- OpenTitan is the first open source silicon root of trust to be commercially deployed
- Chromebooks with OpenTitan include the Dell Chromebook 11 CC11260 and 2-in-1 models
- Open source model enables shared maintenance and retention of expertise across organizations
Google has begun shipping commercially available Chromebooks that feature OpenTitan, the first open source silicon root of trust.
The first devices with OpenTitan include the Dell Chromebook 11 CC11260 and the Dell Chromebook 11 CC11260 2-in-1, but others are likely to follow.
OpenTitan is an important step for open source hardware, providing a design that can be reviewed, revised and maintained by multiple organizations simultaneously.
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First commercial devices with OpenTitan
OpenTitan has been in development for seven years as a collaboration between industry partners, academia and the open source hardware community.
This platform aims to develop security silicon designed to meet the reliability and verification standards required for commercial devices.
Google has previously announced that the manufacturing of OpenTitan silicon is carried out by Nuvoton Technology Corporation, confirming that production-level quality has been achieved.
The project’s open model is intended to offer benefits such as shared maintenance responsibility, retention of expertise across organizations and engagement with academic research.
The integration of OpenTitan into Chromebooks signals that Google intends to expand its use of open source security beyond consumer devices.
Plans are already underway for deployment in Google’s data centers by 2026, perhaps indicating that the company is trying to align hardware-level trust with broader infrastructure security.
The IP developed through OpenTitan is also being reused in other projects, such as Caliptra, demonstrating that the technology will serve multiple applications rather than a single product line.
There are also plans to develop OpenTitan into a second generation, including lattice-based post-quantum cryptography capabilities and other updates.
While the timeline and full capabilities of these features are not fully specified, they suggest that the project is intended to remain forward-looking and adapt to emerging security threats.
Despite the apparent progress, questions remain about how well OpenTitan will perform in large-scale production and in real-world conditions.
So far, the implementation of open source silicon in consumer Chromebooks is limited to a small number of models, so its impact on security within wider Pixel devices or other products has yet to be demonstrated.
For Google, this marks a milestone in open source security silicon development, although independent verification of its performance and reliability is not yet available.
It is therefore still unclear whether silicon can consistently meet the standards expected of data center-grade security hardware.
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