329 research outputs found
Security for 5G Mobile Wireless Networks
The advanced features of 5G mobile wireless network systems yield new security requirements and challenges. This paper presents a comprehensive survey on security of 5G wireless network systems compared to the traditional cellular networks. The paper starts with a review on 5G wireless networks particularities as well as on the new requirements and motivations of 5G wireless security. The potential attacks and security services with the consideration of new service requirements and new use cases in 5G wireless networks are then summarized. The recent development and the existing schemes for the 5G wireless security are presented based on the corresponding security services including authentication, availability, data confidentiality, key management and privacy. The paper further discusses the new security features involving different technologies applied to 5G such as heterogeneous networks, device-to-device communications, massive multiple-input multiple-output, software defined networks and Internet of Things. Motivated by these security research and development activities, we propose a new 5G wireless security architecture, based on which the analysis of identity management and flexible authentication is provided. As a case study, we explore a handover procedure as well as a signaling load scheme to show the advantage of the proposed security architecture. The challenges and future directions of 5G wireless security are finally summarized
A Survey on the Security and the Evolution of Osmotic and Catalytic Computing for 5G Networks
The 5G networks have the capability to provide high compatibility for the new
applications, industries, and business models. These networks can tremendously
improve the quality of life by enabling various use cases that require high
data-rate, low latency, and continuous connectivity for applications pertaining
to eHealth, automatic vehicles, smart cities, smart grid, and the Internet of
Things (IoT). However, these applications need secure servicing as well as
resource policing for effective network formations. There have been a lot of
studies, which emphasized the security aspects of 5G networks while focusing
only on the adaptability features of these networks. However, there is a gap in
the literature which particularly needs to follow recent computing paradigms as
alternative mechanisms for the enhancement of security. To cover this, a
detailed description of the security for the 5G networks is presented in this
article along with the discussions on the evolution of osmotic and catalytic
computing-based security modules. The taxonomy on the basis of security
requirements is presented, which also includes the comparison of the existing
state-of-the-art solutions. This article also provides a security model,
"CATMOSIS", which idealizes the incorporation of security features on the basis
of catalytic and osmotic computing in the 5G networks. Finally, various
security challenges and open issues are discussed to emphasize the works to
follow in this direction of research.Comment: 34 pages, 7 tables, 7 figures, Published In 5G Enabled Secure
Wireless Networks, pp. 69-102. Springer, Cham, 201
Fog based Secure Framework for Personal Health Records Systems
The rapid development of personal health records (PHR) systems enables an
individual to collect, create, store and share his PHR to authorized entities.
Health care systems within the smart city environment require a patient to
share his PRH data with a multitude of institutions' repositories located in
the cloud. The cloud computing paradigm cannot meet such a massive
transformative healthcare systems due to drawbacks including network latency,
scalability and bandwidth. Fog computing relieves the burden of conventional
cloud computing by availing intermediate fog nodes between the end users and
the remote servers. Aiming at a massive demand of PHR data within a ubiquitous
smart city, we propose a secure and fog assisted framework for PHR systems to
address security, access control and privacy concerns. Built under a fog-based
architecture, the proposed framework makes use of efficient key exchange
protocol coupled with ciphertext attribute based encryption (CP-ABE) to
guarantee confidentiality and fine-grained access control within the system
respectively. We also make use of digital signature combined with CP-ABE to
ensure the system authentication and users privacy. We provide the analysis of
the proposed framework in terms of security and performance.Comment: 12 pages (CMC Journal, Tech Science Press
Using Aerial and Vehicular NFV Infrastructures to Agilely Create Vertical Services
5G communications have become an enabler for the creation of new and more complex networking scenarios, bringing together different vertical ecosystems. Such behavior has been fostered by the network function virtualization (NFV) concept, where the orchestration and virtualization capabilities allow the possibility of dynamically supplying network resources according to its needs. Nevertheless, the integration and performance of heterogeneous network environments, each one supported by a different provider, and with specific characteristics and requirements, in a single NFV framework is not straightforward. In this work we propose an NFV-based framework capable of supporting the flexible, cost-effective deployment of vertical services, through the integration of two distinguished mobile environments and their networks: small sized unmanned aerial vehicles (SUAVs), supporting a flying ad hoc network (FANET) and vehicles, promoting a vehicular ad hoc network (VANET). In this context, a use case involving the public safety vertical will be used as an illustrative example to showcase the potential of this framework. This work also includes the technical implementation details of the framework proposed, allowing to analyse and discuss the delays on the network services deployment process. The results show that the deployment times can be significantly reduced through a distributed VNF configuration function based on the publish&-subscribe model.This article has been partially supported by the European H2020 5GinFIRE project (grant agreement 732497). The work of the Universidad Carlos III team members was partially supported by the European H2020 LABYRINTH project (grant agreement H2020-MG-2019-TwoStages-861696), and by the TRUE5G project (PID2019-108713RB-C52PID2019-108713RB-C52/AEI/10.13039/501100011033) funded by the Spanish National Research Agency; and the work of the Instituto de Telecomunicações team members, by the Competitiveness and Internationalization Operational Programme (COMPETE 2020) of the Portugal 2020 framework Mobilizer Project 5G with Nr. 024539 (POCI-01-0247-FEDER-024539)
Service Provisioning in Edge-Cloud Continuum Emerging Applications for Mobile Devices
Disruptive applications for mobile devices can be enhanced by Edge computing facilities. In this context, Edge Computing (EC) is a proposed architecture to meet the mobility requirements imposed by these applications in a wide range of domains, such as the Internet of Things, Immersive Media, and Connected and Autonomous Vehicles. EC architecture aims to introduce computing capabilities in the path between the user and the Cloud to execute tasks closer to where they are consumed, thus mitigating issues related to latency, context awareness, and mobility support. In this survey, we describe which are the leading technologies to support the deployment of EC infrastructure. Thereafter, we discuss the applications that can take advantage of EC and how they were proposed in the literature. Finally, after examining enabling technologies and related applications, we identify some open challenges to fully achieve the potential of EC, and also research opportunities on upcoming paradigms for service provisioning. This survey is a guide to comprehend the recent advances on the provisioning of mobile applications, as well as foresee the expected next stages of evolution for these applications
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