I see your point too, and we're looking forward to a world in which low-power (to enable NFC) open source chips with security features exist. For instance, https://tropicsquare.com is a project that is working towards that.
For now, what we mean by open source hardware is on the one hand that all components are freely available (without NDAs, which nearly all secure elements entail), and on the other that the schematic of the device is open source and passes OSHWA Certification (the CERN license https://ohwr.org/project/cernohl/wikis/Documents/CERN-OHL-ve... is relevant here). This means that you can in principle build a device yourself. The certification will be done post-campaign (we want to avoid copycat products appearing before ours is available in the open market). Like we did with our three previous keys (e.g., https://certification.oshwa.org/us000155.html and https://github.com/solokeys/solo-hw).
For now, what we mean by open source hardware is on the one hand that all components are freely available (without NDAs, which nearly all secure elements entail), and on the other that the schematic of the device is open source and passes OSHWA Certification (the CERN license https://ohwr.org/project/cernohl/wikis/Documents/CERN-OHL-ve... is relevant here). This means that you can in principle build a device yourself. The certification will be done post-campaign (we want to avoid copycat products appearing before ours is available in the open market). Like we did with our three previous keys (e.g., https://certification.oshwa.org/us000155.html and https://github.com/solokeys/solo-hw).