129 research outputs found

    Primary User Emulation Attacks: A Detection Technique Based on Kalman Filter

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    Cognitive radio technology addresses the problem of spectrum scarcity by allowing secondary users to use the vacant spectrum bands without causing interference to the primary users. However, several attacks could disturb the normal functioning of the cognitive radio network. Primary user emulation attacks are one of the most severe attacks in which a malicious user emulates the primary user signal characteristics to either prevent other legitimate secondary users from accessing the idle channels or causing harmful interference to the primary users. There are several proposed approaches to detect the primary user emulation attackers. However, most of these techniques assume that the primary user location is fixed, which does not make them valid when the primary user is mobile. In this paper, we propose a new approach based on the Kalman filter framework for detecting the primary user emulation attacks with a non-stationary primary user. Several experiments have been conducted and the advantages of the proposed approach are demonstrated through the simulation results.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure

    Selfish Attack Detection in Cognitive Ad-Hoc Network

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    The wireless technologies have penetrated everyone’s life in various ways in the recent past. So due to increase in the demand for the bandwidth in spectrum, as all the bandwidth allocation done is in static manner so there is scarcity of bandwidth in spectrum. So no bandwidth is left to allocate for new technology Cognitive Radio (CR) is a promising technology that can alleviate the spectrum shortage problem by enabling unlicensed users equipped with CRs to coexist with existing users in licensed spectrum bands while causing no interference to existing communications. Spectrum sensing is one of the essential mechanisms of CRs and its operational aspects are being investigated actively. However, little research has been done regarding security in cognitive radio, while much more research has been done on spectrum sensing and allocation problems. A selfish cognitive radio node can occupy all or part of the resources of multiple channels, prohibiting other cognitive radio nodes from accessing these resources. Selfish cognitive radio attacks are a serious security problem because they significantly degrade the performance of a cognitive radio networ

    Transfer Learning for Device Fingerprinting with Application to Cognitive Radio Networks

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    Primary user emulation (PUE) attacks are an emerging threat to cognitive radio (CR) networks in which malicious users imitate the primary users (PUs) signals to limit the access of secondary users (SUs). Ascertaining the identity of the devices is a key technical challenge that must be overcome to thwart the threat of PUE attacks. Typically, detection of PUE attacks is done by inspecting the signals coming from all the devices in the system, and then using these signals to form unique fingerprints for each device. Current detection and fingerprinting approaches require certain conditions to hold in order to effectively detect attackers. Such conditions include the need for a sufficient amount of fingerprint data for users or the existence of both the attacker and the victim PU within the same time frame. These conditions are necessary because current methods lack the ability to learn the behavior of both SUs and PUs with time. In this paper, a novel transfer learning (TL) approach is proposed, in which abstract knowledge about PUs and SUs is transferred from past time frames to improve the detection process at future time frames. The proposed approach extracts a high level representation for the environment at every time frame. This high level information is accumulated to form an abstract knowledge database. The CR system then utilizes this database to accurately detect PUE attacks even if an insufficient amount of fingerprint data is available at the current time frame. The dynamic structure of the proposed approach uses the final detection decisions to update the abstract knowledge database for future runs. Simulation results show that the proposed method can improve the performance with an average of 3.5% for only 10% relevant information between the past knowledge and the current environment signals.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, in Proceedings of IEEE 26th International Symposium on Personal, Indoor and Mobile Radio Communications (PIMRC), Hong Kong, P.R. China, Aug. 201

    Location Aided Cooperative Detection of Primary User Emulation Attacks in Cognitive Wireless Sensor Networks Using Nonparametric Techniques

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    Primary user emulation (PUE) attacks are a major security challenge to cognitive wireless sensor networks (CWSNs). In this paper, we propose two variants of the PUE attack, namely, the relay and replay attacks. Such threats are conducted by malicious nodes that replicate the transmissions of a real primary user (PU), thus making them resilient to many defensive procedures. However, we show that those PUE attacks can be effectively detected by a set of cooperating secondary users (SUs), using location information and received signal strength (RSS) measurements. Two strategies for the detection of PUE relay and replay attacks are presented in the paper: parametric and nonparametric. The parametric scheme is based on the likelihood ratio test (LRT) and requires the existence of a precise path loss model for the observed RSS values. On the contrary, the nonparametric procedure is not tied to any particular propagation model; so, it does not require any calibration process and is robust to changing environmental conditions. Simulations show that the nonparametric detection approach is comparable in performance to the LRT under moderate shadowing conditions, specially in case of replay attacks

