A Design of Secure Communication Protocol Using RLWE-Based Homomorphic Encryption in IoT Convergence Cloud Environment

2018 ◽  
Vol 105 (2) ◽  
pp. 599-618 ◽  
Author(s):  
Byung-Wook Jin ◽  
Jung-Oh Park ◽  
Hyung-Jin Mun
Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (6) ◽  
pp. 2057
Author(s):  
Yongho Ko ◽  
Jiyoon Kim ◽  
Daniel Gerbi Duguma ◽  
Philip Virgil Astillo ◽  
Ilsun You ◽  
...  

Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) plays a paramount role in various fields, such as military, aerospace, reconnaissance, agriculture, and many more. The development and implementation of these devices have become vital in terms of usability and reachability. Unfortunately, as they become widespread and their demand grows, they are becoming more and more vulnerable to several security attacks, including, but not limited to, jamming, information leakage, and spoofing. In order to cope with such attacks and security threats, a proper design of robust security protocols is indispensable. Although several pieces of research have been carried out with this regard, there are still research gaps, particularly concerning UAV-to-UAV secure communication, support for perfect forward secrecy, and provision of non-repudiation. Especially in a military scenario, it is essential to solve these gaps. In this paper, we studied the security prerequisites of the UAV communication protocol, specifically in the military setting. More importantly, a security protocol (with two sub-protocols), that serves in securing the communication between UAVs, and between a UAV and a Ground Control Station, is proposed. This protocol, apart from the common security requirements, achieves perfect forward secrecy and non-repudiation, which are essential to a secure military communication. The proposed protocol is formally and thoroughly verified by using the BAN-logic (Burrow-Abadi-Needham logic) and Scyther tool, followed by performance evaluation and implementation of the protocol on a real UAV. From the security and performance evaluation, it is indicated that the proposed protocol is superior compared to other related protocols while meeting confidentiality, integrity, mutual authentication, non-repudiation, perfect forward secrecy, perfect backward secrecy, response to DoS (Denial of Service) attacks, man-in-the-middle protection, and D2D (Drone-to-Drone) security.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (12) ◽  
pp. 5243-5249
Author(s):  
R. Jayaprakash ◽  
B. Radha

The Trusted Key Management Protocol (TKMP) provides one of the most secure communication technologies in MANET cluster-based data protection. For security reasons, TKMP is a trusted key that can be sent to all nodes in the communication cluster. This document introduces the Trusted Key Management Protocol (TKMP) feature to improve the quality of secure communications over a cluster-based wireless network. The proposed TKMP execution process includes CBPPRS (Cluster Based Privacy Preserving Routing Selection), LBCPR (Load Balancing Cluster Based Privacy Routing) and DLBPS (Dynamic Load Balancing Privacy Path Selection) procedure. To lock the data from the malicious node, the Paillier Cryptosystem (PC) encrypts packets with homomorphic encryption. The trust score makes it easier to update routing information and improves network throughput. The experimental results show that the proposed TKMP method works better than the other Trust-ECC method.


2020 ◽  
pp. 37-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
Navid Ali Khan ◽  
Noor Zaman Jhanjhi ◽  
Sarfraz Nawaz Brohi ◽  
Anand Nayyar

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