5,031 research outputs found
Enhanced Position Verification for VANETs using Subjective Logic
The integrity of messages in vehicular ad-hoc networks has been extensively
studied by the research community, resulting in the IEEE~1609.2 standard, which
provides typical integrity guarantees. However, the correctness of message
contents is still one of the main challenges of applying dependable and secure
vehicular ad-hoc networks. One important use case is the validity of position
information contained in messages: position verification mechanisms have been
proposed in the literature to provide this functionality. A more general
approach to validate such information is by applying misbehavior detection
mechanisms. In this paper, we consider misbehavior detection by enhancing two
position verification mechanisms and fusing their results in a generalized
framework using subjective logic. We conduct extensive simulations using VEINS
to study the impact of traffic density, as well as several types of attackers
and fractions of attackers on our mechanisms. The obtained results show the
proposed framework can validate position information as effectively as existing
approaches in the literature, without tailoring the framework specifically for
this use case.Comment: 7 pages, 18 figures, corrected version of a paper submitted to 2016
IEEE 84th Vehicular Technology Conference (VTC2016-Fall): revised the way an
opinion is created with eART, and re-did the experiments (uploaded here as
correction in agreement with TPC Chairs
On the Security of the Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast Protocol
Automatic dependent surveillance-broadcast (ADS-B) is the communications
protocol currently being rolled out as part of next generation air
transportation systems. As the heart of modern air traffic control, it will
play an essential role in the protection of two billion passengers per year,
besides being crucial to many other interest groups in aviation. The inherent
lack of security measures in the ADS-B protocol has long been a topic in both
the aviation circles and in the academic community. Due to recently published
proof-of-concept attacks, the topic is becoming ever more pressing, especially
with the deadline for mandatory implementation in most airspaces fast
approaching.
This survey first summarizes the attacks and problems that have been reported
in relation to ADS-B security. Thereafter, it surveys both the theoretical and
practical efforts which have been previously conducted concerning these issues,
including possible countermeasures. In addition, the survey seeks to go beyond
the current state of the art and gives a detailed assessment of security
measures which have been developed more generally for related wireless networks
such as sensor networks and vehicular ad hoc networks, including a taxonomy of
all considered approaches.Comment: Survey, 22 Pages, 21 Figure
Secure Position-Based Routing for VANETs
Vehicular communication (VC) systems have the potential to improve road safety and driving comfort. Nevertheless, securing the operation is a prerequisite for deployment. So far, the security of VC applications has mostly drawn the attention of research efforts, while comprehensive solutions to protect the network operation have not been developed. In this paper, we address this problem: we provide a scheme that secures geographic position-based routing, which has been widely accepted as the appropriate one for VC. Moreover, we focus on the scheme currently chosen and evaluated in the Car2Car Communication Consortium (C2C-CC). We integrate security mechanisms to protect the position-based routing functionality and services (beaconing, multi-hop forwarding, and geo-location discovery), and enhance the network robustness. We propose defense mechanisms, relying both on cryptographic primitives, and plausibility checks mitigating false position injection. Our implementation and initial measurements show that the security overhead is low and the proposed scheme deployable
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