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Book ChapterDOI

The Resurrecting Duckling: Security Issues for Ad-hoc Wireless Networks

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TLDR
A resurrecting duckling security policy model is presented, which describes secure transient association of a device with multiple serialised owners over the air in a short range wireless channel.
Abstract
In the near future, many personal electronic devices will be able to communicate with each other over a short range wireless channel. We investigate the principal security issues for such an environment. Our discussion is based on the concrete example of a thermometer that makes its readings available to other nodes over the air. Some lessons learned from this example appear to be quite general to ad-hoc networks, and rather different from what we have come to expect in more conventional systems: denial of service, the goals of authentication, and the problems of naming all need re-examination. We present the resurrecting duckling security policy model, which describes secure transient association of a device with multiple serialised owners.

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Citations
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Book ChapterDOI

Cryptanalysis of a message recognition protocol by Mashatan and Stinson

TL;DR: In this paper, Mashatan and Stinson proposed a message recognition protocol for ad hoc pervasive networks, which provides a procedure to resynchronize in case of a (possibly adversarial) disruption of communication.

État de l'art - Sécurité dans les réseaux de capteurs sans fil

TL;DR: In this article, a papier proposed un etat de l'art sur la securite dans reseaux de capteurs sans fil, des reseaux ad-hoc particuliers who se caracterisent par leurs contraintes d'energies et leur puissance limitee.
Book ChapterDOI

A message recognition protocol based on standard assumptions

TL;DR: In this paper, a new message recognition protocol (MRP) using a pseudorandom function F and proving its security based on new assumptions is proposed. But the security assumptions are equivalent to the standard notions of preimage resistance and existential unforgeability.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

RAMP: a reputation-aware multi-hop routing protocol in wireless ad-hoc networks

TL;DR: A Reputation-Aware Multi-hop routing Protocol (RAMP) to enforce node cooperation and takes advantage of congestion control from Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) to quantify the reputation/trust value of each node, which makes the selfish behaviors not attractive in MANET.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Piconet security in IEEE 802:15.3 WPAN

TL;DR: This paper proposes a certificate-based trust management (including device initialization and certificate management) and key establishment scheme to protect the IEEE 802.15.3 WPAN.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

New Directions in Cryptography

TL;DR: This paper suggests ways to solve currently open problems in cryptography, and discusses how the theories of communication and computation are beginning to provide the tools to solve cryptographic problems of long standing.

Integrity Considerations for Secure Computer Systems

K. J. Biba
TL;DR: The author identifies the integrity problems posed by a secure military computer utility and integrity policies addressing these problems are developed and their effectiveness evaluated.

Tamper resistance: a cautionary note

TL;DR: It is concluded that trusting tamper resistance is problematic; smartcards are broken routinely, and even a device that was described by a government signals agency as 'the most secure processor generally available' turns out to be vulnerable.
Book ChapterDOI

Low Cost Attacks on Tamper Resistant Devices

TL;DR: A number of attacks that can be mounted by opponents with much shallower pockets, such as smart-cards, are described.
Journal Article

Low cost attacks on tamper resistant devices

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe a number of attacks that can be mounted by opponents with much shallower pockets, three of them involve special (but low cost) equipment: differential fault analysis, chip rewriting, and memory remanence.