Difference between revisions of "Abera2016"

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{{publication
{{publication
|entry=inproceedings
|author=Tigist Abera and N. Asokan and Lucas Davi and Farinaz Koushanfar and Andrew Paverd and Ahmad-Reza Sadeghi and Gene Tsudik
|author=Tigist Abera and N. Asokan and Lucas Davi and Farinaz Koushanfar and Andrew Paverd and Ahmad-Reza Sadeghi and Gene Tsudik
|keywords=Internet of Thing, Remote Attestation, Trust Establishment
|abstract=<p>The emerging and much-touted Internet of Things (IoT) presents a variety of security and privacy challenges. Prominent among them is the establishment of trust in remote IoT devices, which is typically attained via remote attestation, a distinct security service that aims to ascertain the current state of a potentially compromised remote device. Remote attestation ranges from relatively heavy-weight secure hardware-based techniques, to light-weight software-based ones, and also includes approaches that blend software (e.g., control-flow integrity) and hardware features (e.g., PUFs). In this paper, we survey the landscape of state-of-the-art attestation techniques from the IoT device perspective and argue that most of them have a role to play in IoT trust establishment.</p>
|month=6
|year=2016
|booktitle=Design Automation Conference (DAC)
|booktitle=Design Automation Conference (DAC)
|title=Things, Trouble, Trust: On Building Trust in IoT Systems
|title=Things, Trouble, Trust: On Building Trust in IoT Systems
|date=2016-06-01
|entry=inproceedings
|keywords=Internet of Thing, Remote Attestation, Trust Establishment
|pdf=Abera2016.pdf
|abstract=<p>The emerging and much-touted Internet of Things (IoT) presents a variety of security and privacy challenges. Prominent among them is the establishment of trust in remote IoT devices, which is typically attained via remote attestation, a distinct security service that aims to ascertain the current state of a potentially compromised remote device. Remote attestation ranges from relatively heavy-weight secure hardware-based techniques, to light-weight software-based ones, and also includes approaches that blend software (e.g., control-flow integrity) and hardware features (e.g., PUFs). In this paper, we survey the landscape of state-of-the-art attestation techniques from the IoT device perspective and argue that most of them have a role to play in IoT trust establishment.</p>
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 18:28, 9 November 2021

Abera2016
entryinproceedings
address
annote
authorTigist Abera and N. Asokan and Lucas Davi and Farinaz Koushanfar and Andrew Paverd and Ahmad-Reza Sadeghi and Gene Tsudik
booktitleDesign Automation Conference (DAC)
chapter
edition
editor
howpublished
institution
journal
month6
note
number
organization
pages
publisher
school
series
titleThings, Trouble, Trust: On Building Trust in IoT Systems
type
volume
year2016
doi
issn
isbn
url
pdfAbera2016.pdf

File:Abera2016.pdf

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Email:
farinaz@ucsd.edu
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Address:
Electrical & Computer Engineering
University of California, San Diego
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Lab Location: EBU1-2514
University of California San Diego
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