Smart Hospitals and Cyber Security Attacks

Author(s):  
Yassine Chahid ◽  
Mohammed Benabdellah ◽  
Nabil Kannouf
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abhi Patel ◽  
Tim Schenk ◽  
Steffi Knorn ◽  
Heiko Patzlaff ◽  
Dragan Obradovic ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Qiyi He ◽  
Xiaolin Meng ◽  
Rong Qu

CAV (connected and autonomous vehicle) is a crucial part of intelligent transportation systems. CAVs utilize both sensors and communication components to make driving decisions. A large number of companies, research organizations, and governments have researched extensively on the development of CAVs. The increasing number of autonomous and connected functions however means that CAVs are exposed to more cyber security vulnerabilities. Unlike computer cyber security attacks, cyber attacks to CAVs could lead to not only information leakage but also physical damage. According to the UK CAV Cyber Security Principles, preventing CAVs from cyber security attacks need to be considered at the beginning of CAV development. In this paper, a large set of potential cyber attacks are collected and investigated from the aspects of target assets, risks, and consequences. Severity of each type of attacks is then analysed based on clearly defined new set of criteria. The levels of severity for the attacks can be categorized as critical, important, moderate, and minor. Mitigation methods including prevention, reduction, transference, acceptance, and contingency are then suggested. It is found that remote control, fake vision on cameras, hidden objects to LiDAR and Radar, spoofing attack to GNSS, and fake identity in cloud authority are the most dangerous and of the highest vulnerabilities in CAV cyber security.


2017 ◽  
Vol 36 ◽  
pp. 90-100 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Pan ◽  
X. Zheng ◽  
H.X. Chen ◽  
T. Luan ◽  
H. Bootwala ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 32-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali Amur Al Shidhani

Smart cities are in development around the world to tackle urbanization challenges. Smart solutions are being developed to optimize scarce resources, reduce service cost, improve service quality and improve the livelihood of city residents. With smart city infrastructure getting digitized and remotely accessible, the risk of cyber security cannot be overlooked. This article describes the technical and non-technical challenges smart cities are facing with regards to cyber security attacks. The article outlines design requirements that should be considered when designing a secure smart city. The requirements are overarching technical, operational, social, safety, legal and usability domains. In addition, the article proposes cyber defense maturity levels for smart cities and describes threat models relevant to each maturity level.


Author(s):  
Shaneel Narayan ◽  
Ruchinav Gupta ◽  
Avinesh Kumar ◽  
Salman Ishrar ◽  
Ziafil Khan

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