Internship – Security Research & GPU Development (Fault Injection)
Keysight Technologies · Delft, Netherlands · General
About this role
Keysight Technologies is hiring a intern-level AI Infrastructure Engineer in the machine learning function based in Delft, Netherlands. The posting calls out experience with CUDA, Data Structures, A/B Testing, Encryption. Listed education preference: a bachelor's degree or equivalent.
- Role
- AI Infrastructure Engineer
- Function
- machine learning
- Level
- intern
- Track
- Individual contributor
- Employment
- Internship
- Location
- Delft, Netherlands
- Work mode
- On-site
- Education
- Bachelor's degree
- Department
- General
- Posted
- Feb 2, 2026
More roles at Keysight Technologies
Job description
from Keysight Technologies careersKeysight is on the forefront of technology innovation, delivering breakthroughs and trusted insights in electronic design, simulation, prototyping, test, manufacturing, and optimization. Our ~15,000 employees create world-class solutions in communications, 5G, automotive, energy, quantum, aerospace, defense, and semiconductor markets for customers in over 100 countries. Learn more about what we do.
Our award-winning culture embraces a bold vision of where technology can take us and a passion for tackling challenging problems with industry-first solutions. We believe that when people feel a sense of belonging, they can be more creative, innovative, and thrive at all points in their careers.
We are offering a research-driven security internship for students who enjoy solving complex technical problems and want to gain hands-on experience in cryptography, high-performance computing, and hardware security.
During this internship, you will work closely with experienced researchers and engineers on real security research topics, combining theoretical foundations with practical experimentation and development. The focus is on understanding how cryptographic implementations behave under stress — and how they can be improved.
On a day-to-day basis, you will write code, run experiments, discuss ideas with your mentor, and turn technical findings into clear results. You don’t need to be an expert in everything on day one — strong fundamentals, curiosity, and motivation to learn matter most.