However, current onboard and remote vehicle diagnostics do not include the ability to detect counterfeit parts. A method is needed to verify authentic parts along the automotive supply chain from manufacture through installation and to coordinate part authentication with a secure database. In this study, we develop an architecture for anti-counterfeiting in automotive supply chains. The core of the architecture consists of a cyber-physical trust anchor and authentication mechanisms connected to blockchain-based tracking processes with cloud storage. The key parameters for linking a cyber-physical trust anchor in embedded IoT include identifiers (i.e., serial numbers, special features, hashes), authentication algorithms, blockchain, and sensors. A use case was provided by a two-year long implementation of simple trust anchors and tracking for a coffee supply chain which suggests a low-cost part authentication strategy could be successfully applied to vehicles. The challenge is authenticating parts not normally connected to main vehicle communication networks. Therefore, we advance the coffee bean model with an acoustical sensor to differentiate between authentic and counterfeit tires onboard the vehicle. The workload of secure supply chain development can be shared with the development of the connected autonomous vehicle networks, as the fleet performance is degraded by vehicles with questionable replacement parts of uncertain reliability. 
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  3. Abstract We report progress towards development of a cyber-physical trust anchor for additive manufacturing systems. The additive manufacturing commercial sector needs cyber-physical trust anchors to establish a secure supply chain, to detect counterfeiting and to ensure part provenance. However, the underlying technology of cyber-physical trust anchors requires optimization and spans several sectors ranging from mathematics, additive manufacturing, materials science, nondestructive evaluation, to cyber science. The fast and effective deployment of cyber-physical trust anchors requires an educational component. This project present a novel method for authenticating additively manufactured parts. Features are extracted using advanced X-ray imaging, transformed into unique identifiers, and bound with security features for cloud-based blockchain authentication. A plan for the low-cost and safe incorporation of cyber-physical trust anchor research in education is included. The anticipated outcome is an optimized trust anchor prototype and educational product suitable for interdisciplinary research and coursework to develop the workforce needed for cyber-secured physical supply chainsd. 
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