    Byzantine Attack and Defense in Cognitive Radio Networks: A Survey

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    The Byzantine attack in cooperative spectrum sensing (CSS), also known as the spectrum sensing data falsification (SSDF) attack in the literature, is one of the key adversaries to the success of cognitive radio networks (CRNs). In the past couple of years, the research on the Byzantine attack and defense strategies has gained worldwide increasing attention. In this paper, we provide a comprehensive survey and tutorial on the recent advances in the Byzantine attack and defense for CSS in CRNs. Specifically, we first briefly present the preliminaries of CSS for general readers, including signal detection techniques, hypothesis testing, and data fusion. Second, we analyze the spear and shield relation between Byzantine attack and defense from three aspects: the vulnerability of CSS to attack, the obstacles in CSS to defense, and the games between attack and defense. Then, we propose a taxonomy of the existing Byzantine attack behaviors and elaborate on the corresponding attack parameters, which determine where, who, how, and when to launch attacks. Next, from the perspectives of homogeneous or heterogeneous scenarios, we classify the existing defense algorithms, and provide an in-depth tutorial on the state-of-the-art Byzantine defense schemes, commonly known as robust or secure CSS in the literature. Furthermore, we highlight the unsolved research challenges and depict the future research directions.Comment: Accepted by IEEE Communications Surveys and Tutoiral

    PRIMARY USER AUTHENTICATION IN COGNITIVE RADIO NETWORKS: A SURVEY

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    ABSTRACT: For effective usage of radio frequency spectrum, cognitive radio networks have been proposed, allowing the secondary users to occupy the spectrum whenever the primary user is not using it. To avoid interference with the primary user secondary user should constantly check the usage of the spectrum. But achieving a faithful monitoring is not so easy. Hence Primary user Emulation (PUE) attack comes into existence. To counter this attack primary user's signal can be authenticated in the physical layer itself. In this paper, we provide various approaches (dealt in different papers) for authenticating primary users' signals that conforms FCC's requirement

    Spectrum sharing security and attacks in CRNs: a review

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    Cognitive Radio plays a major part in communication technology by resolving the shortage of the spectrum through usage of dynamic spectrum access and artificial intelligence characteristics. The element of spectrum sharing in cognitive radio is a fundament al approach in utilising free channels. Cooperatively communicating cognitive radio devices use the common control channel of the cognitive radio medium access control to achieve spectrum sharing. Thus, the common control channel and consequently spectrum sharing security are vital to ensuring security in the subsequent data communication among cognitive radio nodes. In addition to well known security problems in wireless networks, cognitive radio networks introduce new classes of security threats and challenges, such as licensed user emulation attacks in spectrum sensing and misbehaviours in the common control channel transactions, which degrade the overall network operation and performance. This review paper briefly presents the known threats and attacks in wireless networks before it looks into the concept of cognitive radio and its main functionality. The paper then mainly focuses on spectrum sharing security and its related challenges. Since spectrum sharing is enabled through usage of the common control channel, more attention is paid to the security of the common control channel by looking into its security threats as well as protection and detection mechanisms. Finally, the pros and cons as well as the comparisons of different CR - specific security mechanisms are presented with some open research issues and challenges

    A Survey on the Communication Protocols and Security in Cognitive Radio Networks

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    A cognitive radio (CR) is a radio that can change its transmission parameters based on the perceived availability of the spectrum bands in its operating environment. CRs support dynamic spectrum access and can facilitate a secondary unlicensed user to efficiently utilize the available underutilized spectrum allocated to the primary licensed users. A cognitive radio network (CRN) is composed of both the secondary users with CR-enabled radios and the primary users whose radios need not be CR-enabled. Most of the active research conducted in the area of CRNs has been so far focused on spectrum sensing, allocation and sharing. There is no comprehensive review paper available on the strategies for medium access control (MAC), routing and transport layer protocols, and the appropriate representative solutions for CRNs. In this paper, we provide an exhaustive analysis of the various techniques/mechanisms that have been proposed in the literature for communication protocols (at the MAC, routing and transport layers), in the context of a CRN, as well as discuss in detail several security attacks that could be launched on CRNs and the countermeasure solutions that have been proposed to avoid or mitigate them. This paper would serve as a good comprehensive review and analysis of the strategies for MAC, routing and transport protocols and security issues for CRNs as well as would lay a strong foundation for someone to further delve onto any particular aspect in greater depth
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