334 research outputs found
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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
Energy efficient cooperative computing in mobile wireless sensor networks
Advances in future computing to support emerging sensor applications are becoming more important as the need to better utilize computation and communication resources and make them energy efficient. As a result, it is predicted that intelligent devices and networks, including mobile wireless sensor networks (MWSN), will become the new interfaces to support future applications. In this paper, we propose a novel approach to minimize energy consumption of processing an application in MWSN while satisfying a certain completion time requirement. Specifically, by introducing the concept of cooperation, the logics and related computation tasks can be optimally partitioned, offloaded and executed with the help of peer sensor nodes, thus the proposed solution can be treated as a joint optimization of computing and networking resources. Moreover, for a network with multiple mobile wireless sensor nodes, we propose energy efficient cooperation node selection strategies to offer a tradeoff between fairness and energy consumption. Our performance analysis is supplemented by simulation results to show the significant energy saving of the proposed solution
A Survey on Consensus Mechanisms and Mining Strategy Management in Blockchain Networks
© 2013 IEEE. The past decade has witnessed the rapid evolution in blockchain technologies, which has attracted tremendous interests from both the research communities and industries. The blockchain network was originated from the Internet financial sector as a decentralized, immutable ledger system for transactional data ordering. Nowadays, it is envisioned as a powerful backbone/framework for decentralized data processing and data-driven self-organization in flat, open-access networks. In particular, the plausible characteristics of decentralization, immutability, and self-organization are primarily owing to the unique decentralized consensus mechanisms introduced by blockchain networks. This survey is motivated by the lack of a comprehensive literature review on the development of decentralized consensus mechanisms in blockchain networks. In this paper, we provide a systematic vision of the organization of blockchain networks. By emphasizing the unique characteristics of decentralized consensus in blockchain networks, our in-depth review of the state-of-the-art consensus protocols is focused on both the perspective of distributed consensus system design and the perspective of incentive mechanism design. From a game-theoretic point of view, we also provide a thorough review of the strategy adopted for self-organization by the individual nodes in the blockchain backbone networks. Consequently, we provide a comprehensive survey of the emerging applications of blockchain networks in a broad area of telecommunication. We highlight our special interest in how the consensus mechanisms impact these applications. Finally, we discuss several open issues in the protocol design for blockchain consensus and the related potential research directions
A survey on intelligent computation offloading and pricing strategy in UAV-Enabled MEC network: Challenges and research directions
The lack of resource constraints for edge servers makes it difficult to simultaneously perform a large number of Mobile Devices’ (MDs) requests. The Mobile Network Operator (MNO) must then select how to delegate MD queries to its Mobile Edge Computing (MEC) server in order to maximize the overall benefit of admitted requests with varying latency needs. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) and Artificial Intelligent (AI) can increase MNO performance because of their flexibility in deployment, high mobility of UAV, and efficiency of AI algorithms. There is a trade-off between the cost incurred by the MD and the profit received by the MNO. Intelligent computing offloading to UAV-enabled MEC, on the other hand, is a promising way to bridge the gap between MDs' limited processing resources, as well as the intelligent algorithms that are utilized for computation offloading in the UAV-MEC network and the high computing demands of upcoming applications. This study looks at some of the research on the benefits of computation offloading process in the UAV-MEC network, as well as the intelligent models that are utilized for computation offloading in the UAV-MEC network. In addition, this article examines several intelligent pricing techniques in different structures in the UAV-MEC network. Finally, this work highlights some important open research issues and future research directions of Artificial Intelligent (AI) in computation offloading and applying intelligent pricing strategies in the UAV-MEC network
On the Integration of Blockchain and SDN: Overview, Applications, and Future Perspectives
Blockchain (BC) and software-defined networking (SDN) are leading technologies which have recently found applications in several network-related scenarios and have consequently experienced a growing interest in the research community. Indeed, current networks connect a massive number of objects over the Internet and in this complex scenario, to ensure security, privacy, confidentiality, and programmability, the utilization of BC and SDN have been successfully proposed. In this work, we provide a comprehensive survey regarding these two recent research trends and review the related state-of-the-art literature. We first describe the main features of each technology and discuss their most common and used variants. Furthermore, we envision the integration of such technologies to jointly take advantage of these latter efficiently. Indeed, we consider their group-wise utilization—named BC–SDN—based on the need for stronger security and privacy. Additionally, we cover the application fields of these technologies both individually and combined. Finally, we discuss the open issues of reviewed research and describe potential directions for future avenues regarding the integration of BC and SDN. To summarize, the contribution of the present survey spans from an overview of the literature background on BC and SDN to the discussion of the benefits and limitations of BC–SDN integration in different fields, which also raises open challenges and possible future avenues examined herein. To the best of our knowledge, compared to existing surveys, this is the first work that analyzes the aforementioned aspects in light of a broad BC–SDN integration, with a specific focus on security and privacy issues in actual utilization scenarios
On the Integration of Blockchain and SDN: Overview, Applications, and Future Perspectives
Blockchain (BC) and Software-Defined Networking (SDN) are leading
technologies which have recently found applications in several network-related
scenarios and have consequently experienced a growing interest in the research
community. Indeed, current networks connect a massive number of objects over
the Internet and in this complex scenario, to ensure security, privacy,
confidentiality, and programmability, the utilization of BC and SDN have been
successfully proposed. In this work, we provide a comprehensive survey
regarding these two recent research trends and review the related
state-of-the-art literature. We first describe the main features of each
technology and discuss their most common and used variants. Furthermore, we
envision the integration of such technologies to jointly take advantage of
these latter efficiently. Indeed, we consider their group-wise utilization --
named BC-SDN -- based on the need for stronger security and privacy.
