1,011 research outputs found

    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

    Emulación de usuario primario en la red de radio cognitiva móvil: estudio

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    For emerging networks such as the mobile cognitive radio network, it is essential to study their possible attacks and thus generate detection strategies. Generally attacks are focused on only one layer of the OSI model, they have been studied for each layer from the physical level to the application level and have focused on fixed secondary users. In cognitive radio networks, the primary user emulation (PUE) is the most studied attack since it affects the entire cognitive cycle from the physical layer to the upper layers. This paper defines types of PUE attack and countermeasures, analyzing the effects on fixed and mobile secondary users and attackers.En el caso de las redes emergentes, como la red de radiocomunicaciones cognitivas móviles, es esencial estudiar sus posibles ataques y generar así estrategias de detección. Por lo general, los ataques se centran en una sola capa del modelo OSI, se han estudiado para cada capa desde el nivel físico hasta el nivel de aplicación y se han centrado en los usuarios secundarios fijos. En las redes de radiocomunicaciones cognitivas, la emulación de usuario primario (PUE) es el ataque más estudiado, ya que afecta a todo el ciclo cognitivo desde la capa física hasta las capas superiores. En este documento se definen los tipos de ataque PUE y las contramedidas, analizando los efectos en los usuarios secundarios fijos y móviles y en los atacantes

    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

    A SURVEY OF IMPLEMENTATION OF OPPORTUNISTIC SPECTRUM ACCESS ATTACK WITH ITS PREVENTIVE SENSING PROTOCOLS IN COGNITIVE RADIO NETWORKS

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    Recently, the expansive growth of wireless services, regulated by governmental agencies assigning spectrum to licensed users, has led to a shortage of radio spectrum. Since the FCC (Federal Communications Commissions) approved unlicensed users to access the unused channels of the reserved spectrum, new research areas seeped in, to develop Cognitive Radio Networks (CRN), in order to improve spectrum efficiency and to exploit this feature by enabling secondary users to gain from the spectrum in an opportunistic manner via optimally distributed traffic demands over the spectrum, so as to reduce the risk for monetary loss, from the unused channels. However, Cognitive Radio Networks become vulnerable to various classes of threats that decrease the bandwidth and spectrum usage efficiency. Hence, this survey deals with defining and demonstrating framework of one such attack called the Primary User Emulation Attack and suggests preventive Sensing Protocols to counteract the same. It presents a scenario of the attack and its prevention using Network Simulator-2 for the attack performances and gives an outlook on the various techniques defined to curb the anomaly

    Contributions to the security of cognitive radio networks

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    The increasing emergence of wireless applications along with the static spectrum allocation followed by regulatory bodies has led to a high inefficiency in spectrum usage, and the lack of spectrum for new services. In this context, Cognitive Radio (CR) technology has been proposed as a possible solution to reuse the spectrum being underutilized by licensed services. CRs are intelligent devices capable of sensing the medium and identifying those portions of the spectrum being unused. Based on their current perception of the environment and on that learned from past experiences, they can optimally tune themselves with regard to parameters such as frequency, coding and modulation, among others. Due to such properties, Cognitive Radio Networks (CRNs) can act as secondary users of the spectrum left unused by their legal owners or primary users, under the requirement of not interfering primary communications. The successful deployment of these networks relies on the proper design of mechanisms in order to efficiently detect spectrum holes, adapt to changing environment conditions and manage the available spectrum. Furthermore, the need for addressing security issues is evidenced by two facts. First, as for any other type of wireless network, the air is used as communications medium and can easily be accessed by attackers. On the other hand, the particular attributes of CRNs offer new opportunities to malicious users, ranging from providing wrong information on the radio environment to disrupting the cognitive mechanisms, which could severely undermine the operation of these networks. In this Ph.D thesis we have approached the challenge of securing Cognitive Radio Networks. Because CR technology is still evolving, to achieve this goal involves not only providing countermeasures for existing attacks but also to identify new potential threats and evaluate their impact on CRNs performance. The main contributions of this thesis can be summarized as follows. First, a critical study on the State of the Art in this area is presented. A qualitative analysis of those threats to CRNs already identified in the literature is provided, and the efficacy of existing countermeasures is discussed. Based on this work, a set of guidelines are designed in order to design a detection system for the main threats to CRNs. Besides, a high level description of the components of this system is provided, being it the second contribution of this thesis. The third contribution is the proposal of a new cross-layer attack to the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) in CRNs. An analytical model of the impact of this attack on the throughput of TCP connections is derived, and a set of countermeasures in order to detect and mitigate the effect of such attack are proposed. One of the main threats to CRNs is the Primary User Emulation (PUE) attack. This attack prevents CRNs from using available portions of the spectrum and can even lead to a Denial of Service (DoS). In the fourth contribution of this the method is proposed in order to deal with such attack. The method relies on a set of time measures provided by the members of the network and allows estimating the position of an emitter. This estimation is then used to determine the legitimacy of a given transmission and detect PUE attacks. Cooperative methods are prone to be disrupted by malicious nodes reporting false data. This problem is addressed, in the context of cooperative location, in the fifth and last contribution of this thesis. A method based on Least Median Squares (LMS) fitting is proposed in order to detect forged measures and make the location process robust to them. The efficiency and accuracy of the proposed methodologies are demonstrated by means of simulation

    Efficient Advanced Encryption Standard for Securing Cognitive Radio Networks

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    During the last decade, the CR (Cognitive Radio) came into view as a major wireless technology to resolve the issue of spectrum secrecy and efficient spectrum utilization. However, due to unlicensed (secondary) users, there are various security threats to the CRN (Cognitive Radio Networks). Some malicious users may access the CRN and mislead the secondary users to vacate the occupied channel, which may stop the communication. In this work, we propose a new cryptographic-based algorithm, CRAES (Cognitive Radio-Advanced Encryption Standard), inspired by the traditional AES to secure the CRN. The data of the primary and secondary users is encrypted at the transmitter and decrypted at the receiver. Unlike the conventional AES, we introduce the data-dependent key-generation and shift-rows process. We also reduce the rounds of AES from 10-6 to improve the computational efficiency without compromising the overall security. The experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed CR-AES in terms of better security, reliability, and computational efficiency
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