27,360 research outputs found
MobilitApp: Analysing mobility data of citizens in the metropolitan area of Barcelona
MobilitApp is a platform designed to provide smart mobility services in urban
areas. It is designed to help citizens and transport authorities alike.
Citizens will be able to access the MobilitApp mobile application and decide
their optimal transportation strategy by visualising their usual routes, their
carbon footprint, receiving tips, analytics and general mobility information,
such as traffic and incident alerts. Transport authorities and service
providers will be able to access information about the mobility pattern of
citizens to o er their best services, improve costs and planning. The
MobilitApp client runs on Android devices and records synchronously, while
running in the background, periodic location updates from its users. The
information obtained is processed and analysed to understand the mobility
patterns of our users in the city of Barcelona, Spain
Security Implications of Fog Computing on the Internet of Things
Recently, the use of IoT devices and sensors has been rapidly increased which
also caused data generation (information and logs), bandwidth usage, and
related phenomena to be increased. To our best knowledge, a standard definition
for the integration of fog computing with IoT is emerging now. This integration
will bring many opportunities for the researchers, especially while building
cyber-security related solutions. In this study, we surveyed about the
integration of fog computing with IoT and its implications. Our goal was to
find out and emphasize problems, specifically security related problems that
arise with the employment of fog computing by IoT. According to our findings,
although this integration seems to be non-trivial and complicated, it has more
benefits than the implications.Comment: 5 pages, conference paper, to appear in Proceedings of the ICCE 2019,
IEEE 37th International Conference on Consumer Electronics (ICCE), Jan 11-
13, 2019, Las Vegas, NV, US
IoT Sentinel: Automated Device-Type Identification for Security Enforcement in IoT
With the rapid growth of the Internet-of-Things (IoT), concerns about the
security of IoT devices have become prominent. Several vendors are producing
IP-connected devices for home and small office networks that often suffer from
flawed security designs and implementations. They also tend to lack mechanisms
for firmware updates or patches that can help eliminate security
vulnerabilities. Securing networks where the presence of such vulnerable
devices is given, requires a brownfield approach: applying necessary protection
measures within the network so that potentially vulnerable devices can coexist
without endangering the security of other devices in the same network. In this
paper, we present IOT SENTINEL, a system capable of automatically identifying
the types of devices being connected to an IoT network and enabling enforcement
of rules for constraining the communications of vulnerable devices so as to
minimize damage resulting from their compromise. We show that IOT SENTINEL is
effective in identifying device types and has minimal performance overhead
Towards a Practical Pedestrian Distraction Detection Framework using Wearables
Pedestrian safety continues to be a significant concern in urban communities
and pedestrian distraction is emerging as one of the main causes of grave and
fatal accidents involving pedestrians. The advent of sophisticated mobile and
wearable devices, equipped with high-precision on-board sensors capable of
measuring fine-grained user movements and context, provides a tremendous
opportunity for designing effective pedestrian safety systems and applications.
Accurate and efficient recognition of pedestrian distractions in real-time
given the memory, computation and communication limitations of these devices,
however, remains the key technical challenge in the design of such systems.
Earlier research efforts in pedestrian distraction detection using data
available from mobile and wearable devices have primarily focused only on
achieving high detection accuracy, resulting in designs that are either
resource intensive and unsuitable for implementation on mainstream mobile
devices, or computationally slow and not useful for real-time pedestrian safety
applications, or require specialized hardware and less likely to be adopted by
most users. In the quest for a pedestrian safety system that achieves a
favorable balance between computational efficiency, detection accuracy, and
energy consumption, this paper makes the following main contributions: (i)
design of a novel complex activity recognition framework which employs motion
data available from users' mobile and wearable devices and a lightweight
frequency matching approach to accurately and efficiently recognize complex
distraction related activities, and (ii) a comprehensive comparative evaluation
of the proposed framework with well-known complex activity recognition
techniques in the literature with the help of data collected from human subject
pedestrians and prototype implementations on commercially-available mobile and
wearable devices
Thirty Years of Machine Learning: The Road to Pareto-Optimal Wireless Networks
Future wireless networks have a substantial potential in terms of supporting
a broad range of complex compelling applications both in military and civilian
fields, where the users are able to enjoy high-rate, low-latency, low-cost and
reliable information services. Achieving this ambitious goal requires new radio
techniques for adaptive learning and intelligent decision making because of the
complex heterogeneous nature of the network structures and wireless services.
