WinMagic today announced a landmark achievement with FIPS 140-3 validation for its SecureDoc and MagicEndpoint cryptographic modules (CMVP Certificates #5204 and #5214). This validation not only reaffirms WinMagic’s unwavering commitment to cybersecurity but also extends an unprecedented 24-year streak of continuous cryptographic certification across all three generations of the FIPS standard—a record of engineering continuity unrivaled in the full-disk encryption industry. This milestone arrives at a critical juncture, as the cybersecurity landscape shifts dramatically; with passkeys, hardware-bound keys, and Zero Trust models pushing identity verification to the endpoint itself, the cryptographic integrity of these devices is no longer merely a requirement for data at rest, but the very foundation of secure online access.
Twenty-Four Years of Continuous Cryptographic Validation: A Legacy of Trust
WinMagic’s FIPS 140-3 certification is the latest chapter in an unbroken record of cryptographic validation that began in 2000, showcasing a consistent dedication to the highest security standards:
- 2000 — Global Recognition: WinMagic’s solution became the world’s first full-disk encryption to earn Common Criteria certification, an achievement presented at the inaugural global ceremony.
- 2000 — NSA Endorsement: The company achieved NSA certification for SECRET-level Full-Disk-Encryption with a FORTEZZA PC-card, marking it as the first disk encryption certified by the NSA for US Government agencies to secure classified information.
- March 2002 — AES Certificate #1: NIST issued its first AES algorithm validation to any commercial vendor, recognizing the SecureDoc Cryptographic Engine as a pioneering implementation.
- May 2002 — FIPS 140-1 Certificate (#209): WinMagic secured cryptographic module validation under the original FIPS 140 standard.
- 2006 — FIPS 140-2 Levels 1 and 2: The company again broke new ground, becoming the first full-disk encryption technology to achieve FIPS 140-2 validation. Notably, it was also the first to certify at both Level 1 (#699) and the more stringent Level 2 (#698), which demands tamper-evidence mechanisms and robust role-based authentication.
- 2006-2026 — Enduring Compliance: WinMagic has continuously maintained active FIPS 140-2 certifications for two decades, demonstrating an unwavering commitment to evolving security requirements.
- 2026 — FIPS 140-3: With Certificates #5204 and #5214, WinMagic ensures its products remain at the absolute forefront of modern cryptography and compliance, providing continuous validation across all three generations of the FIPS standard.
Why This Validation Matters Differently in the Era of Endpoint Identity
For much of its history, the FIPS standard addressed a specific question: is the cryptography protecting data at rest mathematically sound and correctly implemented? While that core question remains, the advent of passkeys, hardware-bound credentials, and continuous endpoint attestation has dramatically broadened the implications of that answer.
In a world where endpoints generate identity-bearing keys within a Trusted Platform Module (TPM), assert user presence for remote services, and continuously attest to their own security posture, the cryptographic integrity of the endpoint is no longer merely incidental to identity—it *is* identity. An endpoint incapable of proving boot integrity, safeguarding its key material, or maintaining a verified state is fundamentally unqualified to authenticate anything. FIPS 140-3, particularly when coupled with TPM 2.0 and continuous attestation, reveals the underlying architecture of an “endpoint as a trust anchor.”
Thi Nguyen-Huu, Founder & CEO of WinMagic, emphasized this paradigm shift: “We’ve held FIPS validation continuously since 2002 because cryptographic rigor is an engineering discipline, not a marketing claim. The discipline mattered for data at rest. It matters more now. Passkeys, Live Key, and every hardware-bound identity scheme rest on the same assumption: that the device generating the key, protecting the key, and asserting identity is cryptographically sound. As identity moves to the endpoint, that assumption stops being adjacent to compliance and starts being the whole game.”
Key Areas Where WinMagic’s FIPS 140-3 Validation Applies
This significant validation offers crucial advantages across a range of high-stakes environments:
- CMMC Level 2 Compliance: SecureDoc proudly meets NIST SP 800-171 IA.L2-3.13.11 and 3.13.16 requirements with FIPS 140-3 validation, ensuring organizations are ahead of the curve before the September 2026 transition moves FIPS 140-2 modules to the CMVP Historical List.
- Critical Infrastructure and OT Security: Aligning with CISA’s April 2026 guidance, which mandates hardware-anchored, continuously-attested identity for operational technology, WinMagic’s solution is vital for protecting critical infrastructure.
- Federal and Defense Procurement: Essential for fulfilling stringent DOD, DOE, and federal agency requirements where FIPS 140-3 is now the current and mandated standard.
- International Deployments: The combination of Common Criteria and FIPS validation effectively addresses the complex cryptographic certification requirements of European governments and sovereignty-aligned procurements.
- Endpoint-Centric Identity Architectures: Providing the cryptographic bedrock for modern identity schemes like passkeys, Live Key, and TPM-bound credentials, ensuring the fundamental soundness of endpoint security.
Beyond Certification: Actively Shaping Standards for Future Identity Architectures
WinMagic’s commitment to security extends far beyond product certification. The company is actively engaged with leading standards bodies, playing a pivotal role in shaping the identity architecture of the next decade:
- W3C Engagement: Contributing submissions to the WebAuthn and WebAppSec working groups in March 2026, influencing the future of web authentication.
- IETF Contributions: Publishing the Internet-Draft draft-winmagic-lit-00 on March 5, 2026, contributing to internet engineering standards.
- DIF Participation: Submitting to the Decentralized Identity Foundation on March 25, 2026, helping to advance decentralized identity solutions.
- Open-Source Leadership: Maintaining an open-source reference implementation at github.com/WinMagic/LIT, fostering transparency and collaborative development.
“What mTLS, TPM, and passkeys started, the standards work completes — embedding identity in the secure channel itself, so there is no token to steal and no session to hijack,” reiterated Thi Nguyen-Huu, underscoring WinMagic’s vision for a more inherently secure digital future.