Additionally, we cover the application fields of these technologies both
individually and combined. Finally, we discuss the open issues of reviewed
research and describe potential directions for future avenues regarding the
integration of BC and SDN.
To summarize, the contribution of the present survey spans from an overview
of the literature background on BC and SDN to the discussion of the benefits
and limitations of BC-SDN integration in different fields, which also raises
open challenges and possible future avenues examined herein. To the best of our
knowledge, compared to existing surveys, this is the first work that analyzes
the aforementioned aspects in light of a broad BC-SDN integration, with a
specific focus on security and privacy issues in actual utilization scenarios.Comment: 42 pages, 14 figures, to be published in Journal of Network and
Systems Management - Special Issue on Blockchains and Distributed Ledgers in
Network and Service Managemen
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Multi-criteria decision support for energy-efficient IoT edge computing offloading
Computation offloading is one of the primary technological enablers of the Internet of Things (IoT), as it helps address individual devices’ resource restrictions (e.g. process- ing and memory). In the past, offloading would always utilise remote cloud infrastruc- tures, but the increasing size of IoT data traffic and the real-time response requirements of modern and future IoT applications have led to the adoption of the edge computing paradigm, where the data is processed at the edge of the network, closer to the IoT devices. The decision as to whether cloud or edge resources will be utilised is typically taken at the design stage, based on the type of the IoT device.
Yet, the conditions that determine the optimality of this decision, such as the arrival rate, nature and sizes of the tasks, and crucially the real-time conditions of the networks involved, keep changing. At the same time, the energy consumption of IoT devices is usually a key requirement, which is affected primarily by the time it takes to complete tasks, whether for the actual computation or for offloading them through the network.
This thesis presents a dynamic computation offloading mechanism, which improves the performance (i.e. in terms of response time) and energy consumption of IoT de- vices in a decentralised and autonomous manner. We initially propose the Multi-critEria DecIsion support meChanism for IoT offloading(MEDICI), which runs independently on an IoT device, enabling it to make offloading decisions dynamically, based on multiple criteria, such as the state of the IoT, edge or cloud devices and the conditions of the net- work connecting them. It provides mathematical models of the expected time and energy costs for the different options of offloading a task (i.e. to the edge or the cloud or the IoT device itself). To evaluate its effectiveness, we provide simulation results, by extending the EdgeCloudSim simulator, comparing it against previous families of approaches used in the literature. Our simulations on four different types of IoT applications show that allowing customisation and dynamic offloading decision support can improve drastically the response time of time-critical and small-size applications, such as IoT cyber intrusion detection, and the energy consumption not only of the individual IoT devices but also of the system as a whole.
Furthermore, we present an enhancement of our MEDICI mechanism, the ProbeLess Multi-critEria DecIsion support meChanism for IoT offloading (PL-MEDICI), which en- ables MEDICI to operate in real IoT environments without the need for probing or having pre-defined parameters in order to estimate or model the network conditions or the com- putation capabilities of the different devices involved. This is the first probeless dynamic and decentralised offloading decision support mechanism for IoT environments. The probeless property is achieved by combining lightweight statistical techniques with the concept of age of knowledge (AoK) to allow us to have accurate enough information to use for our estimations.
We provide experimental results performed in a real IoT testbed with three real IoT applications, showcasing that PL-MEDICI outperforms existing techniques in terms of both response time and energy consumption.
Finally, in order to further evaluate our PL-MEDICI mechanism, we formulate a mixed- integer linear program optimisation problem that provides the theoretical optimal cen- tralised solution to our problem. This is used to compare our PL-MEDICI against the theoretical optimum, given the same estimated input. Our results showed that our of- floading mechanism is close to the obtained optimal solution in terms of both the re- sponse time and energy consumptio
Security Enhancement of IoT and Fog Computing Via Blockchain Applications
Blockchain technology is now becoming highly appealing to the next generation because it is better tailored to the information age. Blockchain technologies can also be used in the Internet of Things (IoT) and fog computing. The development of IoT and Fog Computing technologies in different fields has resulted in a major improvement in distributed networks. Blockchain technology is now becoming highly appealing to the next generation because it is better tailored to the information age. Blockchain technologies can also be used in IoT and fog computing. The blockchain principle necessitates a transparent data storage mechanism for storing and exchanging data and transactions throughout the network. In this paper, first, we explained Blockchain, its architecture, and its security. Then we view Blockchain application in IoT security. Then we explained Fog computing, Generic Security Requirements for Fog Computing, and we also discuss Blockchain applications that enhance Fog Computing Security. Finally, we conduct a review of some recent literature on using Blockchain applications to improve the security of IoT and fog computing and a comparison of the methods proposed in the literature
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