Mobile, Open Hardware, RISC-V System-on-Chip (SoC) Development Kit
https://www.crowdsupply.com/sutajio-kosagi/precursor
Made For a Lab. Fits in a Pocket. Verifiable by Design.
Precursor is an open hardware development platform for secure, mobile computation and communication. This pocket-sized device accommodates a built-in display, a physical keyboard, and an internal battery while remaining smaller and lighter than the average smartphone. Precursor was built for use on the road, but it compromises nothing as a development platform. Powered by an FPGA-hosted, soft-core System-on-Chip (SoC), it gives developers the freedom to inspect, verify, and customize nearly every aspect of its operation. Join us as we build out a world in which silicon-level trustworthiness is attainable.
Trust It. Because You Can, Not Because You Have to.
We are accustomed to accepting the word of large corporations, like Apple and Google, that our gadgets are trustworthy. Without any hard evidence, we’ve long had to take in on faith that our privacy is being respected and that our personal data is not just one backdoor away from being stolen, exploited, or exposed. (We’ll go ahead and leave "monetized" off that list, since we all know that’s happening.) We’ve had to accept this reality in large part because we’ve had no other choice. Precursor changes the status quo by making evidence-based trust a core principle of its design. We have subjected every aspect of this platform to a level of scrutiny that will allow users to trust their devices. You, the user, will be able to trust Precursor based on scientific evidence that is observable without access to a million-dollar microscope.
The principle of evidence-based trust was at work in our decision to implement Precursor’s brain as an SoC on an FPGA, which means you can compile your CPU from design source and verify for yourself that Precursor contains no hidden instructions or other backdoors. Accomplishing the equivalent level of inspection on a piece of hardwired silicon would be…a rather expensive proposition. Precursor’s mainboard was designed for easy inspection as well, and even its LCD and keyboard were chosen specifically because they facilitate verification of proper construction with minimal equipment.
We’ve even prepared a one-hour walkthrough video to help you navigate Precursor’s design and focus on the relevant parts for inspection. The video takes you from "Boot to Root", touching on not only the usual software chain-of-trust starting from the CPU reset vector going to the root keys, but also from the CPU reset vector back into the CPU’s design source, and the hardware elements that it runs on.