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MobileTrust: Secure Knowledge Integration in VANETs
Vehicular Ad hoc NETworks (VANET) are becoming popular due to the emergence of the Internet of Things and ambient intelligence applications. In such networks, secure resource sharing functionality is accomplished by incorporating trust schemes. Current solutions adopt peer-to-peer technologies that can cover the large operational area. However, these systems fail to capture some inherent properties of VANETs, such as fast and ephemeral interaction, making robust trust evaluation of crowdsourcing challenging. In this article, we propose MobileTrust—a hybrid trust-based system for secure resource sharing in VANETs. The proposal is a breakthrough in centralized trust computing that utilizes cloud and upcoming 5G technologies to provide robust trust establishment with global scalability. The ad hoc communication is energy-efficient and protects the system against threats that are not countered by the current settings. To evaluate its performance and effectiveness, MobileTrust is modelled in the SUMO simulator and tested on the traffic features of the small-size German city of Eichstatt. Similar schemes are implemented in the same platform to provide a fair comparison. Moreover, MobileTrust is deployed on a typical embedded system platform and applied on a real smart car installation for monitoring traffic and road-state parameters of an urban application. The proposed system is developed under the EU-founded THREAT-ARREST project, to provide security, privacy, and trust in an intelligent and energy-aware transportation scenario, bringing closer the vision of sustainable circular economy
V2X Content Distribution Based on Batched Network Coding with Distributed Scheduling
Content distribution is an application in intelligent transportation system
to assist vehicles in acquiring information such as digital maps and
entertainment materials. In this paper, we consider content distribution from a
single roadside infrastructure unit to a group of vehicles passing by it. To
combat the short connection time and the lossy channel quality, the downloaded
contents need to be further shared among vehicles after the initial
broadcasting phase. To this end, we propose a joint infrastructure-to-vehicle
(I2V) and vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) communication scheme based on batched sparse
(BATS) coding to minimize the traffic overhead and reduce the total
transmission delay. In the I2V phase, the roadside unit (RSU) encodes the
original large-size file into a number of batches in a rateless manner, each
containing a fixed number of coded packets, and sequentially broadcasts them
during the I2V connection time. In the V2V phase, vehicles perform the network
coded cooperative sharing by re-encoding the received packets. We propose a
utility-based distributed algorithm to efficiently schedule the V2V cooperative
transmissions, hence reducing the transmission delay. A closed-form expression
for the expected rank distribution of the proposed content distribution scheme
is derived, which is used to design the optimal BATS code. The performance of
the proposed content distribution scheme is evaluated by extensive simulations
that consider multi-lane road and realistic vehicular traffic settings, and
shown to significantly outperform the existing content distribution protocols.Comment: 12 pages and 9 figure
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