4 research outputs found
Game-theoretical design of an adaptive distributed dissemination protocol for VANETs
Road safety applications envisaged for Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks (VANETs) depend largely on the dissemination of warning messages to deliver information to concerned vehicles. The intended applications, as well as some inherent VANET characteristics, make data dissemination an essential service and a challenging task in this kind of networks. This work lays out a decentralized stochastic solution for the data dissemination problem through two game-theoretical mechanisms. Given the non-stationarity induced by a highly dynamic topology, diverse network densities, and intermittent connectivity, a solution for the formulated game requires an adaptive procedure able to exploit the environment changes. Extensive simulations reveal that our proposal excels in terms of number of transmissions, lower end-to-end delay and reduced overhead while maintaining high delivery ratio, compared to other proposalsPeer ReviewedPostprint (published version
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Detecting Rogue Nodes In Vehicular Ad-hoc Networks (DETER)
Vehicular ad hoc Networks (VANETs) are self-organizing networks of vehicles equipped with radios and processors. VANETs are very promising as they can make driving safer by improving road awareness through sharing of information from sensors. Vehicles communicate with each other wirelessly to exchange information and this exchange of information is susceptible to attacks of different kinds. There are some very important issues that need to be resolved before VANETs can be deployed on large scale. Security and privacy issues are undoubtedly the most important factors that need to be resolved.
Amongst various problems to be solved in VANETs is the issue of rogue nodes and their impact on the network. This thesis discusses the problems associated with the security and privacy of vehicular networks in the presence of rogue nodes. The rogue nodes can share / inject false data in the network which can cause serious harm. The techniques proposed make VANETs secure and prevent them from the harmful impact of rogue nodes. The proposed work makes the network safer by making it fault tolerant and resilient in the presence of rogue nodes that can be detected and reported. As VANETs are highly dynamic and fast moving so, a data centric scheme is proposed that can determine if a node is rogue or not just by analysing its data. The work then enhances the developed mechanism by applying hypothesis testing and other statistical techniques to detect intrusions in the network by rogue nodes. The technique is simulated using OMNET++, SUMO and VACAMobil and the results obtained have been presented, discussed and compared to previous works.
In order to prevent rogue nodes from becoming part of the VANETs this thesis also presents a novel framework for managing the digital identity in the vehicular networks. This framework authenticates the user and the vehicle separately from two authorities and allows him to communicate securely with the infrastructure using IBE (Identity Based Encryption). The proposed technique also preserves the privacy of the user. The proposed scheme allows traceability and revocation so that users can be held accountable and penalised. The results have been compared to previous works of similar nature. The thesis also discusses the Sybil attack and how to detect them using game theory in a VANET environment