Machine learning (ML) algorithms have great success in supporting big data
analytics, efficient parameter estimation and interactive decision making.
Hence, in this article, we review the thirty-year history of ML by elaborating
on supervised learning, unsupervised learning, reinforcement learning and deep
learning. Furthermore, we investigate their employment in the compelling
applications of wireless networks, including heterogeneous networks (HetNets),
cognitive radios (CR), Internet of things (IoT), machine to machine networks
(M2M), and so on. This article aims for assisting the readers in clarifying the
motivation and methodology of the various ML algorithms, so as to invoke them
for hitherto unexplored services as well as scenarios of future wireless
networks.Comment: 46 pages, 22 fig
An Energy Aware and Secure MAC Protocol for Tackling Denial of Sleep Attacks in Wireless Sensor Networks
Wireless sensor networks which form part of the core for the Internet of Things consist of resource constrained sensors that are usually powered by batteries. Therefore, careful
energy awareness is essential when working with these devices.
Indeed,the introduction of security techniques such as authentication and encryption, to ensure confidentiality and integrity of data, can place higher energy load on the sensors. However, the absence of security protection c ould give room for energy drain attacks such as denial of sleep attacks which have a higher negative impact on the life span ( of the sensors than the presence of security features.
This thesis, therefore, focuses on tackling denial of sleep attacks from two perspectives A security perspective and an energy efficiency perspective. The security perspective involves evaluating and ranking a number of security based techniques to curbing denial of sleep attacks. The energy efficiency perspective, on the other hand, involves exploring duty cycling and simulating three Media Access Control ( protocols Sensor MAC, Timeout MAC andTunableMAC under different network sizes and measuring different parameters such as the Received Signal Strength RSSI) and Link Quality Indicator ( Transmit power, throughput and energy efficiency Duty cycling happens to be one of the major techniques for conserving energy in wireless sensor networks and this research aims to answer questions with regards to the effect of duty cycles on the energy efficiency as well as the throughput of three duty cycle protocols Sensor MAC ( Timeout MAC ( and TunableMAC in addition to creating a novel MAC protocol that is also more resilient to denial of sleep a ttacks than existing protocols.
The main contributions to knowledge from this thesis are the developed framework used for evaluation of existing denial of sleep attack solutions and the algorithms which fuel the other contribution to knowledge a newly developed protocol tested on the Castalia Simulator on the OMNET++ platform. The new protocol has been compared with existing protocols and
has been found to have significant improvement in energy efficiency and also better resilience to denial of sleep at tacks Part of this research has been published Two conference
publications in IEEE Explore and one workshop paper
Network traffic analysis for threats detection in the Internet of Things
As the prevalence of the Internet of Things (IoT) continues to increase, cyber criminals are quick to exploit the security gaps that many devices are inherently designed with. Users cannot be expected to tackle this threat alone, and many current solutions available for network monitoring are simply not accessible or can be difficult to implement for the average user, which is a gap that needs to be addressed. This article presents an effective signature-based solution to monitor, analyze, and detect potentially malicious traffic for IoT ecosystems in the typical home network environment by utilizing passive network sniffing techniques and a cloud application to monitor anomalous activity. The proposed solution focuses on two attack and propagation vectors leveraged by the infamous Mirai botnet, namely DNS and Telnet. Experimental evaluation demonstrates the proposed solution can detect 98.35 percent of malicious DNS traffic and 99.33 percent of Telnet traffic for an overall detection accuracy of 98.84 percent
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