Eclypsium Hardware Hacking Coaster » < EASY >
: An open-source JTAG adapter , also designed by Travis Goodspeed, used for low-level hardware debugging.
The is absurd. It is a $50,000 piece of over-engineered theater designed to make a room full of CISOs wince. But it is also the most honest explanation of firmware security you will ever see. Eclypsium Hardware Hacking Coaster
While it may sound like a mundane office accessory, this device represents a paradigm shift in how we view physical security. It is a tool that strips away the abstraction of software to reveal the raw, vulnerable silicon beneath. In this deep dive, we explore what the Hardware Hacking Coaster is, why Eclypsium—the industry leader in firmware security—championed it, and what it teaches us about the fragile state of our digital infrastructure. : An open-source JTAG adapter , also designed
In the context of security conferences like Black Hat or RSA, vendors often give away branded merchandise: stress balls, pens, and t-shirts. Eclypsium, however, built a reputation for tackling the hardest problems in security: the firmware and hardware layer. To reflect this mission, their merchandise needed to be functional, technical, and slightly subversive. But it is also the most honest explanation

