248 research outputs found
Efficient Wireless Security Through Jamming, Coding and Routing
There is a rich recent literature on how to assist secure communication
between a single transmitter and receiver at the physical layer of wireless
networks through techniques such as cooperative jamming. In this paper, we
consider how these single-hop physical layer security techniques can be
extended to multi-hop wireless networks and show how to augment physical layer
security techniques with higher layer network mechanisms such as coding and
routing. Specifically, we consider the secure minimum energy routing problem,
in which the objective is to compute a minimum energy path between two network
nodes subject to constraints on the end-to-end communication secrecy and
goodput over the path. This problem is formulated as a constrained optimization
of transmission power and link selection, which is proved to be NP-hard.
Nevertheless, we show that efficient algorithms exist to compute both exact and
approximate solutions for the problem. In particular, we develop an exact
solution of pseudo-polynomial complexity, as well as an epsilon-optimal
approximation of polynomial complexity. Simulation results are also provided to
show the utility of our algorithms and quantify their energy savings compared
to a combination of (standard) security-agnostic minimum energy routing and
physical layer security. In the simulated scenarios, we observe that, by
jointly optimizing link selection at the network layer and cooperative jamming
at the physical layer, our algorithms reduce the network energy consumption by
half
Towards Provably Invisible Network Flow Fingerprints
Network traffic analysis reveals important information even when messages are
encrypted. We consider active traffic analysis via flow fingerprinting by
invisibly embedding information into packet timings of flows. In particular,
assume Alice wishes to embed fingerprints into flows of a set of network input
links, whose packet timings are modeled by Poisson processes, without being
detected by a watchful adversary Willie. Bob, who receives the set of
fingerprinted flows after they pass through the network modeled as a collection
of independent and parallel queues, wishes to extract Alice's embedded
fingerprints to infer the connection between input and output links of the
network. We consider two scenarios: 1) Alice embeds fingerprints in all of the
flows; 2) Alice embeds fingerprints in each flow independently with probability
. Assuming that the flow rates are equal, we calculate the maximum number of
flows in which Alice can invisibly embed fingerprints while having those
fingerprints successfully decoded by Bob. Then, we extend the construction and
analysis to the case where flow rates are distinct, and discuss the extension
of the network model
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