Are you familiar with this:
It does ecc and as it is based on an atmel micro controller, adding a display is pretty straight forward
Michael
On Mon, Apr 29, 2013 at 10:30:47PM +0800, Crypto Stick wrote:Crypto Stick is an open source USB key for encryption and secure
authentication.
We have been accepted as a mentor organization for Google
Summer of Code (GSOC) 2013. One of our project ideas is to develop a
physical BitCoin wallet according to
https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Smart_card_wallet
A word of caution: hardware Bitcoin wallets really do need some type ofdisplay so the wallet itself can tell you where the coins it is signingare being sent, and that in turn implies support for the upcomingpayment protocol so the wallet can also verify that the address isactually the address of the recipient the user is intending to sendfunds too. The current Crypto Stick hardware doesn't even have a buttonfor user interaction. (press n times to approve an n-BTC spend)Having said that PGP smart cards and USB keys already have that problem,but the consequences of signing the wrong document are usually less thanthe consequences of sending some or even all of the users funds to athief. You can usually revoke a bad signature after the fact with afollow-up message.Not to say hardware security for private keys isn't a bad thing, but theprotections are a lot more limited than users typically realize.I will say though I am excited that this implies that the Crypto Stickcould have ECC key support in the future.-- 'peter'[:-1]@petertodd.org
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