Digital instrumentation and control (I&C) qualification continues to be a major impediment to addressing the reliability and obsolescence issues of the legacy analog I&C systems of the operating light water reactor (LWR) fleet. In particular, the issue of digital common cause failure (CCF) has been difficult to address and has been the reason some nuclear plant operators have deferred upgrades of these critical plant systems, opting rather to maintain them with costly engineering and maintenance efforts. This has now become far more difficult in the face of declining analog technology suppliers and dwindling availability of spare parts and technical support for critical plant components. At the same time, the nuclear fleet must now reduce its operating costs to remain competitive in a market of low cost gas generation and heavily-subsidized renewables. Digital technology's inherent capabilities of integration, interconnectivity, and standardization offer the foremost means of implementing performance improvements and cost reductions for this purpose. This has been demonstrated over and over again in other industry sectors, as well as in conventional electric generation facilities. However, these digital technologies present certain I&C qualification barriers that must be addressed to enable full deployment where cost-beneficial. This report presents an assessment of digital I&C qualification issues and addresses gaps in qualification methods and processes that would potentially benefit from Department of Energy (DOE) sponsored research and development. Two new qualification methods are described that are recommended for further investigation. They are 1) Testability-the exhaustive (100%) testing of certain digital devices accounting for all combinations of inputs and internal states to ensure there are no digital defects, and 2) Elimination of CCF triggers-ensuring that any latent digital defects are not concurrently triggered in multiple digital functions that are assumed to be independent (e.g., redundant safety systems).