Ronald Aigner
18Patents
2h-index
27Co-inventors
50Inventor score
Filing activity: Dec 1, 2010 → Feb 17, 2023
Most-cited inventions
| Patent | Title | Area | Cited by | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US9735968B2 | Trust service for a client device | Physics | 5 | Active |
| US10284375B2 | Trust service for a client device | Physics | 2 | Active |
| US10313121B2 | Maintaining operating system secrets across resets | Physics | 2 | Active |
| US10025932B2 | Portable security device | Electricity | 2 | Active |
| US9742762B2 | Utilizing a trusted platform module (TPM) of a host device | Electricity | 1 | Active |
| US8468169B2 | Hierarchical software locking | Physics | 1 | Active |
| US10176330B2 | Global platform health management | Physics | 1 | Active |
| US11586710B2 | System and method for protecting software licensing information via a trusted platform module | Physics | 1 | Active |
| US9167002B2 | Global platform health management | Physics | 0 | Active |
| US12158980B2 | Distributed trusted platform module key management protection for roaming data | Physics | 0 | Active |
| US9767304B2 | Representation of operating system context in a trusted platform module | Electricity | 0 | Active |
| US9825944B2 | Secure cryptoprocessor for authorizing connected device requests | Electricity | 0 | Active |
| US10212156B2 | Utilizing a trusted platform module (TPM) of a host device | Electricity | 0 | Active |
| US12101410B2 | Hardware virtualized TPM into virtual machines | Physics | 0 | Active |
| US9576134B2 | Global platform health management | Physics | 0 | Active |
| US9946881B2 | Global platform health management | Physics | 0 | Active |
| US12348627B2 | Executing attestation client code by executing a dynamic root of trust for measurement (DRTM) sequence to attest health of a computing device | Physics | 0 | Active |
| US12111893B2 | System and method for protecting software licensing information via a trusted platform module | Physics | 0 | Active |
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.